Cognizant Misses Q1 Guidance As Q4 EPS Beats; Xerox BPO Lurks
Highly rated business process outsourcing firm Cognizant Technology Solutions gapped down 8% after the Monday stock market opening bell, shortly after management disappointed investors with guidance lower than Wall Street expected for the first quarter and 2016. Cognizant ( CTSH ) beat analysts estimates for Q4 earnings growth and came in short of analysts’ revenue expectations. Its stock fell as low as 53.46 early Monday in a rough market, 23% below its all-time high 69.80 reached Oct. 28. Shares were down 7% midday in the stock market today . Cognizant stock enjoys a high IBD Composite Rating of 90, meaning it’s performing better than 90% of stocks across a variety of metrics. That’s a hair better ranking than its larger business process outsourcing (BPO) rivals Infosys ( INFY ), somewhat better than Accenture ( ACN ) and far better than IBM ( IBM ). Like Cognizant with huge operations in India, Infosys was down 5% at midday Monday. Accenture about 4.5% and IBM was off 1%. A new concern for BPO companies — not that they haven’t been competing already — is Xerox ‘s ( XRX ) BPO spin-off, announced just 10 days ago. Xerox has been offering outsourcing for years, but as a free-standing publicly traded company its BPO is likely to receive heightened attention in the market. Cognizant declines to discuss Xerox, a spokeswoman said. Xerox stock was down about 5% at midday. Cognizant said the current Q1 earnings per share should reach 78-80 cents on revenue of $3.18 billion to $3.24 billion. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters thought Cognizant could do better on earnings, expecting adjusted EPS up 12% to 81 cents from 71 cents a year ago, on sales up 14% to $3.319 billion from $2.911 billion in Q1 2015. For Q4 2015, Cognizant said it earned 80 cents per share minus items, up 19.4% from 67 cents a year earlier, on revenue up 17.9% to $3.23 billion. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had on average been expecting 78-cents EPS minus items on $3.24 billion in revenue. “Our cash and investment balances, net of debt, grew by $1.5 billion during 2015 due to our strong business performance and strong cash flows,” said CFO Karen McLoughlin in Cognizant’s earnings release. She said Cognizant spent more than $375 million buying back stock in 2015, “reflecting our commitment to drive shareholder value.” Said President Gordon Coburn: “While digital opportunities significantly expand our addressable market, our rapidly growing consulting, infrastructure and business process services and geographic market expansion, continue to be solid drivers of demand for our services.” Cognizant and Infosys recovered in December from heavy flooding in Chennai, India, where they employ tens of thousands of workers.