While the market has returned to new highs, not every growth stock has rebounded at the same pace. Five stocks still down 20% or more from all-time highs that look attractive are Advanced Micro Devices (AMD -0.45%), GitLab (GTLB 2.73%), e.l.f. Beauty (ELF 1.21%), Dutch Bros (BROS 1.74%), and Cava Group (CAVA 4.96%).
Let’s look at what each of these five discounted growth stocks brings to the table.

Image source: Getty Images.
1. Advanced Micro Devices (down 35% from high)
While AMD remains a distant second to market leader Nvidia in graphics processing units (GPUs), it’s starting to carve out a meaningful niche in artificial intelligence (AI) inference. That’s important because the inference market is expected to become larger than AI training over time, and AMD’s cost-effective chips are starting to gain traction.
On its latest earnings call, management said one of the largest AI-model companies is now using its GPUs for a large share of its daily inference workload. Major cloud providers are also turning to AMD chips for AI tasks like search and recommendation engines.
The company already has a leadership position in data central processing units, and its overall data center revenue has been growing strongly. Last quarter, its data center segment soared 57%, helping total revenue climb 36%. AMD doesn’t need to unseat Nvidia in the GPU space, it just needs to gain a modest share to drive outsized growth from its smaller base. Given the pullback in the stock, the setup here looks attractive.
2. GitLab (down 65% from high)
GitLab has become one of the most important players in secure software development. Its DevSecOps platform is helping developers build, test, and deploy applications more efficiently in a secure environment, and its recent GitLab 18 launch only strengthens that position. The release includes over 30 new enhancements, including the GitLab Duo Agent Platform, which deploys AI agents across the entire software development life cycle, not just for code but also for documentation, testing, and compliance.
The company is seeing solid growth both from existing customers and new ones. Last quarter, its revenue climbed 27% year over year, while its dollar-based net retention rate was a robust 122%. Much of this growth is coming from existing customers expanding seats and upgrading to higher-tier plans.
While some investors fear that AI will lead to fewer coders over time, thus far, AI has led to an increase in both software development and the number of coders. GitLab stock has fallen too much on this fear, and it looks well-positioned moving forward.
3. e.l.f. Beauty (down 40% from high)
After a red-hot run, e.l.f. shares cooled off after the company’s revenue growth slowed significantly to just 4% in its fiscal Q4. However, its recent $1 billion acquisition of Hailey Bieber’s Rhode brand has the potential to reaccelerate growth in a big way.
Rhode has already hit $212 million in annual sales with just a handful of products on its website and minimal marketing. With e.l.f.’s strong relationships at Ulta Beauty and Target and Rhode’s recent Sephora rollout, e.l.f. has the opportunity to put the brand in front of a lot more consumers. Bieber staying on as chief creative officer ensures brand continuity, and Rhode brings with it premium price points and a strong skincare lineup, which is an ideal complement to e.l.f.’s core mass-market cosmetics strength.
e.l.f. has already proven it can take a lot of market share in mass-market cosmetics, and Rhode adds a big potential growth driver. The company also continues to have opportunities with skincare, international expansion, and potentially moving into other adjacent categories like fragrance over time.
4. Dutch Bros (down 21% from high)
Dutch Bros is still in the early innings of what looks like a multi-year growth story. The drive-thru coffee chain now has over 1,000 locations but sees room for 7,000 over the long term. It’s targeting 2,029 shops by 2029, which would still leave it with a long growth runway next decade as well.
Expansion is not the only story with Dutch Bros, though. It’s also had strong same-store sales growth, and has an opportunity to continue to ramp it up. Last quarter, its same-store sales rose 4.7%, while company-owned comps climbed 6.9%. However, mobile ordering has just recently been rolled out, and the company has just begun piloting food items. Dutch Bros has admitted that a lack of breakfast offerings has likely cost it sales, and rival Starbucks has shown just how important food items can be, with food representing 19% of its sales last quarter.
Between an opportunity to grow same-store sales and expand its store base, Dutch Bros has a lot of long-term growth ahead of it.
5. Cava Group (down 43% from high)
Another strong growth story in the restaurant space is Cava. The Mediterranean restaurant operator has posted four straight quarters of double-digit same-store sales growth, including 10.8% last quarter. More impressively, traffic was up 7.5%, showing that customers are coming in more frequently despite price increases.
Higher-priced add-ons like pita chips and fresh juice are boosting ticket sizes, and the company is experimenting with new menu items and a tiered loyalty program to keep customers coming back. However, like Dutch Bros, Cava is very much an expansion story.
The company added 15 new restaurants last quarter and plans to open 64 to 68 new locations this year. With just 382 total restaurants as of the end of last quarter and a target of 1,000 by 2032, there’s a long runway ahead. Its expansion strategy, dubbed the “coastal smile,” has worked well, and a recent push into the Midwest with markets like Detroit and Chicago should accelerate growth even further.
Geoffrey Seiler has positions in GitLab, LVMH MoĂ«t Hennessy – Louis Vuitton, and e.l.f. Beauty. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Advanced Micro Devices, GitLab, Nvidia, Starbucks, Target, Ulta Beauty, and e.l.f. Beauty. The Motley Fool recommends Cava Group and Dutch Bros. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.