![]() ![]() Investors can track such revisions by themselves or rely on a tried-and-tested rating tool like the Zacks Rank, which has an impressive track record of harnessing the power of earnings estimate revisions. Not only does this include current consensus earnings expectations for the coming quarter(s), but also how these expectations have changed lately.Įmpirical research shows a strong correlation between near-term stock movements and trends in earnings estimate revisions. There are no easy answers to this key question, but one reliable measure that can help investors address this is the company's earnings outlook. Has outperformed the market so far this year, the question that comes to investors' minds is: what's next for the stock? What's Next for DigitalOcean Holdings, Inc. ![]() Shares have added about 29.6% since the beginning of the year versus the S&P 500's gain of 8%. The sustainability of the stock's immediate price movement based on the recently-released numbers and future earnings expectations will mostly depend on management's commentary on the earnings call.ĭigitalOcean Holdings, Inc. The company has topped consensus revenue estimates three times over the last four quarters. This compares to year-ago revenues of $119.66 million. ![]() , which belongs to the Zacks Internet - Software industry, posted revenues of $163 million for the quarter ended December 2022, surpassing the Zacks Consensus Estimate by 1.28%. Over the last four quarters, the company has surpassed consensus EPS estimates three times.ĭigitalOcean Holdings, Inc. A quarter ago, it was expected that this company would post earnings of $0.23 per share when it actually produced earnings of $0.38, delivering a surprise of 65.22%. This quarterly report represents an earnings surprise of 47.37%. These figures are adjusted for non-recurring items. This compares to earnings of $0.10 per share a year ago. (DOCN) came out with quarterly earnings of $0.28 per share, beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $0.19 per share. Tinc of course allows me to easily create private networks that are resistant to failure across any region and the routing is done for me, so I don't have to run around it all that much either With grafana I can just easily put dashboards into folders, create users to look only at certain stats or even dashboards (opened up some interesting contracts actually, because now I can also offer proper monitoring for all things delivered), easily drag and drop around stuff to fit more information (most others fix you to a small 3x2 grid, a too big grid for a TV or simply non resizable tiles, making that one counter take up an entire row) and resize to my hearts desire The dashboard creation was especially great in grafana (tbf promotheus does actually most of it), literally what I always wanted out of those "complicated" solutions, that do it all, but have no proper query language, complex documentation, heavy collectors with no properly named data points, expensive resource runtimes. Thankfully I remembered that there's grafana and me having experimented some time ago with tinc, so I can have very lightweight beat'esque prometheus agents deployed listening on tinc local net only, with the typical nginx auth and some whitelists to all of the servers I host and all those of my clients. I'm sure I could've managed around most of those issues, but the fact it is as hungry as gitlab, made it a literal no-go for the usual server resources my clients host or my own scaled down server recently. Initially I wanted to get into ELK with Kibana and all that, but that required 8G of ram, the instructions to get it running in the open source "mode" was nearly non-existent, together with all the ready docker compose stacks out there simply not working or the images being broken. 4y Using grafana together with tinc+promotheus, has been a blast. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |