MongoDB shares surge 12% on guidance boost

MongoDB shares surge 12% on guidance boost


Dev Ittycheria, CEO, MongoDB.

Scott Mlyn | CNBC

MongoDB shares jumped as much as 16% in extended trading on Thursday after the database software maker reported healthy fiscal second-quarter earnings and pushed up full-year guidance.

Here’s how the company did against LSEG consensus:

  • Earnings per share: 70 cents adjusted vs. 49 cents expected
  • Revenue: $478.1 million vs. $464.1 million

MongoDB’s revenue grew 13% year over year in the quarter that ended July 31, according to a statement. The quarter’s net loss came to $54.5 million, or 74 cents per share, compared with $37.6 million, or 53 cents per share, in the same quarter a year ago.

“We believe we are incredibly well positioned to help customers incorporate generative AI into their business and modernize their legacy application estate,” CEO Dev Ittycheria said in the statement.

The company’s Atlas cloud database service enjoyed modestly better consumption than expected, he said on a conference call with analysts.

In the fiscal first quarter, Atlas consumption growth slowed as clients observed more challenging economic conditions, and usage in the fiscal second quarter implied that the climate did not change, Ittycheria said.

“We generally have not seen the macro environment impact our ability to win new business, and that was true in Q2 as well,” Ittycheria said. “We realized that this is different from what you hear from some other software vendors.”

On Thursday Ash Kulkarni, CEO of search software maker Elastic, said the volume of client commitments it closed in its fiscal first quarter was lower than expected. That stock was down 23% after hours.

With respect to guidance, MongoDB called for fiscal third-quarter adjusted earnings of 65 to 68 cents per share on $493.0 million to $497.0 million in revenue. Analysts surveyed by LSEG had expected 60 cents in adjusted earnings per share on $478.8 million in revenue.

Management nudged up their fiscal 2025 forecast. MongoDB now sees $2.33 to $2.47 per share in adjusted earnings, with $1.92 billion to $1.93 billion in revenue. That’s up from the May guidance of $2.15 to $2.30 in adjusted earnings per share and $1.88 billion to $1.90 billion in revenue. Analysts had predicted $2.26 per share in adjusted earnings, along with $1.90 billion in revenue.

Excluding the after-hours move, MongoDB shares were down almost 40% on the year, while the S&P 500 index has gained 17% in the same period.

This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

WATCH: MongoDB on data center development, the AI boom, and cloud spending trends

MongoDB on data center development, the AI boom, and cloud spending trends



Source

Rocket maker Firefly Aerospace files to go public under ticker FLY
Technology

Rocket maker Firefly Aerospace files to go public under ticker FLY

Firefly Aerospace CEO Jason Kim sits for an interview at the Firefly Aerospace mission operations center in Leander, Texas, on July 9, 2025. Sergio Flores | Reuters Rocket maker Firefly Aerospace filed for an initial public offering on Friday, with plans to trade under the ticker symbol “FLY” on the Nasdaq. Firefly’s planned offering comes […]

Read More
Robinhood is up 160% this year, but several obstacles are ahead
Technology

Robinhood is up 160% this year, but several obstacles are ahead

Robinhood stock hit an all-time high Friday as the financial services platform continued to rip higher this year, along with bitcoin and other crypto stocks. Robinhood, up more than 160% in 2025, hit an intraday high above $101 before pulling back and closing slightly lower. The reversal came after a Bloomberg report that JPMorgan plans […]

Read More
Bill Gates says Trump’s cuts to USAID are devastating: ‘It’s not too late to reverse them’
Technology

Bill Gates says Trump’s cuts to USAID are devastating: ‘It’s not too late to reverse them’

Bill Gates speaks with Reuters during an interview in New York City, U.S., May 8, 2025. Mike Segar | Reuters Bill Gates, the philanthropist and Microsoft co-founder, on Friday said it’s not too late to reinstate international aid funding that President Donald Trump cut off. The Trump administration placed staff members at the U.S. Agency […]

Read More