In this piece, we will take a look at the 11 best cloud stocks to buy according to analysts.
The surge in internet speed and usage has created a plethora of new industries in its wake such as eCommerce, social media, and online streaming. On the business side, one of the biggest beneficiaries of advances in communication is cloud computing. Cloud computing in its simplest terms is the use of computing resources virtually, where companies host expensive hardware and data servers and sell this capacity to customers.
Naturally, it’s unsurprising that some of the biggest companies in the world either directly offer cloud computing software products or the hardware that powers these systems. In fact, out of the five most valuable companies in the world in terms of market capitalization, three have leading cloud computing divisions (Google Cloud, Amazon AWS, and Microsoft Azure) while the other is a hardware company that is Wall Street’s AI darling.
In fact, cloud computing is so valuable that research from Bloomberg shows that AWS alone can reach a whopping valuation of $3 trillion. To wit, only the world’s biggest companies have crossed this metric, so this figure shows the potential that’s present in this industry. This isn’t the only time that a trillion dollar figure has been chosen to describe cloud computing’s potential. One of the biggest benefits of cloud computing is that it allows businesses to save on costs by outsourcing their hardware procurements.
These benefits will be worth quite a bit as research from McKinsey shows that by 2030, they can enable cloud computing companies to capture up to $1 trillion in run rate operating income (EBITDA) from Fortune 500 firms. Run rate EBITDA is a key metric in cloud valuation, as it projects current earnings into the future to make an estimate of value. Another mention of the enticing trillion dollar valuation comes in the form of market research. This suggests that the global cloud computing market was worth $484 billion in 2022, and from 2023, it can grow at a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 14.1% to be worth $1.5 trillion.
Looking at these estimates, it’s clear that there’s at least some value in cloud computing stocks. The next question to ask is, how does one pick out the right cloud computing stocks? On this front, there are several valuation metrics that can be relied upon. Standard models such as the discounted cash flow (DCF) often do not capture the potential of cloud computing stocks since there are few reasonable estimates to measure their growth. These stocks differ from traditional companies since they don’t have to fork out massive capital to buy equipment and prime themselves for growth. Instead, software development is a margin heavy business with low development costs and stable, recurring revenue. This makes management focus on growing market share, and since this also leads to higher operating costs, many cloud computing stocks remain unprofitable for years.
The direct implication of this fact on valuation is that cloud computing stocks cannot be valued by traditional metrics such as the price to earnings (P/E) ratio. Instead, the enterprise value to sales is used as it captures the market and debt value minus cash and compares its scale with the revenue that the firm generates. Investors also have to nevertheless measure the ‘value’ a firm is generating even though it’s unprofitable. This is captured through the free cash flow. One of the most well known cloud computing stock valuation metrics is the Rule of 40. This combines the FCF with the revenue growth rate to evaluate the margins that such firms achieve. The logic is that the revenue growth rate plus the FCF margin (FCF divided by revenue) should be greater than 40 for a cloud computing firm to be sustainable. Combining these together, the ideal cloud computing stock should have a high Rule of 40 scores but a low EV/Sales, as this principle shows that a sustainable business is available at a cheap entry price.
Looking at the data, the EV/Sales multiple varies with a firm’s growth rate, and those with higher growth naturally command a higher multiple. For instance, as of recent market close, data shows that stocks with a Rule of 40 score greater than 40 and a revenue growth rate greater than 30% (Category 1) have a median EV/Sales multiple of 12.5x. On the flip side, those that fall below both of these have a median multiple of 5.1x (Category 2). Crucially, though, the category of stocks that have a growth rate higher than 30% but a Rule of 40 scores lower than 40 (Category 3) have a median EV/Sales ratio of 12.2x in today’s market which implies that investors are valuing growth more than profitability.
Why do we say “today’s market”? Well, when we compare this to the era of low interest and inflation rates in, say October 2021, the picture is different. Back then, Category 1 firms had a median EV/Sales ratio of 27.7x (!) while Category 3 firms had a ratio of 24.9x. This difference was even sharper in September 2020, with a ratio of 42.3x for Category 1 stocks and a value of 29.1x for Category 3 firms. To conclude, it appears that investors place a higher premium on growth than profitability when inflation tightens the belt and higher rates place a premium on attracting business spending for cloud computing stocks.
With these details in mind, let’s take a look at what analysts are saying about cloud computing stocks and their top picks.
Our Methodology
To make our list of the best cloud stocks according to analysts, we ranked the holdings of First Trust’s cloud ETF by their average analyst percentage share price upside and picked out the stocks with the highest upside.
We also mentioned the number of hedge funds that had bought these stocks during the same filing period. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter’s strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 275% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 150 percentage points (see more details here).
10. Zuora, Inc. (NYSE:ZUO)
Number of Hedge Fund Investors in Q1 2024: 20
Analyst Average Share Price Target: $12
Upside: 33%
Zuora, Inc. (NYSE:ZUO) is a specialty cloud company that focuses on allowing businesses to monetize their revenue, bill customers, streamline global payments, and manage customer subscriptions. This leaves the firm isolated to specific businesses that rely on subscriptions to generate revenue, and it also introduces cyclicality into the market. Zuora, Inc. (NYSE:ZUO) does well when its customers’ subscription volumes grow, and in a slow economy, these are likely to struggle along with the general consumer. Naturally, as the market tanked in October 2023 due to investor worries about interest rates, Zuora, Inc. (NYSE:ZUO)’s shares also hit their 52 week low of $7.04 then. Since then, the stock has mirrored investor sentiment and is up by 24%. Since it’s a small company, Zuora, Inc. (NYSE:ZUO) also has plenty of room to grow and it has spent the past couple of months adding big ticket names like The Economist, Luxottica, and Mitsubishi Electric into its customer list.
Since these additions create room for further revenue growth, a key question to ask is, is Zuora, Inc. (NYSE:ZUO) also growing recurring revenue? Here’s what management had to say about this during the Q1 2025 earnings call:
Well, the number one thing is – it is a sticky product. And when we can certainly see the volume that customers are putting through the system. We know how much they contracted for. We have a sense of, look, are these companies doing well? Are they growing? Are they declining? Usually for these subscription businesses, very few subscription businesses are actually shrinking. They are just not growing as fast as they might have been in previous years. And so that gives us a good strong set of visibility into how the base should be performing for, call it, the next four quarters.
9. Open Text Corporation (NASDAQ:OTEX)
Number of Hedge Fund Investors in Q1 2024: 19
Analyst Average Share Price Target: $42.54
Upside: 35%
Open Text Corporation (NASDAQ:OTEX) is an enterprise software products provider that enables businesses to enable employee collaboration, manage their data, avail cybersecurity services, and manage payments, supply chains, and other operations. Its shares are down by 24% over the past year as Wall Street is concerned about Open Text Corporation (NASDAQ:OTEX)’s ability to manage high debt from its revenue. Open Text Corporation (NASDAQ:OTEX)’s revenue has grown by 33% between its fiscal years 2022 and 2023; however, during the same time period, its long term debt has grown by 100%. While this did not impact the share price last year, May 2024 saw the stock drop by nearly 15% after Open Text Corporation (NASDAQ:OTEX) reported its earnings for the third quarter of fiscal 2024. The reason behind the share price drop was Open Text Corporation (NASDAQ:OTEX)’s forward guidance that questioned its ability to generate revenue amidst the firm’s divestiture of its application modernization business AMC. The decision was taken to fund its acquisition of information consulting firm Micro Focus. The divestiture led Open Text Corporation (NASDAQ:OTEX) to expect a $528 million drop in its FY 2025 revenue for a guidance ranging between $5.3 billion to $5.4 billion.
Open Text Corporation (NASDAQ:OTEX)’s management is adamant that it is still on a growth track as shared during the Q3 2024 earnings call:
We continue to build cloud momentum with our business clouds, business AI, and business technology. And we see proof points of this as evidenced by our continued strength with large multi-year cloud contracts and our upward revisions in future cloud bookings expectations. And with the AMC divestiture now complete, we have increased our capital flexibility to accelerate growth in the $200 billion information management addressable market. Long term, we expect our business to deliver mid-single-digit total revenue growth through a balanced approach of cloud-led organic growth plus M&A comprised of 20% plus enterprise cloud bookings growth, 7% to 9% organic cloud growth, 2% to 4% total organic growth, and 1% to 2% M&A growth, powerful cash flows at 20% plus of revenues, and a new return of capital framework comprised of 50% of trailing 12-month free cash flows returned to shareholders in the form of dividends and share buybacks and 50% for Cloud M&A.