3 Multibagger ideas for 2026: My Hunt for the Next 100-Bagger
Three high-conviction micro-caps that Wall Street is too big to buy (yet).
While the rest of the market chases the next Nvidia among the mega-caps, or buy already too large and unprofitable space stocks, I believe the real wealth is created in the corners of the market that almost no one is watching. My strategy is simple but difficult: I hunt for asymmetry. I want situations where the downside is protected by cash flow and tangible assets, but the upside is exponential.
To find these, I use a hybrid philosophy: Nick Sleep’s focus on “Destination Analysis” (where will this business be in 10 years?) combined with Peter Lynch’s ruthless hunt for “Growth at a Reasonable Price.”
I am currently tracking three companies that I think fit this mold perfectly. They are boring, they are ignored by most, and the math suggests they are drastically mispriced.
Let’s go over the filter I use as well as the 3 potential multibaggers.
The Filter: “The 100-Bagger Checklist”
“Investing without research is like playing stud poker and never looking at the cards.” – Peter Lynch
Before a stock enters the Atomic Moat portfolio, it must pass a rigorous quantitative stress test. Based on historical studies of stocks that have returned 100x, I look for these specific markers:
The Valuation (PEG < 1.0): I never pay for growth I cannot measure. The Price-to-Earnings ratio must be lower than the Growth Rate. If the PEG is under 1.0, the growth is essentially “on sale.”
Skin in the Game (> 15% Insider Ownership): I want founders, not just managers. History shows that companies where management owns more than 15% of the shares drastically outperform the index.
The “Boring” Factor: Lynch loved companies that do dull or “disgusting” things. If it involves sewage, security, or sensors—and Wall Street ignores it—I am interested.
The Hidden Asset: Is there value here that doesn’t show up in a standard P/E number? (e.g., a transformation from one-time sales to recurring revenue).
These criteria led me to the three candidates I am watching most closely right now:
1. Acorn Energy ($ACFN)
The Lynch Score:
PEG Ratio: < 0.5 (Deep Value territory)
Insider Ownership: ~17% (CEO Jan Loeb)
Boring Factor: Remote monitoring of standby generators.
The Thesis: On the surface, Acorn looks like a hardware company with lumpy sales. In reality, it is a high-margin software business in disguise.
The market punished the stock recently because hardware revenue dropped after a major contract ended. However, the “Hidden Asset” here is the monitoring revenue. This recurring revenue stream has gross margins of ~95%. While the headline revenue looked weak, the high-quality monitoring revenue actually grew 37% in the last quarter.
Furthermore, Acorn recently unlocked a massive “free option” on growth. In January, they signed a partnership with AIO Systems. This allows them to sell full-site monitoring (batteries, security, access control) to their existing 23,000 customers. They get 50% of this new revenue with zero development costs.
Verdict: A classic “Asset Play” where the market is mispricing the transition from hardware to software.
2. Zedcor ($ZDC)
The Lynch Score:
Category: “Fast Grower” (High double-digit growth)
Boring Factor: Security surveillance for construction sites and oil fields.
Moat: Scale Economies Shared (Better service at a lower cost).
The Thesis: Zedcor is executing a classic technological disruption in an archaic industry. They replace expensive, tired human security guards with mobile, solar-powered AI towers. This provides better security for the customer at a fraction of the cost.
A concept Nick Sleep calls “Scale Economies Shared.”
The company is currently dominating the Canadian market and has begun its expansion into the USA (Texas). This is the key catalyst. The US market is roughly 10x the size of the Canadian market. If they can replicate their playbook in Texas, the current valuation will look laughably cheap in hindsight.
Verdict: My most aggressive growth candidate. A potential “Fast Grower” that could compound for a decade if the US expansion succeeds.
By the way, have you checked out my new Multibagger Index? It’s a curated list of companies I believe have the potential for exponential, long-term growth. Take a look here.
3. Nodebis Applications ($NODE)
The Lynch Score:
Institutional Ownership: Near Zero. (Lynch Rule: “Buy before the institutions do”).
Category: Turnaround / Asset Play.
Geography: Sweden (A haven for serial acquirers!)
The Thesis: Nodebis is a “Tiny Titan” operating completely under the radar. They follow the proven Nordic formula of the “Serial Acquirer”; buying small, profitable software companies at low multiples and optimizing their operations.
The thesis here is purely about execution and margin expansion. The company is on a journey to lift EBIT margins from ~9% toward a target of 15%+. If they succeed, the stock will experience a “double engine” effect: earnings will rise, and the valuation multiple (P/E) will expand as the market realizes the quality of the business.
Verdict: A “Lotto Ticket” with substance. It offers asymmetric upside due to its tiny size and lack of analyst coverage.
Patience as an Edge
I employ a Barbell Strategy with these three:
Acorn provides the safety of deep value and cash flow.
Zedcor provides the explosive growth potential.
Nodebis provides the uncorrelated micro-cap upside.
These are not stocks to trade; they are businesses to own. As Peter Lynch famously said, “The key to making money in stocks is not to get scared out of them.” I am betting on the business fundamentals, not the stock price volatility.
If you want to track my trades and full thesis on these companies, subscribe to The Atomic Moat.
Disclaimer & Disclosure
I am not a financial advisor. The content presented in The Atomic Moat is for educational and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed as financial advice. I am a private investor sharing my personal research and capital allocation journey.
Holdings: I currently hold long positions in Acorn Energy ($ACFN) and Zedcor ($ZDC) I may buy or sell these securities at any time without notice.
Risk Warning: The companies discussed (especially micro-caps) are subject to extreme volatility and liquidity risks. They fit my risk tolerance and timeline (decades), but they may not fit yours. Always conduct your own due diligence (DYOR) and consult a certified financial professional before making any investment decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results.





Great deep dive of stocks under the radar👍 I also try to look at the lagging / undervalued stocks