Tamar Rapaport-Dagim
Analyst · Citi. Your line is open
Thank you, Shuky. Let me start with a quick housekeeping item with respect to OpenMarket which was included in our reported numbers for the income statement and cash flow in the first fiscal quarter of fiscal 2021, but is excluded for the second fiscal quarter of fiscal 2021, following they completed divestiture of these assets on December 31, 2020. To provide you with a sense of the underlying business trends, my comments today will refer to certain financial metrics on our pro forma basis which exclude the financial impact of OpenMarkets from the current fiscal year and comparable fiscal year period. Second fiscal quarter revenue of $1,049 million, significantly exceeded the midpoint of our guidance range of $1,015 million to $1,055 million, revenue include the positive impact on foreign currency fluctuation of approximately $3 million relative to the first fiscal quarter of 2021 and a negative impact of 1 million relative to guidance. Additionally, Q2 revenue included a small amount of less than $2 million from two acquisitions, which we closed in the month of March, Sourced Group, the cloud consulting company Shuky mentioned and another small one, which I will describe later. On a pro forma basis revenue grew by 5.7% year-over-year in constant currency in the second fiscal quarter. Our second quarter revenue as reported grew by 0.1% year over year, and was down 1.4 at a constant currency given the comparable quarter of last year still included OpenMarket results. Our second fiscal quarter non-GAAP operating margin of 17.6% exceeded the high end of our long term target range of 16.5% to 17.5%. It was up 30 basis points sequentially and 40 basis points from a year ago. The non GAAP operating margin improvement reflects the diversity of open market, as well as initiative operational excellence, while accelerating our R&D investments in our strategic growth domains of digital 5G in the clouds. Below the operating line, non GAAP net interest and other expense was $3.9 million in Q2, the mix of which includes interest expense related to our short term boring and 10 year bond and the impact of foreign currency fluctuations. For forward looking purposes, we expect that foreign currency fluctuations will continue to impact the non GAAP net interest another expense line in the range of a few million dollars on a quarterly basis. If you look at non GAAP EPS was $1.13 in Q2, slightly above the midpoint of our guidance range of $1.09 to $1.15. Our non-GAAP effective tax rate was 18.2% in the second fiscal quarter, yet we are on track to meet our annual target range of 13% to 17%. Diluted GAAP EPS was $0.91 for the second fiscal quarter in line with the midpoint of our guidance range of $0.87 to $0.95. Normalized free cash flow was $133 million in the second fiscal quarter, up significantly as compared to $76 million a year ago. On a reported basis, free cash flow was $70 million in Q2. This was comprised of cash flow from operations of approximately $120 million, less $49 million in net capital expenditures and other and included the annual cash bonus payments to our employees in January for the prior fiscal year 2020 consistent with our guidance last quarter. Please refer to the reconciliation table provided in our Q2 earnings release for an explanation of the difference between normalized and reported free cash during the quarter and for past periods. These serve 79 days, decreased by three days year-over-year and increased by one day as compared to the prior fiscal quarter. We remind you that DSOs may fluctuate from quarter-to-quarter. As of March 31, total deferred revenue exceeded total unbilled receivable by $167 million. This reflects a decrease in total unbilled receivables of $19 million, and an increase in total deferred revenue of $8 million as compared to the first fiscal quarter of 2021. Changes in a bill receivables and total deferred revenue are primarily due to the timing of contract specific milestones. Moving forward, you should expect these items to fluctuate from quarter-to-quarter in line with normal business activities. Moving on, our 12 months backlog was $3.54 billion at the end of the second fiscal quarter, up approximately $50 million from the end of the prior quarter. On a pro forma basis, our 12 months backlog was up roughly 9.3% year-over-year. As a reminder, we believe our 12 months battle continues to serve as a good leading indicator of our forward looking revenue. I am pleased to report another record quarter for managed services arrangements, which comprise roughly 61% of total revenue. This performance reflects high renewal rates the adoption of our managed transformation model and continued expansion of activities within existing customers. To clarify, the OpenMarket business was not classified as managed services and therefore, its exit does not impact our revenue for managed services. Our cash balance at the end of the second fiscal quarter was approximately $1.2 billion, including aggregate borrowing of roughly $750 million. Our balance sheet reflects the acquisition of Sourced Group, a leading global technology consultancy for a net consideration of roughly $75 million in cash. Additionally, we recently completed two small acquisitions. One in March, but still within fiscal Q2, and the second in April. In the first small acquisition project to our digital experience group subsidiary acquired ADK for net consideration of roughly $14 million in cash. Based in Boston, ADK is user experience and application development company, which complements project Q2 [ph] capabilities and has a diversified list of global enterprise customers, including Sutton [ph], Dell bank, Mercer and Brown-Forman. Clearbridge Mobile is the second small acquisition for net consideration of roughly $50 million in cash, targeted to further expand our digital portfolio capabilities. Clearbridge is a Toronto-based mobile app development company, which provides user centric design and engineering services for Telco such as [Indiscernible] and non-Telco customers like YES Network and TD Bank. For all three recent acquisitions, additional consideration may be paid later based on the achievement of certain performance indicators. As a visual color on use of capital in early May, we repaid the $100 million of short term bank loan we took on during the early part of the COVID-19 pandemic last year. This repayment was executed according to schedule under the original terms of the loan agreement. We remain comfortable with our balance sheet and believe that we have ample liquidity to support our ongoing business needs, while retaining the capacity to fund our future strategic growth investments as and when the right opportunities arise. Additionally, we're committed to maintaining our investment grade rating. Now turning to the outlook, the prevailing level of macroeconomic business and operational uncertainties surrounding the magnitude and duration of the COVID-19 pandemic remains elevated, including the recently escalated situation in India. The midpoint of our revenue guidance reflects what we consider to be the most likely outcomes based on the information we have today. But we cannot predict all possible scenarios. We expect revenue for the third fiscal quarter of 2021 to be within a range of $1,040 million and $1,080 million. Our Q3 revenue guidance anticipates a negative sequential impact of approximately $3 million from foreign currency fluctuations. Additionally, our guidance incorporates the benefit of the recently completed acquisition as just discussed. Regarding the full year 2021, we are raising our outlook for revenue growth on a pro forma basis to a new range of approximately 5% to 8% year over year constant currency, as compared to a previous range of 3.5% to 7.5% year over year. The new outlook equates to an improvement of roughly 100 basis points at the midpoint of the range, about half of which is attributable to core business, and the other half from recently completed M&A. On a reported basis, we now expect full year revenue growth in the range of 1% to 4% year over year, as compared with our previous range of negative 0.3% to plus 3.7% year over year. The adjusted revenue outlook on a reported basis anticipates a positive impact on foreign currency fluctuations of approximately 1% year over year, as compared to a positive impact of 1.2 previously. Additionally, our outlook remains consistent without previous guidance for an acceleration in the rate of year over year growth on a pro forma basis in the first -- sorry, the second fiscal half. Moreover, we still expect to see all three geographical regions to deliver revenue growth on a pro forma basis for the full year of fiscal 2021. As a final point to further help in your modeling we'll remind you that we originally planned for OpenMarket to contribute revenue in the range of $300 million for the full year fiscal 2021, roughly 75% of which was expected from North America with view hope accounting for the rest. Regarding profitability, we continue to anticipate quarterly non GAAP operating margins to track roughly in line with the high end of the annual target range of 16.5% to 17.5%. This outlook assumes accelerated R&D investment as a percent of total revenue to support our customers and future strategy, balance with our continued focus on delivering operational excellence. We expect this third fiscal quarter diluted non GAAP EPS to be in the range of $1.14 to $1.20. Our third fiscal quarter non GAAP EPS guidance incorporates an expected average dilution share count of roughly 128 million shares. We excluded the impact of incremental future share buyback activity during the third fiscal quarter as the level of activity will depend on market conditions. Regarding the full year fiscal 2021, we are raising our outlook for non GAAP diluted earnings per share growth to a new range of 7.5% to 10.5% on a performance basis, as compared to 5.5% to 9.5% previously. The improved outlook is mainly the result of better business fundamentals. On a reported basis we expect to deliver fully diluted non GAAP EPS growth of 6% to 9% year over year as compared to 4% to 8% year over year previously. As a reminder, this outlook includes the impact of OpenMarket for the first fiscal quarter only. We expect our non GAAP effective tax rate to be within the annual target range of 13% to 17% for the full fiscal year 2021. We now expect normalized free cash flow for the fiscal year 2021 of approximately $820 million, which is slightly improved from our prior guidance of $800 million. The outlook is equivalent to about 8% of Amdocs' market cap and represents a conversion rate of roughly 130% relative to our expectations for non GAAP net income. As a reminder, we expect free cash flow to convert at a rate more than par with our expected non GAAP net income over the long term. Additionally, we now expect slightly better reported free cash flow for fiscal year 2021 of approximately $620 million as compared with $600 million previously. Our reported free cash flow outlook anticipates expenditures of roughly $140 million in relation to the development of a new campus in Israel, $40 million of capital gain tax in relation to the diversity of OpenMarket and other items. As previously stated, we expect fiscal 2021 to be the peak year of capital expenditure for the new campus. Note that the gap between the expected free cash flow on a normalized and reported basis has widened primarily due to the tax in relation to the capital gain of OpenMarket. During the second fiscal quarter we repurchased $360 million of our ordinary shares under our current authorization, including roughly $260 million, funded by the net profits from OpenMarket. As we committed to in the previous quarter, roughly $100 million of our share repurchases in Q2 were executed as part of the regular share repurchase program. Regarding our capital allocation plans for the rest of fiscal 2021, we expect to return a majority of our normalized free cash flow to shareholders in the form of our quarterly dividends, and share repurchase programs subject to factors such as the status of COVID-19 pandemic, the outlook for M&A, financial markets, and prevailing industry conditions. As of March 31, we had roughly $228 million of authorized capacity per share repurchases. Additionally, our board has today authorized another share repurchase plan of $1 billion, which we will execute at the company's discretion going forward. Overall, we remain on track to deliver accelerated pro forma revenue growth, improved profitability and strong free cash flow in fiscal 2021. The combination of which now supports an outlook for double digit total shareholders return of roughly 11%, including the 9% midpoint of our pro forma non GAAP earnings per share, growth guidance, plus our dividend yield. With that, we can turn it back to the operator. And we're happy to take your questions.