Is MongoDB Stock a Buy Now?

In This Article:

Shares of database company MongoDB (NASDAQ: MDB) were once a highflier, exceeding $500 earlier this year. But that changed after the company announced results for its fiscal first quarter, ended April 30.

Management noted a slowdown in revenue growth and reduced its guidance for the current fiscal year. MongoDB stock promptly plunged, eventually reaching a 52-week low of $212.74 in August.

But on Aug. 29, the company reported results for its fiscal second quarter, ended July 31, and after that, shares began climbing.

Does this turn of events mean MongoDB stock is now a buy? Let's dive into where its business is today with an eye toward assessing whether the stock is a worthwhile long-term investment.

Details behind MongoDB's crash

Evaluating the stock includes understanding the business conditions that caused management to cut revenue guidance earlier this year. One of the key factors involved new customers.

MongoDB typically sees new clients ramp up use of its services over time, referred to as the customers' "workload." This is an important revenue driver because the company charges based on how much a client uses its platform. However, in the first quarter, new customers exhibited slow workload growth.

As a result, management reduced its fiscal 2025 revenue guidance from a minimum of $1.9 billion to $1.88 billion. Anytime a company reduces guidance, it raises concerns among investors.

Adding to this is the fact MongoDB isn't profitable. It's common for tech companies to operate at a loss for years as they pour profits into pursuing rapid business growth. But that expansion seemed to be ending for MongoDB when it cut its revenue guidance, resulting in a sell-off of shares.

The road to recovery

Management took action, changing the incentive structure for its sales team to emphasize the acquisition of enterprise customers.

These large businesses bring higher growth potential. According to CEO Dev Ittycheria, "Incremental investments in large accounts have disproportionate returns in terms of workload acquisition and subsequent account growth."

Now for MongoDB's fiscal second-quarter results. Revenue rose 13% year over year to $478.1 million as its cloud-based Atlas platform experienced better-than-expected use. Atlas income increased 27% year over year to $339.7 million, which is a positive sign since the product accounted for 71% of total second-quarter revenue.

And the company exited the second quarter with a healthy balance sheet. Assets totaled $3.1 billion with $1.3 billion of that in cash and equivalents. Total liabilities were $1.8 billion.