Salesforce’s Sell-Side Earnings Roundup

Salesforce.com, inc. CRM 0.51% reported modest earnings and revenue beats in the first quarter. Several Wall Street analysts have commented on the stock following the report.

Here’s a look at the key themes they discussed.

Large Deals

Salesforce’s Q1 deals with large clients such as Visa Inc V 0.59%, Delta Air Lines, Inc. DAL 0.21% and Amazon.com, Inc. AMZN 0.09% were pleasant surprises, Jefferies analyst John DiFuccci said.

“CRM, saw continued strength in enterprise deals globally, including expansions,” DiFucci said.

Strong Billings

Q1 billings were up 16 percent compared to a year ago, well above consensus estimates of 7 percent growth.

“Billings and revenues came in ahead of consensus, with strong results across all geos and clouds,” BTIG analyst Joel Fishbein said.

Greater Visibility

After a number of M&A deals muddied the financial waters in 2016, salesforce delivered strong Q2 guidance and will deliver more predictable numbers in 2017 and beyond, Oppenheimer analyst Brian Schwartz said.

“F1Q results are a positive data point supporting our thesis that salesforce.com sets up as a cleaner story this year with M&A distractions and price changes behind, good new markets to penetrate in Commerce, Analytics, Collaboration, Government and increasing levels of FCF to support valuation,” Schwartz said.

Margins Down

While operating margins beat consensus Wall Street expectations on the quarter, they were still down slightly compared to a year ago.

“While we were impressed with total billings and revenue results, we would have liked to have seen more upside in operating margins in the April Q, which declined y/s,” BMO Capital Markets analyst Keith Bachman said.

Expensive Stock

Salesforce stock currently trades at a price-to-sales multiple of 6.1, ahead of the average 5.2 multiple of its peers.

“We believe the premium valuation is warranted given CRM’s dominant size, potential for sustained >20 percent organic revenue growth, industry leadership in next-generation technologies like cloud, and enterprise social collaboration, paired with string management execution,” Baird analyst Rob Oliver said.

While Wall Street remains…

Click here to continue reading

Want to learn more about how to profit off the stock market? Or maybe you just want to be able to look sophisticated in front of your coworkers when they ask you what you are reading on your Kindle, and you’d prefer to tell them “Oh, I’m just reading a book about stock market analysis,” rather than the usual “Oh, I’m just looking at pics of my ex-girlfriend on Facebook.” For these reasons and more, check out my book, Beating Wall Street with Common SenseI don’t have a degree in finance; I have a degree in neuroscience. You don’t have to predict what stocks will do if you can predict what traders will do and be one step ahead of them. I made a 400% return in the stock market over five years using only basic principles of psychology and common sense. Beating Wall Street with Common Sense is now available on Amazon, and tradingcommonsense.com is always available on your local internet!