What happened

Shares of Asana (ASAN 12.08%) sank 27% in March, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. The enterprise-software company's share price plummeted following the release of its fourth-quarter earnings report. 

ASAN Chart

ASAN data by YCharts

Asana published its Q4 results on March 9, and the stock plummeted even though sales and earnings for the period topped the market's expectations. The company posted a non-GAAP (adjusted) loss per share of $0.25 on revenue of $111.9 million, while the average analyst estimate had called for an adjusted loss per share of $0.28 on sales of $118.6 million. 

People working in an office.

Image source: Getty Images.

So what

Asana's revenue surged 63.6% year over year in the fourth quarter. The performance brought its full-year revenue up to $378.4 million, which was up 67% annually. However, the company's guidance for significant sales growth deceleration, narrowing gross margins, and more significant losses this year prompted investors to sell out of the stock. 

JPMorgan Chase's Mark Murphy published a note on Asana stock following the earnings-and-guidance release, downgrading his rating on the stock from "neutral" to "underweight." The analyst also slashed his one-year price target on the stock from $66 per share to $32.

Now what

For the first quarter, Asana is guiding for sales to come in between $114.5 million and $115.5 million in the first quarter, representing year-over-year growth between 49% and 51%. Management is targeting an adjusted loss between $0.35 and $0.36 per share, while the average analyst estimate had previously targeted an adjusted loss per share between $0.26 and $0.27 per share.

For the full-year period, management is guiding for revenue between $527 million and $531 million, suggesting annual growth between 39% and 40%. While the company's sales target range came in ahead of the previous average analyst target for $507.15 million in sales, investors are worried about the potential for expanding losses. Asana said it expects an adjusted operating loss margin in the mid-40s percentage range this year, potentially suggesting an increase from the adjusted operating loss margin of 41.5% it posted last year. 

Asana stock now trades down roughly 73% from its lifetime high. The software specialist now has a market capitalization of roughly $7.6 billion and is valued at approximately 14.3 times this year's expected sales. While the stock still has a growth-dependent valuation, the big sell-offs may have created a worthwhile buying opportunity for investors who see promise in the company's workplace communication and coordination software.