initial public offerings (IPOs) trading on American exchanges
Showing posts with label WDAY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WDAY. Show all posts

Thursday, November 19, 2020

Workday (WDAY) reported earnings on Thur 19 Nov 2020 (a/h)

  ** charts after earnings **



 









Workday beats by $0.19, beats on revs, raises FY21 subscription revenue guidance

  • Reports Q3 (Oct) earnings of $0.86 per share, $0.19 better than the S&P Capital IQ Consensus of $0.67; revenues rose 18.3% year/year to $1.11 bln vs the $1.09 bln S&P Capital IQ Consensus.
  • Reports subscription revenue backlog of $8.87 bln, up 23.4% yr/yr.
  • Outlook: "Based on our strong third quarter, we are raising our fiscal 2021 subscription revenue guidance to a range of $3.773-$3.775 billion. As we enter Q4, we are increasing our pace of investments to capitalize on the long-term opportunity that we see ahead."
  • Co commented during its call that it expects remaining headwinds due to COVID to be more fully evident in next year's subscription revs, weighing on co's growth in the near term.
  • Sunday, October 14, 2012

    Workday (WDAY) started trading on the NYSE on 12 Oct 2012

    Workday (WDAY)  shares traded up 74% to close at $48.69 after pricing at $28 a share, above its range of $24-$26. The stock opened trading at $48.05.


    The IPO was drawing so much attention the Pleasanton, Calif.-based company early this week raised its proposed range from $21-$24. Workday offers Web-based applications used by businesses to manage employee records and processes.

    Workday is still unprofitable, but its revenue has been growing steadily. For the six-month period ended July 31, the company posted a loss of $47 million, compared with loss of $36 million in the year-earlier period. But its revenue more than doubled to $119.5 million in that same period.

    The company was co-founded by Dave Duffield, who also started enterprise software vendor PeopleSoft, which later was bought by Oracle (ORCL) after a hostile takeover battle. Several other PeopleSoft alums are in Workday’s executive ranks.

    Dave Duffield addressing PeopleSoft employees in 2005
    Eight years ago, Dave Duffield sadly broke the news to his employees at PeopleSoft Inc. that the software company he co-founded 18 years before had lost a hostile takeover battle against Oracle Corp.


    Thursday, March 1, 2012

    The next wave of tech IPOs

    After a year of high-profile consumer Internet IPOs—from Groupon Inc., LinkedIn Corp. and Zynga Inc. last year to Yelp Inc. and Facebook Inc. now—a slew of Silicon Valley companies that sell technology mainly to businesses are also getting ready to hit the stock market.

    This new crop of IPO-ready companies are solving problems that businesses are willing to spend money on, such as improved security or better insight into customer behavior.

    Splunk Inc., a San Francisco company that helps businesses capture and analyze the data they generate, and Infoblox Inc.(BLOX), a Santa Clara, Calif., maker of network-automation technology, in January both filed to go public in IPOs aiming to raise around $125 million each.

    Now other enterprise-tech makers are lining up to get out of the gate. According to people familiar with the matter, security-technology maker Palo Alto Networks Inc., online human resources software company Workday Inc. and tech-management software maker ServiceNow Inc. have picked bankers or are in the final stages of choosing and informing bankers for their IPO process. Atlassian Inc., which provides software building blocks to developers, is also aiming to file for an IPO this year, said another person familiar with the matter.

    Spokespeople for Atlassian, Splunk (SPLK), Palo Alto Networks (PANW) and Workday declined to comment, while ServiceNow didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

    While well-known Silicon Valley consumer Web companies could still go public—such as Twitter Inc.—2012 marks "the revenge of the enterprise tech sector," said Jim Goetz, a board member of Palo Alto Networks and a venture capitalist at Sequoia Capital, which also backed ServiceNow.

    Start-ups that target businesses traditionally take longer to turn a profit than consumer Web companies. But working in these companies' favor, bankers say, are predictable revenue streams based on recurring monthly subscription fees for their products.

    Splunk is still unprofitable but its revenue rose 79% to $77.8 million for the nine months ended Oct. 31 on the backs of big customers such as Bank of America Corp., Comcast Corp. and Harvard University. Palo Alto Networks, meanwhile, said in August that its run rate exceeded $200 million in bookings and that it had been cash flow positive for five consecutive quarters.