interesting report, the boldface part i found particularly interesting.
BancBoston Robertson Stephens Analyst still maintain BUY rating, saying that by year end CATP's price will be significantly higher than whatever low it may get this time. Enjoy! ----------------------------------------------- 08:26am EST 19-Mar-99 BancBoston Robertson Stephens (Birer, Steven 415-248-409 CATP: Cambridge Pre-Announces Revenue and Earnings Shortfall; ...
March 19, 1999
C A M B R I D G E T E C H N O L O G Y P A R T N E R S
Cambridge Pre-Announces Revenue and Earnings Shortfall; Estimates Under Review but Maintain Buy Rating
Key Points:
** Cambridge pre-announced results below street expectations for the company's March quarter. The company expects a revenue and earnings shortfall for the full year as well. Cambridge expects revenues for the quarter to come in at $148 million to $151 million and earnings to range from $0.12 to $0.14 per share. These results fall significantly short of our $165 million and $0.23 estimate.
** The revenue shortfall is largely attributable to transitional issues arising from Cambridge's ongoing reorganization. We believe it is taking Cambridge longer than anticipated to build out the organizational structure for its new service-line focus and move away from its former regional focus which impacts both the company's ability to generate revenues as well as forecast results. Poor execution in Customer Management Solutions, continuing weakness in Custom Software Solutions, and slowing ERP sales contributed to the revenue shortfall.
** On a bright note: Cambridge's Interactive Solutions unit (primarily Internet and web enabled solutions) continues to see strong growth and demand. This unit is growing more than 90% annually and may exceed initial expectations of $120 million in revenues for the year. To take advantage of this growth opportunity, Cambridge has been investing in this business and redeploying personnel from slower growing and less profitable practices.
** We are currently reviewing our estimates. Initial guidance for the year calls for revenues of $660 million to $675 million and EPS of between $0.72 and $0.74. This is down from our estimates of $763 million and $1.12. Management will be working with analysts in the coming week, and we will update our model as we receive additional information.
** We maintain our Buy recommendation. We continue to believe that Cambridge is a company in transition. While the miss in the current quarter is larger than we might have expected, we continue to believe Cambridge will end 1999 and start 2000 as a more competitive player in a stronger marketplace. We expect shares of Cambridge to finish 1999 significantly higher than whatever low they hit as a result of the current shortfall.
Cambridge Pre-announces Shortfall
Cambridge Technology Partners announced that it expects 1Q-99 and full year results to fall short of expectations. Based on a preliminary review of the quarter, revenues are expected to be between $148 million and $151 million, and earnings per share to be in the range of $0.12 to $0.14. For the year, the company is projecting revenues of $660 million to $675 million, with earnings per share of $0.72 to $0.74. These projections fall significantly short of our expectations of $165 million in revenue and earnings per share of $0.23 for the quarter and $763 million and $1.12 for the year. Weakness is due primarily to restructuring initiatives taking longer than expected and reduced demand for package software implementations in the Enterprise Resource Solutions (ERS) business.
Restructuring Delays are the Principal Cause
First, Cambridge's restructuring from a geocentric operating model to one that is focused along service lines has taken longer than expected. Repositioning personnel according to the new structure has been slower than anticipated, and as a result many key managers were not in place until February. When combined with the natural disruption of the reorganization, Cambridge found itself unable to close sufficient projects during the quarter. Several delays in the start-up of several new projects only compounded the problem.
Weak ERP Demand also Contributed to Shortfall
Next, weak demand for package software implementations hurt the performance of Cambridge's ERS business unit. Market demand has dropped as the market has matured and companies have diverted IT spending towards achieving Year 2000 compliance and other mission critical applications. Unfortunately, Cambridge's rapidly growing services, such as e-procurement, and web-enabled solutions, have not been able to offset both the decline in ERS and inadequate sales execution as discussed above.
With Managers in Place, Performance Should Sequentially Improve
While the extended period of time required for the restructuring and the disruption to the organization are disappointing, the appropriate personnel appear to now be in the proper places. We expect Cambridge to improve its sales execution now that it is able to get the appropriate teams in front of clients in order to win business. With the exception of demand for package software implementations in the ERS practice, demand appears largely healthy in the other service areas. Utilization should improve as Cambridge rebuilds its backlog and pipeline, and the company is also transitioning personnel from slower growing, less-profitable business areas to faster growth, higher-value service areas such as Interactive solutions.
Our Estimates are Under Review
We are currently reviewing our estimates. Initial view of 1999 calls for revenues of $660 million to $675 million, representing 8% to 10% revenue growth over 1998. Earnings per share of between $0.72 and $0.74 will show a decrease from $0.91 reported in 1998. These projections are down from our 1999 estimates of $763 million and $1.12. Management will be working with analysts in the coming week, and we will update our model as we receive additional information. A revenue breakout along business lines is shown below.
Conclusion
Despite the current hiccup in results, we continue to maintain our Buy recommendation on Cambridge for 2 reasons: price and longer-term prospects. With respect to price, we believe that shares of CATP may test their 52 week low today, which would place Cambridge's market capitalization below $1 billion. In our opinion, Cambridge's interactive solutions business as a separate company would warrant a valuation of about $1 billion based on public company comparables of 9 times current year revenues. Thus, at a $1 billion market capitalization, it is like you are getting the rest of the company for free. In the longer term, we continue to believe that as 1999 progresses, Cambridge's internal reorganization will have a positive effect on the company. Concurrently, we believe that the underlying IT services market will strengthen as Year 2000 uncertainty dissipates. Thus, while there is likely to be continued volatility in both the company's operating performance and stock price during the year, by yearend we believe that Cambridge will be a better- positioned company in an improved marketplace. As such, we think shares of CATP will experience significant appreciation from whatever low they hit as a result of the current pre-release.
THE COMPANY
Cambridge Technology Partners, headquartered in Cambridge, MA, is one of the largest information technology consulting and implementation firms focused on client/server distributed applications. The company custom-develops and integrates software applications, closely "partnering" with its clients to allow for rapid development and implementation of strategic client/server applications. Cambridge has grown to become a "one-stop" shop with a full range of IT services such as custom application development as well as packaged software implementation, business consulting services and educational and training services across a range of domains, including customer management systems, knowledge management systems, electronic commerce, enterprise resource systems, and network management services. Cambridge maintains partnerships with Sun, HP, PeopleSoft, Scopus, Vantive, Siebel, Baan, and others. The company's differentiating strategy is to guarantee a solution in a fixed time frame at a fixed cost through a series of phases, thereby increasing a client's return on investment. In most situations, Cambridge takes six to nine months to deliver a usable system to a client.
INVESTMENT THESIS
In our opinion, Cambridge Technology Partners is one of the leading service providers in the systems integration and IT consulting space. The market for client/server application implementation is large and rapidly growing; even most "off-the-shelf" packaged applications require some degree of customization. We believe Cambridge Technology Partners will be able to capitalize on this growth and, with its fixed cost and fixed time frame on client engagements, is positioned to command premium prices from customers.
Cambridge's market dominance, acquisition experience and easy access to capital puts the company in a favorable position to be the leading consolidator as the market matures, acquiring smaller, local integrators in order to add to Cambridge's geographic and product diversity. We believe the company stands out from many other public client server integration companies due to its focus on high-end services as well as its strong infrastructure and broad geographic presence. We expect the company to continue adding 10-20 percentage points to growth via acquisitions, with one to two non-dilutive acquisitions per year. In addition, we believe Cambridge has established itself as the brand name in the client/server systems implementation market and is likely to gain share based on that reputation.
INVESTMENT RISKS
Among the risks are: (1) fluctuations due to the timing of employee hiring and project engagements; (2) the company's ability to hire and train personnel in a very competitive recruiting environment; and (3) successful management of acquisitions, rapid growth, and risk on larger enterprisewide application developme |