MongoDB delivered fourth-quarter results that exceeded Wall Street expectations, yet investors responded with sharp selling. Shares tumbled 24% during after-hours trading Monday following disappointing first-quarter guidance and the announcement that two top sales executives would be leaving the organization.
The fourth-quarter performance showed strength across key metrics. The company reported revenue of $695.1 million, representing a 27% year-over-year increase and surpassing the consensus forecast of $670.1 million. Adjusted earnings per share of $1.65 exceeded Wall Street’s $1.48 projection and marked an improvement from the $1.28 reported in the prior-year period.
MongoDB, Inc., MDB
Chief Executive CJ Desai characterized the quarter as robust, highlighting “broad-based demand across our product lines.”
However, the company’s forward-looking projections painted a less optimistic picture. MongoDB’s first-quarter adjusted EPS outlook of $1.15 to $1.19 fell below the Street’s $1.20 expectation. The revenue forecast of $659 million to $664 million aligned closely with the $662 million consensus view.
Shares declined to $247.30 during after-hours activity.
The departure announcement of two senior leaders intensified selling pressure. Both Cedric Pech, who serves as president of field operations, and Paul Capombassis, the chief revenue officer, are exiting the organization. MongoDB characterized these changes as part of a “planned” leadership transition.
Erica Volini will assume the newly created role of chief customer officer, beginning March 3. According to the company, she offers substantial expertise working with large enterprise clients and driving partner-led expansion strategies.
Market participants typically view sales leadership transitions at software firms with caution — these executives directly influence revenue generation and customer acquisition.
Chief Financial Officer Mike Berry provided commentary on Atlas, the company’s multicloud database offering. He projected Atlas would achieve 21% to 23% growth during the current fiscal year and reiterated “continued confidence” in the platform’s trajectory.
Berry acknowledged a forecasting challenge, however. MongoDB’s consumption-based pricing model creates reduced visibility for the latter half of the fiscal year, making precise revenue projections more difficult.
Regarding the non-Atlas business segment, which encompasses self-managed commercial database solutions, Berry described recent performance trends as “healthy.” Management indicated it would incorporate only closed deals or those with substantial closing probability into its guidance.
For the complete fiscal year, MongoDB projects revenue between $2.86 billion and $2.9 billion. Wall Street analysts had anticipated $2.9 billion. The company’s full-year adjusted EPS guidance range of $5.75 to $5.93 exceeded the $5.69 analyst consensus.
Before Monday’s after-hours decline, MDB shares had appreciated 25% over the trailing twelve months. The stock had already retreated 23% during 2026 prior to the extended-hours selloff.
Erica Volini officially joined as chief customer officer on March 3, 2026.
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