5 Reasons to Buy Okta Stock and Never Sell

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In the age of cloud computing, verifying a person's identity is paramount. Mountains of highly sensitive data are stored on servers throughout the world, and if the wrong eyes end up seeing that data there can be serious consequences.

That's where Okta (NASDAQ: OKTA) comes into play. Last month I bought shares of the company because I believe its Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) business model and track record of helping manage identity make it a compelling investment. These five reasons dig deeper into why that's the case.

Magnifying Glass on digital fingerprint background
Magnifying Glass on digital fingerprint background

Image source: Getty Images

1. Incredible growth

One of the quickest ways to see that companies are excited about what Okta is offering up is to peek at the company's growth. As you can see, its customer rosters are swelling.

Chart showing growth in Okta customers by year
Chart showing growth in Okta customers by year

Chart by author. Data source: SEC filings. $100K+ customers for 2014 not available.

Just as important as the growth in total customers, the number of those with annual contract values (ACVs) of over $100,000 has jumped even faster. Over the last four years, the total number of such clients has grown by 60% per year.

What happens when you attract so many customers and they spend so much money with you? Subscription revenue growth that looks like this:

Chart showing subscription revenue by year at Okta
Chart showing subscription revenue by year at Okta

Chart by author. Data source: SEC filings.

2. Two widening moats

None of this growth, however, would be worth it for investors if we didn't know Okta could protect its business over the long-haul. That's where evaluating the company's moat comes into play.

Okta's most powerful moat is high switching costs. Over time, Okta's customers come to rely on the service to provide identity and access to information services; entire company workforces are streamlined through the system, as well as digital services' customers. When companies have gotten familiar with Okta and come to rely on it to solve all of these problems, they aren't too excited about switching. Not only would leaving Okta be expensive (think of all the data to migrate!), it would also be a headache. There'd be a lot of relearning and trouble-shooting along the way. No one wants to deal with that.

We can see if those high switching costs are working by viewing Okta's dollar-based retention rate (DBRR). This measures the amount of subscription revenue the same cohort of companies pay year after year. If the DBRR is at or near 100%, that's a sign customers are staying with Okta -- and it has high switching costs. If they are well above that figure, the moat is widening.

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

DBRR

129%

120%

123%

121%

120%

Data source: SEC filings.