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Technology Stocks : BEA Systems (BEAS) - Undiscovered Growth Stock -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: brk who wrote (1875)5/15/2001 10:51:10 AM
From: sandintoes  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2477
 
No...that won't happen. I hope.

I think it will make the numbers, but long range goal might be a sticking point..we'll have to wait and see.

Not that I don't appreciate all your assets, it just that I want you to have to reach to buy "MORE" BEAS!



To: brk who wrote (1875)5/15/2001 8:35:10 PM
From: Susan G  Respond to of 2477
 
UPDATE 3-BEA's quarter bests outlook, raises EPS for year
(Recasts lead; adds comment president, CEO and analyst, as well as outlook)

By Ilaina Jonas

NEW YORK, May 15 (Reuters) - BEA Systems Inc.(NASDAQ:BEAS), one of the leaders in software used to manage Web businesses, on Tuesday reported quarterly earnings that beat Wall Street's estimates and raised it earnings per share outlook for the year as it turns over some of it service business to partners in hopes of driving more profitable license revenues.

For the fiscal first-quarter ended April 30, the company said pro forma net income -- which excludes acquisition-related expenses, employer payroll taxes on stock option exercises, and net gains on investments in securities -- was $35.9 million, or 8 cents a share, up from $12.4 million, or 3 cents a share, in the same period a year earlier.

Analysts on the average had expected the company to earn 7 cents share, according to Thomson Financial/First Call.

Revenue rose 67 percent to $257.2 million from $153.7 million for the same period in the prior year.

With the item, the company said it earned $20.6 million, or 5 cents a share, versus a loss of $12.4 million, or 3 cents a share.

San Jose, Calif-based BEA is the market leader in application servers, a slightly confusing name for a software product. An application server acts as a foundation on which developers build their computer programs that run on the Web. Application servers also connect the customer facing programs with other parts of a company's computer systems, such as databases, messaging and transaction processing and are known as middleware.

"It was a challenging quarter and we had to work hard to close deals, but what did what we expected to book," Chairman and Chief Executive Bill Coleman said during a conference call with analysts.

The company raised its earnings per share outlook for fiscal year 2002. It now expects to earnings per share in the range of 41-43 cents a share, higher than the 39-41 cents a share the company previously predicted, Chief Financial Officer Bill Klein said. The new figures were based on a different mixture of license-to-service revenues. License margins typically run higher than 90 percent, while service margins are about half that amount.

Nearly two years ago, BEA decided to transfer some of the service business to big consultants such as PricewaterhouseCoopers and KPMG, in the hopes it would yield more license revenues from the new business the consultants generate. While service revenue this quarter accounted for 37 percent of all revenue, BEA expects to bring that number down to 30 percent, Alfred Chuang, president and chief operations officer told Reuters.

Klein also said that year-over-year revenue growth would fall in the low end of the previous guidance range of 46-48 percent as the company pushes more service revenue to consultants.

In after-hours activity on the Instinet brokerage system, shares of BEA traded at $36.04, up from its close of $34.04.

Wall Street analysts recently have been split on the company's outlook past the first quarter. Some said they were concerned that a slowdown in spending on information technology by U.S. companies would hurt BEA's future. They also said BEA is vulnerable to increasing pricing pressures from mounting competition, especially International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE:IBM) and its WebSphere brand of middleware products.

Meanwhile, other analysts said they remained upbeat about BEA's future and said concerns were overblown.

But Coleman responded by rattling off statistics that showed the company's growth. During the quarter the company added 700 new customer accounts for a total of 10,150. It added 400 new partners, now totaling 1,900. In addition, during the quarter developers downloaded BEA's products for a tryout 485,000 times, compared with 339,000 the quarter before. Those downloads are the fist step to new business.

"BEA, had a very, very strong quarter in the toughest IT environment in the last 10 or 15 years," First Union analyst Jason Maynard said. "Other companies complain about the environment. "These guys keep putting up the numbers."

In addition, BEA took away Verizon Communications (NYSE:VZ) from IBM and General Electric Co. (NYSE:GE), which had been using both company's products decided to go with BEA, Chuang said.

Since the start of the year, shares of BEA have lost nearly 48 percent and have underperformed the Nasdaq Composite index by nearly 19 percent.

siliconinvestor.com



To: brk who wrote (1875)5/15/2001 8:36:09 PM
From: Susan G  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2477
 
BEA Systems Backs Up the Bold Talk and Promises More
By Joe Bousquin
Senior Writer
5/15/01 8:02 PM ET

Updated from 6:19 p.m. ET

It wasn't just a bunch of BEAS.

BEA Systems (BEAS:Nasdaq - news), the application server company that touted its prospects repeatedly during its fiscal first quarter, slightly topped analysts' expectations Tuesday for the three months ended April 30 before bumping up its earnings guidance for the remainder of its fiscal year.

The company reported earnings of $35.9 million, or 8 cents a share, on revenue of $257.2 million. License fees were up 89% to $161.2 million, compared with the $85.2 million the company reported a year ago.

Analysts were expecting the company to earn 7 cents a share, according to Thomson Financial/First Call.

In regular session trading, BEA shares traded up $1.05, or 3.2%, to $34.04. In after-hours trading, subsequent to the company releasing its quarterly results, the stock was up another 5.4%, changing hands at $35.91.

During the quarter, BEA's stock benefited several times as CEO Bill Coleman took to the investment conference road with a single message: Business is good, despite the slowing economy. Tuesday's numbers seem to validate those statements. BEA Systems makes application server software, which connects what a customer sees on a Web site to the database that sits behind it.

During the quarter, Coleman repeatedly told investors he was comfortable with the company's previous financial guidance, even as other tech firms hedged their bets by bringing guidance down. On its last conference call in February, the company said it expected an increase in revenue of 46% to 48% for fiscal 2002 to $1.19 billion to $1.21 billion, and earnings per share 3 cents to 4 cents above analysts' estimates, which were 37 cents at the time. Analysts are looking for 2002 earnings of 40 cents a share and revenue of $1.19 billion for fiscal 2002, according to Multex.

With the earnings behind them, investors turned their attention to guidance. There was so much focus on guidance going into the call, that Coleman kicked off the company's conference call this afternoon by reiterating it. "Based on our Q1 financial results, our pipeline and recent bookings experience, we continue to be confident in our ability to meet analysts' expectations for the year," Coleman said. "We are maintaining our guidance."

But later in the call, BEA in fact raised its guidance. It said fiscal 2002 earnings would be 41 cents to 43 cents a share, 2 cents above its previous guidance. Yet at the same time, it said revenue growth would come in at the low end of the 46% to 48% growth range it previously offered.

BEA figures it can get higher earnings on as-expected revenue from the fact that more of its business is coming from its software licenses, which have higher profit margins than the consulting services the company also provides. The company said it expects its services division to consistently account for a lower percentage of its overall revenue in the future.

Profit margins will come in between 20% and 21% for the year, the company said. Also, it's expecting 55% to 59% growth in its license revenue. It cited a range of $740 million to $760 million in license revenue for fiscal 2002.

In the past several weeks, as the company has gone into its "quiet period" before its earnings announcement, some Wall Streeters speculated that BEA might have trouble hitting its numbers. Several analysts downgraded the stock in April, citing lengthening sales cycles and a slowing economy.

Bulls on the company, however, pointed to the fact that BEA didn't warn that it would fall short, as did plenty of software companies whose quarters concluded at the end of March. In the end, it didn't. And that should make all the difference to the bulls now.

"Today's conference call, today's results, were probably what every bull was looking for," says Mark Mulcahy, an analyst at Pacific Growth Equities who rates the stock a buy. "Certainly a lot of people will be excited by the results." (His firm hasn't done underwriting for the company.)

He said the company was able to achieve its results while other technology companies did not due to a combination of a few simple, yet elusive, elements: a good market, a good product and sound management.

Yet like many people on Wall Street, Mulcahy isn't pounding the table on BEA because of its high valuation. It trades at a hefty 89.8 times fiscal 2002 earnings estimates. (Those estimates will likely go up, causing the company's price-to-earnings ratio to decrease, after analysts work up their new models based on the company's new guidance.)

"I do think it's worth paying more for this company than others, but the question I always come back to is how much more do you pay?" Mulcahy says. "I think the premium valuation is already priced into the stock."

With the stock price ranging between $20 and $45 since the beginning of April, plenty of other people seem to be wondering how much they're willing to pay for the stock, too.

thestreet.com