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CSG Systems International, Inc. (CSGS)

Q4 2022 Earnings Call· Wed, Feb 1, 2023

$80.37

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning. My name is Devon, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Q4 2022 CSG Systems International Inc. Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Thank you for your patience. Head of Investor Relations, Mr. John Rea, you may begin the conference.

John Rea

Analyst

Thank you, operator, and thanks to everyone for joining us. Like last quarter, we will be working from a slide deck, which can be found on the Investor Relations section of our website. Please take a moment to locate these slides. Today's discussion will contain a number of forward-looking statements. These include, but are not limited to, statements regarding our projected financial results, our ability to meet our clients' needs through our products, services and performance, and our ability to successfully integrate and manage acquired businesses in order to achieve their expected strategic, operating and financial goals. While these risks reflect our best current judgment, they are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ materially. Please note that these forward-looking statements reflect our opinions only as of the date of this call, and we undertake no obligation to revise or publicly release any revision to these forward-looking statements in light of new or future events. In addition to factors noted during this call, a more comprehensive discussion of our risk factors can be found in today's press release as well as our most recently filed 10-K and 10-Q, which are all available in the Investor Relations section of our website. Also, we will discuss certain financial information that is not prepared in accordance with GAAP. We believe that these non-GAAP financial measures, when reviewed in conjunction with our GAAP financial measures, provide investors with greater transparency to the information used by our management team in our financial and operational decision making. For more information regarding our use of non-GAAP financial measures, we refer you to today's earnings release and non-GAAP reconciliation tables on our website, which will also be furnished to the SEC on Form 8-K. With me today on the phone are Brian Shepherd, Chief Executive Officer; and Hai Tran, Chief Financial Officer. With that, I'd like to now turn the call over to Brian.

Brian Shepherd

Analyst

Thanks, John. Hi, everyone. We appreciate you joining the call today as we get started on Slide 4. With a choppy macroeconomic environment as a backdrop, 2022 showcased the strengths of CSG and our recurring revenue business model. We delivered 4.1% year-over-year revenue growth, a fantastic result, especially when factoring in the discount headwinds from two of our top three customers coming from long-term renewals that we signed in late 2021. Historically, CSG's revenue has been flat to down in the year following a top three customer renewal, let alone two customer renewals. Team CSG also proved the agile and resilient manner with which we will continue to run our business. After facing some inflationary cost pressures in Q2, we took timely action on our margin improvement plan that led to good profitability in both Q3 and Q4. As a result, we finished 2022 with adjusted operating margin of 16.6%, up from 15.7% in H1 2022. In addition, as a result of this increased profitability, favorable foreign currency movements and increased share repurchases, we delivered $3.61 of non-GAAP EPS, a 7.8% year-over-year increase. As we have said many times, over the medium to long run, we aim to have the bottom-line growing as fast or faster than our top-line and that is exactly what we accomplished in 2022. At the end of the day, our revenue growth success is fueled by exciting ongoing market demand for CSG's industry-leading SaaS products and our impressive sales results. We continue to win and wow big new customers in a wide variety of faster growth industry verticals. Team CSG grew annual contract value sales bookings a strong double-digit year-over-year in both Q4 and full year 2022. These sales wins bode well for CSG's continued revenue growth into 2023. Our 2023 guidance should prove that…

Hai Tran

Analyst

Thanks, Brian. Let's walk through our 2020 financial results. And then, I'll wrap it up with some key conclusions. Starting on Slide 11. We generated $1.09 billion of revenue, which represents 4.1% year-over-year growth. For the year, the increase in revenue was mainly attributed to the continued growth of our revenue management solution, as the majority of the increase was attributed to organic growth. This growth was in the face of 3% to 5% discount headwinds for two of our three largest customers. Our 2022 non-GAAP operating income was $169 million or non-GAAP adjusted operating margin of 16.6%, as compared to $162 million or 16.5% in the prior year. The increase in non-GAAP operating income and non-GAAP adjusted operating income margin percentage can be mainly attributed to higher revenue along with the timely operating margin improvement initiatives we took in Q2 and the beginning of Q3. Specifically, we have seen margin benefits from our decision to dissolve our controlling interest in a Latin American business, the continued streamlining of our office space footprint, a rationalization of our headcount and hiring practices, and the strengthening of the US dollar to most global currencies. Moving on, our non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA was $226 million for 2022, or 22.3% of revenue, excluding transaction fees, as compared to $221 million or 22.6% in the prior year. Lastly, our 2022 non-GAAP EPS was $3.61, a 7.8% year-over-year increase as compared to $3.35 in the prior year. The increase in non-GAAP EPS is mainly due to the higher operating income in 2022. Favorable foreign currency movements and share repurchase activity over the last 12 months, offset by higher tax rate and increase in interest expense due to increasing interest rates, as our debt is primarily floating rate in nature at this point in time. Turning to Slide…

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Greg Burns with Sidoti.

Greg Burns

Analyst

Good afternoon.

Brian Shepherd

Analyst

Hi, Greg.

Greg Burns

Analyst

Just to start off, what's a good tax rate for next year?

Hai Tran

Analyst

I think the -- what we guided to is roughly 28.5%.

Greg Burns

Analyst

Okay, perfect. Okay. And then, when we look at the guide, obviously, solid revenue growth acceleration. But what's holding back the operating leverage? Is it just kind of external still inflationary environment? Or are you spending in certain areas for growth? Like why won't -- or why aren't we going to see the operating margin expand a little bit next year?

Hai Tran

Analyst

Yes, I think you hit the nail on the head. There are still inflationary pressures that we'll feel going into 2023. And I think we'll be fairly conservative, middle of the road actually, in terms of our expectations of how those costs [indiscernible] performance for 2023.

Brian Shepherd

Analyst

I think -- hey, Greg. Hope you're doing well. The only thing I would add to that is, we saw a weaker first half of the year last year. This team is laser-focused on having a strong Q1 and Q2 top-line growth and on the profitability side. So, we still see some of those pressures around wage, supply chain and others, but we want to have a strong start to the year and then see how we progress from there.

Greg Burns

Analyst

Okay. And then, the Xponent win that you announced in the UK, how -- I don't know if you gave this information, but how much revenue are you generating from Xponent or your broader customer engagement solutions in North America? And what's the pipeline? Can the rest of the world be as big as your North American revenue stream? And what's the pipeline of those global opportunities look like for those services?

Brian Shepherd

Analyst

It's a great question, Greg. So, thanks for that. What excites us about this product line so much is, A, just the applicability to all these industry verticals in terms of the value we can bring of being personalized around journey experiences of an individual customer, whether that's a consumer or an enterprise level. And the other side is the range of revenue that we could actually get. We announced last quarter, in the previous quarter, a big win with one of the large U.S. pharmacy retailers that could be tens of millions of revenue that comes from that. But we also see -- we can go in an individual use case and we can deploy for hundreds of thousands or low-single digit millions, add a lot of value, cross-sell into other lines of business they have in other vertical. So, it really does run the gamut in terms of size, because we have this modular SaaS solution, and it can really land and expand well as we proved. So, if a customer has a bigger need across their entire enterprise, it could be a much larger annual revenue number. We could also get in with the lower price point that speeds sales, and that's kind of what we're seeing in the market. Specifically on your question around geography, we wanted to prove this out to be effective and efficient with our resources in North America. We think we have tons of headroom in the North America market, but this has applicability in every country, in almost every industry vertical. All around the world, we have a huge expectation. And globally, we could see that be as big or bigger than our North American business. Obviously, we think we'll have to scale up both in terms of direct sales and channel partner sales, but has huge opportunity to drive revenue growth.

Greg Burns

Analyst

Great. And then, lastly, the $1.5 billion target by '25, obviously, that's going to require some acquisitions to get there. So, what are you looking for? Is it technology or maybe some broader scale acquisitions? And what's the market for acquisitions looking like right now?

Brian Shepherd

Analyst

Yes. I mean, it's really that combination that we've been talking about. We're pushing hard to perform at the upper level of our organic growth. That's what drives this earn the right to grow with operating leverage and operating margin expansion, to your first question, and then, just layering on good smart acquisitions. So, what we really look for from an acquisition, and we think the market is turning in our favor with the strong balance sheet, we don't have to do a deal, which means we can stay highly disciplined and be quite selective in terms of strategic fit, paying the right price with the financial accretiveness of deals we do, but it's pretty much the same as our strategic focus; winning big and the number one technology provider of choice in telecom globally. So, we're going to look at scale and rounding out our portfolio to bring more value to our North American broadband cable or our global telecom customers. We look for opportunities in that digital CX. We're again -- like we did when we acquired Kitewheel, and then we did announced our CSG Xponent launch a couple of quarters after that. It can really turbo charge the value we bring brands all around the world. You could see us do something in the payment space. But it really is strategic fit, financial fit, read the right risk return profile. And we like where pricing is coming on some of these potential deals. As you know, we didn't do a deal last year, because we wanted to stay disciplined. We did three or four the year before, and we think it could be a good opportunity, but it's all around that discipline and paying the right price.

Greg Burns

Analyst

All right. Perfect. Thank you.

Brian Shepherd

Analyst

Thanks, Greg.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Maggie Nolan with William Blair. One moment.

Maggie Nolan

Analyst · William Blair. One moment.

Hi, thank you. Congrats on the growth. Another question on some of those goals around global expansion. Are you expecting the global growth to be heavier for you in cable and telecom, or equal weight in other verticals? How are you thinking about that?

Brian Shepherd

Analyst · William Blair. One moment.

Hi, Maggie. Glad to hear you back, and I hope you're doing well. I would say near-term, in terms of where we are, just the wins we continue to announce in global telecom, I would say, that's, first and foremost, that I would hit. I mean the three really, really strong deals we announced in global telecom this quarter in different regions of the world; one in Africa, one in APAC, one in the UK. And then, we also had a good deal that moved into the early part of Q1. So, we think that's just going to continue to drive nice growth in the telecom space. The digital CX, though, like we talked about on the answer to Greg's question, we think it's got a lot of opportunities. It was great to see the Standard Life win in the UK market and get the ball rolling around that. We think it'll take a little bit of time to both build the channel partnerships. And the reason we're focused heavily on channel is to be efficient and leverage their [rolodex] (ph), their proven brand recognition with other partners in those different geographies, in those verticals. And we think we can get a lot of pull-through as we also build out direct sales and marketing as a secondary approach. So, we like what will come from that, but we think that'll probably take time to build out with their focus, I would say, initially in the EMEA market to start.

Maggie Nolan

Analyst · William Blair. One moment.

Got it. Thank you. And then, we've been talking about this Charter migration for some time now. With that fully wrapped, can you maybe kind of give us the recap, the detail on the impact of that in 2022, and then how you're thinking about the impact on the year-over-year comparisons?

Brian Shepherd

Analyst · William Blair. One moment.

Yes, I'll hit the first part and then I'll let Hai just provide a few of the financials. So, I mean just a fantastic effort by the team to work with our colleagues at Charter to convert 14 million subscribers and do that in a way in a good timeframe. That also just brought a lot of value that fit the business need of our biggest and strong customer at Charter. So, grateful to our colleagues on the Charter side that worked with us on that. That came on the heels of after converting 11 million subscribers off of Amdocs at Comcast. So, now from a triple play standpoint, we have all the business and our platforms run all the subscribers at both Comcast and Charter. Hai, you want to provide some of the financial perspectives on that?

Hai Tran

Analyst · William Blair. One moment.

Yes. I mean, I think one of the tailwinds we benefited from and it contributes to our guidance range towards the higher end of our long-term guidance is that we have full year impact of those migrations. But in addition to that the other real benefit we have is over 90%-plus visibility into the business as a result, right? So, it gives us good confidence and good visibility in terms of our ability to generate that strong organic growth that we highlighted.

Maggie Nolan

Analyst · William Blair. One moment.

That's helpful. That's all for me. Thank you.

Brian Shepherd

Analyst · William Blair. One moment.

Thanks, Maggie.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Timothy Horan with Oppenheimer.

Timothy Horan

Analyst · Oppenheimer.

Thanks, guys. The cable industry looks like it's going through a fairly aggressive network and technology upgrades and -- around the world, and here in the United States, kind of converging wireless with wireline a lot more. Do you think this is an opportunity as they do these upgrades? And do you think it's -- you kind of gain some market share during this process? Or maybe just how do you fit into the whole thing?

Brian Shepherd

Analyst · Oppenheimer.

Thanks for the question, Tim. Hope you're doing great. Obviously, it changes some quarter-to-quarter. We tend to look at it having served these big players for going on three decades, over a slightly longer period of time. We'd love to see the broadband adds 105,000 getting added back at Charter this quarter. We love to see the investment we're hearing in the infrastructure to expand the homes past 2% to 3% a year at both Charter and Comcast. I think Comcast, if you normalize out the hurricane, they added about 4,000. But yes, there is going to be technology evolution and disruption around this. And so that's why we're just focused on how can we bring more value, stay mission critical to what they're doing, be easier to do business with, and then try to give them reasons why they might look at expanding some of the parts of the portfolio we don't have with some of those other providers. The other thing that we want to continue to focus on, it's not loss on us when we see a competitor announce 50% of their revenue comes from two customers in the U.S., and those are big customers, and some of them are having some success on fixed wireless and that's going to continue to have some wins in the market in terms of the net broadband adds in North America. We'd love to earn the right over time to actually take some of our telecom wins outside of North America and see if we could do more in the local. Obviously, that may be a longer-term play, but that is where our R&D investment and technology is going to try to really bring more around that convergence. We could serve both sides of that equation. And I think it's going to continue to evolve, Because as you know and you report on quite a bit, there's different approaches being taken by different large service providers around how they might win in different segments of the market.

Timothy Horan

Analyst · Oppenheimer.

That's for sure. And OpenAI and ChatGPT has been in the news quite a bit here lately, and AI in general. Can you talk a little bit about how you can kind of leverage AI with your product suite going forward? And do you think you can integrate ChatGPT into your products?

Brian Shepherd

Analyst · Oppenheimer.

Yes, we do a lot with natural language processing and AI and have for the last two or three years, I would say, the couple of areas that it's the biggest right now, and we work with several large and midsize innovative partners to do that. Around some of our solutions around digital CX where we can actually help take the mountains of data they have and drive personalized journeys and experiences for those individual customers, we see AI and natural language processing giving our solutions a huge leg up where we can then help these large brands to just get more targeted, improved experience in a more cost-effective way. And on the telecom side, we see it around both 5G, but also in some of the network fraud detection things where we use our technology combined with others to detect what might be fraudulent activity on an interconnect or roaming aspect. And I think we're just kind of getting started. ChatGPT, we've looked at. I mean, it is kind of -- it's almost -- it's hard to fathom what they're doing and some of the use cases that are coming out. We started to experiment. We don't have any live active integrations today, but I think that's likely to change and evolve quite a bit in the coming quarters based on what's coming out and with some of that, it's -- that's going to be fascinating and fun to watch.

Timothy Horan

Analyst · Oppenheimer.

Well, and I guess, ChatGPT, there's going to be a lot of winners and losers, obviously, you have to execute, but do you think this is a positive opportunity for you?

Brian Shepherd

Analyst · Oppenheimer.

I think AI in general, I probably won't get to -- I won't pick the winner today. And it's likely that, that could change over time in terms of how we did just like cloud evolved a lot over the last five or six, seven years. But AI is a cornerstone of driving efficiency and automation in terms of how brands do work that make it easier for them to predict and give channels of choice for their customers, consumer or enterprise. So, I think it's hard to imagine that ChatGPT isn't going to both challenge and threaten and potentially create some displacement opportunities with some of the existing AI and natural language processors that are out there. Again, we haven't moved in their direction yet. It doesn't mean that we won't. So, we're still analyzing and doing. But AI as a core is essential to award-winning digital cost-effective digital customer experience in our mind.

Timothy Horan

Analyst · Oppenheimer.

Well put. And then lastly, what interest rate are you assuming next year or interest expense with your EPS guidance?

Hai Tran

Analyst · Oppenheimer.

It's about mid 6% right? If you think about -- our floating rate debt is generally based on LIBOR. LIBOR has gone up north of 4.5% in 12 months. So, right now, we're projecting mid-6%.

Timothy Horan

Analyst · Oppenheimer.

Thank you.

Brian Shepherd

Analyst · Oppenheimer.

Thanks, Tim.

Operator

Operator

Our last question comes from Matthew Harrigan with Benchmark.

Matthew Harrigan

Analyst

Thank you. I have two questions and one follow-up. You didn't touch that much on the payment business other than allusion in M&A discussion. But particularly on the ACH side, how is that getting affected in the current economic environment? And then, on Xponent Ignite and all that, how much resistance are you getting from your corporate clients on the marketing side off the economy? Or do you feel like you really have a pretty coherent selling strategy [saying] (ph), "I mean, look, this is just very high ROI. And what sorts of ROIs are you looking?" I'm sure you've got a pretty broad range there.

Brian Shepherd

Analyst

Yes. No, thanks, Matt. Hope you're doing well. I'll take the first one. On the payment side, we took a meaningful hit as we talked about going back a couple of years ago when we saw the early- to mid-stages of COVID, we lost about 8% to 12% of our transaction volume, which is some of the recurring charges on the ACH and even the credit kind of get turned down, including some of the property taxes where state governments stopped charging for credit card fees and others. And we kind of grew through that as we kind of stayed flat. We saw good double digit growth return in 2022. And we expect strong double-digit growth in that business. We like the demand signals we're seeing across the board in our payments business, both on the ACH and on the credit side. And so, we think that there's -- we kind of weathered the storm, if you will, in 2020 and 2021. And now it's back to growth, back to margin expansion and just that scale in that business. We're pretty excited around what's going to come in the front windshield with that part of the business. On the second side -- the second part of your question was more around -- let me make sure...

Matthew Harrigan

Analyst

Just sort of ROI you think your customers can see on Xponent Ignite? And is the economy hindering that, or is it actually pushing them to be a little bit more efficient?

Brian Shepherd

Analyst

At this stage, I want to make sure, I guess, it could change. But at this stage, we see it being a board level decision with a hard ROI. So, what we're seeing in the market and the reason there's so much traction right now is there's an immediate payback. Usually, it can get deployed in 60 to 90 days. There can be a payback within less than 12 months in terms of where it is. And the payback really comes in three forms. One, often moving from a physical channel to a digital channel is actually going to reduce costs. And if you can take steps out by orchestrating the journey is better in a more efficient way, so it's a cost reduction that can pay for itself. Two, up-sell and cross-sell, and what we're seeing in some of these areas like we talk about on promotion roll off with a large cable or a telecom customer, if we can help them reduce the customers that churn during a promotion-ending period or around some of the appointment notifications where there's over $100 billion dollars lost in the healthcare industry alone by missed appointments, again, that's another example of driving revenue and paying for self. And then, third, just the retention and loyalty benefit that comes from an improved ease of doing business in a digital world. That's actually what we're seeing is just fantastic momentum in the market and we just got to take advantage of it and respond, sell more, sell faster, cross-sell and up-sell the existing new logo wins we get. And we love what we're seeing, but we also don't take it for granted. We know that can change, so let's push hard and make sure that we keep rolling in the new deals.

Matthew Harrigan

Analyst

And if you tip toward the upper end or the bottom end of the revenue guidance range, which isn't really all that wide, do you think it's more likely to be a function of having more selling opportunities and innovation? Or do you think it's more likely to be affected by wherever the macro goes both in the U.S. and Europe?

Brian Shepherd

Analyst

I'll give a high level, and then I'll let Hai add little insights he might have on it. I mean, I think we are seeing and this is -- we're seeing a hot market and a big demand, which is driving that level of growth last year and even bigger organic growth in 2023. So, we love the demand signals in terms of where the market is both in global telecom in our North American business and in digital CX in payments. But we have seen -- I mean every company is trying to shave some discretionary spending. So, we actually felt that throughout the core over the last six or seven quarters. So, it's not like that cost pressure is not there. We grew through it, which is -- it will gives us a lot of optimism in terms of the upside. Will brands continue to try to squeeze costs? The answer is yes. They have been. They will continue to do that. So, to be at the upper end, what we've got to do is continue to have that strong win rate, the strong successful conversions and deployments of our solutions and continue to just win that double digit sales growth that will help us grow at the upper end even as we offset some of the discretionary spending that is definitely having. I think to be at the lower end, you would need to see a lot of things happen. But again, it's still a tough market. So that's why we give that range that we do. And we really want to see that strong start in Q1 and Q2. But, Hai, other comments and color from you.

Hai Tran

Analyst

Yes, I mean, I would echo what Brian said. The only thing I might add is that consistent with the question about ROI, I think what we need to do is do a really good job of highlighting the opportunity cost in terms of driving urgency for our customers around delaying them making decision, right? Because some of our solutions particularly as you highlighted in the CX side, they're really driving some meaningful value, financial value for the customers. And so, to the extent that we can bring that to light for them and drive urgency, we'll be able to affect the timing and it actually plays into even the current economic environment.

Matthew Harrigan

Analyst

Thanks, Brian. Thanks, Hai.

Hai Tran

Analyst

Thank you.

Brian Shepherd

Analyst

Thanks so much, Matt.

Operator

Operator

There are no further questions at this time. I'd now turn the call over -- back over to CEO, Brian Shepherd.

Brian Shepherd

Analyst

Now, thanks everyone for joining. We're proud of the 2022 the Team CSG put on the board. We have an even bigger 2023 that we need to deliver. We're going to be laser-focused on doing that. Look forward to talking to you next quarter.

Operator

Operator

That concludes today's presentation. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.