Dranishnikova Maria

Maria Dranishnikova

Oninvest reporter
Motley Fool names three growth stocks with 10x upside over a decade

Motley Fool analyst Leo Sun has highlighted three undervalued stocks that, in his view, could deliver tenfold returns over the next decade. One of them is small-cap company Serve Robotics, a developer of autonomous delivery robots. The other two are warehouse-automation firm Symbotic and Chinese EV maker Nio.

Serve Robotics

Shares of Serve Robotics, a $1 billion developer of autonomous delivery robots, could rise if the company secures additional partners and enters new markets, Sun argues.

Serve was founded as a subsidiary of food-delivery service Postmates, later became part of Uber following its acquisition of Postmates, and was spun off as an independent company in 2021. Two years later it went public.

Production began in October 2024 with Uber Eats as the first client and Los Angeles as the launch market. Since then, Serve has expanded into Chicago, Dallas, Atlanta, and Miami, entered into a partnership with DoorDash, and plans to double its deployed fleet to 2,000 robots by the end of the year.

Analysts expect revenue to grow at a CAGR of 241% from 2024 to 2027, reaching $71 million by the end of the period as the business scales, Sun writes. The stock may look expensive at 11 times projected 2027 sales, Sun concludes, but he attributes that to Serve’s early-mover advantage in its niche.

According to MarketWatch, Wall Street expects the stock to gain 31% based on the consensus target price of coverage analysts on MarketWatch. Six recommend "buy" versus one "hold." 

Other companies

Shares of Symbotic (market value $41.7 billion), which builds warehouse robots, could also rise as the company diversifies its customer base, according to Motley Fool. For now, Walmart is its largest client. The “modest valuation” of the shares suggests that investors are skeptical Symbotic can broaden its customer list, Sun notes. If it succeeds, patient investors could benefit significantly, he says. Most Wall Street analysts are more cautious, MarketWatch data shows. The most common rating is “hold," assigned by 10 analysts. Nine recommend "buy," and three "sell." The average target price of $50.80 per share sits below current levels.

Nio (market value: $17.4 billion), whose depositary receipts trade on the New York Stock Exchange, could move higher once U.S.-China tensions ease, Sun believes. For now, the stock trades below projected 2026 revenue, even though consensus forecasts call for revenue to grow at a 30% CAGR through 2027, he writes. Sun attributes the low valuation primarily to the escalating trade conflict. Wall Street is constructive on the outlook: the stock carries eight “buy” and seven “hold” ratings. The average target price of $57.80 per share implies upside of 725%.

The AI translation of this story was reviewed by a human editor.

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