Benchmark reboots its Datadog target as the AI super cycle builds

2026-07-04 11:10

Benchmark raised its price target on Datadog to $330 from $260 on Thursday, July 2, a Street high, while keeping its buy rating unchanged.

The stock was already up more than 90% year to date before this call landed, meaning Benchmark is not calling a bottom, but arguing the rally still has room to run.

That is a harder case to make than most price target headlines suggest.

Datadog (DDOG) runs one of the most widely used observability platforms in cloud computing, software that tells engineering teams when applications are breaking or slowing down before customers notice.

As companies rush to deploy AI models and autonomous agents, that job has gotten harder, because AI systems fail in less predictable ways than traditional code.

That shift is the backbone of Benchmark’s entire thesis.

Benchmark’s bet rests on Datadog’s R&D spending and product moat

Analyst Yi Fu Lee argued Datadog has built a technological moat to thrive in the AI super cycle, according to a Seeking Alpha report.

Lee pointed to Datadog’s organic research and development budget, which cleared $1 billion in 2025. This front-loaded investment directly set the stage for the wave of products rolling out this year, serving as evidence that the company is investing ahead of the market rather than reacting to it.

Benchmark also cited favorable competitive dynamics and Datadog’s product-led growth strategy, projecting 2026 revenue growth of 26.8% and a free cash flow margin of 26.4%, according to an Investing.com report.

Those are not modest numbers for a company already generating billions in revenue, and they explain why Benchmark is willing to set the highest target on the Street.

Benchmark raised its Datadog price target to a Street-high $330 from $260, citing more than $1 billion in R&D spending and Bits AI’s autonomous operations push.

Michael M. Santiago / Getty Images

Does the DASH 2026 pitch match the price target?

Datadog used its DASH 2026 conference this month to unveil more than 100 new capabilities spanning autonomous operations, AI agents, security, and infrastructure monitoring.

Lee said his takeaways from the event reinforced a view that Datadog’s leadership is focused on expanding well beyond traditional observability, Seeking Alpha reported.

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The centerpiece is Bits AI, which Benchmark now frames as the foundation of an autonomous AI operations control plane capable of detecting, investigating, and eventually remediating issues in production environments.

That distinction matters. A monitoring tool that flags problems is a feature. A system that fixes them without a human in the loop is a much larger piece of enterprise software budgets. This capability is exactly what that massive R&D spend was designed to build.

The valuation is where Benchmark’s call gets harder to accept

This is where the call gets harder to simply accept at face value. Datadog’s trailing price to earnings ratio has climbed to 678, more than 75% above its own five-year median of 385, according to a GuruFocus report. GuruFocus separately estimates the stock is trading nearly 40% above its calculated fair value.

I think Benchmark’s underlying argument holds up. The R&D spending is real, the DASH announcements are substantive, and Bits AI is a genuine product shift rather than a rebrand.

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Where I disagree is the implied timing. A $330 target assumes Datadog’s AI monetization arrives fast, fast enough to catch up to a stock that has already tripled the pace of its own earnings growth. Also, insiders have sold roughly $329 million in shares over the past three months.

That does not necessarily contradict the thesis but does suggest the people closest to the story are not waiting around to find out.

What this means for the broader AI infrastructure trade

Datadog is not alone in this pattern. Software companies tied to AI monitoring, security and infrastructure have seen analyst targets climb faster than their earnings this year, betting that enterprise AI spending will eventually justify today’s prices.

Benchmark’s call is one of the clearest examples of that bet, made by a firm willing to put a number on it rather than hedge with vague optimism.

The real test will not be whether Datadog’s technology holds up; it likely will. It will be whether the company’s next few earnings reports can close the gap between what Wall Street is now pricing and what the business has actually delivered so far.

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