Salesforce (NYSE:) reported better-than-expected second-quarter results and raised its full-year profit guidance, sending its shares up nearly 5% in Thursday’s premarket trade.
The cloud-based software company posted adjusted earnings per share of $2.56, surpassing analyst estimates of $2.35. Revenue for the quarter came in at $9.33 billion, beating the consensus forecast of $9.22 billion and representing an 8% increase YoY, or 9% in constant currency.
Subscription and support revenue, which makes up the bulk of Salesforce’s business, grew 9% YoY to $8.76 billion. The company’s current remaining performance obligation, a measure of future revenue under contract, rose 10% YoY to $26.5 billion.
“In Q2, we delivered strong performance across revenue, cash flow, margin and cRPO, and raised our fiscal year non-GAAP operating margin and cash flow growth guidance,” said Marc Benioff, Chair and CEO of Salesforce.
For the third quarter, Salesforce expects revenue between $9.31 billion and $9.36 billion, slightly below the analyst consensus of $9.41 billion. The company maintained its full-year revenue guidance of $37.7 billion to $38.0 billion.
On another note, Salesforce raised its full-year adjusted EPS forecast to $10.03-$10.11, up from its previous outlook and above the analyst consensus of $9.89.
The company also increased its operating cash flow growth guidance to 23% to 25% YoY.
Amy Weaver, President and CFO, highlighted the company’s focus on profitability, noting, “We continue to deliver disciplined profitable growth and this quarter, operating margins closed at record highs.”
Weaver will step down from her role as President and Chief Financial Officer at Salesforce. She will remain CFO until a successor is appointed.
Piper Sandler analysts raised their estimates and price target to $268 from $250 following CRM’s better-than-feared print. However, they point out that the second-half outlook of ~8% growth suggests further moderation, influenced by two years of cautious spending and several industry constraints, particularly in the largest Americas region, where growth slowed to 7.5% year-over-year from 10.7% in the previous quarter.
“Macro uncertainty, the CFO departure planned for fiscal year-end, and the pending multi-year model transition from applications to agents keep us on the sidelines,” the analysts said in a note. As such, they maintain a Neutral rating on the stock, awaiting further signs of demand stabilization after three years of slowing top-line growth.
Meanwhile, investment bank Jefferies believes Salesforce, despite near-term demand headwinds, can still drive margins higher “as their margins in the low 30s still lag large cap peers in the high 30s.”
Jefferies emphasizes that CRM “remains one of the cheapest large cap names trading at 19x ’25E FCF vs. peers at 28x,” representing a discount of more than 30%.
Senad Karaahmetovic contributed to this report.
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