MongoDB plummets 20% as weak outlook overshadows strong quarterly results

FAN Editor

Dev Ittycheria, CEO of MongoDB

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

MongoDB shares cratered more than 20% after the database software maker shared weak guidance that signaled a slowdown in growth.

For fiscal 2026, the company said it expects adjusted earnings to range between $2.44 to $2.62 per share and revenue of $2.24 billion to $2.28. Analysts were expecting EPS of $3.34 and $2.32 billion in revenue.

The weak guidance stems from slower growth in the company’s Atlas cloud-based database service. The revenue projection would imply 12.7% growth, the slowest for the company going back to its 2017 stock market debut.

Finance chief Srdjan Tanjga said during an earnings call that the company is seeing slower-than-expected growth in new applications harnessing its Atlas cloud-based database service. However, MongoDB is beefing up hiring and going after deals with larger companies.

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For the fiscal first quarter, MongoDB forecast 63 cents to 67 cents in adjusted earnings per share on $524 million to $529 million in revenue. Analysts polled by LSEG had expected EPS of 62 cents and revenue of $526.8 million.

Citing MongoDB’s weak outlook and slowdown in growth, Wells Fargo analyst Andrew Nowinski downgraded shares to equal weight and lowered his price target.

“With a smaller pool of multi-year deals, we believe it will be difficult to significantly outperform expectations in FY26 and therefore expect shares to remain range-bound,” he wrote.

Read more of Nowinski’s analysis here.

MongoDB’s outlook offset stronger-than-expected fiscal fourth-quarter earnings. The company reported adjusted earnings of $1.28 per share, excluding items, on $548 million in revenue. Analysts polled by LSEG had anticipated EPS of 66 cents and $520 million in sales. Revenue rose 20% from a year ago.

MongoDB gained 1,900 customers in the quarter, reflecting a total of 54,500.

— CNBC’s Jordan Novet contributed reporting.

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