Lightbridge Corporation (LTBR): The Best Micro Cap Stock Right Now?

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We recently compiled a list of the 10 Micro Cap Stocks That Will Skyrocket. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Lightbridge Corporation (NASDAQ:LTBR) stands against the other micro cap stocks.

One of the more well known quotes of Warren Buffett is "Only buy something that you'd be perfectly happy to hold if the market shut down for 10 years." The learning from this quote is simple. Buffett believes that the only investments one should make should be those that should accrete value over the long term. However, the biggest tech stock holding in Buffett's latest 13F SEC filings is up by a whopping 181,533% since its shares started trading in 1984. However, the Oracle of Omaha only took a stake in this firm in 2016, when he became convinced that it had an unbeatable moat that would lead the industry in the future. Since his purchase, this stock has gained 692%, so safe to say, that while Buffett has undoubtedly reaped more returns by earning stable dividends through this stock, he nevertheless missed out on its fastest growth years.

Even though Buffett might have missed out on these returns because of his love of the margin of safety, compounded returns, and value investment in general, six digit percentage returns are all that a growth investor wants. This urge for growth versus the desire for stability through value stocks is at the heart of one of the oldest debates in the industry, namely, which is better, growth or value? For those seeking clarity and a definitive answer, it appears that there's no single answer to this question.

Growth and value stock performance depend on the broader economic environment. Data shows that for the seven years between 1984 and 1991, value stocks led growth stocks by as much as 10 percentage points in an era marked by deregulation and tax cuts. This trend reversed between 1991 and 2001, when growth stocks led by 12 percentage points at the peak of the dotcom era. However, as the bubble popped, value stocks came back with a vengeance and led growth by as much as 17 percentage points between 2001 and 2008. Since then and until 2023, growth stocks are back and have led value stocks by as much as 15 percentage points.

Yet, even though research shows that value stocks are typically the best way to invest over the long term (no wonder Warren Buffett swears by them), no value stock has delivered absolute returns matching those of today's biggest growth stocks. Warren Buffett's top technology stock has posted 1,815x returns since it started trading, but it isn't the only one to have done so. No one would have classified this stock as a growth stock, and the list of the 20 largest technology companies in the world is full of such examples. Within these, those that trade on U.S. exchanges, only one is in the red since its shares started trading due to its exposure to China. All others are in the green, and their price appreciations range from 5.04x for the world's largest search engine provider to 4,251x for the operating system and cloud computing company that's leading the artificial intelligence race.