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Did you miss RKLB’s 1,700% run? These 2 stocks could be next

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Rocket Lab stock (NASDAQ: RKLB) has become one of the market’s favorite regret trades.

It went public at $11.58, fell to a record low of $3.79 in 2022, and now trades around $84.65, after a long run built on launch execution, defense contracts and a growing backlog.

That is the kind of move investors look back on and say they should have seen coming.

The frustrating part is that Rocket Lab is no longer cheap, as analysts now see it as a company with real momentum, but also a stock priced for a lot of success already.

As per The Motley Fool analysis, the stock’s strong run reflects solid execution and growing demand, but also leaves limited room for error at current valuations.

How Rocket Lab turned into the stock everyone wishes they owned

Rocket Lab’s rise came from repetition with 87 successful Electron launches, a long list of contracts with customers such as NASA, the US Space Force, BlackSky and Capella Space, and a steady shift from “interesting space company” to “real business with real demand.”

The company is still expected to grow fast, with analysts looking for revenue to rise from about $602 million in 2025 to $1.6 billion by 2028.

Even after that growth, though, the stock is trading at about 29 times those 2028 sales estimates, which leaves much less room for mistakes than it used to.

RKLB shows the kind of setup that can work extremely well: genuine technology, a market that is still early, and a business that keeps delivering enough proof points to pull in more institutional money.

The problem for anyone arriving late is that the easy part of the move may already be over.

Also read: Why selling these 3 dividend stocks could be a mistake

QuantumScape stock: Technology sleeper still near floor

QuantumScape (NASDAQ: QS) is the cleaner “next Rocket Lab” story for investors who like long-dated technology bets.

The company is developing solid-state lithium-metal batteries that can charge from 10% to 80% in under 15 minutes and are designed to deliver 844 watt-hours per liter of energy density.

It has spent more than a decade developing batteries with Volkswagen, and it plans to license its first commercial designs by the end of 2026.

That commercialization milestone could become a major inflection point as analysts currently expect QuantumScape’s revenue to remain minimal in the near term before rising to roughly $48 million in 2027 and potentially surpassing $100 million in 2028.

The stock still looks like a distressed name.

QuantumScape trades around $7.95, below its 52-week high of $19.07 and only a little above its 52-week low of $3.80.

Plug Power stock: Revenue that can change sentiment

Plug Power (NASDAQ: PLUG) is the more established, more industrial version of the same idea.

It already has a commercial footprint, with more than 74,000 fuel cell systems deployed worldwide, and major customers include Amazon and Walmart.

Analysts expect revenue to rise from about $710 million in 2025 to $1.2 billion by 2028, while adjusted EBITDA is projected to turn positive in the final year of that period.

That is a much more tangible path to re-rating than a pure concept story.

Valuation is the other part of the appeal as Plug Power trades around $3.31, close to its lower trading band and well below its 52-week high of $4.58.

At roughly six times this year’s sales, it is far cheaper than Rocket Lab on a forward-sales basis and still far better known than QuantumScape.

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