Buy these online education stocks, JPMorgan says, forecasting up to 57% gains

Buy these online education stocks, JPMorgan says, forecasting up to 57% gains

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Online education stocks, the combination of modern tech and old-school school, got a boost from the COVID pandemic, and the support has been ongoing. The US education sector was worth $1.4 trillion in 2021, and is expected to reach $3.1 trillion by the end of the decade – and there’s plenty of room in those numbers for investors to find gains.

Covering the ed stocks for JPMorgan, analyst Brian Smilek has taken the measure of online education. As he writes, “The education sector is a large & growing market early in the secular shift online, with a GSV Ventures analysis suggesting the global learning market represents a ~$7T market, w/online learning ~2.3% penetrated at $160B in 2019. The COVID19 pandemic accelerated the secular shift toward online education, & GSV estimates online penetration will grow 5x at a 30% CAGR through 2026, implying 11% penetration, or a $1T TAM.”

Smilek goes on to make some specific stock recommendations, forecasting up to 57% gains for investors willing to buy into the sector. Using the TipRanks database, we’ve looked up the big picture on his picks, finding that the view from the Street includes double-digit upsides. Let’s take a closer look.

Duolingo (DUOL)

We’ll start with Duolingo, the popular online language learning app. This company has built its business and its reputation on the simple insight that people want to learn new languages – but don’t always have the open schedule to accommodate formal classes. The Duolingo app allows users to customize their language lessons taking instruction at their own pace, on their own time, through a proven method that is both fun and effective.

Duolingo boasts that its language app is the world’s most popular online language learning tool, and that it holds the #1 spot as the top-grossing app in both the Apple App Store and Google Play. Prospective learners can choose from 40 or more languages, including Spanish, French, German, Arabic, and Japanese, as well as less common languages such as Greek, Welsh, Hungarian, and Hebrew. There are even ‘specialty’ languages available, like Latin, which is no longer a mother tongue, and Klingon, which was invented for Star Trek. At the end of 2023, the language app had 88.4 million monthly active users, up 46% year-over-year, and 26.9 million daily active users, up 65% y/y.

Those are solid user numbers, the type that will provide a sound foundation for any app, and Duolingo has leveraged them for sound financial results. The company turned to profitability in the first half of last year, and has remained profitable since; in its last reported quarter, 4Q23, Duolingo had earnings of 26 cents per share by non-GAAP measures. This was a significant improvement from the 35-cent EPS loss in the prior-year quarter, and it beat the forecast by 10 cents per share. At the top line, Duolingo’s quarterly revenues came in at $151 million, up an impressive 45% year-over-year and $2.62 million ahead of expectations.