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July 2025’s S&P 500 Champions: These 2 Stocks Crushed the Competition

July 2025’s S&P 500 Champions: These 2 Stocks Crushed the Competition

Author:
foolstock
Published:
2025-08-03 23:37:00
11
3

Wall Street’s winners just lapped the field—again. While the S&P 500 chugged along like a pension fund’s bond portfolio, two stocks decided to moon. No surprises here: when the herd zigged, these picks zagged straight to the top.

What fueled the rally? Same old story—greed, FOMO, and maybe a dash of actual fundamentals. But let’s be real: in a market where ‘valuation’ is just a fancy word for ‘Twitter sentiment,’ these outliers played the game better. For now.

So pop the champagne—or at least your seltzer. Just remember: today’s market darlings often become tomorrow’s bagholders. Happy trading.

A bull charging through a stock chart.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. Generac Holdings (up 36%)

(GNRC -0.46%), a leading Maker of backup power generators, was the S&P 500's top-performing stock last month, finishing up 36%.

The gains came entirely at the end of the month following a better-than-expected earnings report.

Revenue in the quarter ROSE 6% to $1.06 billion, ahead of estimates of $1.03 billion, with balanced growth in the residential, commercial, and industrial segments. Better-than-expected shipments lifted results.

On the bottom line, adjusted earnings per share in the quarter jumped from $1.35 to $1.65, well ahead of the consensus of $1.32. Management noted the company grabbed market share in the portable generator market and ramped up shipments of energy storage systems to Puerto Rico.

Generac also raised its net income margin guidance from 7.5% to 8.5% due to lower tariff assumptions, a clear positive for the company. It sees stronger free-cash-flow conversion under the "big, beautiful bill." 

2. Invesco (up 33.2%)

(IVZ -1.90%), the investment manager that may be best known for the, was the second-best performer on the S&P 500.

Invesco's surge last month came as it filed with the SEC to change the QQQ ETF from a unit investment trust to an open-end fund, which WOULD allow it to earn more revenue from the now-$352 billion fund.

The change would also allow it to reduce its annual expense ratio from 0.20% to 0.18%, benefiting investors.

TD Cowen called the MOVE a "game-changing event" and upgraded the stock to a buy with a price target of $25. It's unclear how much Invesco would earn from the move, but given the size of the QQQ ETF and Invesco's market cap at just $10 billion, the tailwind could be substantial.

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