Down 88%, This Growth Stock Could Be Set for a Recovery in 2025

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Tech stocks saw a boom year in 2021 as they soared through the tail end of the pandemic. But tech stocks that went public during that year got stuck between a bull and bear market.

Amplitude (NASDAQ: AMPL) is one such example. The software-as-a-service stock, which specializes in digital analytics and digital product optimization, went public in September 2021. The stock initially soared out of the gate on the broader enthusiasm for the software sector and the company's strong growth at the time of its market debut.

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However, like the rest of the software sector, its growth rate rapidly slowed as the economy reopened and businesses focused on other priorities. The stock plunged in late 2021 and 2022, and has remained down since then. Amplitude is now down 88% from its peak shortly after its initial public offering, but signs are emerging of a rebound. Let's take a look at three reasons the stock could jump in 2025.

A coder working on multiple screens.
Image source: Getty Images.

1. Customer churn is finally under control

Part of the reason for the company's struggles over the last few years is that many of its customers, like other software companies experienced, overcommitted to the platform -- and as a result, revenue growth decelerated and remained weak since 2021. However, the company is now past most of those customers' defections, essentially clearing the deck for a growth recovery in 2025.

CEO Spenser Skates said on the earnings call:

... ARR [annual recurring revenue] and revenue reacceleration are both well within our reach. This quarter sets us firmly on that path. While we are making progress, there is still plenty of work to do. We are past the significant majority of overbought to optimization contracts, but churn is still too high.

Annual recurring revenue in the quarter was up 8% to $298 million, slightly ahead of reported quarterly revenue, which was up 6% to $75.2 million -- a positive sign for accelerating growth. The company continues to expand its base of large customers; those with annual recurring revenue of at least $100,000 were up 13% to 567.

Amplitude's revenue growth figure was artificially suppressed by the post-pandemic customer churn and as that disappears, its growth rate should return to double digits. As one indicator of that, its remaining performance obligations (RPO, a proxy for backlog) was up 21% in the quarter to $286.6 million, and long-term RPO (contracts greater than 12 months) jumped 49% to $75.5 million. The company said this was the result of closer relationships with its customers and investments in the enterprise segment, meaning larger customers.