Q3 2024 Bentley Systems Inc Earnings Call

In This Article:

Participants

Gregory Bentley; Executive Chairman of the Board, President; Bentley Systems Inc

Nicholas Cumins; Chief Executive Officer; Bentley Systems Inc

Werner Andre; Chief Financial Officer; Bentley Systems Inc

Eric Boyer; Investor Relations Officer; Bentley Systems Inc

Julien Moutte; Chief Technology Officer; Bentley Systems Inc

Joe Vruwink; Analyst; Robert W. Baird & Co., Inc.

Matt Hedberg; Analyst; RBC Capital Markets

Clarke Jeffries; Analyst; Piper Sandler Companies

Kristen Owen; Analyst; Oppenheimer & Co., Inc.

Jason Celino; Analyst; KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc.

Jay Vleeschhouwer; Analyst; Griffin Securities, Inc.

Michael Funk; Analyst; BofA Global Research

Dylan Becker; Analyst; William Blair & Company

Joshua Tilton; Analyst; Wolfe Research

Presentation

Portions of this transcript marked (audio in progress) indicate audio problems. The missing text will be supplied if a replay becomes available.

Gregory Bentley

(audio in progress) To each of you once again for your interest in BSY. Compared with the remit of CEO, Nicholas; and CFO, Werner, who will follow today, my perspectives as Executive Chair by rights would tend more towards qualitative and longer-term considerations. The progress we're reporting for this inaugural quarter after completion of our generational succession underscores my confidence in raising our sites in these respects.
Hopefully, you will have viewed these worthwhile and concise keynotes presented at our annual conference in Vancouver last month. And if not yet, please do follow the links here. In any case, I defer to Nicholas to summarize the directions and developments which he and his team shared, I thought more effectively than ever.
I likewise recommend the supporting going digital award finalist project presentations, each a compelling case story describing and quantifying how our digital advancements together are helping to surmount the infrastructure engineering resource capacity gap. My own role this year was in selecting the very deserving founders' honorees for this year and recording presentations to explain why, which you can find here.
20 -- Q3's progress toward our targeted ARR growth trajectory for the year goes beyond the commendable quantitative gains, which Nicholas and Werner will cover. As we charted in this year's early going, as the proportions under E365 and then subject to annual floors and ceilings, deliberately increase year-over-year ARR growth will naturally ramp somewhat more throughout each calendar year.
Usually now for multiple years, we and our enterprise accounts have constructively agreed to contain and exchange the potential extremes of their consumption volatility for a predictable and mutually satisfactory range of visibility. The purposeful advantage of this for us and investors is that in each successive quarter now, we benefit from greater visibility and linearity in ARR growth both within the quarter and over foreseeable future years.
In effect, we have traded off some potential for quantitative upside extremes for greater qualitative continuity of our annual ARR growth. Balanced against this risk truncation in our traditional paid per user business is our new and promising but intrinsically lumpy asset analytics business in asset analytics were paid annually per asset, but we've got to secure major enterprise procurements, adding to asset analytics volatility, this is our priority for ongoing but less predictable programmatic acquisitions.
In covering today my Executive Chair responsibility for capital allocation, I will come back shortly to review our uses of cash for such acquisitions. But to get there, we should start with our sources of cash flow, also characterized by rather unique visibility. This shows BSY's operating profit performance over our four-year history as a public company. Because our management is held to improving margins on an annual basis, what's plotted for each quarter is the last 12 months adjusted operating income after stock-based compensation as our majority share owning Board regards SBC as fungible with cash compensation.
Over this public lifetime, we have maintained a compounded annual growth rate of 15% in AOI less SBC, subject to minor variance primarily early during the pandemic with unanticipated savings in travel and events. Our accounting profit visibility is an outlier compared to the volatility of our software peers and is bound to be ever more so by virtue of our consumption-oriented business model.
Our visibility is because essentially, we do not book revenues that we haven't billed annually in advance and the great majority of our rev recognition is strictly on pace with consumption. Thus, with subscriptions now 91% of our revenues and over 70% and increasing of our subscriptions revenue booked ratably as if pre-606 and virtually no multiyear bookings our annual profit growth rate corresponds straightforwardly to our consistent ARR growth rate plus the proportionate rate of consistent annual expansion in margins.
Last quarter, I rather offhandedly said what you see is what we get about the direct-ish relationship between our operating profits and cash flows. Here's how this looks quantitatively over our public company history, again accumulating the last 12 months through each quarter to abstract from seasonality.
While we have experienced some temporary collections timing offsets as in '22 Q4, our free cash flow has also tended to compound rather reliably. Of course, in conventional terms of conversion rates, free cash flow wouldn't be expected to exceed operating profit. That appears to be generally the case here only because for us, operating profit is reckoned after the costs of noncash SPC. For our majority share owning Board cash flow could only be regarded as discretionarily free after setting aside an amount equal to stock-based compensation for equity purchases to offset what would otherwise be dilution and as is, in fact, our intended regular practice at BSY.
Not surprisingly, here you see that our truly free cash flow or FCF, less SBC tracks rather consistently with our operating profit. And indeed, throughout our four years as a public company, we have maintained a compounded annual growth rate in less SBC of likewise 15%. This emphasis as much on consistency and sustainability and quality of earnings metrics as we are even further distinguished by visibility over volatility, is an enduring objective and capability of BSY -- and it happens that there is a reason to consider this trajectory of FCS less SBC to be currently relevant for our capital allocation.
This metric has been highlighted to us as perhaps the most plausible valuation basis for a predictably growing and compounding company like ours. The immediate implication is for our almost $690 million of convertible debt, which will mature and need to be refinanced in January 2026 if not converted into about 11 million newly issued shares, which are already included in our diluted share count at just over $64 per share.
So now it behooves us to factor into our capital planning, the potential path of our stock price. If you research this, I think you will find that if for the coming five quarters, our FCF less SBC would continue to grow at this established 15% CAGR, then our stock would crest the conversion price if it's valuation multiple of FCF, less SBC would merely be at least at the current median among our design software peers.
So while conversion of the 2026 convertibles is legitimately possible, of course, we have judiciously prepared for potential debt refinancing by putting in place last month and improved and expanded new five-year syndicated bank credit facility with revolver capacity of $1.3 billion plus further available $500 million accordion. Our predictable and compounding annual cash flows supports debt capacity, which enables us to be agile in responding to the rare opportunities for platform acquisitions such as of Seequent and Power Line Systems, which continue to drive increasing investment returns.
As you see, our capital allocation since these platform acquisitions has prioritized delevering to what is probably now near optimum leverage levels given our cash flow consistency. There is no platform acquisition in prospect, but we think the headroom in the new facility prepares us amply should an opportunity arise. At all times, our capital allocation priorities, along with affording our modest dividend and the equity repurchases to offset stock-based compensation, contemplate relatively consistent expenditures for smaller programmatic acquisitions.
Here, you see our public tenure programmatic acquisition expenditures smooth on a trailing-year basis through '24 Q2. The pace had trailed off over the last 1.5 years, primarily reflecting a change in our acquisition assessments and priorities coinciding with our generational succession. This is now fully signified by our acquisition during '24 Q3 of Cesium which, by the way, serves to bring last 12-month expenditures back to our established range in very low nine figures annually.
I couldn't be more pleased with the acquisition of Cesium. From their start, Cesium has been our neighboring company in many respects. I leave to Nicolas and others to articulate as they did at our year and Infrastructure 2024 Conference. The compounding technical and commercial synergies with our iTwin platform around 3D geospatial immersion for infrastructure digital twins.
For me and my brothers, suffice it to say that internalizing and infusing CZM's naturally more youthful ethos with its corresponding track record of continued vigorous success against world-class compensation to institutionalize its open-source platform and open standards is a resounding accompaniment and reinforcement to the truly generational succession at BSY, which now extends to our new Chief Platform Officer, Cesium Founder and CEO, Patrick Cosi.
I think it would sufficiently substantiate uniqueness -- for Arcade, which only recently exceeded 50 colleagues to have become indispensable for the top-notch open Geospatial consortium, which among things, spans and unifies the world government requirements, and for Google, as to its own price list and ubiquitous geospatial content as well as for developers of tens of thousands of geospatial and digital twin application projects, including all of ours at BSI and all those with iTwin reflecting this breadth and even though its ARR is still relatively insignificant on our scale, the pace of open source early adopters individually upgrading to paid subscriptions seems to compare satisfactorily in relation to other ultimate open platform software winners at the same level of maturity.
But may be again unique in having also proven its substantial enterprise pedigree. From the standpoint of our strategic investment, what seems utterly persuasive is the industrial strength endorsement of heavy construction equipment market leader, Komatsu's global enterprise adoption of Cesium Cobas undertook an exhaustive search for a platform software to anchor their strategic initiatives for the domain, which is very relevant to BSY and to our accounts and aspirations of earthmoving digital trends.
CCM-based heavy construction simulation products are already in the Japanese market through Komatsu's full-scale earth brain joint venture which includes NTT and Sony. This will increase our foothold in the huge Japanese market for infrastructure engineering with 3D construction now an explicit Japanese government priority and where to date, we have been conspicuously underrepresented.
But finally, I think an equal case for our substantial investment can be made from a financial investor perspective as well. In addition to validating and accelerating commercial as well as technical maturity, substantial incremental revenue from Komatsu's ongoing licensing and commission development has enabled Cesium to become and to remain cash flow neutral seemingly a rarity at such an aspirational stage.
Going forward, while our platform investments and organizations are emerging, R&D synergies are abundant. In particular, Cesium will underlie integrated immersive visualization across our asset analytics portfolio, and I expect its widespread penetration to open up new entry points for instant on digital twins. Most significantly for me, this qualitatively different acquisition raises our sites as to the substantial incremental opportunities which Nicolas and his executive generation have, I think, astutely identified and prioritized for AI-driven digital twins to sustain resilient infrastructure asset performance.
And now to review '24 Q3's commendably productive first 100 days along this arc of progress over to Nicholas. Thank you.