Author: Timothy Smith
Source
Key Takeaways
- GitLab shares plunged more than 22% in extended-hours trading after the software infrastructure company issued full-year fiscal 2025 earnings guidance significantly below analysts’ expectations.
- The company said it couldn’t provide a timeline on when it will deconsolidate its JiHu China joint venture.
- The GitLab share price looks set to break below the neckline of an inverse head and shoulders pattern, but may find support around $57.50 from a trendline connecting the formation’s head and right shoulder.
GitLab (GTLB) shares plunged more than 22% in Monday’s extended-hours trading session after the software infrastructure company disappointed investors with weak full-year earnings guidance.
The San Francisco-based company, which operates an open-source repository development platform for coders, said it expects full-year fiscal 2025 adjusted earnings of between 19 and 23 cents per share, with the high end of that forecast coming in significantly below Wall Street’s modeling of 35 cents a share.
For the fiscal 2024 fourth quarter, ending Jan. 31, the company disclosed adjusted earnings of 15 cents per share on revenue of $163.8 million, surpassing analysts’ expectations of 8 cents a share on sales of $157.9 million.
The top line grew 33% in the period, boosted by improved buying behavior across all of GitLab’s customer sizes. The company now has 96 customers with annual reoccurring revenue of over $1 million, up 52% from last year’s corresponding quarter.
“We delivered a strong fourth quarter and continue to see large enterprise customers standardize on GitLab to realize business value,” GitLab’s co-founder and CEO Sid Sijbrandij said in the company’s earnings statement.
GitLab shares have carved out a textbook inverse head and shoulders pattern over the past 18 months—a chart formation that often signals a market bottom. However, the price looks set to break down below the pattern’s neckline after the company’s disappointing earnings outlook.
Amid a news-driven sell-off, investors should keep an eye on the $57.50 level, which may find support from a trendline connecting the formation’s head and right shoulder. It’s worth noting that a close below the right shoulder would invalidate the pattern and could lead to a retest of the stock’s record low at $26.24 set in May last year.
GitLab shares fell 22.1% to $58.01 in after-hours trading Monday.
The comments, opinions, and analyses expressed on Investopedia are for informational purposes only. Read our warranty and liability disclaimer for more info.
As of the date this article was written, the author does not own any of the above securities.
Read the original article on Investopedia.