Open Text Corporation (OTEX) on Q2 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Thank you for standing by. This is the conference operator. Welcome to the OpenText Corporation Second Quarter Fiscal 2021 Earnings Conference Call. As a reminder, all participants are in listen-only mode and the conference is being recorded. After the presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. I would like to turn the conference over to Harry Blount, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Harry Blount: Mark J. Barrenechea: Thank you, Harry. And good afternoon to everyone, and thank you for joining today’s call. I want to open the call with a note of optimism. Over the last year, the world has experienced health, financial, social, political, and environmental crises. Well, many of these crises continue and the effects are long lasting and that forever changed the way we work live and love green shoots are emerging all around us. With an accelerating vaccine rollout, the prospects of a global economic recovery appear to be brightening. Today in the U.S., more people have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine than cases reported. Economists are increasingly predicting a strong economic recovery in calendar of 2021, due to a combination of rebounding demands, rising prices and low inventory levels. We’re also so much better informed today than we were a year ago. The transformative nature of digital and extreme automation is clear. And we remain in the early stages of the fastest, deepest, and most consequential technology disruption in the history of the world. Businesses are accelerating their digital capabilities and are placing greater emphasis on trusted global partners, time to value, modern work, sustainable supply chains, tell our customer experiences and cloud plus edge computing. What has become clear is that the cloud plus network plus edge are inextricably linked. Our new architecture and platform of Cloud Edition places OpenText information management demonstrably in the middle of important demand conversations for companies of all sizes large, medium and small. The previous four quarters at OpenText are reflective of the amazing strength and durability of our employees, our customers, our company, our business model, and the transformative aspects of our products. Over the last year, we have generated a record $3.3 billion and trailing 12-month revenues are record $1.1 billion and trailing 12 months free cash flows and invested $400 million trailing 12 months in our products each approximately. We settled with the IRS. We increased our dividend by 15%. We announced the share repurchase program. We donated 4 million meals to help with food insecurity at the end of last year. We’ve achieved our highest employee engagement scores. We were named a Forbes top 150 employer. We delivered record fiscal 2021 Q2 revenues, which we’ll get to in a moment. We introduced our new platform Cloud Edition. And we’re on target to deliver adjusted EBITDA of 37% to 38% this fiscal year. And we are on target to deliver annual recurring revenues or ARR of 81% to 83% highlighting two key aspects of our business. First, the predictability of our business, and second, we are a cloud company. Madhu Ranganathan: Thank you, Mark. And thank you all for joining us today. We had a strong second quarter and a solid first half of this fiscal year 2021. Our preemptive responses at the onset of the global pandemic strengthened us as we continue to lead the way in modern work. Our disciplined financial management has allowed us to support key growth initiatives, maintain the resilience of our business model and this is reflected in that expanded margins and solid cash simulation. I will speak to Q2, Q3 and our quarterly factors, our fiscal 2021 total growth strategy, our fiscal 2021 annual target model ranges and our long-term aspirations, all outlined in our Q2 investor presentation that is posted on the IR website today. All references will be in the millions of USD unless noted otherwise and compared the same period in the prior fiscal year. So let me start with revenues. Q2, total revenues for the quarter were $855.6 million, 10.9% or up 8.8% on a constant currency basis, including a strong contribution from Carbonite as we completed the one year market, December, 2020. There was a favorable effects impact to revenue of $16.2 million. The geographical split of total revenues in the quarter was Americas 60%, EMEA 32% and Asia Pacific 8%. Year-to-date total revenues were $1.659 billion, up 13% or up 11.5% in a constant currency basis. Q2 annual recurring revenues were $684.9 million, up 21.5% or up 19.5% on a constant currency basis. As a percent of total revenues, ARR, annual recurring revenue was 80% for the quarter up from 73% of the second quarter of fiscal 2020. Here, I would like to highlight that we achieved positive organic ARR growth during the quarter on a reported basis. Year-to-date annual recurring revenues were $1.355 billion, up 21.7% or up 20.4% on a constant currency basis. As a percent of total revenues, year-to-date ARR was 82%, up from 76% of the first six months of fiscal 2020. Q2 cloud revenues are particularly strong at $350.5 million, up 41.1% or up 39.6% on a constant currency basis. Our cloud renewal rate excluding Carbonite’s approximately 96%. Year-to-date cloud revenues of $691.4 million, up 42.4% or up 41.5% on a constant currency basis. Q2 customer support revenues were $334.5 million, up 6% or up 3.6% on a constant currency basis. Our customer support renewal rate for Q2 was 94%. Across the business, our renewals performance remain strong. Year-to-date customer support revenues were $663.9 million, up 5.7% or up 4.2% on a constant currency basis. Q2 license revenues were $107.3 million, down 22.2% or down 24.6% on a constant currency basis. Year-to-date license revenues were $175.9 million, down 18.6% or down 20.7% on a constant currency basis. Q2 professional services revenues were $63.4 million, down 9% or down 11.4% on a constant currency basis. Year-to-date, professional services revenues were $128.5 million down 7.6% or down 10% on a constant currency basis. Tax update, before we speak to net income and other related metrics, I want again call out the IRS Settlement we announced in December 22, 2020. The IRS Settlement provides finality to this longstanding matter, putting it behind us and we move forward and we believe it to be in the best interest of all stakeholders. The settlement resulted in a charge of approximately $299 million to the provision for income taxes. We expect to make payments to the IRS of approximately $287 million during the third quarter of fiscal 2021 and associated state tax and interest payments of approximately $12 million throughout calendar year 2021. All details are included in our Form 10-Q filed today. Q2 GAAP net loss was $65.5 million compared to net income of $107.5 million in the prior year, primarily driven by the tax provision relating to the IRS Settlement. Year-to-date GAAP net income was $37.9 million compared to net income of $181.9 million in the prior year. Q2 adjusted net income was $260.5 million, up 14.8% or up 11.1% on a constant currency basis. Year-to-date adjusted net income was $502.3 million, up 25.4% or up 22% on a constant currency basis. Q2 GAAP loss per share diluted was $0.24 down from earnings per share diluted of $0.40. Year-to-date GAAP earnings per share diluted was $0.14, down from $0.67. Q2 non-GAAP earnings per share diluted was $0.95, up $0.11 from $0.84 and up $0.08 on a constant currency basis. Year-to-date non-GAAP earnings per share diluted was $1.84, up $0.36 from $1.48 and up $0.31 on a constant currency basis. Turning to margins. GAAP gross margin for the quarter was 70.5% up 60 basis points. Year-to-date GAAP gross margin of 69.8%, up 120 basis points. Non-GAAP gross margin for the quarter was 77.1% up 160 basis points. Year-to-date non-GAAP gross margin was 76.8% up 240 basis points. From GAAP gross margins by revenue type, please refer to our Q2 fiscal 2021 10-Q report as I mentioned filed today. Also on a non-GAAP basis for the quarter, cloud margin was 66.7% up from 58.4% given by continued improvement in our cloud service delivery and a strong contribution from Carbonite. Year-to-date cloud margin was 66.9%, up from 57.8%. For the quarter and year-to-date customer support margin was 91.2%, up from 90.7% and reflected continued strong renewal performance. For the quarter, license margin was 96%, down from 97.8% primarily due to higher third-party technology costs similar trends on a year-to-date basis as well. For the quarter, professional services margin was 27.5%, up from 23.5% reflecting benefits we see from lower travel while effectively delivering our solutions on a digital and remote basis. Year-to-date professional services margin was 28.4% up from 22.8%. Please note that our total operating expenses for Q2 into the restoration of compensation and benefits effective December 1, 2020 for all employees. Adjusted EBITDA was $360.8 million this quarter, up 13.8% or up 10.7% on a constant currency basis. This represents 42.2% margin, up from 41.1% in the same quarter last year. Year-to-date adjusted EBITDA was $703.1 million, up 23.1% or up 20.2% on a constant currency basis. This represents 42.4% margin up from 38.9% during the first six months of fiscal 2020. Turning to cash flow, which was consistent and solid performance, with operating cash flows of $282.5 million for the quarter, up 36.3% and free cash flows of $274.8 million up 46.5%. On a year-to-date basis, operating cash flows are $516.4 million, up 49.8% and free cash flows of $493.4, up 61%. DSO was 47 days compared to 57 days in Q2 fiscal 2020. The year-over-year reduction of 10 days effects continuous measures to drive operational efficiency in our working capital framework, particularly the code to collectclasses as well as positive contributions to the integration of Carbonite. From a balance sheet perspective, we ended the quarter with approximately $1.5 billion in cash, given our strong cash flow performance. With a $600 million revolver repayment in October 2020, we now have $750 million undrawn and fully available bringing our total liquidity to $2.25 billion. Our consolidated net leverage ratio is 1.6 times and improvement from 1.82 times last quarter. This is a strong place to be solid execution of the quarter and a balance sheet that positions us well to execute in our total growth strategy. Now turning to quality factors, total growth strategy and annual target model all available on our investor website. So first and foremost, let me reiterate that we do view our business as annual and quarters will vary. Long-term value is created from sustained annual performance and 90-day cycles are way too short to measure. On quality factors, for the third quarter fiscal 2021 and compared to the same period of the prior year, we expect the following inclusive effects. First of all, FX tailwind of revenues of $10 million to $15 million. Total revenues constant, annual recurring revenue, ARR constant to slightly up, adjusted EBITDA margin percentage up 100 to 200 basis points For our full year fiscal 2021 total growth strategy. Our first half of the fiscal year performance has been strong, particularly in the context of the global pandemic and we’re very pleased to increase our outlook for the remainder of the fiscal year. We now expect the following for our fiscal year 2021 compared to fiscal year 2020. High teens growth on cloud revenue compared to a previous target of mid double digit, low single digit growth and customer support revenue is consistent with our prior target. High single to low double digit growth and annual recurring revenue compared to a previous target of high single digit, no changes in license and PX revenue targets, which we see declining and this is consistent with broader industry trends and as cloud adoption accelerate. Total revenue moves from constant to low single digits to mid single digit growth in fiscal 2021. New M&A opportunities will remain additive to our model. Our fiscal 2021 annual target model with included operating ranges remains unchanged. However, I will highlight a few important points. Annual recurring revenue, ARR range for fiscal 2021 expected 81% to 83% compared to 78.2% in fiscal 2020. Non-GAAP gross margin range in fiscal 2021 expected at 74% to 76% compared to 74.5% in fiscal 2020. Adjusted EB margin range for fiscal 2021 expected at 37% to 38% compared to 36.9% in fiscal 2020. On long-term aspirations, our long-term aspirations remain unchanged targeting adjusted EBITDA margin of 38% to 40% and free cash flow of $900 million to $1 billion for fiscal 2023 with a plan to reinvest any margin gains above 40% additional growth initiatives. In summary, well done to the OpenText team for delivering the solid Q2 and leading the way in digital working. On January 2021 rolled in the OpenText team got forward, tremendous learning and resilience as we look ahead to the second half of our fiscal year, a very special thank you for your amazing efforts. I thank you to our shareholders, who trust and confidence we greatly value. We look forward to engaging with all of you as part of our investor outreach and conferences and of course, and our March 11 Investor Day. I wish you all continued safety environments. I would now like to open the call to questions. Operator? Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. Our first question comes from Raimo Lenschow of Barclays. Please go ahead. Raimo Lenschow: Hey, congrats from me on a great quarter. Mark, you talked a little bit about the recovery or the green shoots of recovery you see everywhere. And it’s great to see the guidance decrease now, it’s fully organic what we see for next quarter. If you think about the next few quarters looking out and the guidance you’ve given there. Is there kind of the new normal, it’s an element of recovery in there, so that’s better than normal. Like, how do we have to think about it? What you see in there. And then had one follow-up. Mark J. Barrenechea: Yes, thank you for the question. Look, if I wind back to a year ago, our energy was very much on our preemptive sort of decisions that ultimately strengthened us through the year. But if I look at the year ahead, certainly for the remainder of the fiscal year, which is through end of June, we see those green shoots. I mean, there are four things that come to mind. The first is, modern work is really accelerating, content management, workflow, e-signature, projects in collaboration. Second is we see this rebound of our business network volumes and industries that are seeing an increase, healthcare, automotive, retail, a lot of green shoots there for us on the business network. Security has come front of mind post solar wins and our ability to really provide data protection and the next generation of threat intelligence based on behaviors or signatures. And then Raimo, you have all the – I think the secular things around movement to cloud and the need to have that trusted partner on a global basis. So we feel like very sustained trends coming into the calendar year and we’ve had four quarters of experience through the pandemic and each quarter has been getting sequentially stronger. So that’s part of the reason for a bit more visibility into the fiscal year as we come into the second half and welcome your second year. Raimo Lenschow: Yes. Okay, perfect. And then on the cloud, so we know you’re talking 21.2 and 21.4, some things really exciting when it comes out. What do you see in terms of customer interest in terms of how they’re kind of migrating over to the cloud? Is that – do you see like new workloads going into the clouds and the existing stuff is still kind of staying on premise? Do you see the migration starting? What’s the momentum that you’re seeing there? Thank you. Mark J. Barrenechea: Yes. Thank you for that. Look, at Investor Day, I plan to go a much deeper on the kind of the status of Cloud Edition. Let me just give you a few examples. I look at our content cloud and support for modern work, we have new workloads and expand at work going on at the NIH in the U.S. and European Central Bank on the experience cloud. We have a new customer like PG&E and expanded workloads for social commerce at L’Oréal. On the business network side, we’re very excited about – we’re all very focused on a pandemic and rightfully so, but the greater challenge is really the environment and the circular economy. So our work, in supporting very demonstrable features to support that circular economy with customers like, Nestlé. Our protection cloud doing work with high of Thomson Reuters on our security and protection cloud and I’m really excited about how the developer cloud, everything as a public API is going to contribute to organic growth in fiscal 2022. So it’s all about the cloud additions. I think it’s a mixture of taking off cloud, current workloads to a private managed service. It’s about adding new workloads and our SaaS offerings. It’s attracting new customers and also a new market of our API services. And I plan to go on a lot more detail at Investor Day. Raimo Lenschow: Okay. I’m looking forward to that. Okay. Thank you. Operator: Our next question comes from Stephanie Price of CIBC. Please go ahead. Stephanie Price: Good afternoon. Mark J. Barrenechea: Hi, Stephanie. Stephanie Price: Hi. Let’s talk a little bit about which pieces of the cloud can drove that outperformance versus prior expectations. Did you see kind of outsize growth in Carbonite or CE or business networks? How to kind of think about that outperformance of cloud this quarter? Mark J. Barrenechea: Yes, I would – I pointed to three pieces. On the content side and the content cloud, again for the reasons I just previously talked about support for modern work. Second is the business network, and the increase in volumes and nice new green shoots in a variety of industries. And Carbonite overall just had a strong quarter from the data protection Carbonite side, Webroot and threat intelligence, as well as bright cloud. So those are the three standouts, Stephanie, I’d point to the content cloud, business network and Carbonite in general. Stephanie Price: Okay. That’s helpful. And within Carbonite, kind of thinking about the upside opportunities here and the cross selling into the enterprise and extension of the partner network. Just curious, where we are in those initiatives or the performance in Carbonite was really more a function of just the existing prosumer, consumer market kind of driving those sales. Mark J. Barrenechea: Yes, there are three drivers. The first is, just better running the existing business and it is a unique go-to-market. And this is where we sell to, we enable, we deploy to RMM and MSPs. We don’t really – we of course, sell to some SMBs directly, but the vast majority of our business is through RMMs and MSP. And it’s a very unique channel. I know others are claiming they invented it, they did and that’s okay. But our business is through this for a unique channel. So one growth is just a better managing that. Two is, increased innovation. I’m very excited about 21.2 and an integrated console that delivers on the promise of integrating Carbonite and Webroot to move through that channel of our RMM and MSP. The third is, uplifting kind of, upselling, upscaling the product into the enterprise. And we started to see some green shoots there. I mentioned a few names TD Securities, Hyatt, Thomson Reuters, Prudential, who are using a mixture of Carbonite data protection or bright cloud. So those are the three approaches Stephanie that we’re looking to grow. It’s just better managing the platform to RMMs and MSPs. It’s to accelerating innovation, things like CASB, things like an integrated console, next generation of threat intelligence continuing to focus on behaviors for signatures. And then what I call it, upscaling the product into the enterprise and we’ve begun to see some green shoots on the enterprise customers I just mentioned. Stephanie Price: Great. Thank you very much. Operator: Our next question comes from Paul Steep of Scotia Capital. Please go ahead. Paul Steep: Great, thanks. Mark, maybe you could talk just following up on the content cloud driving growth. Can you give us a sense of what that multi-year migration cycle might look like? I know that might be taking some of the excitement from the March day, but in any context of where we are and then I have one quick follow-up. Mark J. Barrenechea: Yes. My team strongly encouraged me to save the gunpowder for Investor Day, if you will. But let me say it this way, Paul. We are in literally the earliest of innings truly are. We’re less than 10% migrated of our installed base into our five clouds. So it is still the earliest of innings to have our installed base fully on the cloud addition, architecture and platform. And it’s not just a lift and shift of the platform. We can manage it better. We can manage it at a lower price, but we want to bring them to a modern environment. We want to manage the application stack. We want to be able to expand workloads. We want to be able to bring them to all of information management. So I would just summarize that we’re in the literally earliest of innings, we’re less than 10% migrated on cloud. Look, Cloud Edition has only been in the market just a little over a year. So it remains the largest – the single largest opportunity we have to drive growth is to migrate our installed base. Paul Steep: Great. And then risk of wearing out my welcome here. How should we think about longer term as we sort of move over from cloud? How should we think about that license line or maybe how are you managing that transition to make customers more or less agnostic about the purchase decision? Thanks folks. Mark J. Barrenechea: Yes. Thank you, Paul. I think you’ll notice, I didn’t use the word license at all in my script. And the emphasis is all on cloud. Let me point to a few things. The first is our annual recurring revenue, ARR with 80%. It’s all about our business, but when you benchmark us to Oracle, Microsoft, IBM, SAP, we are ahead of every one of those in terms of our transition to ARR. We’re at 80%. We have a – our target model is 81% to 83% for the year, but you look at established companies like IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, we’re ahead of every single one of them and where we are as ARR as a percent of our business. Second I’d point to our support business, which is a support and update business, the ability to get security updates, the ability to get rapid new features that are relevant and easy to consume that business grew 6% as we noted. So our strategy is let customers decide as customer choice of how they want to consume. I said this many years ago, I am agnostic as to how they want to consume. We are opinionated on growing our margin as you can see through the years that we’re not agnostic there. And we’ve – we’re just going to grow cloud faster than everything else as you’re seeing. So customers still had the choice is clearly cloud first ARR is leading and dominating were ahead of our peers, and we’re simply going to grow faster in cloud and ARR adverse that transactional side of the business. Paul Steep: Thank you. Mark J. Barrenechea: Paul, if I can maybe before we get to the last question, I just – we don’t philosophically believe that we should force it, because it’s still customer choice. And some companies are forcing it. But they’re also in a lot lower ARR than we are. And so it’s really the ARR piece that is really a standout at 80%, not just at OpenText, but when measured to our peers. Paul Steep: That helps. Thank you. Operator: Our next question comes from Thanos Moschopoulos of BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Thanos Moschopoulos: Hi, good afternoon. Hey Mark, how would you characterize customer buying behavior in terms of sales cycles, decision processes, deal sizes. Is it starting to look a lot more similar to pre-pandemic or are we still kind of a weird environment in that regard? Mark J. Barrenechea: I would say it’s returning, it’s not fully back to pre-pandemic, but it’s a lot less uncertain in bureaucratic than it was maybe in the first half of last year. There is no doubt a greater emphasis. And I think this is new. So it’s not pre-pandemic or during pandemic. I just think this is new. It is an emphasis on time to value. That there’s an immediacy, there’s a time to value, and it’s also a look to global trusted partners versus – so less risk adverse. So it’s a good question. Deal sizes, I think are slightly up. I think decision cycles are slightly down or slightly shrunk. It’s – I wouldn’t say it’s fully back to pre-pandemic, but it’s more there than not and time to value is certainly emphasized in the majority of our transaction today. Thanos Moschopoulos: Great. And then a question for Madhu, as I look at your guidance and your target model for the year that would seem to imply a fair bit of gross margin compression in the second half in professional services and cloud. Maybe just to clarify was that be a function of comps being a restorative part of levels and expectation of travel expenses going up for maybe just conservatives minor parks. Madhu Ranganathan: So thank you for that. So definitely as Mark was alluded, we are investing in the second half and we’re investing not just putting medic and come back, but also in terms of hires, and building up for the next year. And from a gross margin perspective, that also includes investment cloud services and customer support as well. Thanos Moschopoulos: Presumably maybe to improve the capacity, right utilization of any type of capacity, would that be fair? Madhu Ranganathan: Yes, and that’d be fair as well. Yes. Thanos Moschopoulos: Yes, okay. Thanks for that one. Madhu Ranganathan: Thank you. Operator: Our next question comes from Richard Tse of National Bank Financial. Please go ahead. Richard Tse: Yes. Thank you. With respect to the shift to the cloud, I’m just kind of curious, is there an opportunity to kind of create there’s a step function up in terms of organic growth? What’s that transition here? Mark J. Barrenechea: Richard, thanks for the question. As we noted in our script, we had in the quarter, organic ARR growth on reported the currency. And I expect to have organic growth in the cloud in the second half of the year. In terms of a step up, we’ll maybe talk more about what that means, but I’m expecting cloud to grow organically, just to say it directly based on the factors we talked about. Richard Tse: Okay. Yes, I’m just asking, because it was sort of looking at Slides 21 and 24, where you highlight your customers and the number of products that they’re signed up for and it seems like they’re signing up for more. And I guess the line of questioning was around as these platforms become more uniform, the ability to sell on that basis I would think should be easier, which is why I’m asking a question, but… Mark J. Barrenechea: Yes. Yes, and look, if I cannot point to the principles I talked a little bit about and they’re important principles behind Cloud Editions. I think that’s partly of what you’re noting that once my graded into the OpenText Cloud, we have the ability to deploy the features for customers and they don’t have that friction in the system, right. The more integrated we get again, the less friction to more modules and as we get to more standardized product, the ease of both consumption and new modules. So it’s no doubt that Cloud Editions and running the cloud is going to give us the opportunity, because of the integration to deploy more capabilities and to have customers be able to consume more. Richard Tse: Okay. That makes sense. With respect to the acquisitions, I know you talked about us are one part of your growth strategy. What does that environment look like today? And I guess related to that, are you looking to sort of fortify the markets that you’re currently in, or would you kind of look at it expanding into new marks sort of like what you did with Carbonite and security? Mark J. Barrenechea: Yes. Well, let me take it as an opportunity, I’ll answer the question directly, but I’m going to take it as an opportunity to highlight how we believe we create value. Number one, these are co-number one, number one, number one, organic growth. And that’s top of the list. And as we look into the remainder of the second half of the fiscal year and the calendar year, we’re clearly emphasizing organic growth today and also the step up in our outlook. Second way – number two of number one is margin. And we’ve just been on a stellar track to continue to become more efficient, more productive as a company. And the third way, the third number one is capital, capital deployment and capital efficiency. We’re very focused on the capital we’ve deployed. Getting full value for Carbonite, getting full value for Liaison, Documentum wasn’t that long ago. And the Documentum puts us right in the middle of modern work for a lot of companies. And then there’s new capital deployment. On a new capital deployment, which was I think part of the basis of your question is we’re going to remain a value buyer. We have the management and leadership bandwidth. We have a net debt ratio of 1.6 approaching sort of recent lows, if you will. And I’m very happy with the markets we’re in today. So I’m not looking to create a new market Richard, but rather kind of gaining share in what we have. Richard Tse: Okay. And just one last one related acquisitions, is your comfort level on leverage ratio? I think it was in the mid-3s if I don’t like, as I recall, but I’m not sure what it is today. Is it still around there? Mark J. Barrenechea: Our net leverage ratio is 1.6 today. And as we’ve noted, we’ve chronicled historically that would be comfortable. Ideally we’re at three, but we’ll go above three if we need to and then rapidly decrease that. And I’ll point again to Carbonite as well as Documentum where we rapidly delevered like we – three is where it’s just, I think of it simply that if the world goes really bad like they’re drop more than three years. That’s why – that’s what I thought of a 3x ratio relatively conservative ratio. Our covenants allow us to go higher than that, but we like operating around three, we’re well below it. And if we need to go above three, we won’t be bashful or the right asset. But it will come with a rapid deleverage plan. And as we’ve demonstrated, we can do it and have done it with Carbonite and Documentum. Richard Tse: Okay. That was great. Thanks, Mark. Operator: Our next question comes from Paul Treiber of RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Paul Treiber: Thanks very much, and good afternoon. Just want to hone into one product area in particular, which is e-signature, it seems like that is probably one of the products would be some strong adoption in this environment. How do you see within the large enterprise deals like is it bundled in there or can you sell it as an incremental product offering? And reason I bring it up with some of your competitors are doing quite well selling signatures, digital signatures, should we expect similar growth, are you seeing similar growth with your own product there? Mark J. Barrenechea: Yes. Paul, thank you for the question. We’re excited about it and we sell it independently. We bought the source code to a company about a year ago. And we created a product about a year and a half ago, created a product and a service. And it’s now fully integrated to content services and it’s now a standalone product. So we’re – we expected it is contributing, and we’re fully able to sell it as an independent module. And it is an important part of modern work, part of workflow, part of collaboration, project management, and ultimately signatures. I’ll highlight one customer fully live. We’re doing tens of thousands of signatures a month, the government of Ontario and who are fully live on our e-signature product. Paul Treiber: And you initially said the e-signatures, but with the market e-signature at least, it seems like a lot of the growth is coming from SMB. And it seems like there’s other product categories. You look at like file sharing or whatnot, where the growth has been driven by SMBs with the launch of your 21.4 products in the multitenant side into the cloud. Does that potentially open you up – open up in terms of to going direct in terms of addressing the SMB market? Mark J. Barrenechea: We still have – with all our progress, we still have much to learn. We bring e-signature to the enterprise. We’re – we haven’t brought e-signature to SMB. So our e-signature success is through our enterprise Salesforce. And this is one of the reasons we really love Carbonite, because we see a lot of these solutions that are built to scale up into the enterprise and scale laterally into SMB. And this part of our great long-term growth prospect is to be able to get that multi-channel way to market really humming. So we now have our product like e-signature for the enterprise, but we haven’t brought it into the SMB world yet. So I mean I appreciate your comment, but it just highlights why we brought on Carbonite and the opportunity for many of our key solutions. And it’s one of the things that as part of our strategic direction is able to bring product simultaneously to the enterprise and SMB. We have a lot of learning to do there and lots of opportunity. Paul Treiber: Okay. Thanks for taking my questions. Operator: This concludes the question-and-answer session. I will now hand the call back over to Mr. Barrenechea for closing remarks. Mark J. Barrenechea: All right. Well, thank you very much. We’re obviously very excited about Q2 and playing offense and our improved outlook for fiscal 2021. I hope you’ll – well, we hope to see everyone at our virtual Investor Day on March 11. Please register on our website or contact Investor Relations. And the team is very excited to spend time with you to talk to provide updates on our strategic progress and our future direction. Thank you for joining us today. Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. You may disconnect your lines. Thank you for participating and have a pleasant day.
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OpenText Corporation (NASDAQ:OTEX) is a prominent player in the enterprise information management sector, providing software solutions that help organizations manage and secure their data. The company is known for its cloud-based services and innovative platforms, such as the AI-driven Titanium X. OpenText competes with other tech giants in the software industry, striving to maintain its market position through strategic initiatives and leadership changes.

On August 12, 2025, Kevin Krishnaratne from Scotiabank set a price target of $35 for OTEX, suggesting a potential price increase of approximately 19.78% from its current price of $29.22. This optimistic outlook comes amid significant leadership changes at OpenText, with James McGourlay stepping in as the Interim CEO. McGourlay, a seasoned executive with 25 years at OpenText, previously served as the Executive Vice President of International Sales.

The leadership transition follows the departure of Mark J. Barrenechea from his roles as CEO, CTO, and Vice Chairman of the Board. The Board of Directors has formed an Executive Committee and is actively searching for a permanent CEO. Despite these changes, OpenText remains focused on exploring portfolio-shaping opportunities to enhance its strategic direction, as highlighted in their recent Q4 2025 earnings call.

OpenText's financial performance in the fourth quarter of 2025 reflects both challenges and strengths. The company reported a 10.4% year-over-year decline in total revenues, yet its cloud business showed resilience with a 32% growth in cloud bookings. This growth is largely attributed to the demand for the Titanium X platform. Additionally, OpenText achieved $1.86 billion in cloud revenues, marking a 2% year-over-year increase.

In efforts to return value to shareholders, OpenText announced a 5% increase in its quarterly dividend, now set at $0.275 per common share. The company also initiated a $300 million share repurchase program. Despite a 3.5% decrease in earnings per share and a 14.2% drop in adjusted EBITDA, OpenText remains committed to enhancing shareholder value through strategic financial initiatives and innovative product offerings.

OpenText Corporation (NASDAQ:OTEX) Faces Leadership Changes and Market Fluctuations

OpenText Corporation's Leadership Transition and Market Performance

OpenText Corporation (NASDAQ:OTEX) is a prominent player in the enterprise information management sector. The company provides software solutions that help organizations manage and secure their data. OpenText competes with other tech giants like IBM and Microsoft in the information management space. Recently, Jefferies downgraded OTEX from a Buy to a Hold, with the stock trading at $30.22 at the time of the rating change.

The downgrade by Jefferies comes amid a significant leadership transition at OpenText. James McGourlay has been appointed as the Interim CEO, following the departure of Mark J. Barrenechea from his roles as CEO, Chief Technology Officer, and Vice Chairman of the Board. McGourlay, a 25-year veteran of the company, previously served as the Executive Vice President of International Sales. The Board of Directors has also established an Executive Committee and is searching for a permanent CEO.

OpenText's stock, currently priced at $30.22, has seen a decrease of 2.23% or $0.69. During the trading day, the stock reached a low of $30.11 and a high of $32.87. Over the past year, OTEX has fluctuated between a low of $22.79 and a high of $34.20. The company's market capitalization stands at approximately $7.69 billion, indicating its significant presence in the market.

The trading volume for OTEX today is 3,049,689 shares, reflecting active investor interest. Despite the leadership changes, OpenText plans to continue exploring portfolio-shaping opportunities to enhance its focus. This strategic direction may influence the company's future performance and investor sentiment.