Prediction: 2 Unstoppable Stocks That Will Beat the S&P 500 Again in 2025

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The S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) has risen by about 22% so far this year, which is more than twice its average annual gain going all the way back to when the index was established in 1957. The technology sector has been the driving force behind that bullish run, thanks to emerging themes like artificial intelligence (AI).

However, going forward, the broader market will likely also benefit from the cycle of interest rate cuts that just started in nations around the world. Those rate cuts are expected to carry into 2025, and should prove to be a tailwind for companies that are sensitive to consumer spending.

Shares of Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) and Sea Limited (NYSE: SE) are up 68% and 158% in 2024, respectively. Here's why these two unstoppable stocks could crush the S&P 500 again in 2025.

Two people standing inside a data center looking at a laptop computer.
Image source: Getty Images.

1. Oracle: A leader in AI data center infrastructure

Oracle's rich history in the tech sector dates back to its founding in 1977. Its initial success came from its industry-leading database management software, but it now offers an impressive portfolio of cloud computing services and data center infrastructure. The company's latest Gen2 Cloud data centers have become a leading choice among AI developers for their performance and cost efficiency.

To build AI models, developers need access to thousands of graphics processing units (GPUs), most of which are supplied today by Nvidia. A single high-end GPU can cost over $30,000 to buy, so most developers rent computing capacity from companies like Oracle instead on a per-minute basis. Oracle currently operates 85 data centers and has 77 more under construction, but Larry Ellison, its chairman and founder, believes the company could eventually have more than 2,000.

In its infrastructure, Oracle uses unique RDMA (random direct memory access) networking technology that moves data between GPUs and devices far more quickly than traditional Ethernet networks. Plus, its data centers are entirely automated, which reduces their operating costs. That's why, according to Ellison, developers can train AI models twice as fast and for half the cost by using Gen 2 Cloud infrastructure compared to competing data centers.

During its fiscal 2025 first quarter, which ended Aug. 31, the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) business generated $2.2 billion in revenue. That was a 45% increase from the prior-year period. It also signed 42 new deals for GPU capacity worth $3 billion, which contributed to the company's record remaining performance obligations of $99 billion -- a 52% increase from a year earlier. Many top AI customers like OpenAI, Cohere, and xAI are waiting for more Oracle data centers to come online, at which point that backlog will convert into revenue.