The “Magnificent Seven” group of stocks includes some of the largest companies in the world, all of which are major players in the tech realm. This group is made up of:
Nvidia
Alphabet
Apple
Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT)
Amazon
Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META)
Tesla
All seven of these stocks are trillion-dollar companies by market cap. However, each stock varies in how good a deal it is. Some are quite expensive, while others are less pricey. So, which one represents the best value in the group? Let’s take a look.
Will AI create the world’s first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on a little-known company, called an “Indispensable Monopoly,” providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue ยป |
What valuation metric is best?
Valuing a company can be tricky. There are all sorts of validation measures, and most of them have their use cases, but not every validation metric is relevant at any given time. The most common is the price-to-earnings metric, as it highlights net income as perhaps the most important part of a business. However, the net income metric can be skewed by depreciation or gain on investments. If one company owns another and that investment goes up, accounting practices require the owner to report a gain on investment, even if it didn’t sell. To me, that’s not true earnings, and when several companies are seeing major gains on investments from major artificial intelligence (AI) upstarts like Anthropic and OpenAI, it’s difficult to use this metric.
The best metric I’ve found for these companies is operating cash flow. This metric solely examines how much cash a company’s core business is producing. If there were no other activities (such as capital expenditures), this is how much money would be added to a company’s cash pile at the end of the quarter. With several of the companies in the Magnificent Seven spending big on capital expenditures, I think this is the best metric to use to ensure the comparison from company to company is fair.
Two companies stand out as historically cheap
First, let’s start with the two most expensive stocks. Tesla is, by far, the most expensive on this list. It trades for about 95 times cash flow from operating activities (CFO) — a level it has consistently traded at over the past three years. Nvidia is far cheaper at 56 times CFO, but it’s still expensive. Still, Nvidia is growing at an impressive rate, and strong growth will likely drive this figure down throughout 2026.
These two being the most expensive probably surprised nobody, but what about the other five?