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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Sage Group Plc | LSE:SGE | London | Ordinary Share | GB00B8C3BL03 | ORD 1 4/77P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
9.50 | 0.73% | 1,316.00 | 1,320.00 | 1,320.50 | 1,324.50 | 1,303.00 | 1,307.50 | 3,307,054 | 16:35:25 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prepackaged Software | 2.33B | 323M | 0.3209 | 41.13 | 13.15B |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
22/1/2020 11:32 | The Brokers Analysts are overwhelmingly negative on Sage: Strong Buy........2...(6) Buy...............0. Neutral...........8. Sell..............2. Strong Sell.......7...(3) Brackets are the scores of one month ago .................19. Source: Share.com Their share price targets are similarly pessimistic, for example, James Goodman at Barclays has recently (10 Jan) put 620p share price target and 'underweight' view. (This was an increase on his previous share price target of 580p) I've no idea what Goodman's rationale is - so difficult to contest. Regards, Maddox | maddox | |
22/1/2020 10:26 | Excellent Q1 trading update today. This provides reassurance that the transformation is being successful and the investment is paying-off. Key points: Recurring Revenue +10.7% - indicates that the SasS transition is proceeding at pace; Total Organic Revenue +6.7% - better indicates the underlying growth rate (ignoring the switching of existing customers to SaaS contracts); Sage Business Cloud +12.7% - indicating the strategic shift to a Cloud-based product offering is proceeding well. This is where SGE is 'perceived' to be weak and behind their competitors Xero and Intuit. In fact Sage are fast building a powerful Cloud business with an attractive offering of products built on a common platform (an IT service fabric as they describe it). So, whilst we're conceding a slower growth in dividend returns whilst investment in the faster pace of transformation takes place - its working well and building future value. We also have a return of capital once the SagePay disposal completes of c. £250m to come. We don't yet know how SGE intend to make this return however, if returned all in cash would equate to, I estimate, 22p/share (current div is 16.91p). Regards, Maddox | maddox | |
22/1/2020 10:14 | A positive update this morning - some doubts about sage a year ago but progressing the strategy well it semms. | mozy123 | |
20/11/2019 11:43 | Happy with the results and the investment catchup needed to become a true competitor to Intuit and other cloud offerings. Sage is one of the best performing companies ever on the ftse index, but playing catchup costs money compared to first mover advantage. Nick Train states only 1/60 companies globally use accounting software. Happy to hold onto a long runway stock like sage. | mozy123 | |
20/11/2019 11:19 | Hi Spacecake, Mr Market and the majority of the brokers appear to agree with you. However, IMHO Sage are doing exactly the right thing and also exactly what they set out to do. Which is investing in sustainable long-term (high quality,high margin) revenue growth. This hits the margin in the short term. It costs roughly twice the annual revenue to recruit a new customer but you then get 10 years plus of that revenue from that customer. So it's a highly profitable investment but you pay for it in the first year - hitting the reported margin and slowing the growth in dividends. Mr Market and the brokers analysts are being very myopic and short term. And there-in lies the opportunity for the patient far sighted personal investor. The shares are off 33p down to 708p as I post, and with a cash return in prospect from the sale of SagePay. So I'm buying. Regards Maddox | maddox | |
20/11/2019 09:17 | What they said at last years (2018) outlook statement ... We expect FY19 organic operating margins to be broadly stable before the impact of around GBP60m of specifically targeted investment to accelerate the transition to SaaS, especially in product and innovation which will also enhance efficiency and effectiveness over time. Including this impact, organic operating margin will be in the range of 23%-25%, maintaining strong free cash flow as a proportion of revenue. Over time, this model will drive a sustainable acceleration in recurring revenue growth whilst enabling strong returns on investment. The organic operating margin came in at the bottom end at 23.7% and this years outlook is around 23%. Dividend growth in line with inflation. Sage seem to be doing an awful lot of work just to stand still. | spacecake | |
19/11/2019 16:51 | Thought I’d check-out what the brokers’ recommendations are on Sage on the eve of a trading update – hmmm they are not great: Strong Buy........2...(6) Buy...............0. Neutral...........8. Sell..............2. Strong Sell.......7...(3) Brackets are the scores of one month ago .................19. Source: Share.com So the brokers have are looking increasingly negatively at Sage. With expectations apparently set so low it will be interesting to see the reaction tomorrow. Regards, Maddox | maddox | |
18/11/2019 11:06 | Sage have agreed the sale of their payments business SagePay to Elavon for £232m which looks like a good price. Based on the units figures for fy 30Sep18 of £41m revenue and £15m profit - sold at 5.66x revenue and p/e 15.47. They will be booking a profit on disposal of c. £180m. Whilst payment functionality is an important need for Sage's clients seamless accounting/payments integration with a range of payment service providers (PSPs)is the market need. Thus SagePay didn't fit strategically and will leave Sage a more focused business on its global ambitions and its fast growing Cloud SaaS business. With Brexit in view it also de-risks the business by reducing the revenue mix away from the UK and £Sterling exposure. Regards Maddox | maddox | |
11/9/2019 11:53 | The news that sage has finally getting around to disposing of its Sage Pay business is to be welcomed. It's difficult to reconcile this with the share price decline the last couple of days. My understanding is that payment acquiring is a competitive market with low margins. It doesn't fit strategically and the capital and resources are better redeployed to building the Cloud SaaS business that is higher margin and fast growing. Is Mr Mr Market seeing something I'm not I wonder? | maddox | |
10/9/2019 20:21 | Sage Pay for sale? Why not the whole company while we're at it? | dogwalker | |
25/7/2019 09:49 | Horrible chart formation now in prospect IMO Todays price action following the numbers is symptomatic of todays times Markets are now IMO wobbling Unchartered waters lie ahead | buywell3 | |
20/6/2019 18:27 | Disruptive to our colleagues possibly, apparently. But maybe everything will be fine. | dogwalker | |
20/6/2019 16:22 | Could be disruptive? | eipgam | |
17/5/2019 10:11 | Weak market response to good progress. | spacecake | |
17/1/2019 09:38 | Strong Q1 Trading Update which signals that the problem areas they have had are recovering contributing to 7.6% organic growth. The underlying picture is growth in SaaS revenue of 27.7% off-set by the expected decline in software licence revenue of 5.8% as customers transition to the new contracts. There is also an up-lift on pricing as customers move to the new Cloud product set. North America double-digit growth continues with 10.4% recurring revenue growth. Mr Market seemed to like it with the share price spiking-up to 644p before settling to 30p (5.2%)up at 623p as I post. Regards, Maddox | maddox | |
15/1/2019 16:57 | Sage to sell US payroll outsourcing business for £78m - statutory profit on disposal £23m. This division was flagged as a strategic disposal and follows on from the sale of their US payments business back in June 2017. The US business has been transformed over the last two years from being a problem stagnant area to recently posting 12% organic revenue growth and 13% recurring revenue growth (+10% excluding the Sage Intacct business). The US is now the model that UK business is seeking to emulate. Regards Maddox | maddox |
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