Datadog (NASDAQ:DDOG | DDOG Price Prediction) stock picked up an aggressive round of price target hikes on May 8 after a beat-and-raise Q1 2026 quarter that reignited the bull case for cloud observability. KeyBanc raised its price target on Datadog to $225 from $155, keeping an Overweight rating, while Canaccord lifted its target to $225 from $185 with a Buy rating. Both firms cited broad-based revenue acceleration and deepening relevance with AI-native customers.
The takeaway for prudent investors: Wall Street is repricing Datadog as a core piece of the AI infrastructure stack. Analysts now view the platform as a critical layer for AI-native enterprises rather than a niche software-as-a-service monitoring tool.
| Ticker | Company | Firm | Action | Old Rating | New Rating | Old Target | New Target |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DDOG | Datadog | KeyBanc | Price target raised | Overweight | Overweight | $155 | $225 |
| DDOG | Datadog | Canaccord | Price target raised | Buy | Buy | $185 | $225 |
The Analysts’ Case
KeyBanc’s $70 increase reflects a structural rethink of Datadog’s growth trajectory. The firm noted that Q1 revenue acceleration was broad-based across both AI-native and non-AI customers, and flagged the addition of two hyperscaler AI research labs as customers, an unusually strong validation given hyperscalers typically build observability tooling internally.
Canaccord echoed the bullish read, pointing to Q1 revenue of $1.006 billion accelerating to 32% year over year on stronger-than-expected customer usage across all segments. The shared thesis: as enterprises push AI workloads into production, monitoring, logging, and security become non-negotiable, and Datadog has the widest product surface area to capture that spend.
Company Snapshot
Led by CEO Olivier Pomel, Datadog operates a unified cloud monitoring and observability platform spanning infrastructure, applications, logs, and security. The company ended Q1 with approximately 4,550 customers generating $100K+ in annual recurring revenue, up 21% year over year.
Recent AI-aligned launches at Datadog include general availability of MCP Server, Bits AI Security Analyst, and GPU Monitoring, alongside FedRAMP High certification for Datadog for Government. Together, these rollouts widen the company’s surface area in AI-era observability and regulated public-sector workloads.
Why the Move Matters Now
Datadog’s Q1 earnings delivered non-GAAP EPS of $0.60 versus a $0.51 consensus, the fourth consecutive quarterly beat. Management raised full-year revenue guidance to $4.3 billion to $4.34 billion and non-GAAP EPS to $2.36 to $2.44.
DDOG stock closed at $188.73 on May 7 and is up roughly 43% year to date (YTD), putting Datadog among a small group of cloud software names that have re-accelerated in 2026. For broader software context, see this recent piece on cloud software’s 2026 rebound leaders.
What It Means for Your Portfolio
The bull case for Datadog rests on usage-driven growth, AI workload expansion, and rising product attach. The bear case is straightforward: a forward earnings multiple of 68x, competition from cloud-native observability tools, and concentration risk among a handful of large customers.
For prudent investors, the dual price target raise on DDOG stock to $225 signals genuine fundamental momentum, but the premium valuation leaves little room for execution slips. Keep an eye on the stock heading into the DASH 2026 conference on June 9-10 in New York, where new AI-product disclosures could either reinforce or test the rerating.