SAP sees flat 2021 revenue after fourth-quarter beat

Business software group SAP forecast flat revenue and a decline in operating profit in 2021, as it released preliminary annual results that came at the high end of guidance slashed last autumn.

BERLIN: Business software group SAP forecast flat revenue and a decline in operating profit in 2021 after reporting fourth-quarter results that beat market expectations, sending its shares up in early trading on Friday.

Giving an early view of 2020 results and setting 2021 guidance, SAP said adjusted revenue, at constant currency, would be unchanged to up 2per cent this year, while adjusted operating profit was seen falling by 1per cent-6per cent.

“This update should trigger a modest relief rally,” said Citi analyst Amit Harchandani, adding, however, that the overall level of near-term uncertainty meant he would keep his neutral rating on the stock.

CEO Christian Klein abandoned his medium-term profit targets last October and said SAP would go all-in on its shift to cloud computing, cautioning that business would take longer than expected to recover from the coronavirus pandemic.

That announcement, which came with a third-quarter earnings miss, sparked the biggest drop in SAP shares in a generation, causing the leading provider of enterprise software to lose its mantle as Europe’s most valuable technology company.

SAP’s 2020 revenue exceeded its lowered guidance, while profit hit the high end, the company said in an overnight news release issued ahead of results scheduled on Jan. 29.

“Our strong finish to the year and the upcoming launch of our new holistic business transformation offering position us well to meet our new outlook targets,” Klein said in a news release that followed SAP’s late-night results release.

The company plans a kick-off event, called SAP Rise, on Jan. 27 to promote its cloud drive.

SAP shares were up 1.4per cent in Frankfurt. They have lost more than a quarter in value since their all-time high set last September, valuing the Walldorf-based company at US$156 billion.

Chief Financial Officer Luka Mucic highlighted SAP’s record cash flow generation in 2020 which, at 7 billion euros, was double a year earlier.

CLOUD GROWTH

Cloud revenue continued to be impacted by lower pay-as-you-go transactional revenue, however, in particular for Concur, SAP’s expense management app that has been hit by a slump in corporate travel.

That was offset by strength in e-commerce, business technology platform and customer experience sales, as well as wins for SAP’s human resources application SuccessFactors.

“SAP also saw strong early take-up of its new holistic business transformation offering among pilot customers, contributing to the cloud performance in the quarter,” the company said.

SAP says its switch to subscription-based cloud services will boost growth and profit margins in the long term, but weaning itself off the upfront fees that its legacy software licences throw off will create near-term headwinds.

Non-IFRS cloud revenue at constant currencies rose by 13per cent in the fourth quarter, while current cloud backlog – the company’s preferred indicator of sales performance – grew by 14per cent, also at constant currencies.

Quarterly operating profit was lifted by lower share-based compensation expenses, rising 3per cent at constant currency. Adjusted operating margin, also at constant currency, expanded by 1.5 percentage points to 36.8per cent.

(US$1 = 0.8229 euro)

(Reporting by Douglas Busvine in Berlin. Editing by Matthew Lewis and Mark Potter)