3 Takeaways From Cloudera's Strong Earnings Report

Cloudera (NYSE: CLDR), the Hadoop software distributor, recently reported third-quarter earnings, sending shares up about 7%. Cloudera went public back in April at $15 but has traded as high as $23 earlier this year. Big data analytics and open-source Hadoop is becoming a key tool for large enterprises over the world, and the recent quarter's results showed this in spades.

However, as is the case with many high-growth, young tech companies, Cloudera also continues to rack up losses with $24.4 million in non-GAAP operating losses. Including stock-based compensation, operating losses were $56.6 million. Here's what management wants us to know about the company's key achievements last quarter.

Wide view of giant lightbulbs and people standing around them like they are looking at statues.
Wide view of giant lightbulbs and people standing around them like they are looking at statues.

Images source: Getty Images.

Going into the cloud

Cloudera's biggest announcement last quarter was a product called the Shared Data Experience, or SDX. Basically, Cloudera has made a product that allows large enterprises to work across Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) Web Services, Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) Azure, or a private data center running the Hadoop Distributed File System.

Traditionally, Hadoop deployments occurred with a company's data center, but as more and more large enterprises are increasingly turning to the cloud, they run into a problem -- how to govern the company's data moving around all over the place, and how do you cleanse and analyze all the data across environments? Said Chief Strategy Officer Mike Olsen:

If you're an enterprise CIO or CBO, you're required by law to protect sensitive user data. You're generally under the gaze of regulators, making sure you comply with rules, governing how data is used and by whom... But that data is essential for high value business applications. You need to be able to process new data as it arrives, to clean it and enhance it. Then, you need to be able to query it or to do statistical analyses or to train machine learning models... At every step, there are new security and identity systems. The result is that operations staff are forced to create multiple copies of data. This data replication and movement increases risk, management complexity and cost. There's no way to look at data lineage, or to set policies for end-to-end data governance. There's no support for answering the questions that regulators ask. And that's precisely the problem that SDX solves...

This is good news, given that Hadoop has traditionally run in a data center. Last quarter, for instance, only 20% of Cloudera's revenue came from cloud deployments. Since large enterprises -- which make up most of Clouder's revenue -- are increasingly accelerating cloud and hybrid cloud environments, it is essential that Cloudera's software works seamlessly across the major clouds. The SDX product not only does that but aids companies in assuring security, too.