Why these ASX growth stocks could be much bigger in 5 years

A businessman compares the growth trajectory of property versus shares.

The Australian share market is home to a number of ASX growth stocks that could be destined to grow materially over the next five years.

But which ones could be buys right now? Here are five that analysts currently rate as buys:

Lovisa Holdings Ltd (ASX: LOV)

The first ASX growth stock that could be a buy is Lovisa. Lovisa has built one of the most repeatable growth models on the ASX. Its fast-fashion jewellery concept translates well across markets, allowing the company to roll out new stores using a proven format supported by centralised sourcing and disciplined inventory management.

While the company now has over 1,000 stores globally, with many markets still underpenetrated, it still has a significant expansion opportunity. So, if Lovisa continues executing its rollout strategy as it has to date, the business could be significantly larger in five years without needing to change its playbook.

Morgans is bullish and has a buy rating and $40.00 price target on its shares.

NextDC Ltd (ASX: NXT)

Another ASX growth stock that could be a buy according to analysts is NextDC. It operates behind the scenes of the digital economy, providing data centre infrastructure that supports cloud computing, artificial intelligence, enterprise IT, and increasingly data-intensive workloads. Demand for this infrastructure is driven by long-term digitisation trends rather than short-term economic conditions.

Looking five years ahead, the volume of data being created and processed is likely to be far higher than it is today. If NextDC continues expanding capacity in line with demand, the scale of the business could look very different by the end of the decade.

UBS is bullish on its outlook and has a buy rating and $21.85 price target on its shares.

Temple & Webster Group Ltd (ASX: TPW)

A final ASX growth share to consider is Temple & Webster.

As an online-only furniture and homewares retailer, Temple & Webster benefits from the gradual shift of consumer spending toward ecommerce. Australian furniture remains a category with relatively low online penetration compared to other western markets. This suggests that there’s still plenty of structural growth ahead.

The company’s asset-light model allows it to scale without the costs associated with physical stores or large inventories. As volumes grow, improvements in logistics, supplier relationships, and brand awareness can drive operating leverage.

Over a five-year timeframe, even steady gains in online adoption could see Temple & Webster operating at a much larger scale than it does today.

Bell Potter currently has a buy rating and $19.50 price target on its shares.

The post Why these ASX growth stocks could be much bigger in 5 years appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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Motley Fool contributor James Mickleboro has positions in Lovisa, Nextdc, and Temple & Webster Group. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Lovisa and Temple & Webster Group. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Lovisa and Temple & Webster Group. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

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