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Datadog has been granted admission to the S&P 500 index, one of just 5 companies to make the grade so far in 2025.
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The company's cloud monitoring and security platform is a leader in the field, with a long track record of industry accolades.
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Despite its impressive history of growth, Wall Street still believes the stock is a buy.
The S&P 500 is widely regarded as the most comprehensive gauge of the U.S. stock market, made up of the 500 leading publicly traded companies in the country. Given the extensive reach of the businesses that comprise the index, it is hailed as the most reliable benchmark of overall stock market performance. To be considered for admission to the S&P 500, a company must meet the following criteria:
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Be a U.S.-based company
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Have a market cap of at least $20.5 billion
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Be highly liquid
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Have at least 50% of its outstanding shares available for trading
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Be profitable based on generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) in the most recent quarter
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Be profitable over the preceding four quarters in aggregate
Datadog (NASDAQ: DDOG) is the latest addition to the S&P 500, scheduled to join the benchmark on July 9. That makes it one of only five companies to make the cut so far this year. Since its initial public offering (IPO) in late 2019, Datadog has soundly thrashed the market, generating gains of 315%, compared to just 109% for the S&P 500 (as of this writing). The stock price gains have been fueled by its robust underlying fundamentals, as its revenue has jumped 694% and net income has soared 2,670%.
Yet, despite the stock's impressive performance and the company's strong track record of growth, many believe the runway ahead is long for Datadog. Let's examine the opportunity ahead and why Wall Street considers the stock a strong buy despite its premium valuation.
The digital transformation is ongoing, driven by the continued adoption of cloud computing and the increasing use of artificial intelligence (AI). Many companies are heavily reliant on their digital presence, and they need a way to continually monitor their websites, apps, servers, and other cloud-based systems to ensure they stay up and running.
That's where Datadog comes in. The company's sophisticated monitoring and analytics platform continuously tracks cloud-based business systems, processes millions of data points every hour, and notifies developers of issues before they result in critical downtime. Datadog's software-as-a-service (SaaS) tools go further, getting to the root of the problem to help prevent it from recurring.