
Strive, Trump Media & Technology Group, and Sprout Social are the three Social Media stocks to watch today, according to MarketBeat’s stock screener tool. Social media stocks are shares of publicly traded companies that operate social networking platforms or related services, whose revenue and valuation depend heavily on user engagement, advertising, subscriptions, and data-driven monetization. For investors, these are typically growth-oriented tech investments characterized by strong network effects but also elevated risk from regulatory scrutiny, privacy concerns, competition, and sentiment-driven volatility. These companies had the highest dollar trading volume of any Social Media stocks within the last several days.
Strive (ASST)
Asset Entities Inc., a technology company, provides social media marketing and content delivery services across Discord, TikTok, and other social media platforms. It designs, develops, and manages servers for communities on Discord. The company offers discord investment education, entertainment, and marketing services.
Trump Media & Technology Group (DJT)
Trump Media & Technology Group Corp. engages in operating social media and in the technology business. Its brands include TRUTH Social, TMTG+ and TMTG News. The company was founded on March 28, 2024 and is headquartered in Sarasota, FL.
Read Our Latest Research Report on DJT
Sprout Social (SPT)
Sprout Social, Inc. designs, develops, and operates a web-based social media management platform in the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and the Asia Pacific. The company provides cloud software for social messaging, data and workflows in a unified system of record, intelligence, and action.
Read Our Latest Research Report on SPT
See Also
- MarketBeat’s Top Five Stocks to Own in November 2025
- 3 Big Earnings Misses: Is It Time to Buy the Dip?
- Is Robinhood’s 11% Post-Earnings Fall a Buy-the-Dip Opportunity?
- AI Demand Is Coming—Is Microchip Technology Ready?
- Why Investors Have Flocked to 2 Unorthodox ETFs This Month
- Rivian’s Chart Says Go, But Some Analysts Still Say No
