Radware Ltd.
Q1 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

Published:

  • Operator:
    Welcome to the Radware Conference Call discussing First Quarter 2021 Results and thank you all for holding. I would now like to turn the call over to Yisca Erez, Director, Investor Relations at Radware. Please go ahead.
  • Yisca Erez:
    Thank you, Amitris. Good morning everyone and welcome to Radware's first quarter 2021 earnings conference call. Joining me today are Roy Zisapel, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Doron Abramovitch, Chief Financial Officer. A copy of today's press release and financial statements as well as the investor kit for the first quarter are available in the Investor Relations section of our website. During today's call, we may make projections or other forward-looking statements regarding future events or the future financial performance of the company.
  • Roy Zisapel:
    Thank you, Yisca and thank you all for joining us today. We are pleased to report a strong first quarter, driven by solid performance across our business and specifically our growing cloud business and robust markets. This quarter is testimony to our strategy being firmly in place and working across all fronts. We continue to execute well on our growth drivers. Our cloud and subscription business continues to grow, as more customers choose our cloud offerings. This is reflected in our total ARR, which reached yet another record of $176 million. Our successful OEM and GSI partnerships continue to expand our footprint, capturing new opportunities and bringing new customers on board, and our financial results were strong right across the board. In the first quarter of 2021, we reported an increase of 11% in total revenues to $67 million and improved profitability, led to a 22% increase in non-GAAP earnings per share to $0.17. In recent years, we have witnessed a couple of transformations that have accelerated in the past year. First, the acceleration in digital transformation as more and more transactions move online and, in many cases, to the public cloud. More assets and transactions online create more targets for attackers, which makes cybersecurity even more critical. Second, last year, due to the lockdown, organizations were forced to rapidly move their employees to work from home. The new reality of hybrid workforce creates an increase in attack surface with millions of new entry points, which has led to an all-time high level of cyber activity. The outcome of these two forces is that organizations are experiencing more attacks in their network and in applications, both in terms of increased volumes and increased complexity.
  • Doron Abramovitch:
    Thank you, Roy and good day everyone. I'm pleased to provide the analysis of our financial results and business performance for the first quarter as well as our outlook for the second quarter of 2021. We had an excellent quarter with both the top and bottom-line results exceeding our expectations. First quarter 2021 revenues were $67 million, representing an increase of 11% year-over-year. Total revenues were driven by our cloud business performance as reflected in the total ARR, which normalizes timing differences in bookings, invoicing and revenue recognition and reached a record of $176 million in Q1 2021. This record result is an increase of 10% compared to Q1 2020, driven by 27% growth in our cloud and subscription ARR.
  • Operator:
    Your first question comes from the line of George Notter with Jefferies.
  • George Notter:
    Hi guys. Thanks very much and Doron, best wishes to you in your next adventure. It's been great working with you. I guess, maybe the question that's topical, I think, through earnings season here is just component availability and supply chain impacts. And I get it, declining component of your business is coming from hardware these days. But can you maybe talk about what you're seeing on the supply chain impact on revenue, impact on margins? Yes, I noticed your inventory was down sequentially. So, any more flavor you can give us there would be great.
  • Roy Zisapel:
    Yes, we're obviously seeing the pressures that everyone else is seeing. We're trying, obviously, to accommodate it with longer commitments. And obviously, we're seeing also increased prices. But all-in all, at least for the second quarter, we don't see a material impact from that.
  • George Notter:
    Got it. Okay. And then, I guess, I also wanted to ask about capital allocation. You guys are obviously buying back a fair amount of stock here in Q1. And I know there's been some talks stoically about you guys looking at acquiring businesses and businesses that are more developed. But can you talk about where you stand right now on capital allocation? What's the thought process on repurchase versus M&A versus other opportunities you have? Thanks.
  • Roy Zisapel:
    Yes. So, we continue to be active looking for companies. Obviously, some of the valuation metrics in today's market might be a bit challenging for us. But we constantly look and this continues to be the prime use of cash that we intend to.
  • George Notter:
    Great. Thank you.
  • Operator:
    Your next question comes from the line of Tavy Rosner with Barclays.
  • Peter Zdebski:
    Hi. This is Peter Zdebski on for Tavy. Congratulations on the quarter and the solid results. I wanted to dig into the customer verticals a little. The sequential decline in carrier was a little surprising, since we've seen some improving trends in spending in that market, overall. Could you discuss some of the drivers there? And maybe your thoughts on next quarter?
  • Roy Zisapel:
    Yes. So, at a high level, our business is more focused towards enterprises and the cloud subscription and the product subscription are generally consumed by enterprise customers. So, over the long-term, we believe, and we've seen it also in previous results that our enterprise business or that portion of the business will provide a higher growth rate. In carriers, in general, we continue to play in the network. There are opportunities looming with 5G, and we are tracking them. But all in all, our company is highly focused on enterprise, cloud security.
  • Peter Zdebski:
    Got it. Thank you.
  • Operator:
    Your next question comes from the line of Tim Horan with Oppenheimer.
  • Tim Horan:
    Thanks guys. Can you talk a little bit about the competitive intensity and what you're seeing particularly from the cloud service providers or the larger cloud service providers and some of the new CDNs, how do you kind of compare and contrast? And how do you win business versus them?
  • Roy Zisapel:
    Yes. So, the public cloud providers, a lot of our offerings, they are also targeting companies that are actually putting their infrastructure in the public cloud. So, for example, if you look on our cloud-native protector, that's exactly what it does. It protects customers' infrastructure within AWS or Azure cloud, and we see the need to protect better cloud infrastructure as one of the core drivers for future growth of the company. What we provide there is a comprehensive and across all cloud, a multi-cloud comprehensive security with state-of-the-art capabilities. We believe that security, especially for our target customers in the finance, technology, online, larger enterprise segments is paramount, and they would not compromise on the level of security. And hence, the ability to really protect end-to-end. Their on-prem data centers, their cloud data centers, hybrid, public, private, whatever form their application residing and to do it across multi-cloud is a very, very strong competitive advantage that none of the public cloud providers can offer. Regarding the CDNs, I put Akamai aside on that. The other types of CDN, I would say, are less competitive as it relates to security per se. They are selling some security capabilities as add-ons to their CDNs. By the way, some of them resell our cloud solutions as add-ons under CDNs, but I would say we see them less in the large enterprise and financial markets in the world as direct competitors to us.
  • Tim Horan:
    Very helpful. Thank you.
  • Operator:
    Your next question comes from the line of Andrew King with Colliers Securities.
  • Andrew King:
    Hey guys, thanks for taking my question. So, obviously, you guys did really well with the OEM, but can you just give us a little bit more color into the checkpoint and Nokia OEM partnerships, specifically, I know they're a little less mature than Cisco, but any color there would be great.
  • Roy Zisapel:
    We don't break specific OEMs, but all in all, I think all of them are providing with us wins and so on. In my script, when I gave the examples, those are examples that are spread across all our OEM partners. So, all are contributing in different geographies, in different segments. Obviously, Nokia is helping us much more in carriers. Cisco might be across, check Point is more enterprise focused, but all of them are contributing. And I think one of the key points is their contribution to new customer acquisition. So, we are really able to see very good results in leveraging their incumbency in customers to generate new logos for us, and that's been very successful, and we're planning to increase it further.
  • Andrew King:
    Okay. Thank you.
  • Operator:
    Your next question comes from the line of Alex Henderson with Needham.
  • Alex Henderson:
    Thank you. Just wanted to get a couple of details, first, for as question. Can you talk about the tax rate? It was 14.9%, I think you've been guiding to 14.5%. Should we be using 14.9% going forward? And similarly, on the interest line, do you expect it to decline sequentially as the interest rate on cash balances continues to decline over time. Just a couple of mechanics, and then I didn't catch our head count as well.
  • Roy Zisapel:
    Yes. So, I said, in 2020, the effective tax rate that we take into consideration is approximately 15%, which represent the tax regime that we have. Last year, there was some tax relief in the U.S. that this year is not. So overall, 15% is the ETR that we take for Q2, similar to Q1 and for full 2021. As for the interest, yes, the answer is yes. Unfortunately, the yields are declining. So, I believe that, right now, the level of $2 million, and assuming that we will continue to generate cash, maybe a bit more. But overall, this is with the interest rate that we see right now, it's less than last year. Last year, it was 2.7%. This year, 1.9%. So overall, full 2021 will be less than 2020. And as for the headcount. So, we ended Q1 with approximately 1,100 employees, similar to last quarter. And similar to last year in a way. So, overall, this is the level of employees that we right now have.
  • Alex Henderson:
    I see. I wanted to ask a question on the operational side. When we look at the results out of that five, the company stated that they were quite surprised at a substantial increase in appliance ADC sale. So, which vaulted to meet teen double digits. And they indicated that, that reflected a sort of snapback in demand there because traffic growth and application adoption had driven up processor utilization rates, which was a little bit counterintuitive. We had expected digital transformations to be driving more stuff towards the cloud. But nonetheless, the point is that ADC business, appliance business was much stronger than expected. Can you talk about whether you saw a similar dynamic where the underspend in ADCs over the last year because of COVID has now caused a pickup there? Or is this more on the software side and you're not seeing that dynamic?
  • Roy Zisapel:
    Yes. We're seeing our customers transiting to the cloud. More and more, and we're seeing the plans on the on-prem, even if certain applications are definitely growing in capacity and usage, the total on-prem capacity is not, at least in our customers, is not seeing a dramatic increase. Furthermore, when I looked on other ADC vendors in the market like Citrix and A10, I didn't see in the reports similar indications. So, I believe the transition to the cloud is happening. We were up on ADC. We had solid business there, but in line, I would say, with our guide and expectations, we didn't see this pent-up demand coming to the ADC on-prem market. So, what we are seeing is more applications moving to the cloud, more customers requiring more capacity and protecting more applications with cloud services, and that's where we're seeing the bandwidth upgrades and the number of application upgrades. Together with that, we're also seeing increase in the size of attacks. So, we're seeing larger and larger attacks, which also, of course, increasing the demand. And by the way, forcing many of the enterprise to go into cloud solutions because they cannot handle with their bandwidth, there's just no way, unless they want to buy 10 times or 20 times the bandwidth they have today, they cannot cope with it in their own data centers. So, we're clearly seeing a continuous strong move to the cloud.
  • Alex Henderson:
    That's very helpful. Thanks Roy. Just if I could, on the cost side of the equation, flat headcount sequentially. The shekel impact increasing. Can you talk a little bit about whether you think your OpEx will continue to increase over the course of the year, based on the shekel or whether your hiring changes are going to accelerate? And to what extent that reflects back into the mix. If there's a delta between, say, sales and marketing and R&D?
  • Doron Abramovitch:
    Yes. So, I would take the financial part and leave Roy to answer some of the strategic recruitment that we plan to do in in the next few quarters. But as for the numbers, so we took into consideration in second quarter, the impact, of course, of the schedule, I mentioned something like $1.3 million versus the 2020 rates. Although, the headcount is relatively flat, we do see some increase, obviously. And the good part is mainly because of commissions that we pay due to the increased performance and stuff like this. Together with some offset because of the COVID-19 impact on travel, et cetera. So, you see that we guided the first quarter approximately $47.5 million to $49 million, same guidance for second quarter. We are in this range, and again, mainly because of the FX.
  • Alex Henderson:
    Yes, Doron, I got the second quarter guide. The question really is, as the year progresses, do you expect the currency impact to increase into the back half? Or do you expect it to stay flat at the current levels? Should we be anticipating further increases, given the flat hiring and will the OpEx continue to increase as we go into the back half of the year based on where we are on the shekel?
  • Doron Abramovitch:
    Yes. So, again, I mentioned it last quarter, and I will reiterate, estimation about the Israeli Shekel is continued to be strong in 2021. So, give or take, $1.3 million this quarter, same as previous quarter. I assume that next quarters will be the same impact per quarter. I think that we mentioned last quarter, $0.10 to $0.12 impact because of the FX. It will continue unless something happened in this area, FX will continue to impact.
  • Roy Zisapel:
    And as it relates to hiring, Alex, we were planning to increase hiring and in the following areas. First in field, in sales and system engineering. We see a lot of opportunities, demand there. And in cloud operations and in cloud R&D. So, cloud security, coupled with increased go-to-market capabilities are the prime areas where we are planning to increase headcount, and with that obviously the OpEx will also increase regardless of the currency exchange rate.
  • Alex Henderson:
    Doron, I just want to say thanks for a great run at Radware and I hope to hear from you when you land to the next shop. We will miss you. You were certainly a key piece of the puzzle here. Thanks.
  • Doron Abramovitch:
    Thank you, Alex.
  • Operator:
    Your next question comes from the line of Joshua Tilton with Berenberg Capital Markets.
  • Drew Smith:
    Hi, this is Drew Smith on for Josh. Can you comment on the strength in bookings in Q1? And has there been any meaningful change in the performance of the business going into Q2? And would it be possible to comment just a little bit more on which products are specifically fueling the growth?
  • Roy Zisapel:
    Yes. So, in general, the growth is led by security, by our security business, and specifically, the cloud and subscription offerings there. I think it's across all our cloud security offerings, almost A to Z. Going into Q2, it's reflected in the guidance. We believe we've provided a strong guidance. We feel good about the business. We feel good on how we open the year, so we try to reflect that in our guidance.
  • Drew Smith:
    All right. Thank you.
  • Operator:
    At this time, there are no further questions. I would like to turn the call back over to management.
  • Roy Zisapel:
    Okay. Thank you all for joining us today, and have a great day. Thank you.
  • Operator:
    Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.