MongoDB, Inc. (MDB): Among Stocks with Potential to Explode in 2025

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We recently published a list of 10 Stocks with Potential to Explode in 2025. In this article, we are going to take a look at where MongoDB, Inc. (NASDAQ:MDB) stands against other stocks with potential to explode in 2025.

The recent pullback in US equities can be a sign of an aging bull market and a reaction to developments happening around trade policy, as per Jurrien Timmer, Director of Global Macro for Fidelity Management & Research Company. Corrections and volatility are the factors investors need to consider to capture any sort of long-term market returns. The current volatility has got many investors worried regarding the prospects of losing their gains.

Pullbacks Are Part and Parcel

As of March 11, the S&P 500 Index declined 9.3% from its all-time closing high it touched in mid-February, says Timmer. According to him, the market has seen a decline of 5% or more in 93% of calendar years since the year 1980, and it has suffered a 10% or more drop in 47% over the same calendar years. Yet, its average calendar-year return over a similar period has been ~13.3%. This means that pullbacks are quite common in the equity markets. The broader market has seen recovery from every one of those periods and has delivered healthy long-term returns.

READ ALSO: 7 Best Stocks to Buy For Long-Term and 8 Cheap Jim Cramer Stocks to Invest In.

Expert’s Views on Current Market Dynamics

Timmer opines that bull markets generally take place when there are expectations that the news can’t get any worse. The markets are forward-looking, meaning that stocks always showcase the expectations regarding the future. Even if the current news is not favorable, if investors think that tomorrow’s news will be less bad, the prices might start to increase. In this stage, the market continues to increase despite a decline in profits or earnings. This reflects that the higher P/E ratios have been fueling the market. After 2 – 4 quarters, the profits start to show up. Now, as the bull market matures, earnings growth tends to take charge, with the PE ratios beginning to decline.

As per Timmer, the market investors are in this environment. The earnings growth remains in the double digits, but since investors are getting into the later innings of the bull market, the P/E ratios have now been stretched. The broader market is slightly more prone to fluctuations or volatility. Apart from these trends, the market continues to process the impact of current trade policy shifts. Overall, Timmer said that across all different cycles, booms, crises, and busts, the markets eventually recovered and touched new all-time highs.