3 Soaring Stocks to Hold for the Next 20 Years

The best long-term investments aren’t the ones that make you check your portfolio every morning; they’re the ones you buy, hold, and let compound while the world changes around them.

I’ve been digging for consumer goods companies with the kind of structural positioning, momentum, and innovation pipelines that could reward investors for the next two decades.

Here are three that I’d feel comfortable holding through recessions, market corrections, and for the next 20 years.

Image source: Getty Images.

  1. On Holding

On Holding (ONON +0.73%) has done something extraordinarily rare in the consumer goods industry. It has built a performance athletic brand from scratch that competes directly with **Nike **(NKE 1.23%) and Adidas, and it’s winning in a sense. Net sales grew 34% year over year on a constant-currency basis in 2025, and the company previously set a goal to double net sales by 2026, requiring a 26% constant-currency compound annual growth rate from 2023.

What makes On a 20-year hold to me is the ecosystem it’s building. Tennis star Roger Federer invested in the company in 2019 for roughly $50 million, taking a 3% stake. That investment has paid off nicely for him, but it has also brought cultural credibility, allowing On to expand beyond tennis into training and lifestyle categories.

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NYSE: ONON

On Holding

Today’s Change

(0.73%) $0.34

Current Price

$46.82

Key Data Points

Market Cap

$15B

Day’s Range

$44.63 - $47.24

52wk Range

$34.38 - $61.29

Volume

284K

Avg Vol

4.7M

Gross Margin

62.49%

Today, the brand has expanded its roster to include A-list celebrities like Zendaya and up-and-coming athletes like Ben Shelton, and its “The Roger” line has opened the door to the fashion-forward consumer. With some of these partnerships, On is capitalizing on the growing tennis fandom in younger consumers.

New models like the Cloudrunner 3 and Cloudmonster 3 are launching this quarter, backed by a strong order book, and the Cloudrunner Max arrives in the second half of the year with breakthrough foam technology.

I view this investment as an opportunity to get on the ground floor of a company growing quickly the way Lululemon Athletica or Nike has. In 20 years, I hope to cash out my On to pay for my kid’s college tuition.

  1. Celsius Holdings

Celsius (CELH 8.08%) deserves a spot here, too, because the 20-year thesis is different from the near-term investment case.

The U.S. energy drink market is undergoing a structural shift toward zero-sugar, functional beverages and Celsius is positioned at the center of it with a 20% market share. The company now controls three major brands, Celsius, Alani Nu, and Rockstar, giving it a portfolio approach that mirrors the strategy Procter & Gamble uses to dominate shelf space.​

Celsius’ recent partnership with PepsiCo isn’t just about logistics – it’s about permanence. With 99.5% all-commodity volume and presence in over 250,000 retail outlets, Celsius has the kind of distribution moat that takes competitors years and billions of dollars to replicate.

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NASDAQ: CELH

Celsius

Today’s Change

(-8.08%) $-4.33

Current Price

$49.28

Key Data Points

Market Cap

$14B

Day’s Range

$49.15 - $52.29

52wk Range

$24.04 - $66.74

Volume

363K

Avg Vol

4.8M

Gross Margin

49.57%

The company is also seeing an interesting consumer dynamic: 52% of repeat buyers purchase five or more times, and female consumers are increasingly driving category growth.

Coming out of 2025 retail resets, Celsius expects over 17% gains in shelf space, and Alani Nu anticipates over 100% increases in distribution in convenience, the channel that represents 60% of energy drink volume.

I see Celsius as a massive trend among Gen Z. Sure, the company is powered by savvy branding that positions it as “healthy,” but the drink has clearly resonated with 18- to 24-year-olds as a way to “look cool.” In many ways, Celsius feels more like a lifestyle accessory than just a beverage.

It’s a brand I’d feel comfortable investing in for the next 20 years.

  1. e.l.f. Beauty

The beauty industry is brutally competitive, with very few brands ever reaching real scale. What makes e.l.f. Beauty (ELF 11.31%) stand out is the company’s repeatable ability to build and expand beauty franchises under one roof.

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NYSE: ELF

e.l.f. Beauty

Today’s Change

(-11.31%) $-10.41

Current Price

$81.64

Key Data Points

Market Cap

$5.4B

Day’s Range

$80.96 - $89.00

52wk Range

$49.40 - $150.99

Volume

3.4M

Avg Vol

2M

Gross Margin

65.91%

That kind of brand incubation is rare.

Its Rhode acquisition last year strengthens that playbook. Bringing Hailey Bieber’s brand into the portfolio adds cultural relevance and premium positioning, and its blockbuster Sephora launches show the brand has far more upside than early projections suggest.

For a 20-year hold, the real story is e.l.f.'s bond with Gen Z and millennials. These consumers are forming brand loyalties now, and e.l.f.'s mix of affordability, quality, and social-media-native marketing has made it a default entry point.

This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
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