What happened

Shares of MuleSoft, Inc. (MULE) gained 16.1% in October, according to data provided by S&P Global Market Intelligence. The company's stock climbed on favorable ratings coverage and held on to its gains following a solid quarterly report late in the month. 

A cloud made up of connected lines of light.

Image source: Getty Images.

So what

With a market cap of roughly $3 billion and a growth-dependent valuation, MuleSoft can post significant movement in relation to new ratings coverage. The enterprise cloud software company received a fresh round of favorable coverage last month.

On Oct. 9, Goldman Sachs published a note upgrading the stock from a "neutral" rating to a "buy" and changed its price target from $24 to $26. Oct. 11 saw Bidask Club upgrade its rating on the stock from "sell" to "hold." Cannaccord Genuity also upgraded the stock from "hold" to "buy" on Oct. 23 and raised its price target from $24 to $29.

Now what

The company released its third-quarter report on Oct. 26 and delivered 57% year over year sales growth -- far ahead of the average analyst growth estimate of 47%. It also raised its annual revenue guidance by roughly $11 million -- putting its target for the fiscal year at between $290 million and $292 million.

Shares didn't move much following the earnings release, but a solid revenue beat in the last quarter, upward revisions for its sales targets, and an in-demand product point to sustained sales momentum. MuleSoft currently has a leading offering in its corner of the enterprise software space -- with its Anypoint Platform providing a way to connect applications, data sources, and devices through a unified interface, and the stock could post big growth if the company continues to successfully move upmarket. 

Even after posting big gains in October, shares still trade down roughly 5% from their closing price on the day of the company's March IPO.