Millennials plowed their money into Apple, Tesla, and Disney during the pandemic. Here are their 10 favorite stocks.

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange

Millennials' favorite stocks over the past year include Apple, Tesla, Ford, and Pfizer, according to a study by DailyFX.

The financial-news website turned to Robinhood to figure out which companies were most popular among young investors. DailyFX looked at data from the trading app - whose users are predominantly aged 18 to 35 - for the 12-month period to April 1, 2021.

Millennials piled into several stocks that were hammered by pandemic-related travel restrictions and lockdowns, including Disney, Delta Air Lines, and Carnival, the cruise operator. GameStop was excluded from the study as it risked skewing the results, given the frenzied buying of the stock during the Reddit-fuelled trading frenzy in January.

Here are the top 10 stocks that millennials put their money into during the COVID-19 crisis, ranging from electric-car makers and airlines to healthcare firms:

10. Disney
disney world

Ticker: DIS
Market Cap: $323 billion

Disney lost nearly $5 billion last year when its theme parks were shuttered due to the spread of coronavirus, but its stock has since rebounded as visitors flocked back to its entertainment venues.

9. Nio
GettyImages 1232435708

Ticker: NIO
Market Cap:
$72 billion

Seven-year-old Nio, one of the most successful EV startups to come out of China, is a major disruptor in the global car market.

8. Delta Air Lines
Delta Air Lines Boeing 737-700

Ticker: DAL
Market Cap: $26 billion

The airline, which doesn't use the Delta variant's name, wants to hire over 1,000 pilots by next summer as travel recovers.

7. Carnival Corporation
carnival cruise ship

Ticker: CCL
Market Cap: $27 billion

Carnival, the world's biggest cruising company, saw future bookings jump 45% in the second-quarter as Americans were raring to spend lavishly again on cruises.

6. Pfizer
pfizer administered to a teenager

Ticker: PFE
Market Cap: $260 billion

The COVID-19 vaccine has driven Pfizer's revenue 61% higher in the second-quarter to nearly $19 billion. That figure is expected to grow as its vaccine for children gets approved, and a booster shot is explored.

5. American Airlines
American Airlines

Ticker: AAL
Market Cap:
$13 billion

American Airlines, a major US air carrier, emerged from the pandemic by re-establishing routes as leisure travel picked up in the summer. 

4. Ford
The new Ford Bronco near a lake.

Ticker: F
Market Cap:
$54 billion

Ford plans to boost investment in electric-vehicle spending and aims to have 40% of its global sales to be fully electric by 2030, with its cross-town rival GM going fully EV by 2035.

3. General Electric
General Electric logo and buildings are pictured, in Belfort, eastern France

Ticker: GE
Market Cap:
$116 billion

US conglomerate General Electric's stock is up 23% so far this year, and 101% higher in the past 12 months.

2. Tesla
The interior of a Tesla driving down the highway

Ticker: TSLA
Market Cap:
$699 billion

Tesla's stock is up 20,000% since it went public in 2010, making some believe it may be highly overvalued. Analysts and investors think the EV-maker's production capacity, demand from China, and its "full self-driving" mode justifies its stock price.

1. Apple
Apple Event April 2021

Ticker: AAPL
Market Cap:
$2.4 trillion

Apple delivered a "gold-medal"performance in the third quarter despite a global chip shortage, posting a 50% surge in iPhone sales compared with the same period last year.

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