1 Spectacular Growth Stock Down 67% to Buy Hand Over Fist, According to Wall Street

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Confluent (NASDAQ: CFLT) is a leader in data streaming, which is the technology responsible for many of our live digital experiences. For example, it's the magic behind real-time inventory information when we shop online, which tells us whether a product is in stock before we hit the buy button.

Confluent just reported its financial results for the first quarter of 2024 (ended March 31), which revealed further progress toward capturing what could be a $100 billion addressable market in 2025. Its stock popped following the release, and it's sitting on a 36% gain this year so far -- but it remains 67% below its all-time high, so it still has some work to do.

The Wall Street Journal tracks 29 analysts covering Confluent stock, and the majority have given it the highest possible buy rating. Not a single one recommends selling. Wall Street doesn't always get things right, but here's why investors might want to pay attention to the bullish consensus on this occasion.

Data streaming has a growing number of use cases

The year is 2003. Beyonce just dropped her new album, "Dangerously in Love," and you desperately want to hear it. You race down to the local record store and buy a physical copy on disc. You take it home, insert it into your CD player, and blast it on repeat for hours. How times have changed. Today, you can access unlimited amounts of music through streaming services like Spotify, which stores songs in its data centers and feeds them to your smartphone in real-time. No discs or clunky hardware are required.

Conceptually, data streaming is quite similar. Businesses used to collect customer and operational data and store it on physical servers located onsite, and managers would come back at a later date to analyze it. They can now store that data in centralized data centers and access it instantaneously, which is a practice called cloud computing.

Data streaming allows businesses to ingest their data, process it, and analyze it in real-time in the cloud. This means they can spot trends far more quickly and pivot their sales strategies to suit, and it also allows them to create live experiences for customers to drive more sales.

Take global tire manufacturer Michelin, for example. It uses Confluent to track the real-time flow of products across its enormous network, which spans 170 countries, so distributors and customers always know when and where a tire is available for purchase. The company estimates it has reduced its operating costs by 35% thanks to data streaming's ability to drive efficiency.