- Total revenue for FQ3 was $303 million, down 10% as reported and down 1% in constant currencies (cc)
- Total software revenue was $250 million, down 7% as reported yet up 2% in cc. On an organic basis, excluding Axeda and Atego, software revenue was down “low single digits” cc. Within the software total,
- License and subscription (L&SS) revenue was $84 million, down 14% as reported and down 7% in cc
- Support revenue (aka maintenance) was $166 million, down 4% as reported but up 6% in cc
- Professional Services revenue continued its planned decline, down 20% as reported (down 10% in cc) to $54 million
- By line of business, CAD and extended PLM (PLM + ALM, aka ePLM) declined y/y as large deals slipped out of the quarter. CAD revenue was $120 million, down 20% as reported (down 10% in cc), while ePLM revenue was $123 million, down 16% (down 6% in cc)
- CAD software revenue was $115 million, down 20% while CAD L&SS revenue declined 42% on a decline in Creo modules, upgrades and legacy CAD products. Apparently, new Creo seat sales declined but more modestly. Fewer large deals and a weaker than expected macroeconomic environment affected spending among discrete manufacturing customers
- ePLM software revenue was $88 million, down 11% (down 2% cc) as ePLM L&SS revenue declined 29%. Double-digit growth in ALM and in cloud services could not offset the decline in PLM license revenue. Fewer large deals, economic conditions and a strong quarter a year ago were cited for the decline
- SLM total revenue was $39 million, down 5% as reported and up 2% in cc. SLM software revenue was $26 million, down 3% (up 3% cc). SLM L&SS revenue was down 10% due to a higher mix of subscription solutions bookings in the quarter
- PTC highlighted the IoT segment, which it says performed well ahead of expectations. IoT software revenue was $21 million, up an insane percentage that’s not worth noting. ThingWorx added 78 new IoT customers in FQ3, for a total of 182 for the year so far, making it likely that PTC will exceed its target of 200 for the year
- By geo, revenue from the Americas was $134 million, up 3% as reported and up 4% in cc. Mr. Heppelmann said PTC struggled to close large CAD and PLM deals in this region, but saw strong sales of IoT and SLM, leading to double-digit software revenue growth in the region
- Revenue from Europe was $110 million, down 16% as reported but up 2% in cc. In constant currency, that meant modest software revenue growth due to sales of PLM/ALM, IoT, and SLM but a decline in CAD
- Revenue from the Pacific Rim was $33 million, down 10% as reported and down 8% in cc. The company says it saw a modest constant currency decline in software revenue again due to weak results in CAD, extended PLM, and SLM, primarily due to the overall slowdown in China. Revenue from Japan was $26 million, down 33% (down 21% in cc) year/year due to a very strong quarter a year ago
- PTC reported 8 large deals (>$1 million of license and subscription solutions bookings) in FQ3, down from 21 a year ago — when there was also one mega deal (>$5 million). Three of the 8 large deals the company closed in FQ3 were IoT deals, which is worrisome: extending the practice of hunting big deals into the new IoT business expands big deal risk into a new domain.
“I don’t think there’s any competitive dimension here. I think that we are in a series of businesses and Dassault is a series of businesses. Our CAD and PLM businesses most directly correlate to Dassault’s CATIA and ENOVIA businesses. And I think over the last three years, the growth rates of those have been remarkably similar. Now, Dassault is in some higher-growth businesses like SolidWorks, and we are in some higher growth businesses like IoT. But I think you can’t really compare — Dassault is structured differently than we are, and I think that that has helped them in this quarter because the SolidWorks business performed well and so did our IoT business.”
At a total revenue perspective, of course, he’s right. DS is trying hard not to be seen as a CAD company, selling its Experiences as overall solutions to business problems. But the Experiences are composed of CAD, PLM and other components. So we do have a basis for comparison: CATIA revenue was up 4% cc and SolidWorks was up 11% cc while PTC’s overall CAD revenue was down 10% cc, admittedly over a very good quarter a year ago. How much of this difference is due to the pressure PTC’s customers feel from their business climates? Are they holding back purchases more than DS’s? Hard to tell. I think what Mr. Heppelmann was trying to say is that they haven’t lost any CAD or PLM deals to DS and that the companies are increasingly calling on different customers — or different people within their traditional accounts. What’s ahead? PTC once again cited the IoT business as the momentum driver for FQ4 but sees a “challenging” manufacturing economy holding back broader growth, especially in the Americas and China. On the plus side: number of the large deals that didn’t make it into FQ3 have already closed. The question, of course, is whether deals meant for Q4 will slide into Q1 … The company sees total revenue between $304 million on $319 million for FQ4, which means total revenue for the fiscal year of $1,250 million to  $1,265 million, flat or down 1% in cc.Discover more from Schnitger Corporation
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