Data Storage Stocks Q3 In Review: MongoDB (NASDAQ:MDB) Vs Peers

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Data Storage Stocks Q3 In Review: MongoDB (NASDAQ:MDB) Vs Peers

The end of an earnings season can be a great time to discover new stocks and assess how companies are handling the current business environment. Let’s take a look at how MongoDB (NASDAQ:MDB) and the rest of the data storage stocks fared in Q3.

Data is the lifeblood of the internet and software in general, and the amount of data created is accelerating. As a result, the importance of storing the data in scalable and efficient formats continues to rise, especially as its diversity and associated use cases expand from analyzing simple, structured datasets to high-scale processing of unstructured data such as images, audio, and video.

The 5 data storage stocks we track reported a strong Q3. As a group, revenues beat analysts’ consensus estimates by 4% while next quarter’s revenue guidance was 0.8% above.

Amidst this news, share prices of the companies have had a rough stretch. On average, they are down 9.4% since the latest earnings results.

MongoDB (NASDAQ:MDB)

Started in 2007 by the team behind Google’s ad platform, DoubleClick, MongoDB offers database-as-a-service that helps companies store large volumes of semi-structured data.

MongoDB reported revenues of $529.4 million, up 22.3% year on year. This print exceeded analysts’ expectations by 6.8%. Overall, it was an exceptional quarter for the company with a solid beat of analysts’ billings estimates and EPS guidance for next quarter exceeding analysts’ expectations.

"MongoDB's third quarter results were significantly ahead of expectations on the top and bottom line, driven by better-than-expected EA performance and 26% Atlas revenue growth. We continue to see success winning new business due to the superiority of MongoDB's developer data platform in addressing a wide variety of mission-critical use cases," said Dev Ittycheria, President and Chief Executive Officer of MongoDB.

MongoDB Total Revenue
MongoDB Total Revenue

MongoDB achieved the biggest analyst estimates beat of the whole group. The company added 125 enterprise customers paying more than $100,000 annually to reach a total of 2,314. Investor expectations, however, were likely higher than Wall Street’s published projections, leaving some wishing for even better results (analysts’ consensus estimates are those published by big banks and advisory firms, not the investors who make buy and sell decisions). The stock is down 33.3% since reporting and currently trades at $233.80.

Is now the time to buy MongoDB? Access our full analysis of the earnings results here, it’s free.

Best Q3: Commvault Systems (NASDAQ:CVLT)

Originally formed in 1988 as part of Bell Labs, Commvault (NASDAQ: CVLT) provides enterprise software used for data backup and recovery, cloud and infrastructure management, retention, and compliance.