This article was originally published on Forbes on Jun 10, 2022,12:19am EDTForbes on Jun 10, 2022,12:19am EDT
The market has indiscriminately penalized tech stocks across the board and cybersecurity stocks are simply caught in the cross fire. Q1 earnings proved that cybersecurity stocks are insulated from supply chain issues and remain a number one priority across corporate budgets. Specifically, cybersecurity-related companies reported top line and bottom line beats plus a handful raised guidance while consumer-related tech and less cash efficient cloud verticals lowered or missed guidance this past quarter.
The analysis below looks at why cybersecurity is a more insulated trend and a few of the cybersecurity stocks that stood-out.
Cybersecurity Budgets are Expanding in 2022
Enterprise spending is expected to increase in 2022 from the previous year, according to Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) surveys. Considering the level of cloud spending in both 2020 and 2021, an increase on already high budgets is impressive. The CISO survey states that 44% increase budgets to increase in 2022 compared to 41% in 2021 and only 2% expect a decrease compared to 6% the previous year.
In a similar study from PricewatershouseCooper, 69% predict a rise in cyber spending for 2022 and 26% expect a surge of 10% or higher spending year-over-year. This survey was done across a broader C-suite and executive sampling.
According to a Gartner survey, 88% of the Board of Directors viewed cybersecurity as a business risk. According to Paul Proctor, VP at Gartner, “The influx of ransomware and supply chain attacks seen throughout 2021, many of which targeted operation- and mission-critical environments, should be a wake-up call that security is a business issue, and not just another problem for IT to solve.”
Gartner has also reported from a CIO survey that cyber and information security is the top priority of planned investments for companies for 2022 with 66% planning to increase investments.
Monika Sinha, VP at Gartner, said, “There is a continued need to invest in cybersecurity as the environment becomes more challenging. A high level of composability would help an enterprise recover faster and potentially even minimize the effects of a cybersecurity incident.
According to Global Market Insights, the cybersecurity market is expected to reach $400 billion by 2027 from $170 billion in 2020, representing a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15% during this period. The report mentions that rapid technological advancement is driving the shift to cloud-based solutions. The increasing use of the digital world increases cybercrime, which increases enterprises' spending on cybersecurity.
Cybersecurity Stocks Report Strong Q1 Earnings
We had stated on Fox Business News that a small cohort of companies emerged this past quarter to increase the top line while also reporting narrowing losses on the bottom line. We feel not losing site of opportunities during selloffs is how generational wealth is built.
This quarter, we saw on average a 5% top line beat above guidance across major cybersecurity stocks, including Crowdstrike, Okta, SentinelOne and Zscaler. This is coupled with a beat on the bottom line across all major cybersecurity stocks with both Crowdstrike and Palo Alto Networks proving the sector can be profitable and also increase cash efficiency at scale.
Source: YCharts and Investor Relations (I/O Fund)
Zscaler’s Q3 FY 2022 revenue accelerated by 63% YoY to $286.8 million in the recent quarter. It was the seventh consecutive quarter of above 50% growth. The growth was led by the strong adoption of the company’s Zero Trust Platform. Zscaler has a free cash flow margin of 15% and management expects this to expand to a free cash flow margin of 20% for the full-year ending July 2022.
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Credit Suisse analyst Phil Winslow lowered the company’s price target to $310 from $410 and kept an Outperform rating. He said, “Zscaler reported strong Q3 results, with revenue growth greatly surpassing consensus estimates and operating margins and billings also exceeding consensus. He believes a meaningful runway exists for the company.
CrowdStrike stole the show this quarter with a beat on both top and bottom line; but it was the raised guidance line that stood out. Revenue accelerated by 61% YoY to $487.8 million and annual recurring revenue (ARR) also accelerated by 61% YoY to $1.92 billion. This company has an impressive cash flow margin of 32%.
Crowdstrike also raised revenue guidance for FY 2023 ending January to $2.19 billion to $2.21 billion from the earlier guidance of $2.13 billion to $2.16 billion, representing a YoY growth of 52% at the mid-point of the revised guidance. It also raised guidance of adjusted income from operations from a midpoint of $300.5 million to $312.2 million. Similarly, the adjusted net income from a mid-point guidance of $262.4 million to $289 million.
Morgan Stanley analyst Hamza Fodderwala upgraded the stock to overweight from equal weight. The analyst said, “CrowdStrike (CRWD) is seeing further adoption based on conversations with Chief Information Officers and is seeing 100% growth from its non-endpoint offerings, which now account for 15% of its annual recurring revenue, showing that its total addressable market could be $30B bigger than first thought.”CRWD) is seeing further adoption based on conversations with Chief Information Officers and is seeing 100% growth from its non-endpoint offerings, which now account for 15% of its annual recurring revenue, showing that its total addressable market could be $30B bigger than first thought.”
(I/O Fund)
Cloudflare company reported 54% revenue growth, beating estimates by 3%, with 49% growth expected next quarter. The company raised full year revenue guidance to $957 million, at the mid-range, for growth of 46%.
There is additional supporting evidence that growth is not an issue for Cloudflare, including remaining performance obligations (RPO) up 57% year-over-year and dollar-based net retention up 400 bps YoY. Customers paying over $100K increased 63% year-over-year to 1,537. This outpaced total customer growth of 29%. Large customers contributed 58% of revenue. There was solid growth in the >$500K customer base of 68% year-over-year growth, and >$1 million customer base grew by 72% year-over-year.
Needham analyst Alex Henderson has kept the buy rating but lowered the company’s price target to $100 from $245. He reduced the target multiples in his valuation model to enterprise value to expected FY23 sales of 23-times, down from 64-times, given the sell-off in growth equities, but maintains that Cloudflare should be a core long-term holding in all growth portfolios and recommended that investors buy the recent weakness.
Palo Alto’s Q3 FY 2022 revenue grew by 29% YoY to $1.4 billion. The billings and remaining performance obligation grew by 40% to $1.8 billion and $6.9 billion, respectively. The management mentioned in the earnings call that it was the highest billings growth in the past four years. The company raised the full-year ending July revenue guidance from a mid-point of $5.46 billion to $5.49 billion, representing a YoY increase of 29% at the mid-point.
Wedbush analyst Daniel Ives lowered the company’s price target to $580 from $660 and kept an Outperform rating on the shares. He said, “The shift to cloud is a massive tailwind for Palo Alto as the company is in the right spot at the right time to benefit from this multiyear tidal wave of cybersecurity enterprise spending.”
Conclusion:
Cybersecurity is a top priority in budgets and the results are showing up. We found a strong pattern with cybersecurity stocks sustaining growth rates and strong bottom lines this quarter. The cybersecurity sector overwhelmingly beat estimates compared to other sectors within tech and investors may want to take notice.
Zscaler’s product has done exceptionally well considering the crowded cybersecurity market. This is due to its best-of-breed, singular focus on security edge and zero trust. Primarily, Zero Trust architecture began to replace VPNs in a meaningful way in 2020 and this has sustained due to the Zero Trust model offering deeper and more scalable protection by eliminating implicit trust.
Zero Trust Security is built on the premise that no one should be trusted within or outside the network. In the traditional security systems, it is difficult to obtain access from outside the network while those located inside the network were trusted. With Zero Trust, these trust assumptions are removed with tools such as multi-factor authentication, giving access for a limited time and to also verify, authorize and to have a continuous check on all the data points that are given access.
Zscaler released its third-quarter fiscal year 2022 results on May 26th with revenue accelerating 63% year-over-year to $286.8 million, which beat consensus by 5.6%. The company also raised full-year revenue guidance by 2.9%. The stock rose 13% the following day from the results.
On the bottom line, Zscaler has a 15% free cash flow margin with a goal to increase this to 20% FCF margin this year. The company saw an increase in adjusted operating income and adjusted net income yet is reporting slightly higher losses on a GAAP basis from (25%) to (30%) due to stock-based compensation.
Cybersecurity Spend is Increasing in 2022
We will copy a few points from our upcoming Forbes analysis on Cybsersecurity stocks here for easy reference. Note: we covered these points in our Q2 2022 analysis. For the full article, please check the forum on Friday.our Q2 2022 analysis. For the full article, please check the forum on Friday.
Enterprise spending is expected to increase in 2022 from the previous year, according to Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) surveys. Considering the level of cloud spending in both 2020 and 2021, an increase on already high budgets is impressive. The CISO survey states that 44% increase budgets to increase in 2022 compared to 41% in 2021 and only 2% expect a decrease compared to 6% the previous year.
In a similar study from PricewatershouseCooper, 69% predict a rise in cyber spending for 2022 and 26% expect a surge of 10% or higher spending year-over-year. This survey was done across a broader C-suite and executive sampling.
According to a Gartner survey, 88% of the Board of Directors viewed cybersecurity as a business risk. According to Paul Proctor, VP at Gartner, “The influx of ransomware and supply chain attacks seen throughout 2021, many of which targeted operation- and mission-critical environments, should be a wake-up call that security is a business issue, and not just another problem for IT to solve.”
According to Global Market Insights, the cybersecurity market is expected to reach $400 billion by 2027 from $170 billion in 2020, representing a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15% during this period.
Although that’s a small CAGR, many best-of-breed companies are only reporting around $1 billion in annual revenue right now, therefore, the size of pie is quite substantial for those that outperform competitors.
According to Gartner’s CIO survey concluded in 2021, cyber and information security is the top priority of planned investments by companies for 2022. Monika Sinha, VP at Gartner, said, “There is a continued need to invest in cybersecurity as the environment becomes more challenging. A high level of composability would help an enterprise recover faster and potentially even minimize the effects of a cybersecurity incident.”
Zscaler’s Product Leadership
Zscaler has been successful in capturing the cybersecurity growth trend with evidence the growth can sustain post-Covid. This is key as Covid was a major catalyst as Zero Trust began to replace VPNs. Although employees are returning to the office, the hybrid nature of work will persist, which means companies will face challenges in protecting their network since most of the information is stored in the cloud and the applications are SaaS-based.
Companies have realized that VPNs and firewalls are no longer safe, and the majority of them are adopting Zero Trust Security. The main reason is allowing remote workers to access through a VPN makes it easier for attackers to gain access through the internet to the company’s networks and gain access to data points. This can be efficiently tackled only by Zero Trust Security which is built on the premise that no one should be trusted within or outside the network.
The company has a large serviceable market of $72 billion. The company is benefiting from the shift from traditional cybersecurity solutions to cloud-based Zero Architecture. The Internet of Things and remote working has further increased the long-term opportunity for the company.
Zscaler primarily protects cloud workloads by controlling access through implementing policy-based access and interconnects for a company’s data centers, cloud infrastructure, software and third-party services. Zscaler is cloud native and its growth is related to growth in cloud migrations. SASE and zero-trust became especially important during the hybrid work-from-home rush that occurred during Covid.
The company offers the following products, Zscaler Internet Access (ZIA), Zscaler Private Access (ZPA), Zscaler Digital Experience (ZDX), and Zscaler Cloud Protection (ZCP). The company offers the flexibility for its customers to purchase products separately, which allows for flexibility in pricing.
ZIA is a security stack that offers reliable access to the internet and apps regardless of their location. ZIA is suited for connecting to external apps like Zoom or Office 365. Since it goes to third-party applications and the public internet, all the traffic is inspected so that no malware attacks occur and the data is secure.
ZPA provides secure access to internal applications that are hosted in data centers or in private/public clouds. ZPA offers secure private app access to its users across all locations with the company’s Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA) platform. The main advantage is that the apps are not exposed to the internet, limiting external cyber-attacks.
Traditional network performance analysis tools have become obsolete due to the applications moving to the cloud and users being in various locations. Previously, enterprises used to own the network and the applications used to run in their own data centers to identify any issues efficiently. ZDX solves this problem in the modern cloud environment since it helps companies know exactly where the issues lie and how many users are affected.
The company is a leader in the Zero Trust Platform, particularly in the Security Service Edge in the Gartner Magic Quadrant which can be seen in the graph below. The company’s demand for products remains strong, evident from the large multi-year contracts signed by the company. In the recent earnings call, the management mentioned they witnessed solid growth in $1 million annual contract value deals broadly across business verticals and geographies. The remaining performance obligation (RPO) grew by 83% YoY to $2.21 billion, indicating future revenue for the company.
Zscaler has a strong base of growing enterprise customers. The company also has been able to increase the number of Global 2000 customers. In the last two quarters alone, the company added 80 Global 2000 customers. It currently has 30% of the Global 2000 companies and 40% of Fortune 500 companies as its customers.
The company has been able to upsell its products which is evident with the company maintaining the dollar-based net retention rate of over 125% for the sixth consecutive quarter. The company had 288 customers in the recent quarter with annual recurring revenue (ARR) of over $1 million, up 77% YoY.
How is Zscaler Different?
Zscaler management is often asked how the company is different from its competitors. The main thing Zscaler accomplishes when competing against more legacy virtual private network (VPN) offerings is they are able to replace global load balancers, DDoS protection, external firewalls, intrusion prevention system (IPS) and also VPNs. Hackers use numerous attack vectors and Zero Trust is a solid replacement for VPN systems because it aggregates the appliances while broadening the protection.
One way that Zscaler offers enhanced protection for the attack surface is that nothing sits between Zscaler Private Access and the applications and workloads. Rather than build a VPN replacement, the company has extended ZPA to include browser isolation, app protection, interior deception and EIM based policy. This equates to Zscaler offering the widest and deepest coverage.
Secondly, attackers have a hard time finding where to attack with Zscaler’s Zero Trust architecture because the products act like a shield with the applications hiding behind Zscaler. The company’s proxy architecture scales rapidly as applications and workloads scale rapid. The CEO has said “[Zscaler] scales like nothing else out there.”
Regarding CDNs such as Cloudflare entering the market, Zscaler’s response in the earnings call is that it will take a long time for a CDN and DDoS provider that is focused on servers to catch up to the best-of-breed, singular focus Zscaler has. “We start focusing on users to start with. It takes a lot of time and experience to build our richness and breadth of functionality we have built with ZIA, ZPA and associated functionality. I think it will take a long, long time for someone to try to catch us. And we are setting. We are innovating at a very fast pace.”
With that said, certainly Cloudflare aggregates many products under its umbrella and does well on Zero Trust against more VPN-related solutions.
Notably, Zscaler is moving into machine learning-based cybersecurity. Zscaler processes more than 240 billion transactions per day and the company’s AI/ML models can block many types of known threats in real-time before the endpoint delivery. They are also designed to identify unknown phishing webpages before they appear in the end user’s browser. This proactive approach was not possible with traditional cyber security solution providers.
Financials
The company continued to deliver strong revenue growth. Revenue accelerated by 63% YoY to $286.8 million in the recent quarter. This is the seventh consecutive quarter of above 50% growth. The growth was led by strong adoption of the company’s Zero Trust Platform, as discussed above. The management expects revenue to grow 55% at the mid-point of the guidance in the Q4 FY2022 ending July.
Source: YCharts
The company’s key metrics are growing, indicating that growth is expected to continue. The remaining performance obligation grew by 83% YoY to $2.21 billion. The company’s billings grew by 54% YoY to $346 million.
The company reported GAAP operating margin of -30% compared to -25% in Q3 FY2021. The rise in operating expenses is partly due to the return of travel expenses which was absent during the Covid lockdowns. The company’s adjusted operating margin was 9% compared to 13% in the same period last year. The difference in GAAP and non-GAAP operating margins is primarily due to the stock-based compensation. The management mentioned in the earnings call that it should come down as a percentage of total revenue over a period of time. Recently, the market has been concerned about companies using high stock-based compensation, so this is a risk to watch in the coming quarters.
The company reported a net loss of $101.4 million compared to a net loss of $58.5 million in Q3 FY2021. The adjusted net income was $24.7 million compared to $21.4 million in the same period last year.
The company has strong cash flow. In the recent quarter, the free cash flow margin was 15%, and the management expects it to be 20% for the full year.
Conclusion
The strong revenue growth has given the company a premium valuation. The stock is currently trading at a P/S ratio of 22 with year ending in July and forward one-year P/S ratio of 15. The company is not without GAAP losses yet adjusted operating margin and cash flow margin helps offset profitability concerns.
We had discussed cybersecurity being strong this quarter going into Q2 2022 with our Quarterly Webinar presentation and the current earnings season supports this prediction. Primarily, the cybersecurity sector is insulated from supply issues (which we do expect to ease eventually) and also is a #1 must-have in budgets, per the many CISO and C-suite surveys published by multiple third-party consultants.
Undoubtedly, cybersecurity was the strongest category in tech this past earnings season and Zscaler was one of handful that put up a strong report.
The FANG acronym rose to popularity in 2013 and was extended in 2017 to FAANG to include Apple. If history is any indication, the world’s most valuable companies over the next ten years will not look like the previous ten years. Being early to identify which companies can take over this coveted status is how generational wealth is built.
As a tech industry analyst who has seen what one generous winner can do for an entire portfolio, I want to pause and acknowledge that an investor needs to only identify one company that can hold a top 5 position in order to see life-changing gains. To choose all five would be to defy incredible odds. This analysis is aimed at identifying what companies we believe will hold “world’s most valuable” by 2030.
Not only is tech the most valuable industry today, but what the tech industry is setting up to do over the next ten years will provide exponential gains compared to the 2020-2030 era. With that said, tech is going through a period of consolidation and this means the stakes are high in identifying the winners. To complicate matters, the market is not efficient with tech stocks as each product is quite nuanced and impossible to efficiently price without manual deep dives. Instead, the market will indiscriminately penalize all tech and indiscriminately reward all tech — and each time the liquidity tide rolls in and then out again, it becomes sink or swim. At times like this, we are very flexible as we know we only need to identify a handful of winners.
Our portfolio has twenty positions at any given time, yet we believe it will be 5-10 positions total that create 90% of our wealth by 2030. We are long-term buy and hold investors yet we acknowledge and accept this means we exit those who show weaker-than-expected results for more than one quarter — or we trim to 1% to hold a place for the stock in our coverage. Because we are flexible, we can always revisit a stock when the story resumes and the earnings match the thesis again.
The equity market is driven by sentiment and macro factors, which we expand on herewe expand on here, yet the underlying strength of tech fundamentals is hard to deny. The best way to predict what will happen next is to look closely at what happened over the past decade.
In 2007, following Steve Jobs famous iPhone keynote, a burgeoning app economy was driven forth by iOS and Android developers. Google’s search engine was already a success yet mobile catapulted it’s use by putting the mobile device into far more hands over three years’ time than personal computers did over two decades.
There were many ways to capitalize on this massive addressable market — the iPhone and iOS apps dominated the highest spend on mobile, Facebook proliferated to 2 billion people and Google expanded to acquire YouTube. In this way, mobile drove gains for three FAANGs.
The adage is that history rhymes but it does not repeat. I believe a large addressable market is certainly required to produce the new wave of FAANGs – however, rather than consumer driving the gains, I believe it will be enterprises.
Below, I discuss the enterprise-level market that will be four times larger than mobile and two stocks that will directly participate. Imagine participating in 4X the FAANGs by 2030. That’s what I believe will happen due to one key trend and I discuss exactly why this will be achieved below.
Later in the analysis, we look at cloud and the trends that will drive cloud over the next ten years. This will catch investors who are complacent off guard as cloud is already going through a period of consolidation and we are seeing new business models emerge, such as the consumption model whereas the SaaS model with annual recurring revenue has dominated the past decade. Microsoft helps prove that cloud is certainly capable of FAANG-status.
We will also look at blockchain and crypto as I have been covering this space since 2013, which predates the Ethereum network. I was trained in Silicon Valley and my role is to introduce public investors to the next wave of innovation in as safe a manner as possible. I agree that 90% of cryptos will go to $0 yet I/O Fund has been firm for years that Bitcoin would reach $1 trillion in market cap and we have two Layer 1 networks to discuss with you plus a middleware company. Whether you’re ready for it or not, Web3 will replace the internet by 2028-2030 and we are fully prepared to participate in the substantial gains the blockchain will produce.
Lastly, FAANG is not entirely dead and consumer will have its moments too. We discuss the two FAANGs we own and what major catalysts these companies have in their future. We also briefly touch on some consumer-facing stocks we own and the large addressable markets they have the potential to capture.
For those of you who are new to the I/O Fund, we are prolific in our analysis. I began writing analysis on products, startups and enterprise-technologies in 2011 and moved over to the public markets seven years later. There is a library of analysis available to you that dates back to our launch in 2019 and additional free analysis in 2018. Due to the sheer number of products I have analyzed, we are able to hold an all-tech portfolio across semiconductors, cloud, ad-tech, blockchain and more.
We also encourage you to sign up for trade alerts as Knox’s active tradesKnox’s active trades help frame the market and whether we are risk-on or risk-off. We also have an automated hedge signal and are audited annually. You can learn more about how we manage an all-tech growth portfolio here.
Yet, the investors on our site need to do their part, which I can summarize as the following:
Speak with your financial advisor about your risk level. We are not financial advisors. Instead, we simply show you the trades we are making with our own money.
Use our pie chart to view our allocations. The larger the allocation, the higher the conviction – and vice versa, the lower the allocation, the lower the conviction.
As stated, we are flexible as we expect a handful of companies to drive the majority of our gains. If we receive new information, we will manage risk accordingly by lowering allocation or exiting the position.
We firmly believe all tech investors need a long-term time frame for tech. The best tech investors in the world are venture capitalists and they seek an exit 5-7 years after they’ve funded a round. The reason to have a long holding period is that it’s nearly impossible to time an entry, therefore professionals instead time their exit. By having a long-term horizon, you can be patient until the market conditions are in your favor to take your exit.
Accept that tech is volatile. For example, high beta tech has sold off around 40%/year since 2018. I have been down this much and more so on positions that became 1,000% and 2,000% winners. This is not value investing, it’s an entirely different sport.
We have a proprietary hedge that we developed. The hedge went live in April and is designed to help us remain comfortably invested during drawdowns. You can learn more about the hedge here and watch the webinarhedge here and watch the webinar.
Without further ado, let’s talk about who will be the world’s most valuable companies in 2030
Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning will Exceed the Mobile Economy
Smartphones had a 10-year cycle of maturation with the iPhone distribution beginning in 2008 and the app economy had a similar 10-year maturation for digital advertising. We know mobile is reaching saturation as the iPhone often has flat quarters and Facebook’s DAUs are also flat. Following a decade-long run:
The smartphone market was valued at $720 billion in 2019 and the global mobile application size was $155 billion.
The mobile advertising market was valued at $60 billion — Facebook
The market is roughly $2 trillion for mobile yet the market cap of these companies combined is $4 trillion. Meanwhile, Pricewatershousecooper is predicting the AI market to reach $15.7 trillion with some believing AI will be the next electricity. Semiconductors will not comprise the entire $15.7 trillion but according to McKinsey, they will “capture 40 to 50 percent of the total value from the technology stack.”
“Many AI applications have already gained a wide following, including virtual assistants that manage our homes and facial-recognition programs that track criminals. These diverse solutions, as well as other emerging AI applications, share one common feature: a reliance on hardware as a core enabler of innovation, especially for logic and memory functions.”These diverse solutions, as well as other emerging AI applications, share one common feature: a reliance on hardware as a core enabler of innovation, especially for logic and memory functions.”
The artificial intelligence economy will be four times larger than the mobile economy. Put differently, mobile gave us companies with up to $2 trillion market caps and AI will give us companies with $8-$10 trillion market caps. Let’s break this down.
The size of total addressable market is critical to produce the world’s most valuable companies. FAANG companies have illustrated this well and that the private markets base nearly every investing decision on TAM.
Pictured above: Google’s search engine revenue growth from 2008-2022
Google’s search engine is used by over 4 billion people
Android is used by 2.5 billion people and YouTube 2 billion people.
Facebook is at 2.9 billion users
Apple has 1.8 billion active devices (about 1 billion iPhone)
Microsoft Windows has 1.4 billion users and MS Office has 1.2 billion users = Microsoft coming from the dot-com era shows us that mobile produced much larger addressable markets across three companies compared to the previous decade.
However, not only will AI semiconductors power the accelerated computing and the training and inference that reaches every person on earth, it will ultimately power the automobiles, the streetlights, vehicles, refrigerators, factories, cities and spaceships. This will extend the addressable market beyond the 7 billion global population to reach 100 billion connections. Now, imagine this – it will be writing the software too and running the machine-to-machine automations.
View my Bloomberg appearance here where I discuss the AI market being 4 times larger than mobile.Bloomberg appearance here where I discuss the AI market being 4 times larger than mobile.
Here is a glimpse of what AI will do for GDP in each country:
AI is expected to nearly double GDP in the United States by 2035 and across Europe and Japan. The same study shows the American worker will increase productivity by 35% due to AI.
Accelerated Computing Required for Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning will Produce Two (New) FAANGs: Nvidia and AMD
Accelerated computing is a term first used by the gaming industry when graphic accelerators were put into use to accelerate the work of a central processing unit (CPU). Nvidia created GPUs to offload tasks from CPUs for rendering 3D images. The CPUs provide the instructions while GPUs perform multiple calculations from streams of data. Parallel processing became a natural fit for the data center including training artificial intelligence and deep learning models due to processing multiple computations simultaneously.
Please reference the additional resources below where we have done previous deep dives on every company mentioned in this summary.Please reference the additional resources below where we have done previous deep dives on every company mentioned in this summary.
Nvidia’s Moat is Called Cuda:
Nvidia has a parallel computing platform and programming model called CUDA that is universally known due to the company’s first mover advantage in GPUs. The GPUs themselves do not create the moat. The compute platform creates the moat. Universities teach CUDA, which helps strengthen the universal platform for building GPU-accelerated applications as students graduate with this universal skill.
Hardware does not offer a moat. The iPhone was not the moat. Instead, it was the strength of the developer ecosystem that propelled Apple to become a $2 trillion company. The moat that Apple has enjoyed was created by the third-party developers who created iPhone applications in C and C++ with XCode, which made the device more attractive due to the mobile app ecosystem.
Android then became the second operating system in the mobile duopoly. Due to the friction of learning too many languages, the mobile ecosystem did not entertain any further competitors. This is despite there being 4 to 5 billion smartphones globally (i.e. it’s certainly feasible from a consumer supply/demand view point to entertain more operating systems and app stores), yet the limitation came from the number of languages developers are willing to learn. Microsoft Windows failed because it launched too late, and developers had already chosen the two languages they were willing to work with.
Developers create a moat because they don’t want to learn new systems – the cost of time, especially when bringing products to market is very valuable. For instance, AI startups are not going to shop a new software layer to program GPUs right now as it’ll slow down their time to market and it’s critical to launch products quickly. If there’s a competitor to Nvidia and the startup is already developing on the CUDA platform, then it better be a heck of a value proposition.
Nvidia’s Game Changer Was the A100 GPU:
In 2019, I had already stated to our premium research customers that Nvidia would become one of the world’s most valuable companies. However, the path became clearer in 2020 when the company released the A100 GPU which combines both training and inference onto one chip. The result is a 20X performance boost from a multi-instance GPU that allows many GPUs to look like one GPU. The A100 offers the largest leap in performance to date over the past 8 generations.
Note: Reference the resources below for more information on the A100 GPU including our coverage in 2020.
Fast forward, and nearly two years later after the A100 GPU launched, Nvidia had this to say in the most recent earnings report:
“[Data center revenue] doubled year-over-year. and we're seeing really strong adoption of A100. A100 is really quite special and unique in the world of accelerators. And this is one of the really, really great innovations as we extended our GPU from graphics to CUDA to Tensor Core GPUs. It's now a universal accelerator […] And so from database queries to data processing, to extraction, and transform and loading of data before you do training and inference and whatever image processing or other algorithmic processing you need to do can be fully accelerated on A100.”
Buried a bit deeper into the previous earnings call, management stated this: “The flagship NVIDIA A100 GPU continue to drive strong growth. Inference-focused revenue more than tripled year-on-year.”Inference-focused revenue more than tripled year-on-year.”
These are the kinds of critical moves we try to get in front of by covering the A100 GPU at its launch. Two years later, and we see management saying inference revenue has tripled and data center revenue doubled due to this specific product.
View my interview on TDAmertrade where I discuss Nvidia’s data center segment and why automotive will be strong in the second half of 2022.my interview on TDAmertrade where I discuss Nvidia’s data center segment and why automotive will be strong in the second half of 2022.
AMD: The Dark Horse of AI Chips
The Dark Horse refers to an underdog or an overlooked competitor that emerges seemingly from nowhere to succeed. We believe AMD is a force of nature that the market often underestimates due Intel’s overhyped public relations strategy. Meanwhile, the competitive prowess of Lisa Su has led to the second biggest comeback in the history of the tech industry after she took over AMD in 2014 on the brink of bankruptcy.
Note: We’ve done a 1-hour webinar exclusively on AMD. Reference the resources below.
AMD’s Strength Came from the Zen Architecture
The Zen architecture was introduced under Lisa Su in 2017. These processors are chipset free and fully integrated. Communication between CPUs is done through Infinity Fabric protocols. The result of the new architecture was more energy efficiency and the ability to execute more instructions per cycle.
The company released the second generation of its Zen architecture and this is when AMD started to clearly outpace Intel in terms of computing power, memory and energy use – all at a lower cost. This was due to multi-chip modules that combine a 7nm with a 14nm to use the most advanced technology when and where it’s needed most by leveraging the more mature process node. The L1 cache and L2 cache locations in the core and across the core also helped the company beat Intel on memory bandwidth.
Intel was still producing a 14nm chip with a 10nm supposedly on the way. Essentially, AMD leapfrogged the incumbent with a product that is more power efficient and allows for more cores per chip.
Note: read more about the Zen architecture in the resources listed below.
If technical jargon around chips isn’t your thing, then this is probably the most important line from our original analysis in terms of AMD’s competitive prowess: “It’s estimated that for every $1.00 in Rome chip sales, Intel loses $2.25 on average in Intel Xeon SP sales. The savings are then deployed to buy more Rome chips, which can further depress Intel’s revenue.”
We can clearly see AMD taking market share in server CPUs although losing ground in desktops and laptops (our thesis is server market share so that’s less important to us). Notably, overall CPU market share for AMD is up.
Most importantly, look at where AMD was when it launched the second generation of Zen (roughly 2%) to today (roughly 11%) market share – or nearly 6X from this major design win. Moving forward, Intel will need to deliver a 7nm chip – but by then Lisa Su will already be releasing a 5nm design.
As the analysis below points out, Intel needs to make up for lost time, meanwhile, Lisa Su is unlikely to allow that now that AMD has clawed its way back from near-zero. Our site was early to AMD overtaking Intel and this was the analysis we chose to publish during the Covid selloff in March of 2020.
Tech investors should pay attention to AMD’s ability to stave off the competitor and the new inroads AMD will have following the Xilinx acquisition. Xilinx’s FPGAs are particularly well suited for accelerated computing yet require an easier software development platform – which I suspect AMD and Lisa Su will fully deliver in the next year.
So far, Lisa Su has simply set the foundation for her company to see substantial AI tailwinds.
AI Acceleration Goes Far Beyond Data Centers
In the months to come, I will detail for I/O Fund members the additional revenue segments that will cause Nvidia and AMD to catapult their current market caps. The data center does not even scratch the surface.
Primarily, these companies will participate in the lion’s share of AI acceleration in the automotive industry, edge computing and edge devices, 3D virtual worlds and robotics simulation, industrial automation, software automation — and probably most crucially, why the leading hardware companies of today are moving into licensing software and why that will cause an eruption in revenue for these particular hardware companies. Look for this special report before next earnings season.
Before I move onto cloud, I’d like to mention that we hold two more semiconductor positions – Marvell and Lam Research. We foresee holding these companies for the long haul and linked resources below spell out why we’ve chosen these two names out of the hundreds of semiconductors on the market.
2030 Cloud Companies Won’t Look like 2020 Cloud Companies
Tech is synonymous with innovation, and consequently, innovation is synonymous with the word change. This is why winning cloud investments from the past ten years will not look like the next ten years. Cloud has treated investors well, yet cloud is going through a transformation that will shake up the previous paradigm. The previous paradigm was one where most cloud stocks were successful, and was distinguished by easy cash. Now that cash is tighter, there will be fewer winners in this category. We covered the fundamental change to cloud’s bottom line here in: Compartmentalizing Cloud Stocks.
Cloud: Only the Strong will Survive
In 2010-2021, the public markets saw hundreds of cloud companies go public. Yet anyone with a decade or more experience in tech will tell you that consolidation eventually will come knocking.
Consolidation is a natural part of the tech industry where competitors become acquired or they merge with stronger companies to avoid failing entirely. This helps a small minority to emerge as the defacto leaders. I believe that cloud companies will survive either through consolidation or standardization, which means cloud companies that have evolved to serve more than one market, which in turn helps drive down costs.
Let me illustrate:
Recently, a report came out that repatriation, or moving some workloads back to on-premise, has resulted in quite a bit of cost savings for companies like Dropbox, Crowdstrike and Zscaler, who use hybrid approaches. The report is quite surprising as the conclusion is that $100 billion to $500 billion in market value is lost on cloud deployments in terms of margins. One use case that is detailed is Dropbox, a company that reported savings of $75 million in two years after repatriation, which in turn, helped the company’s gross margins increase from 33% to 67%.
The problem with cloud is that it’s not uncommon for companies to spend about 60% of their revenue towards committed cloud spend. The solution is aggregating services and products to drive down costs.
Two companies we own that offer standardization are Datadog and SentinelOne. Standardizing means interoperability between various cloud environments and integrated interfaces. This is especially important with multi-cloud or hybrid cloud where companies have more than one environment. This is becoming the new normal to prevent vendor lock-in.
If corporations continue to standardize on Datadog’s platform, then the company will continue to capture market share. Since dealing with multiple cloud vendors quickly becomes cumbersome, there is a natural tendency to standardize in tech, especially with software. Moreover, cloud applications need to communicate, so having everything on one platform can make detecting and resolving issues less complex and costly. The cloud industry is on the cusp of this standardization trend with cloud software vendors, with Datadog leading the way. In this way, Datadog is best positioned to benefit from both the rise in cloud usage and the standardization of cloud software.
SentinelOne is a security position we own. Although the company has many competitors in the EDR space, they extend the acronym to XDR to not only include devices and workstations, but to also include other data points on the network, such as containers and cloud-native applications, and also across the entire stack, such as email, the network, and identity.
SentinelOne uses many data sources to create a data lake. The single pool of raw data is built across a wide range of sources, including other vendors or internal data sources. What matters to customers is that every threat is detected very quickly, and SentinelOne proposes a solution that is able to do both because automation and AI is best done at the data level rather than managing thousands of user endpoints to mitigate attacks.
According to SentinelOne, using their products can produce cost savings can be up to 353% – granted this number is a marketing department, however, the point is that any company increasing ROI in cybersecurity has a real chance of taking market share if their product improves the results. The savings quoted is achieved by reducing the amount of cybersecurity tools a company needs by standardizing endpoint security across more data types. The consolidation in this case saves up to $3 million over a three-year period and the enhanced threat detection saves $671K over three years. Due to automation, $1.2 million can be saved over three years by reducing time and employee hours across the IT team.
Big Data and Analytics/ML – Consumption Model is Here to Stay
There is an oft-quoted statistic that 90% of the world’s data was created in the last two years – and this stat is from 2018. The world produces 44 zetabytes of data across the digital universe as of 2020 and there is expected to be 200+ zetabytes of data in cloud storage by 2025. Each zettabyte has 21 zeroes or is 1,000 bytes to the 7th power. By these estimates, we can expect to see up to 5X growth specifically in data centers. Statista places the number at 181 zetabytes by 2025 up from 64.2 zettabytes in 2020.
In regards to data integration in the cloud, this spans from data lakes, to ETL pipelines, cloud data warehouses and object storage. Data fabrics and data virtualization is key to both hybrid and multi-cloud strategies.
The key thing to know about Big Data, Analytics/ML is that these companies will test financial analysts as they do not bill according to subscriptions like many software companies do. Instead, companies like Snowflake, MongoDB and Confluent bill customers based on consumption. This is a relatively new approach to software billing, which makes it harder to model and forecast near term sales.
As data creation, ingestion and storage soar in the cloud environment, cloud software providers are starting to migrate away from subscription agreements, which are fixed, to a consumption-based pricing model, which are uncapped.
Consumption-based pricing has a few drawbacks. For example, its less predictable than subscription revenue and there isn’t a ‘floor’ on revenue, because if consumption declines then so will sales. However, the flip side is also true, consumption billing does not have a ‘ceiling’ on revenue, so if customer consumption rises, so does sales. This uncapped revenue potential is key to why growth could be quite substantial in this category compared to cloud SaaS peers.
Here is a disclosure from Snowflake in the 10Q:
“Consumption for most customers accelerates from the beginning of their usage to the end of their contract terms and often exceeds their initial capacity commitment amounts. When this occurs, our customers have the option to amend their existing agreement with us to purchase additional capacity or request early renewals”
We want CAGRs that are larger than mobile’s CAGR for 5-10 years. According to industry analysts, the CAGR for machine learning is at 38% between 2022-2029, growing from $15 billion in 2021 to over $200 billion in 2029. Some of this is being driven by Big Tech yet as more companies seek a vendor agnostic approach and multi-cloud workloads, there is ample room for agnostic companies to do well.
Compare this to the smartphone market which grew at 24.9% CAGR with some years in the 12% CAGR range. Here’s an example of a reference for CAGR during Apple’s high-growth years: “The Asia-Pacific smartphones market shipment stood at 87.8 million in 2010 which is expected to reach 294.1 million in 2015 growing at a CAGR of 27.3% during 2010 – 2015.”
Here's how Datadog’s CEO describes what is going on in terms of big data in the Q2 earnings call: “it's almost a given that there will need to be a different way of charging for capturing some of the value provided to customers that can't just be attached to the straight volumes of data that are being exchanged because those volume of data are exploding exponentially while our customers' revenues are not going to explode exponentially.”
To capitalize on the Big Data, Analytics and ML trend – which we fully believe has the potential to produce a FAANG – we hold long-term positions in MongoDB and Snowflake. We are comfortable with the fluctuations of the consumption model, which means some volatility at times, as the consumption model will be tied to higher revenues in the long-term.
Note: We hold a 1% position in Confluent which translates to a lower conviction than MongoDB and Snowflake for this trend. We have recently trimmed 2.5% from Snowflake with the goal of building a bigger position in MDB. Please reference Knox’s trade alerts for more information on these positions and others in real-time.
We encourage tech investors to look at cryptocurrencies with a level head. It’s easy to dismiss the blockchain as a fad and it’s also easy to gamble on crypto for a quick gain. We think both approaches are wrong. Instead, our approach is to fully embrace the blockchain and it’s volatility by being willing to trim when the uptrend hits our targets close to the top and layer back in around the bottom.
Knox has a strong track record in navigating Bitcoin’s volatility and we fully expect to continue to trim at the top and layer-in at subsequent bottoms for the next five years – with real-time trade alerts sent to our premium members.
We own the following cryptocurrencies in a longer-term fashion: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Chainlink and Avalanche. The first three come with a higher conviction simply due to the size of their ecosystems yet we think Avalanche stands-out as a secure, decentralized protocol that can scale.
We also own very small, token positions in what we call a YO/LO portfolio (You Only Live Once) where we are a bit more liberated to take higher risks than we would with our core portfolio. Reference the resources below for more information.
Bitcoin:
We covered Bitcoin within a month of launching our premium site in 2019 and it’s in my top 5 for FAANG status. Notably, we had predicted Bitcoin would reach $1 trillion market cap when it was selling off from the $7-$10,000 range to $3,000 range.
The primary reason we are proponents of Bitcoin is that it is the world’s most secure financial network with a higher level of security than the 10,000 global banks combined. This solves a genuine need for the financial system as payments and transfers cannot be automated without a decentralized blockchain solution.
Crypto transfers eliminate processing fees and also hedges against inflation. There are transaction fees charged by crypto exchanges but these fees are not inherent to Bitcoin and will lower in time with more competition.
Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Amazon crossed market caps of $1 trillion because their products scale to global populations and are required on a daily basis. Bitcoin not only scales to global populations, but it also protects their livelihood – a necessity rather than a convenience. This is why we see populations that are not necessarily tech-savvy most enthusiastic about Bitcoin. In 2019, I argued that Bitcoin will reach a $1 trillion market cap as solving a real financial need for global populations should be worth as much as a search engine, enterprise software, social media network, warehouse fulfillment (AMZN), or iPhone hardware company.
In our original report we used the example of Venezuela, where during a period of hyperinflation, the price of a cup of coffee rose to 2,800 bolivars up from 0.75 bolivars within one year, representing an increase of 373,233%, according to Bloomberg data. Essential goods such as toilet paper and medicine were also very costly.
Bitcoin was immediately available to Venezuelans as a store of value and offered them an option to cross the border and escape an autocratic regime. Since then, El Salvador has adopted Bitcoin as their country’s currency.
Currently, the United States is at debt levels of about 133 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). There has been a steady rise in the level of national debt to GDP due to decreased tax revenue and increased spending, especially on health care.
The United States is unlikely to see hyperinflation to the level of Venezuela (at least, let’s hope not). However, trust in fiat currencies will erode as debt continues to climb.
Japan is an excellent case study for an economy that is struggling due to quantitative easing. The Japanese debt-to-GDP ratio is at an all-time high at 254% due to its quantitative easing. Government debt to GDP in Japan averaged 137.4% from 1980 to 2017.
Easy money policies from Japan’s central bank harmed domestic asset returns by suppressing local interest rates. Ranking as the world’s third largest economy, Japan resorted to negative interest rates in 2016. In April 2016, it was reported that a “Japanese bank buying 5-Year U.S. Treasuries with perfectly hedged currency and duration risk would (lose) 0.9% a year.”
Consequently, Japan is a thriving bitcoin market and has seen increased crypto deposits. According to the Japan Virtual and Crypto assets Exchange Association (JVCEA) Japan’s virtual currency deposits recorded 1.41 trillion yen or about US$13 billion in March last year, the volume was about seven times more than in March 2020.
During the recent Ukraine-Russian war the use of crypto has once again taken prominence. The Ukrainian government has also accepted crypto donations during this crisis. In the words of Alex Bornyakov, Deputy Minister of Ukraine’s Ministry of Digital Transformation, “In times like these, response time is crucial. Crypto is playing a role to give us flexibility to respond really quickly to deliver the army’s required supplies.” The lack of financial access might also increase the use of crypto in both the countries. The Ukraine central bank had suspending electronic transfers and reduced cash withdrawals and there were reports that Ukrainians were turning to cryptocurrency.
According to Alex Gladstein, Chief Strategy Officer at the Human Rights Foundation, “The fact that it can’t be frozen, the fact that it can’t be censored, and the fact that it can be used without ID is very, very important,” He further added, “And they are why bitcoin is such an important humanitarian tool.”
We’ve written extensively on Bitcoin and we encourage you to read more about the importance of the Lightning Network in our resources below, which is a payment protocol that operates on top of cryptocurrency blockchains and enables fast transactions.
The Lightening Network will be used for small transactions that don’t require the security of the bitcoin network. Large transfers that require decentralized security will continue to take place on the original layer.
The final iteration for the Lightning Network will be the cross-chain atomic swaps, which will exchange crypto tokens between different blockchains without the need for a crypto currency exchange.
Benefits of the Lightning Network:
Transactions will take place on the Lightning Network channels and outside of the blockchain:
Fees will be minimal to non-existent for small payments like coffee, dinner, and local stores.
Quick transactions no matter how busy the network is. The transactions will be instantaneous and able to keep pace with Visa, MasterCard and Paypal.
Cross-chain atomic swaps will eliminate the need for separate crypto exchanges.
The Lightning Network can reach 1 million transactions per second.
If you want a perfect parallel to the mobile duopoly of Android and iOS, then it will be Web3. We began with artificial intelligence because by increasing GDP, AI/ML promises to be the technology that delivers the most gains in the public market’s history – far exceeding mobile. Yet, the blockchain offers a parallel to mobile as what layer one networks set out to achieve is very similar to what Apple’s app store achieved.
The primary difference between Ethereum and Bitcoin is that Ethereum is not trying to compete as a currency. The focus of Ethereum is on its network, not the coin. Butkin’s vision is to create an open network for decentralized applications (dapps) and smart contracts based on the Turing complete programming language Solidity. The takeaway is that just like Apple hosted apps on its operating system, Ethereum hosts d’apps on its network.
These three benefits are: decentralization, security and scalability. The issue is that most decentralized networks cannot offer all three without some compromise.
Ethereum faces constraints in transactions per second (TPS) and how to overcome the high energy costs of mining that comes with decentralized security. The network simply can’t scale without the upcoming release of Ethereum 2.0.
In our premium analysis last year on Ethereum here, we discussed the difference between Proof of Work (PoW) and Proof of Stake (PoS). In addition to the Proof of Stake merge that Ethereum must complete, the network must also launch shards. Nodes in the previous network must download a transaction, calculate it, archive it and read every transaction in Ethereum’s history, which is terribly inefficient. Shards create a subset of the network where nodes are dispersed for more efficient processing. Ethereum 2.0 must also replace Plasma with ZK Rollups, which allow for hundreds of transfers to be rolled into a single transaction.
In November, we wrote another update on crypto and Ethereum, stating that the expectation was for Proof of Stake to merge in late 2021 with Shards and Rollups expected by late 2022 or early 2023. The timeline for PoS is delayed yet again until Q3 2022, which puts Sharding and Rollups out another year potentially to Q3 2023. (Read more in the resources below).
The takeaway: Ethereum has a wide lead in terms of number of d’apps and developers (remember that developers adopting CUDA created Nvidia’s moat). However, the Merge to Proof of Stake is an unknown which leaves the Layer One network market wide open for now.
Avalanche
Layer One Networks are considered early-stage tech investing which carries higher risk. Ethereum clearly has a head start, and after the proof of stake merge, we could see the network take off in a meaningful way.
However, there are other Layer One networks to consider. We hold an allocation in Avalanche due to it’s Ethereum Bridge, application-specific subnets, and the launch of a consumer-facing app over the next quarter. Avalanche also has a high Nakamoto Coefficient, which is a number that designates the number of nodes that would need to be corrupted to slow or prevent a chain from functioning properly.
Avalanche launched with three chains. Per our YO/LO write-up: The X-Chain is for creating and exchanging assets including NFTs, the P-Chain validates and creates subnets, and the C-Chain is for executing Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) contracts. The C-Chain offers interoperability with Ethereum, which is why the Avalanche bridge is the most popular ETH Bridge currently. The P-Chain is what is used to create and manage subnets. The coordination of Avalanche validators occurs on the P-Chain and it can support thousands of subnets and millions of validators.
As we stated in the AVAX write-up: “Ethereum is running into issues with 500,000 to 1 million daily active users. Meanwhile, a single mobile application sees hundreds of millions of users, such a Twitter or Spotify. What Layer 1 can handle this level of adoption? That is a platinum-level question for investors to answer. To be clear, it could be Ethereum in 2023 if the developers and users prefer to not migrate. However, if the ecosystem runs out of patience and seriously looks for an alternative, then Avalanche is a candidate.”
Warren Buffet famously said: “The stock market is a device for transferring money from the impatient to the patient.” I believe Chainlink could be our best performing asset in our portfolio by 2030 as the middleware that enables smart contract through decentralized oracles.
Smart contracts are a more advanced use of blockchain where an exchange between two parties is automated based on conditional provisions. These self-executing contracts are written into lines of code, and the agreements contained exist across a distributed, decentralized blockchain network.
Smart contracts offer a more complete use for blockchain. First discussed in 1996 by Nick Szabo, some claim that smart contracts are the real use case for blockchain as they aim to automate financial transactions, and in the future, can automate machines.
We have written extensive deep dives and webinars on what the company does but for those who would rather get the elevator pitch, it’s this: Chainlink is the most likely candidate to become the Google of Web3. In fact, ex-Google executives are joining Chainlink as strategic advisor, former CEO Eric Schmidt, new Chainlink Chief Product Officer, Tensorflow’s Kemal El Moujahid.
We are very bullish on Chainlink and it was our first one-hour deep dive webinar for this reason. However, it requires a longer-term mindset, which we certainly have at the I/O Fund. Our goal for our position is sizable gains by 2025 with an exit in 2028-2030.
“Winners keep winning” is a reliable and true statement. We began this analysis by showing you a chart of how the world’s most valuable companies change every 10 years. However, there is an important caveat: tech overtook oil to become the world’s most valuable industry in 2010 and we have yet to see the pattern that tech sets in terms of how often the top 5 will rotate now that tech is in the driver’s seat.
Microsoft:
We were one of the first analysts to cover Microsoft Azure’s hybrid computing strategy and why that could narrow AWS’ lead in the cloud IaaS market. At the time, tech was selling off in Q4 2018 yet we were firm that Microsoft would emerge as a significant leader in this space by specializing in a mix of on-premise and cloud deployments.
Hybrid cloud allows for scenarios where customers can keep their most sensitive data on their own servers while sending workloads to the private or public cloud that gain an advantage from mining data more efficiently and requires improved accuracy and productivity.
Azure’s strength in offering both on-premise and cloud in a hybrid solution has prompted Amazon to chase Microsoft with recent efforts to improve its hybrid strategy. Today, Azure claims more than 95% of the Fortune 500 as customers because of its hybrid flexibility.
Azure growth of 46% is performing quite well given the tough comps it has overcome, and Microsoft’s best financial metric during this tech selloff is that commercial bookings increased 28% this quarter following 32% increase last quarter. I would look for Azure to remain elevated against AWS and Google Cloud for those two reasons – hybrid cloud leader which attracts large enterprises and its ability to reduce costs with its tech stack.
In our latest Q2 webinar, I discussed why reducing cloud costs is a key trend for 2022 and beyond. To put it simply, Sayta Nadella said in this quarter’s earnings call: “More value for less price means you win.” In the same breath, he also said: “Most businesses are not looking to their IT budgets or to digital transformation for budget cuts.” These two statements echo my first point in the Q2 2022 webinar which is that both are true: increase in cloud spending will continue and companies will want to lower costs associated with cloud.
That’s going to be the trick moving forward – which companies assist cloud migrations while lowering costs. Microsoft is the leader here as the company aggregates many cloud services and products under one umbrella which creates substantial leverage to undercut on price.
Microsoft is increasingly becoming a cybersecurity company, as well, with $15 billion in revenue and growing at a rate of 45%. Microsoft was careful to build a multi-cloud product and is the only Big 3 cloud vendor to be multi-cloud on security right now. This also helps to drive down costs for Microsoft’s customers.
There are additional catalysts for Microsoft beyond Azure’s winning streak, its large security footprint, and the ability to lower costs. The first catalyst is that Microsoft is setting up to own the edge through its telecom partnerships. Another catalyst is that when more enterprises adopt AI/ML, whether it’s automation, super computers and/or other use cases for training and inference, it will a natural decision to use Microsoft if they’re already optimized for Azure. As discussed, enterprises will drive forward the next major market in tech (AI/ML) and Tier 1/Fortune 500 will be the largest customers for AI/ML. Power Automate was up 72% year-over-year, surpassing $2 billion in revenue, and this is only the beginning.
Third, the company ranks with Nvidia and Unity for inroads to the Metaverse as it owns many gaming publishers now and is the most widely used VR headset (HoloLens). The company also has Teams to introduce Metaverse-like qualities to business meetings. It will be industrial that drives forward 3D worlds (not consumer) and Microsoft is auspiciously positioned.
We have been meticulously building our portfolio for the next FAANGs of 2030 since we launched the site in 2019 with the understanding that even getting 1 or 2 correct can create generational wealth. Our goal from the beginning has been to stick with our winners and to cut our losers and we have compiled quite a bit of research along the way.
Alphabet is a new addition to our portfolio and one we’ve been circling for some time. If the 2014-2022 era in digital advertising was known as the walled garden era primarily fueled by third-party data then 2022-2030 will be known as the brick walls of first-party data – meaning, publishers controlling their data become the trend that drives forward digital advertising as we move into more AI/ML-driven ads.
In fact, we are in the midst of what is the biggest shift in digital advertising since advertising went digital. The shift is due to Apple and other real estate owners shutting off how data is collected across mobile and desktop. In the mobile era, third-party data was rampant but all of that changed with the release of iOS 15.
Note: We were one of the top authors on this topic with coverage dating back two years before the change occurred on both Forbes and MarketWatch here.
Google will be following in Apple’s footsteps by changing how third-party data is collected on Android and Chrome. This will greatly strengthen the company as not only is Google an equal or greater real estate owner compared to Apple but the company is also a publisher for the purpose of ads with Search and YouTube. This means long-term ads placed on Google will be more effective and produce higher ROI than those with less signals to work with.
These data collection changes are coming just in time for the advantage from first-party data to be realized across AI/ML (with digital ads) and a myriad of other uses cases.
We’ve focused quite a bit on enterprise for the purpose of this article yet we want to acknowledge that consumer-facing tech carries strength in most macro environments.
We hold the following stocks to capture consumer-driven gains. Notably, we’ve covered in the past how supply chains are contributing to consumer spending and inflation. We are watching this closely for when growth in this area rebounds. You can access our research on this here.
Roku: Netflix made it into FAANG and CTV ads will be a bigger market than subscriptions – primarily CTV ads will do well globally. Roku must prove its hardware strategy will pay off in global markets starting with LatAm.
Snap:: This company has had a brutal month – yet audience metrics have been strong post-Covid and the Gen-Z/Millennial concentration is important to take note of.
Shopify: This company is spending an unknown amount on the fulfillment center yet can rival Amazon simply through unlimited distribution channels. Social commerce will eventually take off despite the setback from Apple’s iOS changes.
Twilio The Twilio management team is known to be visionaries and they are pivoting into an API-forward marketing platform with strong PII data – they are early to API-driven automation taking over marketing and advertising.
Conclusion:
Thank you for taking the time to read this report. Despite tech being one of the most volatile sectors in the market, it is also the most rewarding. Had you entered Apple between 2008-2010, it would have blown away all other positions in your portfolio across all other industries. The same goes for a Facebook or a Google position. Half the battle is finding them, which we think we are particularly well suited for, and the other half of the battle is knowing which stocks to sell and which ones to hold when the tide rolls out. We show you how we do this with real-time trade notifications plus a hedge for ample insurance during drawdowns. There are many positions we own today that we will own in 2030 with the goal of perfectly timed exit. We are patient and thorough in our research as we acknowledge and accept that approximately 5 companies will lead to 90% of our wealth in 10 years.
MongoDB carries a bit of nostalgia for our team as it was one of the first stocks we covered after launching the premium site in July of 2019. At the time, there were concerns DocumentDB would rival Atlas yet Amazon had declared Atlas the segment winner at the open-source conference OSCON that month.
The company reported revenue of $285 million compared to estimates of $267 million for a $18 million beat. This represents growth of 57% and is the highest growth rate since Q3 2019. Particularly, it proves MongoDB can accelerate post-Covid which is rare among its peers.
The company had a sizable beat on adjusted EPS of $0.20 compared to estimates of ($0.10) EPS, which was a ($0.30) beat. The company’s adjusted operating income was $17.5 million compared to a loss of $2.8 million in the year ago quarter.
On a GAAP basis, the company reported EPS of ($1.14). Notably, GAAP losses increased this quarter to ($75.9) million compared to a GAAP loss of ($61.4) million in the year ago quarter. This is due to stock-based compensation expenses of $91 million with shares increasing from 61 million to 67 million over the past 12 months.
Gross margin expanded from 72% in the year ago period to 75% for gross profit of $214.3 million. The company stated this was due to increased efficiencies in Atlas. The company has $1.8 billion in cash and cash equivalents of which $456 million is cash. The company’s cash flow this quarter was $8.4 million, which is down from $16.8 million sequentially. Operating cash flow was $11.6 million compared to $22.3 million last quarter which management explained is partly because Q4 has more days than Q1 for consumption.
MongoDB is estimating a $30 to $35 million headwind. With that said, MongoDB reiterated guidance for the full year at $1.18 billion which would imply the company had expected to beat by $30 to $35 million. Management is also forecasting a $4 to $5 million headwind for next quarter yet was still able to raise guidance from $277 million expected next quarter to $279 million-$282 million provided as new guidance. The headwind of 1% sequential growth this quarter came from slower-than-expected customer growth in self-serve and mid-market channels in Europe yet could spread to impact all geographies.
The earnings guide for next quarter is for adjusted EPS of ($0.31) to ($0.28).
As we had covered three years ago, the MongoDB story centers around Atlas. This was the fourth quarter of over 80% growth and it now comprises 60% of revenue compared to 51% of revenue in the year-ago quarter.
There were ample questions about why MongoDB was able to weather the weakness in consumer-facing businesses better than Snowflake. The management feels they are more insulated because their consumption is tied to the value and usage of the applications and databases are not something that can be shut on, shut off or moderated by choice.
Here is the exact quote:
So the people are not using their application, something has gone wrong. So the more they use the application, the more value they’re seeing. So there’s a direct correlation between the value they get from the apps running on MongoDB and the value we get from those customers. Other software companies that you mentioned, I think are being forced to consider alternatives to be because there’s a trend where there’s a slight mismatch between price to value because as they suck in more data, it’s not completely clear how much incremental value that data is providing. So we don’t see that problem.
Probably the biggest contrast between Snowflake’s call and MongoDB’s call was that Snowflake noted a slowdown in a few of their biggest customers while MongoDB noted only a slowdown in their self-serve and mid-market. MongoDB also emphasized they are well diversified with six times more customers than Snowflake “tens and tens of thousands of customers” and due to representing more industries.
Conclusion:
We had stated the following:
“As stated above, MongoDB’s cash flow margin is what can keep the stock strong given stock based compensation is weighing on GAAP operating margin. We want a meet/beat on revenue, strong Atlas growth (bonus for acceleration) and we must continue to have a healthy, positive cash flow margin.
Analyst consensus has MongoDB reaching profitability on an adjusted basis by calendar year 2023.”
MongoDB proved they can become profitable on an adjusted basis in calendar year 2022 so that’s a plus. The company maintained its cash flow positive status. There were beats and raises alongside conservative guidance, which was really the ticket this quarter. It was easily the better report over Snowflake primarily because Snowflake has begun to concern analysts that the exposure to consumer could cause the company to become discretionary (more information is needed beyond one quarter). Meanwhile, MongoDB clearly illustrated this quarter its document databases are not discretionary.
This article was originally published on Forbes on May 13, 2022,01:26pm EDTpublished on Forbes on May 13, 2022,01:26pm EDT
This year, cloud investors have been given a dose of reality on how the market prices growth in this category. For Cloudflare, revenue growth is not an issue at this time. Yet, revenue growth is less meaningful in the current macro environment if the growth does not translate to a healthier bottom line.
It’s true that cloud is deflationary, which is why companies in this sector may continue to see growth during times of inflation. Yet it’s also true that cash is becoming more expensive, and therefore growth must be balanced with a stronger bottom line.
Product Overview
Cloudflare has a formidable customer base and owns the predominant share of the Content Delivery Network market. According to the data from W3Techs, 81% of the websites that use CDN or reverse proxy rely on Cloudflare with a strong presence in small to medium-sized businesses (SMBs).
We had discussed in a podcast on tech stocks last year that Cloudflare is strong in the small to medium-sized business (SMB) category and offers free entry-level services. The company benefits by converting the free customer base to paid services, and it can also use the free customer base to test any new features before they are launched. Cloudflare has been able to upsell its products with a dollar-based net retention rate that increased by 400 basis points YoY to 127% in the recent quarter.
Zero Trust Security is gaining prominence due to rising security threats as the data is not stored in one place. Secure access service edge (SASE) is a cybersecurity concept that utilizes Zero Trust to identify users and devices to deliver secure access to specific applications or data.
Cloudflare One is the company’s flagship Zero Trust network-as-a-service. The need for this has grown due to remote teams as SASE allows policy-based security no matter where the user, application or device is located. Zero Trust Security is built on the premise that no one should be trusted within or outside the network. In the traditional security systems, it is difficult to obtain access from outside the network while those located inside the network were trusted. With Zero Trust, these trust assumptions are removed with tools such as multi-factor authentication, giving access for a limited time and to also verify, authorize and to have a continuous check on all the data points that are given access.
Zero Trust has helped the company to increase its Total Addressable Market from $32 billion in 2018 to about $100 billion in 2024. The company is playing a major role in the transition from a traditional hardware-based security approach to modern zero-trust security.
In late September, Cloudflare company announced its R2 storage product. You can see the dark purple line start a sharp rise upward following the start of October. R2 storage allows unstructured data to be stored without egress bandwidth fees, which are charged when developers retrieve data from a cloud provider like AWS. The egress fees are essentially a tax without any value. Markups are as high as 7900% in the United States region when calculating what AWS charges. This is an 80X bandwidth markup and was detailed here by Cloudflare’s management.
Primarily, Cloudflare is hoping to attract developers for its Workers product, which is a serverless compute service for developers to build applications and deploy code at the edge. This removes the need for developers to maintain servers or spin-up containers. The cloud service provider (in this case, Cloudflare) provisions, scales and manages the infrastructure required to run the code. Cloudflare wants developers to choose them over the larger cloud providers because of their location at the edge.
Cloudflare’s Q1 Earnings
At the time the low-cost R2 cloud storage service was launched, Cloudflare’s CEO has stated “we’re aiming to become the fourth major public cloud.” Big Tech has the advantage of strong margins and quite a bit of cash on the balance sheet to build out cloud infrastructure. For this ambition to materialize, not only must Cloudflare build more Points of Presence (PoPs) but the company must also undercut AWS on egress fees, for example, in order to remain competitive.
In the current quarter, network capex was 9% of revenue. For the full year, the network capex is expected to increase to 12% to 14% of revenue. I believe this is a primary reason Cloudflare’s valuation could come under pressure.
I think the thing which is powerful about as we build out more POPs is that counterintuitively, because of the design of our network and because of the efficiency of our network that both Thomas and I just alluded to, it actually drives our cost down over time rather than driving it up. It takes a certain amount of servers in order to process a certain number of requests. So your CapEx is actually driven by the amount of usage of your service more than anything else.
What is powerful is because we have done the hard work on the networking and software side to make it so that any server, anywhere can handle any request, that means that as we continue to expand our network out that we're able to directly interconnect with the various ISPs and eyeball networks around the world and drive our cost down for things like bandwidth, co-location and other variable costs that are part of our business.
At this time, revenue growth is not an issue for Cloudflare as it’s been quite robust for many quarters. The company reported 54% revenue growth beating estimates by 6% with 49% growth expected next quarter. The company raised full year revenue guidance to $957 million, at the mid-range, for growth of 46%.
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There is additional supporting evidence that growth will not be an issue for Cloudflare, including remaining performance obligations (RPO) up 57% year-over-year and dollar based net retention up 400 bps YoY. Customers paying over $100K increased 63% year-over-year to 1,537. This outpaced total customer growth of 29%. Notably, the >$100K segment was a deceleration from 71% in the previous two quarters.
Large customers contributed 58% of revenue. There was solid growth in the >$500K customer base of 68% year-over-year growth and >$1 million customer base grew by 72% year-over-year.
The company has a gross margin of 77.80% but had a GAAP operating margin of (18.90%) and adjusted operating margin of 2.30%. The primary difference being stock based compensation which doubled to $34 million in Q1, up from $18 million in the year-ago quarter.
Similar to the note about network capex, the company is stating they will not see improvement to operating margin in the near term. I believe this could put pressure on valuation if cloud peers are able to improve operating margin during the current macro environment.
Here is what management said:
“We intend to grow our operating expenses in line with the revenue staying here or at breakeven and reinvest excess profitability back into the business to address the enormous opportunity in front of us.”We intend to grow our operating expenses in line with the revenue staying here or at breakeven and reinvest excess profitability back into the business to address the enormous opportunity in front of us.”
Free cash flow was negative $64.4 million (30% of revenue) in comparison to a negative $2.2 million (2% of revenue) in Q1 2021. Of this, $30 million was due to a unique withholding tax payment in the recent quarter. This would still show a marked decline in free cash flow from last quarter during a time when the market is especially sensitive to cash flows. The company reported positive free cash flow of $8.6 million in Q4 2021, and it was the first positive free cash flow quarter since the company became a public company. Management stated they will be cash flow positive in the second half of the year while the first half of the year will have negative free cash flow due to the investment in network and redesigning of physical offices post Covid-19.
The company had cash and available-for-sale securities of about $1.7 billion, out of which cash is $152 million.
Conclusion:
Cloudflare is showing strong customer growth and its steady revenue growth also helps substantiate that cloud is, indeed, deflationary. What is likely weighing on the market’s mind is what the CapEx will be to become the fourth cloud provider. Management has confirmed that operating margin will not improve anytime soon as the company plans to re-invest and the company’s recent quarter showed a decline in free cash flow. The I/O Fund exited the stock based to focus on higher conviction companies that have a better cash flow margin.
Maintaining focus can be really tough when the market is penalizing tech stocks across the board. How do we determine which ones to trim/exit and which ones to add/enter? Despite it being counterintuitive, usually the best entries are made when the market is in a state of fear.
My first instinct is to protect our stocks with the highest allocations with a few of these certainly in the cloud category. I am less concerned with near-term price action and much more concerned with how the fundamentals mesh with the current macro environment. If a company has a strong report (AMD, Datadog) then I don’t stress market moves as fundamentally these companies are showing strength. It’s not an investor’s job to control the market or change positions based on 6-month price action. That’s why we haven’t changed positions such as AMD or Datadog. I’m using them as an example because they already reported.
The I/O Fund is positioned for an ad-tech rebound in H2. We’ve published quite a bit on this. We understand this requires a bit of speculation and we have been keeping our members up to date on this over the past few months with this research here and here. Ultimately, ad-tech valuations are well below the median in 2018 and 2019.
Strong growth in ad-tech is often awarded a 10 Forward EV to Revenues. The bottom line can fluctuate depending on how much a company is investing in growth, yet rarely does ad-tech have cash flow issues at scale. Snap and Roku are certainly at the scale where the path to profitability has been proven. Ultimately, we believe there is alpha here due to the market over-reacting to macro which is why we own ad-tech positions. There are many more ad-tech positions than the ones we own for investors to consider.
This analysis goes over cloud as what happened last Friday to Bill and Cloudflare caused me to shelf a deep dive on ad-tech post-earnings in favor of a cloud overview of our holdings. Many cloud companies have not been public during a rising rate environment (2017- early 2019). With the FOMC decisions being out of a tech investor's control, we have been forced to evaluate our cloud stocks to look for expanding margins and positive cash flow. There was some evidence last week that the market’s appetite for growth in this category has changed if the growth doesn’t contribute to the bottom line. I understand there is a relief rally today but my job this week has been to make sure fundamentally our cloud stocks can withstand macro pressure.
It’s true that cloud is deflationary but it’s also true that cloud can have profitability issues. As you saw last Friday, cloud is quite resilient in terms of growth, due to being deflationary, but those weak bottom lines may be questioned over time. Cash came easy over the past decade, and as cloud investors, we need to reframe our thinking on what constitutes an attractive cloud stock.
For long-term cloud investors that hold sizable allocations, like the I/O Fund does, I believe the following has to be answered:
1. Is there something inherent to the product that weighs on margins? If so, these companies have an additional hurdle beyond rising rates that must be resolved.
Cloudflare could fall into this category due to CapEx (something to monitor – we closed this position for now). The CapEx went from 9% in the current quarter to 12% to 14% for the year, and the market is likely assessing the cost it requires to become the fourth cloud provider.
Twilio falls into this category until Segment and other products can improve its core product gross margin (I believe it will and we will layer back in when it does). I expand on this more below.
2. GAAP operating margin versus Non-GAAP operating margin; this is where stock based compensation can affect a company’s GAAP profitability and companies that recently went public or had an acquisition often see an impact. There are also many cloud companies that invest their cash to grow rapidly, yet the leniency for “growth at any cost” may shift substantially.
3. Free cash flow is probably the most important in a rising rate environment for a sector that is often unprofitable and/or must spend heavily for growth. Below, we examine our top cloud holdings on the basis of their ability to become free cash flow positive.We need to recognize that the innovation cycle is such that venture capitalists exit through public offerings and there is often no path to profitability at the time a tech companies goes public. When you couple the historically loose FED policy we’ve had, it compounds the issue of figuring out which companies can become profitable and sustain in a slowing economy. Cloud will be put to the test the longer interest rates remain elevated and/or slated to rise, and I believe this will catch tech investors off guard because the sector has treated them so well. These relief rallies also do not help to distinguish which are fundamentally stronger as the price action reflects more of a rising of all boats.
Our Cloud Stocks
SentinelOne
SentinelOne is a company where we like the product very much. However, there is no denying that this company has weak margins albeit the margins are improving quite rapidly.
SentinelOne leads the cloud category in growth at 120% last quarter. In the previous quarter, SentinelOne accelerated to 128%, up from 121%. The company is expected to report $74.7 million in revenue for growth of 99.5%, assuming they come in at this number, that would be a deceleration in revenue.
Full year revenue is expected to be $370 million, up 80%. The 1-year forward for fiscal year 2024 ending in January is expected to be $605 million, up 64%. The main key metric that forecasts strong revenue growth is that ARR was up 123% year-over-year. This is a highlight from the last earnings report.
SentinelOne has a particularly weak operating margin of (108%) last quarter. The adjusted operating margin was at (66%) compared to (104%). The management guided for (85%) this quarter. The company emphasized this is improving with a full year adjusted operating margin guide of (55%) to (60%) for full year.
I believe this improvement in the guide is why the stock recovered after hours the evening of its earnings report. Will SentinelOne be able to provide a meet/beat on operating margin in the upcoming quarter and a meet/beat for the full year guide? This must happen and we also need revenue to remain strong.
We covered here in the Q2 2022 webinar how cybersecurity budgets are indicated to grow this year over 2021.
Management seemed to be quite sensitive to understanding this is key as it was the second thing they mentioned in the opening remarks:
I'm pleased to share that we ended the fourth quarter with double-digit year-over-year improvement in both our gross and operating margins. Our gross margins expanded 12 percentage points year-over-year, and our operating margin improved 38%. This progress reflects our growing scale and increasing efficiency.
The number of shares owned by institutions and the percentage of shares owned by institutions is also high at 92% (compared to Cloudflare at 80%). However, the number of institutions has declined by about 13%.
For SentinelOne, weighing on operating margin is also sales and marketing expenses at 64% of revenue and R&D at 65% of revenue. Compare this to Crowdstrike with S&M at 38% of revenue and R&D at 24% of revenue. To be clear, Crowdstrike has a better bottom line than SentinelOne. The operating margin has been at (10%) over the past few quarters and is at (5%) in the most recent quarter.
SentinelOne’s free cash flow has been improving but certainly needs work, which is common for a company that has not reached scale. The company reports cash flow of ($7.1) million improving from ($25.6) million in the same period last year.
SentinelOne has $1.67B in cash and the company burns about $400M so that’s three years. If we assume the margins improve, and the company reaches profitability by 2025 (analyst consensus believes this will happen) then the negative free cash flow should not hinder the stock. We had discussed why SentinelOne is similar to Crowdstrike at this stage of growth here.
Notably, last year, SentinelOne was weakest in Q1 and they’ve mentioned strong seasonality in Q4.
“The strength of our performance was broad-based, coming from a healthy mix of new customer additions, existing customer renewals and upsells. All of this was further magnified by the strong underlying seasonality of our fourth quarter.”All of this was further magnified by the strong underlying seasonality of our fourth quarter.”
Here was their comment about the upcoming Q1 quarter:
“Our ARR and revenue growth track very closely. Our revenue guidance for Q1 implies that we should be at or better than typical Q1 net new ARR seasonality, which has been down between 25% to 35% sequentially in the past 2 years.”
Here was our comment about Q1 following the last earnings report:
“Total ARR is nearing $300 million while annual revenue for the upcoming fiscal year 2023 is guided at $368 million, with ARR suggesting this guide could be easily met over the next four quarters. Most importantly, customers over the $100K range are growing at a rate that is double overall customer growth at 137% and 70%, respectively.
The overall customer growth represents a slowdown from 79% YoY to 70% YoY while larger account growth was fairly flat at 141% in Q3 to 137% in Q4.
The company guided for Q1 revenue of $74.5 million, compared to revenue in Q4 of $65.6 million. This is important because management has stated in the past, Q1 revenue was down sequentially by 20% to 25%. “Our revenue guidance for Q1 implies that we should be at or better than typical Q1 net new ARR seasonality, which has been down between 25% to 35% sequentially in the past 2 years.”
Notably, the I/O Fund is unable to track where the ARR was down “for the past 2 years” but the sequential growth is headed in the right direction. The numbers we have show Q1 FY2021, net new ARR declined 37% QoQ to $8 million yet in Q1 FY2022 it grew +8% QoQ to $30 million. This year, the sequential growth will be +13.5%.
Higher ARR sequentially for the upcoming Q1 is likely driven by the record number of 100,000-plus deal and a record number of million-dollar plus deals. International is another area of strength as the company saw revenue grow 140%. This represents 31% of revenue – so something to watch closely as a near-term driver.”
Takeaway: No changes to our position right now, if there is a meaningful change to operating margin, we will update you.
MongoDB
MongoDB had an acceleration in revenue from 50.1% in Q3 to 55.85% in Q4. The market rewarded this earnings report with an increase in price, moving from $280 to $338 on the report. At the beginning of April, the stock price was nearly flat YTD.
There was an acceleration in revenue for FY2022 to 48% year-over-year, up from 40% growth in FY2021. Looking forward, FY2023 revenue growth is expected to be 35% year-over-year.
Key metrics supporting future revenue growth include customers over $1 million in ARR growing 67% and customers over $100,000 growing 34%. Atlas customers outpaced total customer growth at 35% compared to 33% growth, respectively.
MongoDB has a 72% gross margin and GAAP operating margin of (29%) due to stock-based compensation, or a loss of $78.6 million. The adjusted operating margin is (0.49%) or essentially a loss of $1.3 million. The net margin is (32%) or a loss of $84.4 million with adjusted net margin of (2%), or a loss of $6.3 million.
With that said, MongoDB is cash flow positive. It needs to remain cash flow positive for the market to be confident in its valuation. I do believe where Cloudflare was penalized was the surprise to the downside in cash flow. This is a marked change to how the market treated cloud companies in the past.
MongoDB has $474 million cash on its balance sheet with operating cash flow of $22.3 million and free cash flow of $16.8 million. This represents a free cash flow margin of positive +6%. The company holds $1.2 billion in debt.
The difference between MongoDB’s GAAP EPS and Non-GAAP EPS is primarily due to SBC. Here we have a forward GAAP EPS of ($1.22) and Adjusted EPS of ($0.10). Overall, MongoDB has improved it’s adjusted EPS as it was typically in the ($0.20) range.
MongoDB’s catalyst for growth is Atlas, which we covered in a deep dive here. We also covered how this company fits into our Big Data and Analytics positioning here. We are more likely to hold a cloud stock that falls into the Big Data theme and/or cybersecurity due to seeing evidence of growth in these markets. Primarily, Microsoft pointed towards the following trends in the recent earnings report, which we covered here:
Starting in September, we began to position for Big Data, Analytics and ML. Microsoft has grown their Cosmos database (DB) transactions and data volume by 100% year-over-year for the third quarter in a row. Synapse data volume has also doubled. Monthly machine learning inference requests increased 86% year-over-year. for Big Data, Analytics and ML. Microsoft has grown their Cosmos database (DB) transactions and data volume by 100% year-over-year for the third quarter in a row. Synapse data volume has also doubled. Monthly machine learning inference requests increased 86% year-over-year.
As stated above, MongoDB’s cash flow margin is what can keep the stock strong given stock based compensation is weighing on GAAP operating margin. We want a meet/beat on revenue, strong Atlas growth (bonus for acceleration) and we must continue to have a healthy, positive cash flow margin.
Analyst consensus has MongoDB reaching profitability on an adjusted basis by calendar year 2023.
Snowflake
Snowflake is seeing a deceleration in revenue yet is reaching adjusted profitability this year.
The company is expected to report revenue of $412 million, representing growth of 80%. The previous quarters the company reported revenue growth of 101% in Q4, 109% in Q3, and 104% in Q2. For the fiscal year 2023 ending in January, the company is expecting revenue growth of 67% for revenue of $2.03 billion. Analyst consensus shows revenue of $3.17 billion, or growth of 56% for fiscal year 2024.
There has been an outflow of institutional shares since December with a 30-day change from 330 million shares to 305 million shares.
As Snowflake continues to grow revenue, the losses are narrowing. When the company reported roughly $300 million revenue, the GAAP operating losses were around $200 million. The company is now reporting a little over $400 million in revenue with GAAP operating losses of about $150 million. What you don’t want in this environment is an inverse relationship to where losses increase as revenue increases.
Snowflake is steadily improving its margins from 58% gross margin a year ago to 65% gross margin in the recent quarter. The company has improved its GAAP operating margin from (90%) a year ago to (40%) in the recent quarter. The company has a positive adjusted operating margin of 5% and has stated they will end the year with a positive 1% adjusted operating margin. They have to deliver on this promise to maintain a category-high valuation.
Revenue grew 64% to $126 million and customers over $100K grew 41%. Analyst consensus on revenue was for $127.4 million. The company reported EPS of (0.19) and analysts were looking for (0.20).
However, free cash flow for Confluent is a blemish at ($58.4) million, or 46% of revenue. Adjusted operating margins are at (41%) and GAAP operating losses of (88.4%). Adjusted gross margin is 69.7% with employee bonuses and employee stock purchase plans hurting the operating margin. FCF is to be the lowest in Q1.
Confluent has cash and marketable securities of $2.0 billion with cash of $1.05 billion.
Adjusted operating margin is expected to be (38%) on revenue growth of 44% for FY 2022.
We all know how the market feels about those margins right now – Confluent was not alone in the AH bloodbath.
On a positive note, Confluent Cloud is ripping at 180% YoY growth. This has led to RPO accelerating to 96% YoY. The company signed an 8-figure deal that was not recognized in Q1. Cloud net retention rate is 150%.
Analysts on the call were excited about the net new add in customers and the company reiterated its goal of positive FY2023 operating margin.
Note: We believe the negative free cash flow margin is too steep for Confluent to be a high conviction company at this time. We very much like the Confluent Cloud growth and will look for the more normalized growth rate once it scales. If Knox asked me where to raise cash in cloud, I would choose Confluent although we do not have all earnings reports yet.
Datadog was down after putting up a solid report and we bought a small tranche following the earnings report.
The company beat and raised on all accounts. Customers over $100K grew were up 54%, growing from 80% of revenue to 85% of revenue. The company also said the magic words: “36% free cash flow margin” in Q1 with a TTM cash flow margin of 28%. Free cash flow (FCF) grew from $250 million in Q4 to $335 million in Q1.
The company was expected to report 70% revenue growth and instead reported 83%, with revenue up 11% sequentially. Guidance also impressed at $378 million at the midpoint, or 62% growth. That should be enough to keep Datadog in the top 5 on forward growth in the cloud category. FY2022 guidance raised to $1.61 billion for growth of 56.4% at the midpoint, up from $1.53 billion.
They said the other magic words which is that “dollar based net retention rate continued to be over 130% as customers increased their usage and adopted newer products.” During covid, this DBNRR wouldn’t be as meaningful as many cloud companies were at the 130 mark but Datadog proving itself best-of-breed here by maintaining this level for 19 consecutive quarters.
Datadog’s strength is cross-selling or standardization, which we’ve covered in detail. Number of customers using 2 or more products increased to 81%. The company signed its largest contract in terms of ARR (they said it was 8-figures with a next-gen fintech company). There were examples on the call of customers consolidating monitoring tools from 5 products to 10, and from 1 product to 6.
Notably, on top of accelerating revenue growth YoY from 51% in Q1 last year to 83% in Q1 this year, Datadog also improved operating margin from 10% to 23% in the current quarter.
Note: Datadog is the strongest cloud company on the market if you look at the relationship between the top line and the bottom line.
Twilio
We covered Twilio pre-earnings here and also post-earnings here on the forum. We ultimately trimmed our position due to the reason stated post-earnings: “Analysts asked if increased costs in core product could affect gross margin and/or user fall-off. This comment is probably the most concerning to me. Lots of questions on Gross Margin, which the main concern being any fluctuations here if there's pricing pressure from telcos.”
Ultimately, we will layer back into Twilio when we see the software business help to sustain the gross margin.
Here is what was asked on the call:
Michael TurrinMichael Turrin
Gross margin saw a meaningful improvement sequentially. The prepared remarks still referenced just some near-term fluctuation potential. Just in sort of adding some more context around that. I guess the question is just why wouldn't that be at least somewhat bottoming if we're looking at sort of a point in time where U.S. growth is moderating? Some of these 10DLC impacts are playing through. Are you at all comfortable that gross margin can at least remain around a similar ZIP code regardless of our messaging mix plays through? Or anything else you could just provide to help us think through normalization of what these fluctuations can look like?. I guess the question is just why wouldn't that be at least somewhat bottoming if we're looking at sort of a point in time where U.S. growth is moderating? Some of these 10DLC impacts are playing through. Are you at all comfortable that gross margin can at least remain around a similar ZIP code regardless of our messaging mix plays through? Or anything else you could just provide to help us think through normalization of what these fluctuations can look like?
Khozema ShipchandlerKhozema Shipchandler
Yes. That's a good question. I mean I think with respect to the gross margins in Q1, we are obviously happy with them improving to 53%. I think, Michael, the thing I'd encourage you to keep in mind is that just the size and scale of our messaging business is what tends to drive it. And so that's why we're kind of signaling some level of fluctuation in gross margins in the near term. I think it'll be in the ZIP code. I mean I'm not going to be prepared to call the bottom or anything like that. But I'd also remind you that we like the messaging business a lot. And while it does carry that lower gross margin, it also generates a lot of gross profits that we reinvest back into the business.And so that's why we're kind of signaling some level of fluctuation in gross margins in the near term. I think it'll be in the ZIP code. I mean I'm not going to be prepared to call the bottom or anything like that. But I'd also remind you that we like the messaging business a lot. And while it does carry that lower gross margin, it also generates a lot of gross profits that we reinvest back into the business.
If you go back to Q1 of 2020, Twilio’s growth rate in customers was about 23.5% from 190K customers to 235K customers. The most recent year-over-year growth was 14% from 235K customers to 268K customers. The company does not break out the growth rate but the presentations provide number of customers. This would imply some churn due to increased fees passed onto customers on the core product.
In terms of margins, the company guidance missed expectations at adjusted EPS of ($0.23) to ($0.20) compared to consensus of ($0.13). The forward growth of 27%-29% is to be expected during this pivot. I want to emphasize the management has been preparing for the core product to hit saturation essentially which is why we want to remain invested to participate in this management team bringing API-driven marketing to marketing departments. Twilio certainly is consumer-facing and thus what we are seeing with ad-tech affects Twilio, as well. This is unique from more deflationary cloud products at the enterprise-level.
Cloudflare
We covered Cloudflare this week for the free newsletter, which will hit your inboxes soon. The stock hit our stop and here is the main thing that drove our decision on fundamentals.
At the time the low-cost R2 cloud storage service was launched, Cloudflare’s CEO has stated “we’re aiming to become the fourth major public cloud.” Big Tech has the advantage of strong margins and quite a bit of cash on the balance sheet to build out cloud infrastructure. For this ambition to materialize, not only must Cloudflare build more Points of Presence (PoPs) but the company must also undercut AWS on egress fees, for example, in order to remain competitive.
In the current quarter, network capex was 9% of revenue. For the full year, the network capex is expected to increase to 12% to 14% of revenue. I believe this is a primary reason Cloudflare’s valuation could come under pressure.
Here is what the company said on the call:
I think the thing which is powerful about as we build out more POPs is that counterintuitively, because of the design of our network and because of the efficiency of our network that both Thomas and I just alluded to, it actually drives our cost down over time rather than driving it up. It takes a certain amount of servers in order to process a certain number of requests. So your CapEx is actually driven by the amount of usage of your service more than anything else.
What is powerful is because we have done the hard work on the networking and software side to make it so that any server, anywhere can handle any request, that means that as we continue to expand our network out that we're able to directly interconnect with the various ISPs and eyeball networks around the world and drive our cost down for things like bandwidth, co-location and other variable costs that are part of our business.
At this time, revenue growth is not an issue for Cloudflare as it’s been quite robust for many quarters. The company reported 54% revenue growth beating estimates by 6% with 49% growth expected next quarter. The company raised full year revenue guidance to $957 million, at the mid-range, for growth of 46%.
There is additional supporting evidence that growth is not an issue for Cloudflare, including remaining performance obligations (RPO) up 57% year-over-year and dollar based net retention up 400 bps YoY. Customers paying over $100K increased 63% year-over-year to 1,537. This outpaced total customer growth of 29%. Notably, the >$100K segment was a deceleration from 71% in the previous two quarters.
Large customers contributed 58% of revenue. There was solid growth in the >$500K customer base of 68% year-over-year growth and >$1 million customer base grew by 72% year-over-year.
The company has a gross margin of 77.80% but had a GAAP operating margin of (18.90%) and adjusted operating margin of 2.30%. The primary difference being stock based compensation which doubled to $34 million in Q1, up from $18 million in the year-ago quarter. The market has not been very friendly to companies diluting GAAP operating margins due to SBC, and we see evidence this may have impacted Cloudflare.
Similar to the note about network capex, the company is stating they will not see improvement to operating margin in the near term. I believe this could put pressure on valuation if cloud peers are able to improve operating margin during the current macro environment.
Here is what management said:
“We intend to grow our operating expenses in line with the revenue staying here or at breakeven and reinvest excess profitability back into the business to address the enormous opportunity in front of us.”We intend to grow our operating expenses in line with the revenue staying here or at breakeven and reinvest excess profitability back into the business to address the enormous opportunity in front of us.”
Free cash flow was negative $64.4 million (30% of revenue) in comparison to a negative $2.2 million (2% of revenue) in Q1 2021. Of this, $30 million was due to a unique withholding tax payment in the recent quarter. This would still show a marked decline in free cash flow from last quarter during a time when the market is especially sensitive to cash flows. The company reported positive free cash flow of $8.6 million in Q4 2021, and it was the first positive free cash flow quarter since the company became a public company. Management stated they will be cash flow positive in the second half of the year while the first half of the year will have negative free cash flow due to the investment in network and redesigning of physical offices post Covid-19.
The company had cash and available-for-sale securities of about $1.7 billion, out of which cash is $152 million.
Clearly, many investors like Cloudflare and the company is not without merit by any means. Rather, I can’t rely on cash flow improving in H2 and/or CapEx not rising beyond the current 12% to 14% to personally maintain conviction in the current environment.
For costs inherent to the product, my personal choice is Twilio as I can see the product road map a bit more clearly on Segment/software side and how this can expand the company’s gross margin.
Asana
Please note, Asana is a small 1% position and we covered the company’s financials here and the unexpected rise in expenses. We will update you on the next earnings report. We hold the stock because the product should be deflationary (more than most).
In the packed 6-week calendar of earnings reports that comes from our tech universe, we like to note to our Members which ones we think are the strongest. To those who are new to our site, we don’t do news cycle-level earnings coverage as we are building positions rather than feeding a content machine. We think there is too much information coming at investors and it creates information overload. Therefore, this analysis is to say – “hey, you might want to take the time to look at AMD’s report because we think it was pretty special” – and we track dozens of earnings reports before we determine this.
AMD’s report was impressive on many accounts. Primarily, it’s because management is laying a solid foundation by leveraging general-purpose computing success for a workload specific product road map. AMD refers to this as compute differentiation and also adaptive computing in their decks, where the software defines the hardware’s workload rather than the other way around.
The company is optimizing CPUs and GPUs for cloud computing separately from technical computing workloads, for example. This means not only is AMD maximizing the large footprint of data centers right now but is looking at where data centers will be in the next 5-10 years, which will be optimized workloads, with CPUs and GPUs that are optimized to best serve cloud computing, high performance computing (HPC), gaming/Metaverse, and machine learning as unique workloads and by expanding AMD’s already strong product line in general-purpose CPUs and GPUs.
The $8 billion buyback is great news as it’s $4 billion higher than what the market had priced in. However, as Bradley discusses below, the Xilinx acquisition is a $35 billion all-stock transaction. He discusses what both mean for the stock in the near term and he also provides a health check on the financials.
I’m going to focus on how AMD continued to take server market share in this update as we haven’t revisited this for about six months and quite a bit has changed in favor of AMD investors. I’ll try to keep this analysis enjoyable as semis can sometimes be weighed down in technical jargon.
Regarding Xilinx, this company is a critical pillar to AMD’s future strategy so we will get to this in our next AMD update likely at the start of H2. Our goal with AMD is to figure out how big of a position the company can hold in our portfolio this year and in subsequent years. The Xilinx deal will play a big part in how we determine our allocation in future years as it has the potential to drive incremental gains in many segments, especially automotive/Embedded, plus perhaps 5G. Keep an eye out for that report in a few months. If you don’t want to wait that long, you can read what I wrote when the acquisition was first announced here.
A Trip Down Memory Lane …
How did AMD get here? I highly recommend every Member listen to our AMD webinar from July as we discuss the story of AMD’s “EPYC” comeback.
I’ll briefly summarize some of what was discussed in the webinar before we go into the current generation of the Zen architecture and the specific workloads that AMD plans to introduce to potentially take more market share from Intel and to also nibble at Nvidia’s near-monopoly in GPUs (I’m not worried about Nvidia, hence the word “nibble”).
The Zen architecture was introduced under Lisa Su in 2017. These processors are chipset free and fully integrated. Communication between CPUs is done through Infinity Fabric protocols. The result of the new architecture was more energy efficiency and the ability to execute more instructions per cycle. The Zen 1 architecture had 32 cores and 64 processing threads so more cores than Intel. There are 128 lanes of I/O for storage, networking and PCIe expansion. When you add two CPUs, Infinity Fabric is used as an interconnect to increase connectivity speed. In this case, there are 64 cores.
The first generation of the Zen architecture helped prove AMD still had a pulse and a heartbeat (however faint with 2% CPU market share) but it was between 2019-2020 when the company found its wings again and catapulted to 8% of the CPU market share. Today, it’s market share stands at an estimated 12%. The company is unlikely to 6X again but can it take the lead someday, is the question. We think it’s a possibility if management’s execution continues.
The company released the second generation of its Zen architecture and this is when AMD started to clearly outpace Intel in terms of computing power, memory and energy use – all at a lower cost.This was due to multi-chip modules that combine a 7nm with a 14nm to use the most advanced technology when and where it’s needed most by leveraging the more mature process node. The L1 cache and L2 cache locations in the core and across the core also helped the company beat Intel on memory bandwidth.
Intel was still producing a 14nm chip with a 10nm supposedly on the way.Essentially, AMD leapfrogged the incumbent with a product that is more power efficient and allows for more cores per chip. Because 7nm are twice as dense as 14nm, AMD was able to release a 64-core server chip and 128 threads rather than AMD’s previous 32-core server chip. Up until early 2019, Intel’s offering had been a 28-core server chip and 64 threads.
AMD’s products at the time were the EPYC Rome processors and the 7nm Radeon Instinct MI60 and MI50 accelerators that are built around the Zen-2 CPU microarchitecture. Here's the main thing about that point in time — Intel was expected to catch-up with a comparable 10nm release planned for Q2 or Q3 2020 called the Ice Lake Xeon Scalable. About four months before Intel’s expected release was when the I/O Fund covered AMD during the height of the pandemic sell-off. The company was “the one that got away” in 2019 and March of 2020 allowed us to revisit this.
If technical jargon around chips isn’t your thing, then this is probably the most important line from our original analysis in terms of AMD’s competitive prowess: “It’s estimated that for every $1.00 in Rome chip sales, Intel loses $2.25 on average in Intel Xeon SP sales. The savings are then deployed to buy more Rome chips, which can further depress Intel’s revenue.”$1.00 in Rome chip sales, Intel loses $2.25 on average in Intel Xeon SP sales. The savings are then deployed to buy more Rome chips, which can further depress Intel’s revenue.”
Going into July of 2020 earnings, we reminded our Members to watch for a AMD beat and an Intel miss, asthat would be the lynchpin that sets into motion the lead for AMD on product. This was not an earnings call, rather a “be alert” message as we were putting into place leading semiconductor allocations at that time. This was based off a few clues in Nokia’s earnings report that stated they were delayed due to a chip supplier. We knew they were referring to Intel. Two weeks later, we got exactly that –Intel stumbled by pushing out delivery on Ice Lake and AMD seized the moment by releasing Milan.
Image Source: 2021 Webinar, Guess Which Car is Intel? 🙂
The gains we have seen over the next past few years were put into motion with Intel and AMD’s Q2 2020 reports as it’s proven quite difficult for Intel to catchup from this delay as AMD answered by speeding up its product release cycle. The projections provided by management at AMD at the time we first covered the stock was for $14 billion in annual revenue by 2023. Instead, we will see $21.5 billion in revenue if we factor in the 31% revenue guide that was provided in the most recent earnings call – plus margins are expanding.
This is from product strength and that’s important to remember, there is nothing in the financials that could have predicted the nearly $6 billion beat on the top line over a four-year period. Arguably, Covid was a tailwind but we are likely to see the data center double on a quarterly basis this year for a much larger revenue contribution (in terms of dollar amount) than years prior.
Reviewing AMD in 2021
The Milan EPYC Series announced in August of 2020 was officially launched in March of 2021. The Milan is built on 7nm technology and has up to 64 cores and 128 threads with increased clocks compared to the Rome series. At the time of launch, Milan had a 100% advantage over Intel’s Sky Lake on server processor scores, according to Geekbench. The launch that was in question during the Milan release from Intel is called Ice Lake, and as the car race picture shows above, Intel drove into a brick wall as this release was two years delayed. Ice Lake would eventually launch with 40 cores up from 28 cores while AMD had 68 cores.
“We won’t rehash the delay, denial, and begrudging admittance cycle that is Ice-SP’s gestation, just be aware that it was a 2019 CPU and is now a mid-2021 CPU. We know it launches today and Intel is officially claiming, “We have shipped over 200,000 Ice Lake CPUs for revenue” and the shipping parts are the D-2 stepping. Since volume production started in mid-January and the throughput is 4-5 months, these parts are likely wafers pulled mid-production and restarted, real production volume is set for May delivery. Don’t take our word for it though, the largest OEM out there thinks so too.the largest OEM out there thinks so too.
As an aside lets do the math and assume those 200K Ice-SPs shipped in three months or about 66K CPUs/month. If the server market is about 30M CPUs/year, lets call it 32M for the sake of round numbers, that would be 8M/quarter for normal production. 200,000/32,000,000 = .025 or about 2.28 days worth of production. This is not a figure I would be mentioning in public if I was aiming to boost confidence.”
In my world, that throwdown by SemiAccurate is like a good Hollywood roast session.
In terms of how third-generation EPYC performed against third-generation Xeon processors, there are debates there. I mentioned in the webinar that Intel likely has a very large marketing department that can help make sure headlines are in its favor — although it is true that Ice Lake does boost performance for AI, high-performance computing and cloud workloads with eight channels of DDR-3200 memory per socket and 64 lanes of PCIe, up from six channels of DDR4-2933 and 48 lanes PCI Gen3.
The core count of the Milan Series is higher despite any transistor density improvements that Intel may have had from Ice Lake. Hyperscale cloud customers likely prefer AMD for adding more capacity and also due to virtual CPUs from AMD helping to drive down costs for the hyperscalers. Technically, there is a performance imbalance between AMD and Intel skewed in AMD’s favor.
In this case we don’t have to wade through a public relations campaign to figure out where Ice Lake stands like we did in 2020 as we now have the benefit of hindsight. We can clearly see AMD taking market share in server CPUs although losing ground in desktops and laptops (our thesis is server market share so that’s less important to us). Notably, overall CPU market share for AMD is up.
Most importantly, look at where AMD was when it launched the second generation of Zen (roughly 2%) to today (roughly 11%) market share – or nearly 6X from this major design win. Moving forward, Intel will need to deliver a 7nm chip – but by then Lisa Su will already be releasing a 5nm design. As the analysis points out, Intel needs to make up for lost time, meanwhile, Lisa Su is unlikely to allow that now that AMD has clawed its way back from a near-zero.
“Turning to our overall data center business. We made outstanding progress in the last year. We exited 2021 with data center revenue contributing a mid-20 percentage of overall revenue, and we expect 2022 to be another year of significant growth based on the strong customer demand signals for our current and next-generation products.”we expect 2022 to be another year of significant growth based on the strong customer demand signals for our current and next-generation products.”
The management also said this which pretty much sums up AMD’s level of confidence:
“Yes, Vivek. So look, we always expect the competitive environment to be very strong and very aggressive. And that's the way we plan our business. That being the case, I think we're very happy with the growth that we've seen in the business sort of last year.
And as we look forward, we see opportunities in both cloud and enterprise. On the cloud side, we're in 10 of the largest hyperscalers in the world are using AMD. As they get familiar with us over multiple generations, they're expanding the workloads that they're using AMD on. So we see that across internal and external workloads.On the cloud side, we're in 10 of the largest hyperscalers in the world are using AMD. As they get familiar with us over multiple generations, they're expanding the workloads that they're using AMD on. So we see that across internal and external workloads.
In the Enterprise segment, we doubled year-over-year here in 2021. We continue to add more field support to have more people get familiar with our architecture. We have very strong OEM relationships. So I feel very good about our server trajectory. And yes, it's very competitive out there. But we think the data center business is a secular growth business. And within that, we can grow significantly faster than the market.”And yes, it's very competitive out there. But we think the data center business is a secular growth business. And within that, we can grow significantly faster than the market.”
Notably, these comments are likely priced in at the moment as the 31% guide outpaces overall data center revenue growth in 2022, expected to be 11%. However, it helps to have context in terms of AMD’s confidence level right now.
Q4 Update and What to Look for in 2022
As discussed, AMD had a breakout year in terms of its position in the data center which helped drive top line growth in 2021 of 68% revenue growth for a record $16.4 billion. This was the company’s sixth consecutive quarter of 45%+ year-over-year growth. Mind you, this is not a $2 billion company putting up these growth numbers.
Q4 revenue grew 49% year-over-year and was up 12% sequentially to $4.8 billion.
With all the profitability concerns in the market, Lisa Su came out swinging on the bottom line, partially driven by higher average sales price (ASP) given the supply shortage. The company doubled operating income, net income and EPS over the past year and also recently announced $8 billion in buybacks. Operating cash flow was up 239% year-over-year. Cash flow was up 314% year-over-year for $3.2 billion. There is $3.6 billion on the balance sheet. One important caveat – as stated some of this is driven by higher average sales price (ASP) due to supply constraints which Bradley dissects below.
Q4 gross margin expanded 5% to a 50% GM and operating income doubled year-over-year. Operating income doubled to $1.3 billion, operating cash flow was up 48% year-over-year, and free cash flow was up 53% year-over-year. EPS was up 105% YoY on a GAAP basis and 77% on an adjusted basis to $0.92. (Again, big bottom line growth but will be tempered when supply shortages ease).
First quarter 2022 revenue is expected to be $5 billion, for an increase of 45% year-over-year. The sequential growth is expected to be driven by higher server and client revenue. Adjusted gross margin is expected to be 50.5%.
For FY2022, revenue is expected to be $21.5 billion, for an increase of 31% YoY with an adjusted gross margin of 51%. The company provided a statement at the Analyst Day that server will grow to contribute 30% of total revenue by 2023, implying increased market share.
We are primarily interested in the Data Center and this is bridged between two revenue segments – Computing and Graphics for GPUs, and Enterprise, Embedded and Semi-Custom for EPYC processors. Data center EPYC CPUs help drive AMD’s leading growth category, Enterprise, Embedded and Semi-Custom which was up 75% in revenue and up 17% sequentially. This segment’s operating income was up 213% YoY and up 40.5% sequentially.
GPUs helped drive the Computing and Graphics segment, which was up 32% YoY to $2.6 billion in revenue in Q4. This
includes more consumer facing products such as desktop and laptop processors. The company is focusing on more consumer-facing GPU products, such as the Radeon 6000 which grew double-digits sequentially, and will have the RDNA 2 to architecture powering gaming consoles and PCs. The company is also releasing a new mobile GPU and GPUs for lightweight gaming notebooks.
Regarding GPUs at the data center level, The Instinct MI200 accelerators power high-performance computing (HPC) and this helped drive data center graphics. The new Instinct accelerator outperforms the M100 with 383 TFLOPs compared to 185 TFLOPs. This is accomplished by coupling two CDNA2 dies with Infinity Fabric interconnects. AMD is starting to go more head-to-head with Nvidia on the A100 in terms of artificial intelligence applications and benchmarks.
Combined, data center EPYC CPUs and Instinct GPUs helped AMD cross the $1 billion revenue mark per quarter last year for data center revenue, and this could reach $1.5 billion per quarter by Q1 and may reach $2.3 billion per quarter by the end of this year. There are Trento EPYC CPUs and Aldebaran Instinct GPUs that are used in Frontier supercomputers but not as meaningful as the more commercial lines. Estimated revenue for HPC accelerators are in the $250 million range, per semiconductor analysts.
According to management, “revenue doubled year-over-year in this category and increased double-digits sequentially.” This is where AMD is gaining ground against Intel and is the primary growth we watch. The company was able to grow more than 100% year-over-year driven by cloud capex from companies such as AWS, Alibaba, Google, IBM and Microsoft Azure. Looking forward, Facebook is now a major customer for EPYC processors for their Metaverse workloads and new data center buildouts with Facebook also building data centers with Nvidia’s A100 GPUs.
Diversified Computing:
Milan-X EPYC with 3D V-Cache = Technical Computing
EPYC processors will get the boost that Ryzen gaming chips got last year from 3D stacked memory. The product is called “AMD 3D V-Cache” and will add cache capabilities in a vertical stack increasing the memory capacity from 256 MB to 768 MB by adding an additional 512 MB vertically. According to one report, the L3 cache (which boosts performance) can have up to four cache stacks per chip. According to AMD, this offers a "50 percent average uplift” across targeted workloads by offering 15X density increase, 200X interconnect density increase over 2D chiplets, and 3X energy efficiency. Ultimately, this means lower latency and improved performance.
Note: we covered 3D Stacking for Memory here in our Lam Reportcovered 3D Stacking for Memory here in our Lam Report
Microsoft published a report that showed 50% to 80% higher performance on complex simulations and workloads, such as electronic design automation (chip design), computational fluid dynamics and finite element analysis (FEA). The study also showed 42% to 51% lower memory latency compared to the previous generation of Milan with an amplification effect of up to 1.8X for effective memory bandwidth due to the workload performing as if it were being fed a higher bandwidth from DRAM.
Here's what AMD said on the call:
“Microsoft Azure previewed a new HPC instance, powered by our third-gen EPYC processors with 3D stack memory that delivers up to 80% more performance than currently available instances. Our differentiated 3D stacking technology further extends the leadership performance of EPYC processors and technical computing workloads like EDA, fluid dynamics, and complex simulations. We started volume production of EPYC processors with 3D stacked memory earlier this quarter in advance of OEM platform launches with all our major server partners.”
Genoa Series Shipping in 2022, Cloud-Native Specific Bergamo Close Behind in H1 2023
The fourth-generation of Zen architecture is the Genoa EPYC processors with 96 cores which will deliver the highest performing general-purpose compute. The Zen 4c core is made for cloud-native workloads due to its thread density and will be featured in the Bergamo server roadmap for the first half of 2023. This powerful combination of Zen 4 cores and power-efficient CPUs are tailored for cloud workloads. The Bergamo release will have up to 128 cores, an increase from the 96 cores in the 2022 Genoa series.
As we stated during Intel’s stumble, it’s likely we see a 5nm chip come from AMD in this time frame, and that’s exactly what the company plans to do with the Zen 4 and Zen 4c platform. The “c” stands for cloud computing. The Ryzen desktop processors will also leverage a 5nm Zen 4 core with the new AM5 socket; this was discussed at the CES 2022 presentation with expected launch in H2 2022.
Here is what the company said in the call about the upcoming lineup of Milan-X and Bergamo:
Chris CasoChris Caso
Yes. Thank you. Good evening. First question is, if you could give some indication of the strategy behind some of the processor variants that have come out, most recently Milan-X and Bergamo coming up. Do those variants represent incremental revenue to AMD? What's the strategy behind it? How does that help you, help the product line?First question is, if you could give some indication of the strategy behind some of the processor variants that have come out, most recently Milan-X and Bergamo coming up. Do those variants represent incremental revenue to AMD? What's the strategy behind it? How does that help you, help the product line?
Lisa SuLisa Su
Sure, Chris. Well, I think the strategy is, as we have gotten more scale in the business, we can invest more and we see ways to further differentiate our product portfolio. So I mean, I think Milan-X is really sort of the highest of the highest end. And we see that for technical computing and some of these EDA workloads that, that does give us a very differentiated product. And then we have the regular Milan product line. We'll have Genoa. And Bergamo is really optimized for cloud.
So I do believe it gives us more opportunity to expand from a market share and a footprint standpoint. And I think the broader statement, Chris, is that, the data center is so large. There are so many different workloads that you can optimize. Like, by doing these variants, we will actually get a better solution for the customer, give them better total cost of ownership and, hopefully, give us a larger footprint in that workload as well.So I do believe it gives us more opportunity to expand from a market share and a footprint standpoint. And I think the broader statement, Chris, is that, the data center is so large. There are so many different workloads that you can optimize. Like, by doing these variants, we will actually get a better solution for the customer, give them better total cost of ownership and, hopefully, give us a larger footprint in that workload as well.
Discussion on Average Selling Prices, Supply and Dilution Impact of Xilinx Acquisiton
By Bradley Cipriano
As mentioned above, Q4 sales increased 49% YoY to $4.8 billion while FY2021 sales increased 68% YoY to $16.4 billion. During the year, AMD’s largest segment, Compute and Graphics (57% of 2021 sales) increased 45% YoY to $9.4 billion. The rise in Compute sales was driven by a 57% YoY surge in average selling prices (ASP), offset with an 8% decline in volumes. AMD explained in its 10K that the rise in ASP was driven by the company’s focus on higher-end products, and a greater mix of its Ryzen, Radeon and AMD Instinct products. AMD further explained that the lower volumes were driven by its focus on premium products and a tight supply environment. The tight supply market also likely contributed to the ramp in selling prices.
It is noteworthy that 2021 was a unique year, and investors should expect that ASPs will likely normalize in the future. While we do not believe that ASPs will rise by 50%+ again in 2022, we do believe that volumes will rebound and supply chain constraints will ease. As shown in the chart below, AMD’s raw materials inventory balance is at multi-year lows, highlighting the limited supply of input materials in the current environment. On an absolute basis, Q4 raw materials declined 12% YoY to $82 million, a three-year low and inventory balances relative to sales were also at a five-year low in the most recent quarter. The low inventory levels highlight the strong demand for AMD's products, but may be a near term headwind to growth if raw materials inventories do not rebound.
Fab capacity is also constrained, and multiple companies such as TSMC, Texas Instruments and Intel have announced new fab constructions recently. To address this capacity issue, AMD has prepaid nearly $1 billion for long-term supply agreements (shown below). Lisu Su explained on the Q4 call that the firm’s focus is on securing long-term supply, rather than raising prices. However, she explained that prices will likely continue to rise given the strong demand in the current environment. This trend could lead to strong earnings and cash flows in the near future.
Picture 1. AMD Secures Long-Term Supply Capacity
While Computing volumes declined, Enterprise, Embedded and Semi-Custom sales surged 113% YoY to $7.1 billion, primarily due to higher volumes of EPYC server processors. As mentioned above, the growth in EPYC server processors is a secular tailwind that we expect will continue as AMD captures more data center market share.
AMD’s focus on premium products and its ramp in ASP and volumes led to strong growth in margins. Gross margins increased 300 bps YoY in 2021 to 48%, driven by a richer mix of EPYC, Radeon and Ryzen processor sales. However, margins may come under pressure going forward as ASPs ease following a normalization in supply chain constraints. Fortunately, this will likely be offset with a rise in volumes as inventories increase. AMD has secured long-term supply capacity which will help it meet the robust demand for its products, allowing it to continue to capture market share and grow earnings going forward. However, we will be closely monitoring the supply situation as semiconductors have historically been a cyclical industry (but that trend may be changing as well).
Near-term Impact of Xilinx Acquisition
In October 2020, AMD announced its intention to purchase Xilinx for $35 billion in an all-stock deal. Xilinx had 252 million in diluted shares before the acquisition closed on 2/14/22 and AMD issued 1.7234 shares per Xilinx shares, which resulted in ~430 million shares of AMD being issued. On the closing date of the transaction, AMD shares traded at $114.27, giving the transaction a value of about $50 billion. There may be some near term headwinds to AMD's stock price as holders of Xilinx sell AMD shares, however we do not expect a material impact to dilution for a couple of reasons. For one, outside of a few independent instances for non-employee Board of Director members, there was not an acceleration in the vesting of shares, so insider selling should not be expected to accelerate following the close of the transaction. AMD disclosed that “the [Xilinx share] awards generally remain subject to the same vesting and other terms and conditions that applied to the awards immediately prior to the [acquisition date]”. Importantly, insiders will not be selling 100% of their newly acquired AMD shares either. For example, Former Xilinx CEO Victor Peng will join AMD as president of the newly formed Adaptive and Embedded Computing Group. Mr. Peng owned 192,000 Xilinx shares, or about 1% of XLNX's float.
Further helping to offset the dilution is the announcement of an $8 billion share buyback on 2/24/22. This is on top of $1.2 billion of remaining buyback capacity after the close of the year. AMD will be able to purchase around 88 million shares at current prices, which reduces the potential dilution by ~20%. So long as insider selling is not above 20% over the next year, then we shouldn’t expect a material impact on the shares from the stock deal. Finally, AMD has capacity to ramp share repurchase going forward. The combined company should be producing north of $4 billion in annual FCF, with close to $6B in cash on the balance sheet, net of debt. AMD expects about $300 million in cost synergies as well following the deal, which should improve the capacity for share repurchases even further.
Conclusion:
By Beth Kindig
During the height of the high beta bubble (SPACs) and also when hypergrowth was in favor, it was counterintuitive to build a position in a semiconductor company. It can also be tough to rely on product over financials with semis, which is why we see fund managers still pushing Intel and analysts here.
However, from this stance on product, it will be easier for AMD to take market share from its current position than when it was at a 2% penetration. This is partly because Intel’s stumble came during *maybe* the most critical time for hyperscalers to expand due to “digital transformation.”
For the conclusion, I’m going to take a direct quote from CEO Lisa Su on the earnings call as to why I believe AMD can continue its lead in the data center and across other segments as she says it better than I can:
“And I think what you're seeing is growth in the model from the standpoint that we've always kind of said we're underrepresented in the business. When you look even today with all of our growth, we're still underrepresented in the business, whether you're talking about the server business or the PC business. And so we believe that our product strength and our customer engagements are such that we can grow significantly in this environment.”
The “underrepresented” she refers to in her comment is why I’ve called AMD “The Dark Horse” – which means an unexpected contender. We will need to rename AMD someday after the market is fully onto the product story as it was more fitting at 2% than at 11% market share and it certainly won’t apply if AMD continues on this trajectory.
Disclosure: The I/O Fund owns shares in AMD and has no plans to change their respective position within the next 72 hours. You can access the I/O Fund’s positions here. The above article expresses the opinions of the author, and the author did not receive compensation from any of the discussed companies.Disclosure: The I/O Fund owns shares in AMD and has no plans to change their respective position within the next 72 hours. You can access the I/O Fund’s positions herehere. The above article expresses the opinions of the author, and the author did not receive compensation from any of the discussed companies.
Cloud reports in two waves, with the first wave of Q4 earnings ramping this week. Microsoft was the first to report on January 25th, and strength in cloud sales helped the company beat expectations. Specifically, Azure and other cloud services revenue increased 46% YoY in the quarter, which drove consolidated sales growth of 20% YoY, beating topline estimates by 2%. In the analysis that follows, I give a brief overview of the cloud industry and discuss key metrics that investors should be aware of heading into Q4 earnings.
Cloud: Top 10 EV/FWD Revenue Multiples
Below we ranked cloud stocks based on their EV/NTM sales multiples. Snowflake (SNOW) has the highest multiple in the cloud sector, as the cloud platform provider most recently reported accelerating topline growth coupled with improving retention and other key metrics. Snowflake is benefitting from increasing rates of data ingestion in the cloud environment, a secular tailwind that will likely continue to be strong in the near term.
SentinelOne (S), Zscaler (ZS) and Cloudflare (NET) follow Snowflake’s valuation and have been rewarded a relative premium in the cloud category. Each of these companies provides cybersecurity solutions, which is a market that will likely continue to see strong demand as companies increasingly digitize and migrate online. As companies move online, their attack surfaces increase, driving demand for cyber security solutions.
It is noteworthy that cloud valuations have normalized in 2022 following the heightened volatility in financial markets. Nonetheless, these leading cloud companies highlighted below will likely continue to report robust growth in the near term as cloud adoption remains a strong secular tailwind for the foreseeable future.
Cloud: Top 10 Three-month Forward YoY Growth Rates
Below is a chart of forward sales growth expectations for cloud stocks expected to grow the fastest in the upcoming quarter. Bill.com (BILL) is expected to report the fastest growth rate in our cloud universe heading into Q4 earnings at nearly 140% YoY. However, Bill.com recently completed its acquisition of Invoice2go, which impacts the company’s as-presented topline growth rate.
Absent M&A, Bill.com’s sales are still strong and recently grew 78% YoY on an organic basis, up from the 73% YoY organic growth rate in the prior quarter. Also noteworthy are the differing growth rates between Monday.com and Asana, two work productivity platforms that are both rapidly growing.
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Monday.com is expected to grow sales 75% YoY to $88 million while Asana is expected to grow sales slower at 54% YoY to $105 million in quarterly sales. The next few quarters will likely shed light on which platform is the leading work productivity solution going forward. Strength in enterprise will be a key metric to monitor to gain insight into which company is the leading work productivity platform.
Top 10 Weekly Share Price Movements
Below is a table of the weekly change in share price for our universe of cloud stocks (week ended 01/21). Markets have been volatile and every cloud stock in our universe was down last week as the Nasdaq declined by 7%. However, there were some relative outperformers, such as Workday (WDAY) and Zuora (ZUO), both of which support back-office operations, and the market may be expecting these companies to perform well given the labor shortage. Furthermore, Anaplan (PLAN), Box (BOX) and Dropbox (DBX) have also outperformed well on a YTD basis, and were up 4%, 2% and 3% relative to the Nasdaq’s 7% YTD decline. Lengthening the timeframe to 1-year and Box has performed the strongest of the three and is up 38% YoY. Likely contributing to its outperformance, Box has reported three consecutive quarters of acceleration topline growth, with sales rising 14% and billings increasing 25% YoY in Q3. The outperformance in billings suggests sales may continue to accelerate, and management guided for Q4 sales to accelerate to 15% YoY.
Top 10 Changes in sales growth estimates – last 90 days
The table below ranks cloud stocks by their topline revisions over the last 90 days. An increase in topline revisions signals that the Street believes that the company will grow faster than initially believed, which can result in outperformance. Confluent (CFLT) has had a 16% topline revisions over the last three-months, which leads cloud stocks. Confluent raised its FY2022 sales guide in November by 8% at the mid-point and also announced a partnership with Alibaba in December, both of which likely contributed to the higher topline estimates. Another standout is New Relic (NEWR), which saw a 9% rise in estimates over the last 90 days, driven by a strong earnings report as the company reported an acceleration in sales and guided for a further acceleration in Q2. New Relic’s shares are up 27% over the last three-months as the company recently revamped its product offering and migrated to a consumption billing model. Time will tell if the recent changes resulted in sustainable growth or if the recent changes provided only a short-term boost to growth.
Update on EV/Fwd revenue multiples:
Overall stats:
Overall cloud forward median: 8x
Top 5 cloud forward median: 24x
Overall cloud forward average: 10x
EV/FWD SALES:
As shown below, the median and average cloud EV/NTM sales multiple was trending up throughout 2021 but has since corrected in 2022 to levels last seen in early 2020. For instance, the median cloud EV/NTM revenue multiple was 8x in the most recent week, which is below the 9x median cloud multiple in May 2020. Furthermore, the delta between the average and median multiple has narrowed recently as the top valued cloud stocks have had their valuations compress, reducing the distortion on the average calculation. If Q4 growth comes in strong for the cloud category, expectations for forward growth will likely be revised higher, leading to a recovery in valuations.
Top 5 EV/FWD SALES:
In the chart below, we can more clearly see the large dispersion in cloud valuations, as the top 5 premium valued cloud stocks have had their EV/Fwd sales multiples expand since 2020. However, the top 5 valued cloud stocks have had their valuations halved since November. The median cloud stock has also experienced a multiple compression in recent weeks.
EV TO FWD Sales Growth Buckets:
We can further dissect the change in cloud valuations by breaking up the group into high growth (>30%), mid growth (>15% and <30%) and low growth (<15%). The below chart shows the historical valuations for stocks in various growth buckets. Each growth bucket has had their valuations compress since November, with the high growth bucket experiencing the steepest decline. The market may be expecting a deacceleration in growth in the near term, which would explain the correction in high growth valuations. If growth in cloud remains robust in Q4 and estimates come in strong, then valuations may rebound in the next few months. Microsoft’s strong cloud results discussed above suggest that cloud will continue to grow strongly in the near term.
Top EV TO FWD SALES:
The below chart provides a more holistic view of the cloud landscape heading into Q4 earnings, sorted by EV to Fwd revenue multiples. As mentioned above, Snowflake (SNOW) sports a premium multiple, driven in part by its accelerating topline, followed by three cyber security firms: SentinelOne (S), Zscaler (ZS) and Cloudflare (NET). Snowflake’s premium multiple is 380% above the cloud median of 8x, which may be warranted given its triple-digit accelerating topline growth rate.
The last chart is based on EV to FWD sales but also takes into account forward growth expectations. By scaling valuation relative to forward growth, we can more clearly see which companies are cheapest relative to forward growth. A low value in the below chart means that a company is cheap relative to growth. Note that some names may be skewed due to acquisitions. It is interesting to note that Snowflake drops from having a 380% premium valuation relative to the median to a 33% premium after taking into account its strong growth rate. Alteryx and Splunk move to being some of the most expensive cloud stocks once we factor in their forward growth.
Finally, the last table we will be discussing includes aggregate cloud operating metrics. The below table illustrates the median topline growth, margins and FCF generation for the cloud industry. The median growth rate was 36%, and the market expects the median cloud stock to grow sales by 28% YoY in Q4. Gross margins remain robust at over 73% and cashflows are slightly positive at 3% of three-month sales for the median cloud company. Cloud remains a category exhibiting rapid growth, with strong margins but relatively low cashflows. As the category matures, cashflows will likely materially improve, rewarding investors in the long run.
While cloud valuations have been volatile in recent weeks, the category remains one of the fastest growing areas in the market. The I/O Fund believes in the long-run success of the cloud category, and we remain invested Find out what the Street is saying about cloud stocks headed into Q4 earnings in our I/O Fund’s Preview of 7 Cloud Stocks for Q4 Earnings.
The I/O Fund is a team of analysts that share their research publicly as they build a portfolio of 30 stocks. Our team has record results for a retail Fund and we also have four-digit gains on some of our free newsletter coverage. You can learn more about our premium service by clicking here or sign up for our free newsletter here.by clicking here or sign up for our free newsletter here.
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IBM released upbeat results recently as the company beat consensus analysts’ revenue estimates by $740 million and adjusted EPS by $0.06. Even though IBM is not a pure-play cloud company, it has increased its focus in the cloud segment to stay in the race. IBM’s cloud revenues increased 16% YoY in Q4 and the results brought some relief to the investors after the recent volatility in the stock market.
On the other hand, Microsoft beat analysts’ revenue estimates by 1.9% and adjusted EPS by 6.9%. Microsoft Cloud revenue grew 32% to $22.1 billion. This is a positive sign for the broader cloud market. The company’s capex has also been strong, suggesting that management believes demand is structural.
Our Cloud companies’ earnings preview includes Dynatrace, Unity Software, JFrog, DigitalOcean, UiPath, Palantir, and BigCommerce. To understand valuations across the cloud companies and how the sector is positioned moving into earnings, please reference our analysis, “I/O Fund’s Cloud Q4 2021 Earnings Overview.”
The company’s revenue in Q2 FY22 grew 34% YoY to $226.35 million. According to the analysts’ consensus estimates, revenue is expected to grow 28% YoY to $234.6 million in the next quarter. The management has been positive on the long-term growth prospects due to the digital transformation across industries. In the last earnings call, they mentioned that the near-term market expansion opportunities include the U.S. government's investments in cloud platforms.
Barclays analyst Raimo Lenschow has lowered the price target to $65 from $85. He has an Overweight rating. According to the analyst, the main question for software investors in 2022 is not around end demand, as there are "no issues there," but the correct valuation level for the space. "Are we going back to the long-term average, or should software bounce back to the more recent highs given the exciting structural growth profile? We are in the former camp,” says the analyst as he gets a bit cautious on the sector.
Jefferies analyst Brent Thill also lowered the price target to $60 from $75 and has kept the hold rating. He adjusted his targets across the app, infrastructure and security software spaces. “Software underperformed the S&P 500 by 15% in 2021 as overall valuations contracted 10%,” according to Thill, who thinks multiples in the space will continue to compress in 2022 as 80% of software names are expected to decelerate with "digital digestion" happening coming out of the pandemic.
Please note that the I/O Fund may or may not agree with the above financial analysts, yet we objectively report what the Street is saying. You may view our previous analysis of the company below:
Unity’s revenue grew by 43% YoY in Q3 and is expected to grow 34% to $295.29M in the next quarter. The company recently completed the acquisition of Weta Digital. Weta is a digital visual effects company known for its work in Lord of the Rings, Avatar, and Wonder Woman. The management believes that the company’s addressable market will increase by about $10 billion from the acquisition.
Piper Sandler analyst Brent Bracelin made an interesting point that the company is an indirect beneficiary of Activision and the Microsoft deal due to its unique position as the leading 3D creator platform for gaming, movies, AR/VR, and metaverse applications. The analyst also believes that Unity can expand its footprint as a 3D creator platform in the coming year.
Stifel analyst J. Parker Lane has initiated coverage of the company with a buy rating and a price target of $190. According to the analyst, “Unity's broad set of solutions has made the company a market leader in the gaming industry and positioned its platform to address emerging use cases in other industry verticals.” Lane further adds, “Additionally, the company's continued investment in research and development, tuck-in acquisitions, and presence in gaming has helped it withstand the headwinds of IDFA and gain market share in a competitive advertising market.”
The company’s revenue grew by 38% YoY in Q3 and the consensus analysts’ estimates suggest revenue to grow 36% to $58.1 million in the next quarter. The management expects revenue in the range of $57.5 million to $58.5 million and adjusted earnings per share of break-even to $0.01. For the full year, management expects revenue in the range of $205 million to $206 million, representing a growth of 36% YoY at the mid-point.
Stifel analyst Brad Reback has a buy rating and a $45 price target. He sees the company is well positioned to sustain 30%-plus revenue growth as it leverages its "unique position within the DevSecOps workflow.” He further believes that JFrog has a growing suite of solutions to help customers build, manage, distribute, and secure their respective applications more effectively and efficiently.
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Needham analyst Jack Andrews has a buy rating and a $71 price target. The analyst is positive on its leverage to strong macro demand trends for DevOps tools and practices, expects its key financial metrics to inflect higher. He further believes that the company is trading at a discount to the broader software companies creating a favorable risk/reward. At the time of the writing, the company was trading at 6.0x EV/Fwd revenue multiple.
The company’s shares got listed in March 2021. The stock rose about 30% since its IPO. The consensus analysts’ estimates suggest revenue to grow 36% YoY to $119.02 million. The company’s net dollar retention rate (NDR) has shown improvement from 105% in Q4 20 to 116% in the last quarter. On the other hand, the growth rate has also shown acceleration for three consecutive quarters.
William Blair analyst James Breen has initiated coverage of the company with an Outperform rating. He notes, “DigitalOcean is a comprehensive cloud platform designed to simplify cloud infrastructure for developers, start-ups, and small to midsize businesses.” He is also positive on the large and growing addressable market, which is expected to reach $116 billion by 2024.
UiPath Inc – Tentative Earnings date is February 15th
UiPath had a successful listing in April 2021. The company’s revenue grew 50% YoY in Q3 and the consensus analysts’ estimates suggest revenue to grow 36% to $283.25M. The company is betting on the robotic process automation market (RPA). According to Precedence Research, the Robotic Process Automation market is expected to reach $23.9 billion by 2030, growing at a compound annual growth rate of 28% from 2021 to 2030.
Oppenheimer analyst Brian Schwartz has upgraded the company to Outperform with a $56 price target. In his opinion, “UiPath as the RPA market leader should benefit from a strong top-line driver with good business efficiency tools demand this year. At the same time, valuation risk has lessened considerably.”
Wells Fargo analyst Michael Turrin upgraded the company to Overweight with a price target of $60. The analyst sees a "potential tailwind emerging" for the company from a tightening labor market, which he thinks could benefit automation-centric vendors.
Palantir Inc – Tentative Earnings date is February 15th
Palantir's revenue grew 36% YoY in Q3 and the consensus analysts estimate revenue to grow 30% to $418.07 million. The company's initial focus was on the government sector. The company's first platform Gotham was mainly built for government operatives in the defense and intelligence sector. The company continues to win deals from the public sector. On the other hand, the commercial revenue segment has also shown strong growth in the past few quarters.
Jefferies analyst Brent Thill lowered the company’s price target to $24 from $31. He kept a Buy rating on the shares and adjusted his targets across the app, infrastructure, and security software spaces.
Deutsche Bank analyst Brad Zelnick lowered the firm's price target to $18 from $25 and kept a Hold rating on the shares. The analyst is bullish on software industry fundamentals but recommends a balanced approach with greater valuation sensitivity than in recent years.
The company’s revenue grew 49% YoY to $59.3 million in Q3. It included $5.9 million from the recently acquired Feedonomics, a data feed optimization platform. The consensus analysts estimate revenue to grow 43% to $61.82 million in the next quarter. Management expects revenue in the range of $61.3 million to $61.7 million, representing a growth of 42% to 43%. The guidance includes expected Feedonomics revenue of $7.1 million to $7.3 million. For the full year, the management expects revenue in the range of $216.2 million to $216.6 million, representing a growth of about 42%.
Needham analyst Scott Berg has been positive on the recent acquisition and also has a bullish stance on the company. In his words, "We came away incrementally more confident in BIGC’s positioning in the market entering 2022 and its growth opportunity upmarket as large organizations look to re-platform from legacy on-prem solutions to a flexible, multi-tenant SaaS platform." He has a buy rating and a price target of $85.
On the other hand, a few other Wall Street analysts have lowered the price target on the company due to overall weak market sentiment. KeyBanc analyst Josh Beck lowered the price target to $40 from $75. Barclays analyst Raimo Lenschow lowered the price target to $36 from $67.
The I/O Fund is a team of analysts that share their research publicly as they build a portfolio of 20 stocks. Our team has record results for a retail Fund and we also have four-digit gains on some of our free newsletter coverage. You can learn more about our premium service by clicking here or sign up for our free newsletter here.by clicking here or sign up for our free newsletter here.
Disclaimer: This is not financial advice. Please consult with your financial advisor in regards to any stocks you buy.
Datadog is a company that quietly appears every three months with earnings results that say: “Remember me?” We are looking to increase allocation to this LTBH position as this is a rare leader in the migration to the cloud and the observability that is required across increasingly complex architectures. If you want a simple thesis that you can share with your friends and family, it’s this: Datadog lets us directly participate in the growth of AWS, Azure and Google Cloud through a pureplay that cross-sells better than almost any other cloud company.
Product Overview:
Datadog’s management team was very early to address the issue of silos in a cloud-native environment. As systems moved from on-premise to the public cloud to include virtualized machines and containers, the number of applications to monitor grew. Virtualized machines create more data from many more applications. The next iteration of the cloud, which was containers, exponentially grew the number of applications. Now that there are serverless architectures where every function needs to be tracked individually – which means the complexity has grown yet again.
Here's a picture of what I mean:
Datadog is a company that solves the complexity associated with the cloud as the products are able to observe and monitor any environment no matter how large the tech stack scales.
The second thing to understand about Datadog is that it’s not only cloud native but it also works well in a multi-cloud environment. This means Datadog is downstream from Azure, AWS and Google Cloud – no matter who a customer goes with and at what percentages for the deployment. The fact that companies prefer to work with more than one cloud vendor is actually a driving force for Datadog as it’s observability and security products can scale across any deployment a customer chooses and is flexible if the customer makes changes down the line.
The trend of multi-cloud and hybrid cloud is only going to accelerate from here which we covered in detail in our Big Data and Analytics analysis. It’s worth a read if you haven’t read it yet.
The company uses the word “standardization” to describe how the multi-cloud trend is a main driver for Datadog. We covered this in our last analysis but it bears repeating here as to why multi-cloud and hybrid cloud are important drivers for Datadog and how standardization plays a key role.
Standardizing means interoperability between various cloud environments and integrated interfaces. This is especially important with multi-cloud or hybrid cloud where companies have more than one environment. This is becoming the new normal to prevent vendor lock-in. The word standardization/ standardize was mentioned 20 times on the Q2 Earnings Call, highlighting its importance to Datadog’s story going forward. If corporations continue to standardize on Datadog’s platform, then the company will continue to capture market share.
Since dealing with multiple cloud vendors quickly becomes cumbersome, there is a natural tendency to standardize in tech, especially with software. Moreover, cloud applications need to communicate, so having everything on one platform can make detecting and resolving issues less complex and costly. We believe that we are on the cusp of this standardization trend with cloud software vendors, with Datadog leading the way. We believe that Datadog is best positioned to benefit from both the rise in cloud usage and the standardization of cloud software.”Moreover, cloud applications need to communicate, so having everything on one platform can make detecting and resolving issues less complex and costly. We believe that we are on the cusp of this standardization trend with cloud software vendors, with Datadog leading the way. We believe that Datadog is best positioned to benefit from both the rise in cloud usage and the standardization of cloud software.”
Datadog eliminates the need to work with many different vendors and pulls the entire DevOpsSec stack into one platform. This not only breaks down silos in terms of the observability framework yet also breaks down silos within the company.
Infrastructure Monitoring
At the point that companies migrate to the cloud from on-premise servers, how they monitor their infrastructure fundamentally changes. On-premise servers have fixed IP addresses and there are static servers and virtualized machines. Once you move to the cloud, this changes as servers are spun-up in the cloud and are not on-site and components are hosted across many regions.
At the start, Datadog helped monitor the hardware in cloud-native environments, the operating systems, and the application servers. Infrastructure monitoring is essential if there is a problem with the functionality of a cloud-native company on the back-end. It offers tools, such as CPU utilization, to determine if there’s sufficient processing capacity, memory utilization to determine if there’s memory capacity, and storage use which indicates the amount of disk that the host is using to store files and other content.
The goal of infrastructure monitoring is to prevent or troubleshoot performance issues and to lower costs. We’ve covered in the Big Data and ML analysis here the costs associated with cloud environments and why this is coming under pressure with more companies choosing hybrid architectures, including a mix of cloud and on-premise servers.
Datadog set out to disrupt on-premise solutions that monitored servers and virtualized machines. This is called “host-centric.” The primary issues with former infrastructure monitoring tools are that they do not scale for the cloud and it creates silos between departments. In the cloud, infrastructure monitoring uses an API for cloud-based metrics. Datadog’s products also remove the need for Secure Shell, or SSH, to log onto remote servers. As architectures evolved to serverless, legacy monitoring tools were even more outdated as there isn’t a server to run the code and install a monitoring agent.
One key thing about Datadog is the company allows for metadata to be tagged on backend components for better monitoring. These tags inform alerts and visualization tools. The company tags both the zones and the applications. Unified tagging limits the need for reconfiguration as a company scales. This is one of Datadog’s core competencies and their unique method approach to tagging is what they launched with in 2010. This aggregates and contextualizes the data no matter where the data comes from.
Another main selling point to many of Datadog’s features is a unified platform rather than many disparate tools or vendors. This is how Datadog has disrupted its competitors and crept into larger addressable markets. The unified platform works across all environments – on-premise, hybrid and cloud – and spans infrastructure monitoring, application monitoring, log management, observability and now security. By being so strong in the area of observability, Datadog can knock down its competitors by cross-selling 13 products from the key critical piece in the stack, which is monitoring and observability. With 450 integrations, Datadog leaves little reason to leave the platform and the dashboard for other tools.
The unified platform for complex architectures is also partly why Datadog is able to lead its competitors in standardization. The dashboard also offers AI to help customers move through the dashboard by recommending the next monitoring step. Here’s a direct quote from an analyst on the call that sums up Datadog’s positioning:
“Congrats on the solid quarter as well for me. But Oli, you’re already bigger than all your near-term or nearest competitors growing faster than all of them by a couple of magnitude. You talked about enterprise standardization trend that led to your largest deal in the company’s history.”
Application Performance Monitoring
As discussed, the number of applications that need monitoring began to exponentially grow with virtualized machines and containers. Infrastructure monitoring is incomplete in these architectures without application performance monitoring to assure applications and websites run as expected with optimal speeds across mobile platforms, cloud-native infrastructures, virtualized and containerized servers. Distributed application environments can cause numerous bottlenecks and it can be challenging to figure where the bottleneck is coming from. Meanwhile, slow speeds can cause customer drop-off.
APM also assures that the application is performing as it should and backend processes are executing as they should, including transaction processing, and detects bug or errors in the application code.
APM performs the following functions:
Digital user experience monitoring: determines if there are errors or downtime that could lead to a loss of revenue
Transaction profiling: analyzes the transaction flow to isolate the cause
Code-level diagnostics: According to DZone, 43% of application performance issues come from code. Diagnostics help to identify the line of code or query causing the issue.
Deep-dive analysis: Looks beyond code at the server and application infrastructure for problems such as insufficient memory or long wait times
Infrastructure monitoring: similar to deep drive analysis, ideally infrastructure monitoring is part of the APM package to monitor slow network connections or virtualization bottlenecks.
Datadog’s APM also comes with network performance monitoring to verify if the network is slowing down traffic or if there is a low connectivity issue. The 360-degree view of infrastructure, applications and networks helps diagnose issues more quickly and with more accuracy.
According to Gartner, the number of applications monitored with APM tools has increased from 5% in 2018 to 20% in 2021. Machine learning is also used to forecast usage patterns and to detect anomalies outside of manual alerts.
Observability
Where observability differs from APM is that it monitors external data across metrics, events, logging and tracing (MELT). It’s called observability because it provides visibility as the issue is occurring and ideally before there is a performance issue.
Observability tools work with telemetry data, which is this combination of logs, metrics and traces. Metrics are numerical measurements, such a transactions per second. Events are individual actions. Logs are application-specific structured and unstructured data. Tracing tracks how many requests flow through a system. This is achieved through APIs, such as the Tracer API or the Metric API.
An observability framework allows you to work with telemetry data with fast retrieval and good visualization. In this specific area, Datadog competes yet is also compatible with the open-source framework called OpenTelemetry. You could also argue the project erodes some of Datadog’s moat as it reduces vendor lock-in but it’s the end-to-end tools that draws customers to Datadog rather than only the telemetry data. We covered this here in Q2.
Because Datadog is an end-to-end tool, it can be compatible with OpenTelemetry by allowing the open-sourced SDK to connect to the platform for telemetry data. The company also supports other open-source projects under the OpenTelemetry umbrella, such as OpenTracing, OpenCensus and OpenMetrics. This has created a standard set of APIs and libraries for observability and allows for the telemetry data to be easily migrated between vendors. Datadog has contributed to the project with its auto-instrumentation libraries.
Kubernetes and the rise of microservice-based architectures increase application reliability and efficiency; however, developers need the ability to monitor these architectures. Microservices benefit from Observability as it helps understand how microservices communicate. This keeps track of metadata for performance purposes and also distributed traces or requests. Observability allows for a more holistic picture so developers can connect data to monitoring tools and solve issues quickly.
Datadog has a new product that offers observability before code goes to production called CI Visibility. The launch of the CI Visibility product follows the acquisition of Undefined Labs. Datadog talks about “shifting left” which means moving more into the development phase prior to production.
Continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) provide a shared repository of code for an automated build process with regular intervals. This helps speed up development by deploying smaller batches of code. In data science machine learning models, projects are based on code and also the data used to train the model. The CI/CD data pipelines help to deliver machine learning models and this is another opportunity for Datadog’s observability tools to serve a growing demand.
Security Platform
Datadog’s core product is observability and security is an additional catalyst (or an accelerant). Datadog’s positioning with observability puts the products into the right place in the tech stack for threat detection. Cloud environments have an increased attack surface across infrastructure, containers and applications. As teams seek simplified operations, there are more third-party managed services being deployed which reduces visibility. Datadog offers a few security products to allow teams to detect real-time threats to applications and infrastructure, track compliance posture, and also workload security across infrastructure or workloads, such as Kubernetes clusters. With security monitoring, engineering teams have end-to-end analytics coverage from a unified dashboard. This increases time to resolution and also means you can find threats buried deep in the architecture.
As we covered in our previous write-up, the Sqreen acquisition helps Datadog take advantage of the trend towards microservices and Kubernetes rather than monolithic architectures. Generally speaking, Kubernetes can introduce vulnerable clusters due to default configurations. In the past, demonstrations at BlackHat, the annual security conference held in Las Vegas, have exploited features in Kubernetes default attack surface rather than bugs. Sqreen specializes in protecting code-level risks across distributed applications by protecting application logic. Sqreen’s main goal is to deliver security solutions to developers and the operations teams, as well, i.e., to “democratize” and emphasize security testing and implementation during the development process, often called DevSecOps. These are the two main points on this acquisition – more market share across security for microservices and more stakeholders at a company who can buy and deploy Datadog products outside of the security team.
The breakdown between developers, operations and security called DevSecOps is a transition that Datadog plans to capture similar to how the company captured DevOps. Applications and infrastructure security is new to Datadog yet management has hinted towards it becoming as big as the observability market, which is at $38 billion in 2021.
Datadog’s Financials
Datadog accelerated revenue growth during a year of tough covid comps. This shows remarkable product strength. The company’s revenue is up 75% year-over-year to $270 million, an acceleration from 66.81% last quarter, and 61.35% revenue growth in the year-ago quarter. The revenue comfortably beat estimates by 10% and was up 16% QoQ.
The company has an adjusted operating margin of 16% and adjusted EPS of $0.13. The company also had free cash flow of $57.1 million which is an increase from last quarter’s $52 million. This proves the company can grow the top line and invest heavily in R&D but not at the expense of the bottom line. The company has $1.5 billion in cash and cash equivalents.
The company issued guidance of $291 million in revenue, or 52.3% growth in the fourth quarter and EPS of $0.11. For the full year, the company is guiding for $994 million, at the midpoint, and adjusted EPS of $0.39-$0.40. According to the company, usage is down for them seasonally in Q4 as employees and businesses take holiday breaks.
It’s the underlying key metrics on customer growth that help forecast strength for Datadog as we move into 2022. The company has 17,500 total customers of which 1,800 have a ARR of $100K or more, up 66%. These accounts make up 80% of ARR, so growth in the <$100K segment is key. The other key driver of growth for Datadog is the cross-selling of products. The company is unusually strong here with 77% of customers using two or more products, up from 71% a year ago. The number of customers who use four or more products is at 31%, up from 20% a year-ago. The company also stated that net dollar retention rate is above 130 for the 17th consecutive quarter.
Annual recurring revenue helps gauge what level of revenue a company is expecting. According to management, “We also had a record quarter of ARR adds, including record ARR adds in all of our major products. And we saw strong growth across geographical regions, with all regions accelerated on a year-over-year basis compared to Q2.”
Although billings contract terms have fluctuated due to Covid with shorter terms in 2020 that are slowly returning to a more normal length. This helped drive Billings growth of 98% year-over-year. Increased contract duration to annual and multi-year partly contributed to remaining performance obligations (RPO) growth of 127%. On a more normalized basis, the company mentioned current RPO growth was closer to 100%. Revenue still remains the primary way to value Datadog, however, this under-the-hood growth certainly helps understand the strength of the company and how customers view the products as we move into 2022.
The company is investing “significantly in R&D” and plans to spend on travel and conferences in the coming year. The R&D expenses were up 80% in Q3 which management explained by saying, “It’s important to go fast when scaling those teams because there’s quite a bit of a lead time between the time when you hire engineers and the time when you get new products on the other hand. I’ve mentioned in other calls like maybe hiring now is a good predictor of output two years from now on the engineering side. So we should get started. That’s why we’re doing it.”
Notably, we like companies that invest in their engineering teams. Datadog points towards pricing power and cross-selling as to why they’re able to invest heavily in R&D and still remain profitable.
Conclusion:
As someone had said on the forum following the stellar earnings report: “Who let the Dog out?!”
To be literal, it’s AWS, Azure and Google Cloud that let the dog out. Our simplified thesis as we rounded the corner into tough Q2 covid comps was specifically, “If the tech giants are communicating that cloud infrastructure-as-a-service is one of the most critical markets in the future, then who are we to argue with this by not investing in the leader across cloud monitoring products?”
Observability is not exactly the most conversational topic, but hopefully it’s understood that architectures are becoming more complex in terms of monitoring and observability. I’m also hoping it’s clear from this analysis that Datadog has additional tailwinds from the trend towards hybrid and multi-cloud. Lastly, the management has not only executed before, during, and after Covid, yet has also grown its product suite to leverage its key positioning at the observability layer. Many companies will begin here and remain with Datadog for other products.
Valuation is high at 43X forward P/S. We rarely buy above 50 forward P/S and much prefer under 40. However, you’ll get buy alerts as we go along to help communicate when the risk/reward looks favorable as we continue to build this position.