Database Software
•20 stocks
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Price Performance Heatmap
5Y Price (Market Cap Weighted)
All Stocks (20)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
|
MSFT
Microsoft Corporation
Fabric and Microsoft’s data platform portfolio position MSFT in database software and data management.
|
$3.51T |
$474.96
+0.60%
|
|
ORCL
Oracle Corporation
Oracle Database Software is a core product line that's central to Oracle's offering.
|
$558.28B |
$200.45
+0.85%
|
|
PLTR
Palantir Technologies Inc.
Foundry/Gotham function as comprehensive data platforms with database-like capabilities (data integration, storage, governance).
|
$367.36B |
$164.74
+6.39%
|
|
IBM
International Business Machines Corporation
IBM's database software (e.g., Db2) constitutes a major database software offering.
|
$277.07B |
$305.64
+2.76%
|
|
SAP
SAP SE
Database Software: SAP HANA and related database technology underpinning SAP data processing and analytics.
|
$275.99B |
$238.41
+0.72%
|
|
NOW
ServiceNow, Inc.
NOW's platform leverages an ultrafast database (RaptorDB) as part of its data and analytics capabilities.
|
$169.19B |
$812.29
-0.14%
|
|
SPGI
S&P Global Inc.
Database Software: SPGI's platforms rely on database tooling for storage, retrieval, and analytics.
|
$150.55B |
$492.06
-0.31%
|
|
SNOW
Snowflake Inc.
Snowflake provides a cloud-native database software platform (data warehouse) sold as a service.
|
$78.10B |
$242.31
+3.54%
|
|
MDB
MongoDB, Inc.
MongoDB's core product is Database Software (document-oriented NoSQL) which is MongoDB's primary offering.
|
$26.25B |
$328.65
+2.33%
|
|
TEM
Tempus AI, Inc.
Database Software – Tempus's platform relies on a large-scale data repository and database capabilities.
|
$12.21B |
$74.94
+6.62%
|
|
ESTC
Elastic N.V.
Elasticsearch is described as the world’s most downloaded open-source vector database and analytics engine, underpinning data storage and search capabilities.
|
$7.39B |
$69.45
-0.84%
|
|
INFA
Informatica Inc.
IDMC includes data catalog, data governance and related database-like capabilities, aligning with database software.
|
$5.09B |
$24.79
|
|
DOCN
DigitalOcean Holdings, Inc.
Managed database services (e.g., MySQL, PostgreSQL) are direct offerings, i.e., Database Software.
|
$3.99B |
$45.44
+3.71%
|
|
TDC
Teradata Corporation
Teradata's core offering is a multi-model database/data warehousing platform (Vantage) used for enterprise analytics.
|
$2.57B |
$27.69
+1.80%
|
|
CLVT
Clarivate Plc
Web of Science and Derwent are database platforms; Clarivate licenses and provides access to structured data via database software.
|
$2.44B |
$3.44
+0.29%
|
|
PRGS
Progress Software Corporation
MarkLogic and Semaphore form the Progress Data Platform, placing database software as a primary offering.
|
$1.75B |
$40.26
-0.90%
|
|
BASE
Couchbase, Inc.
Core product is a database platform that unifies relational and NoSQL capabilities.
|
$1.33B |
$24.51
|
|
PDFS
PDF Solutions, Inc.
Exensio/CIMETRIX databases and data platforms underpin analytics; classify as database software.
|
$984.16M |
$25.76
+3.37%
|
|
ELWS
Earlyworks Co., Ltd
GLS is described as a hybrid of traditional databases with blockchain, i.e., Database Software.
|
$18.03M |
$5.77
-3.51%
|
|
TGNT
Totaligent Inc.
Proprietary Database Management Platform tracks data points for cross-platform marketing.
|
$1.46M |
$0.02
|
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# Executive Summary
* The Database Software industry is undergoing a profound transformation driven by enterprise adoption of Generative AI, creating massive demand for new capabilities like vector search and AI-optimized infrastructure.
* This transformation is enabled by the near-complete shift to cloud, hybrid, and multi-cloud deployment models, which now dictate revenue streams and competitive dynamics.
* Explosive demand is met with significant constraints from macroeconomic headwinds, which are elongating sales cycles, and the immense capital expenditure required to build out AI infrastructure, pressuring profitability.
* The competitive landscape is bifurcating between hyperscale, full-stack providers like Microsoft and Oracle and specialized, cloud-native platforms such as Snowflake and MongoDB, with customers increasingly consolidating vendors to manage complexity.
* Financially, this divergence is clear: AI and cloud segments are posting strong double-digit growth, while legacy on-premise and consulting services are flat or declining.
* The primary strategic focus is on capital allocation towards AI R&D and infrastructure, with leaders like Microsoft and Oracle committing tens of billions annually to maintain a competitive edge.
## Key Trends & Outlook
The single most important factor reshaping the Database Software industry is the rapid, large-scale enterprise adoption of Artificial Intelligence. This AI adoption is the primary driver behind the market's projected 14.21% to 16.55% CAGR from 2025-2030, creating entirely new product categories like vector databases designed for AI workloads. This trend directly impacts revenue and valuations by creating new, high-growth consumption streams and necessitating massive investment in AI-specific infrastructure and R&D. Hyperscalers are building out "gigawatt-scale" data centers, with Microsoft's Azure AI processing over 500 trillion tokens this year, a more than 7x increase. Simultaneously, software specialists are integrating AI directly into their platforms, such as Oracle's AI Database (Oracle 23AI) and MongoDB's acquisition of Voyage AI in February 2025 to bolster its vector search capabilities.
The AI transformation is built upon the foundational migration to cloud, hybrid, and multi-cloud platforms. This shift from on-premise hardware to flexible consumption models is now the dominant force in the market, with cloud databases growing at an 18.6% CAGR. This has fundamentally altered business models, favoring recurring, usage-based revenue as exemplified by MongoDB's Atlas service, which now accounts for 72% of its total revenue.
The primary opportunity lies in providing integrated, AI-ready data platforms that simplify development and reduce complexity, capitalizing on the strong trend of vendor consolidation. The most significant risk is the dual pressure of macroeconomic uncertainty slowing IT spending and the immense, ongoing capital expenditure required to compete in AI, which could compress margins and strain balance sheets, as seen with Microsoft's projected over $30 billion in quarterly capital expenditures for Q1 FY26.
## Competitive Landscape
The database software market is experiencing significant consolidation as enterprises seek to reduce complexity. A substantial 68% of technology leaders are planning to reduce their vendor landscape, with nearly three-fourths (74%) of companies now limiting themselves to three database platforms or fewer.
One distinct competitive model is that of the full-stack, integrated infrastructure providers, exemplified by Microsoft. These companies leverage massive, global-scale cloud infrastructure to offer a comprehensive, integrated stack of services, from silicon and networking up to databases, AI models, and end-user applications. Microsoft's $281.7 billion in annual revenue and its global network of over 400 data centers, alongside an integrated offering from Azure infrastructure to the Microsoft Fabric data platform and the Copilot family of apps, demonstrate its scale and integration advantages.
In contrast, cloud-native, best-of-breed data platforms like Snowflake focus on providing a highly flexible, easy-to-use, and developer-centric data platform that runs on top of any of the major cloud providers. Snowflake's deployment across 49 regional instances on AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud Platform, its focus on ease of use and open formats like Apache Iceberg, and its 125% net revenue retention rate driven by its consumption model highlight its architectural flexibility and strong developer loyalty.
A third model comprises hybrid-cloud enterprise specialists, such as Teradata, who cater to large enterprises with complex, mission-critical data environments spanning on-premises data centers and multiple public/private clouds. Teradata's Vantage platform offers consistent analytics across AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, private cloud, and on-premises environments, focusing on enterprise-scale AI. Its financial results, showing a decline in overall revenue but growth in its public cloud segment, underscore the challenges and strategic responses of a company with deep legacy roots.
The key competitive battleground is providing a unified, AI-ready platform that is both powerful and simple to use, directly addressing the vendor consolidation trend.
## Financial Performance
Revenue performance in the database software industry is sharply bifurcated, largely a function of a company's alignment with the AI and cloud megatrends. Revenue growth ranges from +54% year-over-year for AI-centric cloud infrastructure to -6% year-over-year for legacy-heavy businesses. Oracle's cloud infrastructure (IaaS) growth of +54% year-over-year exemplifies the AI tailwind, demonstrating how companies providing foundational infrastructure for AI are experiencing hyper-growth. In contrast, Teradata's -6% year-over-year overall revenue decline, despite 17% public cloud ARR growth, proves the drag from legacy business models and the challenges of transitioning from declining on-premise and consulting revenue streams.
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While software gross margins remain robust, the defining profitability story is the immense capital investment in AI infrastructure. Gross margins generally range from the high 60s to low 80s, with IBM's Software segment reporting an 83.1% gross margin in Q3 2025. However, overall profitability and free cash flow are under pressure at capital-intensive players. Hyperscalers like Microsoft are sacrificing near-term free cash flow, with capital expenditures soaring past $30 billion quarterly, to meet surging AI demand, which they expect to monetize at high margins later.
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Capital allocation is overwhelmingly focused on capturing the AI opportunity, either through building data centers or acquiring technology. Oracle projects massive capital expenditures of $35 billion for FY2026, with Microsoft guiding for over $30 billion in Q1 FY26 capital expenditures, primarily for AI infrastructure. For software players, this investment takes the form of R&D and tuck-in acquisitions to acquire AI talent and technology, such as MongoDB's acquisition of Voyage AI in February 2025. Share buybacks, like MongoDB's $1 billion share repurchase authorization, signal confidence in future cash flow.
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The industry's financial health is generally strong due to robust recurring revenue models that generate significant cash from operations. This allows for financial flexibility, as demonstrated by MongoDB, which is now debt-free following the redemption of its 2026 convertible notes in December 2024 and holds $2.5 billion in cash, cash equivalents, short-term investments, and restricted cash as of April 30, 2025. This financial strength is critical to weather economic uncertainty and fund strategic investments.