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Is Hortonworks Being Unjustly Punished for Cloudera's Sins?

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Hadoop, along with its related architectures, is open-source technology that enables the processing of vast amounts of data. While the technology is relatively new, the emerging industry surrounding it could be big: IDC estimates the markets for dynamic data management, content analytics software, and advanced analytics software will reach $22.1 billion by 2020.

Also enticing for investors: There are currently only four players that sell these specific big data tools, two "pure plays" -- Cloudera (NYSE: CLDR) and Hortonworks (NASDAQ: HDP) -- private company MapR, and Amazon's Elastic MapReduce. Over the past 12 months, Cloudera and Hortonworks' revenues were just under $400 million and $300 million, respectively, meaning there could be a very long runway ahead.

HDP Revenue (TTM) Chart
HDP Revenue (TTM) Chart

HDP Revenue (TTM) data by YCharts

Recently, however, a curious thing has happened: Cloudera's revenue has slowed, dragging down not only its own stock, but also that of competitor Hortonworks. In fact, at the time of this writing, Hortonworks stock is down roughly 13% so far this year while Cloudera's stock is down about 6%. This is despite Hortonworks continuing to post strong numbers in 2018. Is there something wrong in the big data market, or is Hortonworks being unjustly punished for taking market share?

Cloudera underwhelms

Ever since its IPO last year, Cloudera seemed to have been the favored company. Cloudera historically wrote proprietary software on top of the open-source Hadoop framework for enterprise-specific applications, while Hortonworks was more of a "pure" open-source company, selling services and support subscriptions to help data scientists implement the technology. The market has long preferred Cloudera's model, granting it a higher price-to-sales ratio than Hortonworks (both companies are unprofitable so a price-to-earnings ratio is not available), even though both play in the same market.

I actually prefer Hortonworks' business model, and recent results have gone Hortonworks' way. As the calendar turned to 2018, Cloudera's revenue growth rate significantly decelerated, going from the low 40% range all the way to 29% in the past quarter, while Hortonworks has continued to grow strongly, notching 41% revenue growth in the first quarter.

HDP Revenue (Quarterly YoY Growth) Chart
HDP Revenue (Quarterly YoY Growth) Chart

HDP Revenue (Quarterly YoY Growth) data by YCharts

Cloudera has admitted to having to refocus its sales model. On the last earnings call, management said it hired three new general managers and would focus on selling only to customers that were likely to greatly expand usage over time. While the company used to list how many Global 8000 customers it had, it has stopped doing so, defining its new addressable market as about 5,000 enterprises -- a list that is perpetually shifting.