Workday Stock Rises After After an Impressive Quarter
Corporate software provider Workday (WDAY) had a great qtr, but management left a lot of questions to be asked.
Corporate software provider Workday (WDAY) had a great qtr, but management left a lot of questions to be asked.
Workday’s (WDAY) software gives the company a steady revenue stream. But new clients might be hard right now.
Workday’s (WDAY) P/E is 83 while profits are expected to climb an average of 10% the next 4 qtrs. The stock is high.
Workday (WDAY) stock has been overvalued for a while. But now that “valuations matter” investors are dumping the stock.
Workday (WDAY) is a fabulous company that can re-do old computer systems big companies have. But WDAY is high.
With 40% of the Fortune 500 using Workday’s (WDAY) Human Capital Management Software, Workday is dominating big business.
Workday (WDAY) cut profit estimates last qtr, then went onto beat those lowered estimates. Let’s sift through the numbers to see whats going on
Workday (WDAY) had 2018 profit estimates slashed from $1.26 to $1.08, citing currency exchange and acquisitions as the issues. Still, the stock holds its own.
Corporate software company Workday (WDAY) is growing great, especially Internationally. And the company is now expanding into Italy, South Africa and Thailand.
Workday’s (WDAY) profit growth rate is expected to decline from 300% last qtr to -10% this qtr. This could be bad. Let’s look further into WDAY.
Workday’s (WDAY) software helps companies track and analyze sales, then figure payroll. And with the economy strong, business is good.
Workday’s (WDAY) software is utilized by one third of the Fortune 500 to do human resources and financial analysis, and profits are zooming so far in 2017.
Workday’s (WDAY) software unifies company’s human resources and financial data into one program. Here’s my analysis on why WDAY could be the next big winner.
Workday (WDAY), which provides human resources and financial management software, has triple-digit profit growth, but also carries a triple-digit P/E ratio.