Archived article

Please note that tax, investment, pension and ISA rules can change and the information and any views contained in this article may now be inaccurate.

Cloud engineering software firm still backed to deliver double-digit revenue growth by analysts
Thursday 02 Mar 2023 Author: Steven Frazer

Cloud engineering software company Autodesk (ADSK:NASDAQ) gave investors a nasty shock after steering for soggy margins and free cash flow this year.

The company specialises in computer-aided design for buildings and is a holding in several global funds.

The latest disappointing news came alongside fourth-quarter and full year results to 31 January 2023 that beat expectations and showed a 28% jump in billings.

However, these positives were not sufficient to make up for the disappointing guidance.



Shares in the $42.5 billion business lost 13% on 24 February, the day following the after-hours announcement, falling to $192.53 and wiping out virtually the entire gains chalked-up this year.

‘While the fourth-quarter results were solid and ahead of expectations, in our opinion, the full year 2024 guidance was somewhat underwhelming, particularly on the margins outlook,’ Berenberg analysts told clients in a note.

‘The company is guiding to no margin expansions in full year 2024, which is below expectations,’ observes Berenberg, explaining their 2% downgrade of earnings per share estimates. The investment bank is now forecasting EPS of $3.77 on a reported basis, or $7.28 after adjustments.

For the full year to 31 January 2024, Autodesk sees adjusted EPS in a range between $6.98 to $7.32, largely missing consensus of $7.31. Revenue is seen in the range of $5.35 billion to $5.455 billion, again below expectations for revenue of $5.46 billion. Full-year billings are expected in the range of $5.03 billion to $5.18 billion, below the average analyst estimate of $5.34 billion.

The company reported fourth quarter 2023 EPS of $1.86 on revenue of $1.32 billion, beating the consensus for earnings of $1.81 per share on sales of $1.31 billion. Billings rose 28% year-on-year to $2.12 billion, crushing the average analyst estimate of $1.93 billion. An 8.2% increase in subscription revenues helped the total sales increase by 8.8%.

Free cash flow is expected to fall almost 50% to $1.2 billion, although the drop off is linked to a shift from multi-year contracts where cash is collected up front from business customers to an annual billing cycle.

‘Net/net, given the slightly weaker-than-consensus guidance along with stock outperformance this year versus the Nasdaq, we are not surprised to see the shares modestly trade-off,’ said Stifel analysts. ‘While we acknowledge macro-uncertainty, we believe Autodesk has a number of drivers to sustain double-digit top-line growth and operating margin/free cash flow expansion in coming years,’ they said in a note.

Autodesk is due to host an analyst day on 22 March 2023, providing the next potential catalyst for the shares, whether positive or negative. The risk for the business is a pronounced and sustained downturn in the construction industry which could put a significant dampener on profitability beyond this year.

‹ Previous2023-03-02Next ›