Better Database Stock: Oracle vs. MongoDB

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Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) first introduced its relational database (the one that can be visualized in tables of rows and columns) in the late 1970s.

While the Oracle database served user needs for decades, the nature of data has changed as computing capabilities have increased. That need prompted MongoDB (NASDAQ: MDB) to introduce Atlas, a non-relational database that can store unstructured data types.

However, Oracle responded by introducing its own non-relational database. It has also pivoted into the fast-growing cloud infrastructure business. Does this response mean that Oracle is still a better software-as-a-service (SaaS) stock for investors, or should they buy MongoDB as it spearheads a major shift in the industry?

The case for Oracle

Given Oracle's longtime presence in the tech industry, it is the more stable stock of the two. As the world's largest database management company, it has long served customers and shareholders with various IT services.

The company derives most of its revenue from its cloud services and license support segment. This includes its database services, applications such as its e-business suite and PeopleSoft enterprise, and its cloud infrastructure services.

While not among the largest cloud companies, it holds about 2% of the cloud market share, according to Statista. Since cloud computing plays a critical role in supporting artificial intelligence (AI), Oracle is unlikely to go into decline and could leverage AI to keep it relevant in the database market.

Cloud Infrastructure Market Share, By Company, Q1 2024
Image source: Statista.

In the first quarter of fiscal 2025 (ended Aug. 31), revenue of $13 billion rose 6% from year-ago levels. This matched the revenue growth rate for fiscal 2024, which was also 6%. Still, because it limited operating expense growth to under 2%, Oracle reported $2.9 billion in net income for fiscal Q1, rising 21% from the same quarter last year.

The company's value proposition has likewise grown, taking its stock higher by approximately 25% over the last year.

However, the stock has become increasingly expensive, with a P/E ratio of 42 and a price-to-sales (P/S) ratio of 8. Even with earnings growth of over 20%, that could leave investors questioning its valuation with a recent history of single-digit revenue growth. But amid the continuing popularity of its database and software capabilities, the stock should hold its own.

Why investors might consider MongoDB

In contrast, MongoDB is comparatively new, existing only since 2007. As previously mentioned, it derives its revenue from its non-relational database, which could upend the database industry as Oracle's traditional database model becomes outdated.