Motley Fool Money - Buy High, Buy Higher
Episode Date: September 2, 2025It’s never too late to make the right investing decision. Today on Motley Fool Money, Rick Munarriz, with analysts Tim Beyers and Jason Hall dig into a document database developer and a cybersecurit...y leader that they believe can keep beating the market. There’s also a short-form look at three long-term opportunities with an improv game that has a stock market bent. They unpack: - A stock that soared 44% last week, but can keep moving higher in the long run. - A cybersecurity leader that has bounced back after a whopper of a blunder last summer. - The bullish case for three stocks, one point at a time. Companies discussed: MDB, CRWD, S, MELI, DUOL, WRBY Host: Rick Munarriz, Tim Beyers, Jason Hall Producer: Anand Chokkavelu Engineer: Dan Boyd Disclosure: Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. The Motley Fool and its affiliates (collectively, “TMF”) do not endorse, recommend, or verify the accuracy or completeness of the statements made within advertisements. TMF is not involved in the offer, sale, or solicitation of any securities advertised herein and makes no representations regarding the suitability, or risks associated with any investment opportunity presented. Investors should conduct their own due diligence and consult with legal, tax, and financial advisors before making any investment decisions. TMF assumes no responsibility for any losses or damages arising from this advertisement. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Ohio is high in the middle, but some states of investing can be high in both ends.
I promise this will make sense soon because Motley Fool Money starts now.
I'm Rick Minars, and today I'm joined by fellow analyst Jason Hall and Rule Breakers' lead analyst, Tim Byers.
We're going to take a tug on a security stock blanket.
We're also going to play an improv game with three stocks we think are worth a closer look.
But first, do the naysayers have a Rongo decree when it comes to MongoDB?
MongoDB was one of the last week's biggest gainers.
Shares of the document database platform operator soared 44% last week after posting well-received financial results.
As investors, sometimes it's instinctive to sell into strength.
If you were on the sidelines, it's easy to move on to a different playing field.
Tim, you don't think it's too late to get in on the MongoDB story.
What's your take on its latest results and what it means for Motleyful money listeners?
Yeah, I got three words for you, Rick.
Growth is accelerating.
Revenue from the cloud-based Atlas database grew 29% in the second quarter.
That is impressive. For those who don't know what Atlas is, essentially think of the database
that you could install in your own company, but you access it via the cloud. That's Atlas.
You can have it in any of your cloud hosting environments, and it is growing increasingly popular.
In fact, the company added 2,800 net new customers during the quarter, and that set a new record.
one quarter after Mongo broke a six-year record with 2,600 net new ads.
So the big Mo is with Mongo.
My apologies, I just see Rick, and I start, you know, I just start riffing.
I can't help myself.
But if there is a story to key in on here, it's that the unit economics are getting better.
Revenue growing 24% while operating expenses only grew 15% is a pretty good formula for long-term success.
I mean, you could see it in other areas of the business. So, for example, cash flow return on
investment where we take the cash flow from operations and compare it to all of the cash available
for investment, including all of the debt and all the equity. That grew to 8.96% of the trailing
12 months, and that was up from 5.26% in fiscal 2025. So that's still not good enough. That's not
above the cost of capital yet, but it's moving in the right direction. And the more we see this
kind of efficient growth, the greater the premium MongoDB stock will command. Nothing is assured,
but I really like the direction of this company. Yeah, it's hard to argue about what's going on with
the business itself. The unit economics are better, generating positive free cash flow.
They can live off their own balance sheet as they continue to grow. So you take the growth
accelerating and the metrics behind the growth. It's better growth, right? You love to see that.
but one of my biggest concerns, Tim, when we see a stock shoot up 40% in a single trading session,
is investors buy and then be able to hold what is assuredly going to be a really volatile
investment in the months and quarters that follow. So sales outstanding sold short has climbed
all year coming into this report, and it hits 6% of shares short right before earning. So
probably a short squeeze playing some role here in the stock going up. Why does that matter?
Because it means that bears were buying the shares to close,
their short positions, not necessarily just a bunch of bulls that are a long company. So I'm curious,
right? We're trying to be long-term and mindful of that. Does that really temper your near-term outlook?
Or do you just think this is a case of an excellent business that's really starting to show its ability
to do those good things on the business side, trading for what should prove a good price for investors
multiple years from now, no matter what happens in the months or quarters ahead?
I mean, it's both. I think we say it's both. The short squeeze,
is probably a recognition that the business is improving faster than bearish investors expected.
And so they fled. And now they're probably going to reestablish short positions again.
And that could, you know, over the short term. I mean, Jason, you're right.
That could push down the stock price in the short term. I think you can expect continued volatility.
I think it would be naive to say, don't expect volatility. It's just going to go up and to the right.
That's just unlikely to happen. And there is.
still improvement needed. I mean, let's be clear about that too. MongoDB is still unprofitable.
But the trajectory is looking really good. And something that Rick, you can speak to,
but something we really value at rule breakers is this maximum, maximum, not maximum, or maybe maximum,
in this case, I hope. But the maximum is, acceleration tends to lead to more acceleration.
Or, as David Gardner likes to put it, winners keep on winning. So,
Most investors can buy slowly as they follow the story because this will be so volatile, Jason.
But yeah, I think it's a fair criticism.
For me, it's one that I would like to build upon, but I like building slowly in these sorts of situations.
Perfect.
So you won't see it in a lot of Wall Street manuals, but buy high, buy higher might be the best
forwards of market advice for long-term investors.
Coming up next, can lightning crowd strike twice?
The cybersecurity specialist is a compounder in more ways than just its corporate moniker,
but Jason thinks a smaller rival bears watching.
Stay close.
We're going to play ball with crowd strike.
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Friday, July 19, 2024.
CrowdStrike didn't die that day, but it did skip a beat.
A faulty update to its Falcon sensor security software shut down millions of windows-fueled systems.
Airports, offices, hospitals were in limbo for more than an hour before CrowdStrike put in the fix.
But the damage was already done to CrowdStrike reputation and to its stock price.
Shares of CrowdStrike would go on to plunge 23% over two trading days.
It was a rough time to be a Crowdstack shareholder, but history is kind.
The shares are up 24% in the nearly 14 months since the day before the outage,
up more than 60% since where the stock closed two days later.
Is chaos a ladder or a blatter?
Jason, you think CrowdStrike is doing well,
but another player might be the better investment in the growing market for cybersecurity solutions.
Let's talk about it.
Yeah, so just to kind of build on what's happened since CrowdStrike reported
there are since that outage. In the quarters that it's reported for business that happened after
the outage happened, there's been issues. A company clearly has had to work harder to regain
trust with existing customers and had to fight harder to win new business. Its margins took a hit.
They're still down. Cash flows have weakened, and some of its growth-focused metrics shrank.
One in particular, Netnew ARR. The measures the dollar value of net new business on an annual basis,
came in lower in the quarters that it's reported since after the outage.
Now, sure, the company's still growing, but weaker margins, slowing growth, they don't
lie. This is especially true. If we look at Sentinel 1, which is Crowdstrike's much,
much smaller Pure Play competitor in the AI-powered endpoint security space, we get some
contacts. Security 1 reported strong and accelerating growth and higher growth rates than CrowdStrike.
Some indication that, again, the end market certainly healthy and growing.
and further supporting that CrowdStrike is not exactly struggling,
certainly having to work a lot harder to win,
and having to sacrifice some profitability in some cases.
Now, this past quarter, we got just last week,
CrowdStrike showed a little more life.
That net new ARR number came in higher year over year.
That's the first time that's happened since the outage.
It was a record level, and it does look like its margins have at least stabilized
and on an adjusted basis to pretty exceptional margins.
On a gap basis, they're still good, but they've deteriorated more than the adjusted numbers make it seem.
I mean, it is interesting. And the recovery has been pretty remarkable. I do concede that, Jason. I think it's been interesting to watch it.
But how much do you think that net new ARR number is due to selling more into the existing customer base versus selling to new customers?
And the reason I ask this is reputationalally, they took a hit, right?
And so it would follow that if the recovery really is working well, then those customers that
decided to stick it out.
If those customers that stick it out are spending more, that would be a pretty darn
bullish sign.
Now, obviously, CrowdStrike needs a mix of both.
We do know this.
But they have spent years telling the street to pay attention to this metric, you know,
hey, what's the proportion of the customer base that buys five, six, seven, or even eight plus
modules in the implementation? Today, the company says that I've just pulled this from the latest
quarterly deck. 60% of customers generate at least 100K and ARR use eight or more of these
CrowdStrike modules. And they've got more than 20 of them. I think it may even be more
than 25. So let's just be generous and say it's about a third. It's a handicap it for me here, Jason.
and where they were reputationally, what they're trying to do now, will more or less than 50%
of crowd strikes growth over the next five years come from growing these massive customers
from within or from winning massive multi-model, or should I say, module deals up front?
I think overwhelmingly it's going to come from existing customers for a couple reasons.
Number one, this is the top dog in the space.
It has by far the lion's share of the market already.
Its growth rates are slower, but its revenue dollar growth is substantially larger than
than Sentinel One.
I mean, it's basically adding about every quarter its new revenue, just its new revenue,
is equivalent to a Sentinel one quarter of total revenue, right?
So that's how big they are.
So we have a maturing industry.
We have the top dog in the industry.
I just don't think they can find enough net new business to generate that.
I think one of the things with the slowing growth rates is probably some new customers that are coming to it
that are probably starting small.
And they're going to be adding more modules over time as they find that it is the best platform
and any concerns they have about issues like the outage that happened last year,
kind of start to fade into the background.
So I think overwhelmingly it's going to come from those existing relationships.
I mean, you've mentioned Sentinel 1 here. I've looked at this company. It is an interesting company,
and I do wonder, is there a scenario where the lamb eats the lion? And I know that sounds
utterly absurd, but Sentinel 1, I mean, they have survived in this market. And they've survived
in this market for quite a long time. I have to imagine there's something special about this
business. And maybe it's the AI imbued threat detection. Maybe that's a slightly better alternative.
is there something you've seen in looking at the business that makes you think Sentinel One is special?
Well, Synthena 1, their purple product is the newest branding that they're using for a lot of their AI-driven things.
A couple things that highlight is the fact that they play well with others, which I think is important,
and how this is more kind of a tech-driven, AI-driven product and less people-driven,
which is interesting. You think about CrowdStrike, that doesn't seem like it makes sense.
But if you listen to what Sincinnacle 1, what they say,
Maybe that's the case. Some similarities. You have founders behind the business. Yeah, I think you've got
a little bit deeper experience in cybersecurity with Crowdstrike, but the founder and CEO of Sentinel One
owns a quarter of the business. So this is someone who's been deeply involved as well. We love
those aspects of winning businesses that have the culture that comes with those founders that believe
in the mission of what they're trying to do. I don't know if this is as much a case of like the lamb eating
the Lions, so to speak, maybe more like a Pepsi Coke kind of situation where it's just such a
gigantic market that you can have multiple winners, which isn't always the case.
You know, we look at the history of a lot of rule-breaking businesses as investments.
There's been one that's emerged that has disrupted, has become the top dog and has turned
into the rulemaker.
I think cybersecurity is so big that this, again, could be the Pepsi to the Coke here.
And here's the interesting thing about it.
If you look at the longer-term history, generally Pepsi is actually.
actually been the better investment than Coke. I think you think about valuation with these two
stocks right now. Right now, in Crowdstrike, you're paying a similar multiple to what you were
paying for the stock back when it was growing closer to 30% a year. It's growing at 20% a year now,
and you're still paying for those multiples. For about a third that valuation, you can buy
the lamb here that's growing at a higher rate and certainly trades for a much more compelling
evaluation. My money is still on Crowdstrike, which is more than doubled the S&P 500 this year,
which brings us back to buy high, buy higher. When we get back from the break, we'll turn
due diligence into an improvisational comedy art form. Can I get a suggestion? Stay with us.
We're going to turn playtime into pay time.
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I've been a fool for what is now 30 years.
I've also been helping run Miami's longest running improv comedy theater for the past 13 years.
I want to bring these two passions together now.
Yes, and is a core principle of improv. You take something simple that your scene partner gives you,
you build it up together. You bring a brick, not a cathedral. Jason, Tim, I want us to take a stock
that we're passionate about, followed by simple bullish thesis. We'll then go around the room,
yes-anding, the positives, then, well, yes-but, some potential concerns. And when we're out of
bullish or bearish bricks, one of us will just say an scene, and we'll move on to the next stock.
Jason, let's start with you. Mercado Libre is the dominant first mover.
and top dog in both e-commerce and fintech in the biggest economies in Latin America.
Yes, and Latin America is earlier in the migration cycle for banking, fintech, and e-commerce
than the more advanced U.S. market. Yes, and payments in particular is a problem in the Latin
American market that Mercado Libre makes this simple and digital is crucial.
Yes, and Mexico in particular is one of the most exciting, largest economies in Latin America
and Mercado Libre is really early in its journey in that country.
Yes, and advertising revenue rose 38% in its latest quarter.
This isn't a needle mover from Mercado Libre at this point,
but it's an obvious growth opportunity given all the eyeballs it attracts.
Yes, and we are only just starting to see how big the payments processing
part of Mercado Libre's business can be,
and they've managed to reduce their risk materially that,
Mercado Libre can be not a bank, but kind of a really slick payments provider and not get caught up
with consumers at bad credit is pretty good. Yes, but if you look at its financial results over the
past three or four years, that lending business is the thing that is driving most of the earnings
growth of the company has generated. Move fast, break through things works great when you're building a
tech platform, not so much when you're letting other people use your money.
Yes, but, and not just that the lending business, also the credit cards, it's putting a riskier
sprice profile on Mercado Libre right now. Yes, but I'd have to say that the e-commerce
business, as great as that has been, it is still the core business for Mercado Libre,
but you have to figure that that is a business where you're going to see a lot more competition.
Ricardo Libre hasn't faced a lot of competition yet.
The growth has been kind of unencumbered, but that competition is coming.
And seen.
All right, I'll go next.
Duolingo is a popular language learning platform that's taking the world by storm.
Yes, and it has some of the best unit economics I've ever seen.
It's not uncommon to see a dollar of sales and marketing expense produce $7 or more of new revenue.
Yes, and the world is becoming smaller.
with more people traveling to places that speak different languages.
Yes, and daily active users is growing faster than daily monthly users,
a sign of improving engagement.
Yes, and the AI threat that we all thought, well, maybe not all,
but a lot of us thought would really hurt Duolingo actually became a strength.
They judo through it into their own AI that has been a material driver of growth
over the last several quarters.
Yes, and those of us have.
us that remember trying to use CD-ROMs in our laptops to learn languages are finding out that
it's much easier to do it in a cloud-based app ecosystem.
Yes, but Google Translate, a recent update may have Duolingo in its crosshairs.
Yes, but in addition to that, you have all of the large language models doing language
tutoring for people on demand, and that is a pretty interesting and possibly threatening substitute.
Yes, but like health and fitness and weight loss and so many other categories,
learning a foreign language often proves to be ethereal and a short-lived, exciting venture
that doesn't prove to be sustainable.
And seen.
All right, let me start us off.
Let's talk about Warby Parker.
Warby Parker is revolutionizing the market for developing and selling fashionable prescription
eyewear.
Yes, and this is definitely an industry that is ripe for disruption with one giant player and not a lot else.
Yes, and it's teaming up with Google to roll out its first entry in the AI glasses market.
Yes, and this is a company that is doing an incredible amount of growth through traditional stores,
and those stores are highly profitable with 35% for wall EBITDA margins.
Yes, and it hardly operates.
in any market outside of North America right now.
Yes, and it's a mix of e-commerce and small boutique stores help broaden its reach and
crystallize the brand.
Yes, but Warby Parker is a very small player in a very big market.
There's roughly 300 stores now in a market where there's somewhere on the order of
45,000 optical locations, including at some of your favorite big box discount stores.
Yes, but the relationship so many of the people in the eyewear profession have are pretty deep with the biggest player.
And change management is the hardest thing to do if you're going to disrupt an industry.
Yes, but it's still trading below the $40 reference price it hit the market at when it went public four years ago.
And seen.
Well done.
Tim and Jason, thank you for indulging me today.
Let's form an improv troupe someday.
Thanks, Rick.
Let's do it.
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and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against,
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For Tim Byers, Jason Holland, the entire Motley Fool money team,
I'm Rick Minars.
May your days be sunny and your life, Motley Fool Money.
