3 Reasons to Buy MercadoLibre Stock Like There's No Tomorrow

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Any investors shopping around for new growth stocks right now probably haven't considered MercadoLibre (NASDAQ: MELI). In fact, there's a good chance you've never even heard of the company.

Don't let a lack of familiarity prevent you from plugging into this compelling stock pick. It's got tons of upside potential -- it's just capitalizing on its opportunity outside of your immediate circle of awareness. See, MercadoLibre's market is Latin America. It's often referred to as the Amazon of Latin America, in fact, and rightfully so in more ways than one.

Reasons to buy MercadoLibre stock

While the comparison to Amazon is a fair one, it's also incomplete. In addition to operating an online mall open to third-party merchants, the company also facilitates online auctions akin to eBay's, lets brands manage their own online store like Shopify, and even facilitates online and offline payments in the same vein as PayPal. Right now its top markets are Brazil, Argentina, and Mexico, although it operates in some form in several others. Of course, the company is also always looking for ways to expand its reach.

Whatever it's doing wherever it's doing it, it's working. The company's first-quarter revenue was up 30% year over year, lifted by a currency-neutral 86% improvement in total payments it handled and a comparable 71% increase in the amount of goods it sold. This growth extends long-standing trends too.

Data source: StockAnalysis.com. Chart by author.

This continued forward progress, however, isn't the crux of the reason you may want to own a stake in the company sooner than later. It's just the result of the bigger and more important bullish factors at work here. Three of them stand out among the rest.

1. Latin America's broadband industry is still putting down roots

In many ways Latin America is where North America was 20 years ago. That is, while the internet isn't exactly new, broadband connectivity is just now becoming commonplace. Although up a little last year, Standard & Poor's reports that still less than 60% of Latin America's homes enjoy access to high-speed wired internet. The other 40%-plus have yet to subscribe to fixed-line broadband, but many of these residents eventually will.

That said, the region's consumers are more likely to embrace their mobile devices as their primary broadband connection to the rest of the world. To this end, market research outfit GSMA suggests only 65% of the continent's people are currently users of smartphone-driven mobile internet, although this penetration rate is expected to reach 72% by 2030.