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Red Hat Earnings Report Ahead: Amazon A Threat In Linux Landscape?

There’s a notion out there, says Deutsche Bank analyst Karl Keirstead, that Amazon ’s ( AMZN ) flavor of the Linux open-source operating system is about as good as other Linux distributions — and since it’s free and Amazon Web Services (AWS) offers good support, converting is cheap. So does that stand to hurt Red Hat ( RHT ), which reports its fiscal fourth-quarter 2016 earnings after the stock market close Tuesday? “Bottom line, we conclude that the number of migrations from RHEL (Red Hat Enterprise Linux) to Amazon Linux remains quite modest and mostly confined to small enterprise customers,” Keirstead wrote in a research note March 13. “Larger RHEL-centric customers have only a small mix of workloads on AWS, they value OS consistency across their hybrid infrastructures, they prefer support from RHT and/or view the cost savings of a switch as being too modest to be worth the hassle. “These advantages appear to more than offset a view that AMZN Linux is at/near functional parity with other Linux distributions.” Keirstead reiterated Deutsche’s buy rating for Red Hat with a 95 price target, which might take Red Hat a couple of months to achieve if it stays on the same upward trajectory that it’s maintained since bottoming out Feb. 8 at a two-year low of 59.59. On Friday, Red Hat stock closed up 1.9% to 74.09, up 3.2% for the week, 24% above that Feb. 8 nadir, and just 12% off a 16-year high set Dec. 30. Trading above its 50-day moving average, Red Hat stock is still below its 200-day line near 75. But it looks like Red Hat is rebounding firmly from the Software Sag of ’16 that battered many of Red Hat’s rivals and tech players in January through early February. Red Hat stock gets an IBD Composite Rating of 84 out of a possible 99, factoring in earnings, sales, stock performance, institutional ownership and other metrics. Enterprise software developer Salesforce.com ( CRM ) carries an 81, Microsoft ( MSFT ) ranks 76, software giant Oracle ( ORCL ) earns a 61 and SAP ( SAP ) a 70. For its Q4 ended Feb. 29, analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expect Red Hat earnings per share up 9% from a year earlier to 47 cents minus items, matching the company’s guidance. Analysts expect revenue up 16% to $537 million, which also would match the midpoint of the company’s guidance of between $535 million and $539 million, and rival the year-ago sales growth rate of 16%. At those levels, Q4 would be Red Hat’s first quarter decelerated to single-digit growth since EPS flattened at 42 cents in fiscal 2015’s Q3. It would be the 16th consecutive quarter of mid-to-high-teens sales growth. In a research note issued Thursday, Robert W. Baird analyst Steven Ashley warned that Red Hat’s long-term revenue growth in Q4 could have fallen below expectations as seen in historical, sequential long-term growth weakness every three years, going back to Q4 2007. This is due to what he theorizes as three pools of larger deals that renew every three years in Q4, with the most recent cohort in Q4 being smaller than the others. “We believe this nuance (if correct) is truly just ‘noise’ and short-term billings should remain strong,” Ashley said. He models Q4’s total billings growth (long-term and short-term) at a 10% year-to-year improvement vs. the 12% consensus. “Where could we be wrong?” Ashley asked. “Signing a bunch of ‘new’ large three-year deals could augment the smaller renewal pool.” He tipped his hat to Baird’s outperform rating on Red Hat with an 80 price target.      

Oracle Gives Analysts Some Fun Watching Cloud Rising, Stock Too

After the hell that many hotshot software stocks have put investors through this young year, Wall Street analysts got a break. “Listening to Oracle ( ORCL ) conference calls is always a hoot,” said Canaccord Genuity analyst Richard Davis in a research note Wednesday, following Oracle’s late-Tuesday Q3  earnings that beat analyst estimates . “In the 16 years we’ve followed this firm, we can’t remember a quarter when management wasn’t wildly bullish. This quarter was no different, with Trump-like phrases like ‘slaughter,’ ‘better and better,’ ‘game over,’ etc. “The good news for our now almost exactly 3-year-old buy rating is that Oracle’s execution has begun to catch up with its verbiage. Indeed, this was the first quarter in four in which Oracle did not scuffle somewhere — bookings, revenues, earnings or whatever. Investors are still jumpy after the January panic, so this means they are flocking to moneymakers like Oracle.” Oracle stock was up 4% in afternoon trading in the stock market today , near 40, and touched an eight-month high. Rivals  Microsoft ( MSFT ), Salesforce.com ( CRM ) and SAP ( SAP ) were up about 1% Wednesday afternoon. Not that Davis was totally giddy: “Should ORCL decisively penetrate the $40 price level, we will declare victory and seriously consider downgrading the stock from today’s buy to a possible hold.” What’s all the fuss? They can visualize Oracle’s cloud-revenue skyrocketing, while traditional database-software sales shrink. Oracle and its traditional enterprise-software customers have faced a tough conversion, but now Oracle is developing serious momentum with its own cloud and hybrid-cloud growth, shepherding the transition of its customers while absorbing the shrinkage of its still-dominant traditional enterprise sales. Oracle Acceleration Seen “With 310,000 on-premise database customers, the company sees an enormous potential TAM (total addressable market), as database customers continue to shift to the cloud,” said Evercore ISI analyst Kirk Materne in a research note Wednesday. “Management also noted that renewal rates were higher than in previous years.” Materne put annual recurring revenue from cloud software-as-a-service (SaaS) and platform-as-a-service (PaaS) sales up 77% in constant currency in Q3, with billings up 32%, “and importantly, this strength is expected to translate into accelerating revenue growth going forward,” he said. In Q3, Oracle said it added 942 new SaaS customers, more than half of which were Oracle Fusion ERP (enterprise resource planning) software subscribers. SaaS clients now total more than 11,000 with more than 2,000 on Fusion, Materne noted. Oracle sold customer experience (CX) SaaS to 465 new customers and 500 existing ones in Q3. Human capital management software was sold to 213 new customers. Oracle’s ERP Cloud attracted 334 new clients, “175 of which did not have an Oracle on-premise app before,” said Materne, for an installed base exceeding 1,800 clients. Still, for all the excitement of watching Oracle’s cloud revenue fly 40% to $735 million in Q3, that only amounted to 8% of Oracle’s total $9.01 billion in sales for the quarter. Revenue fell 3% from the year-earlier quarter. Traditional software revenue slipped to $6.34 billion from $6.64 billion, as the legacy line slipped to 70% from 71% of total revenue. Likewise, legacy hardware sales slipped to $1.13 billion, or 13% of Q3’s total sales, from $1.29 billion, or 14% a year before. “This is obviously a continuation of execution of their pivot toward the cloud pursuit,” Gartner analyst Charles “Chad” Eschinger told IBD via email. “Top line is better than I expected, even with the transition, especially with the increase in margins, where there have been many curmudgeons.”

Oracle Calls Cloud Software Revenue Growth ‘Dramatic,’ But Q3 Mixed

The Big Daddy of business software, Oracle ( ORCL )  made it four consecutive quarters of shrinking year-over-year earnings, but the company posted a big increase in its cloud software and shares rose after-hours despite a slight revenue miss. For fiscal Q3 ended Feb. 29, the company late Tuesday said earnings per share minus items fell 5.9% from the year-earlier quarter to 64 cents. That nevertheless beat the 62-cent consensus estimate of analysts polled by Thomson Reuters. And Oracle stock was up 4% in after-hours trading, after its earnings release. Revenue fell 3% to $9.01 billion, where analysts had modeled $9.13 billion. Cloud software revenue, however, jumped 40% to $735 million, and would have been up 44% in constant currency. Oracle does a lot of its business outside the U.S., so it’s hurt more than most by the strong U.S. dollar. Oracle said its software-as-a-service and platform-as-a-service revenue jumped 57%. The third cloud software component, infrastructure-as-a-service, fell 2%. The legacy software developer is transitioning more of its business to the cloud, while still managing billions of dollars in traditional, on-premise enterprise software license sales, making for an often rocky transition. “Our Cloud SaaS and PaaS revenue growth rate accelerated to 61% in constant currency in Q3,” said Oracle co-CEO Safra Catz in the earnings release. “This dramatic revenue increase drove our non-GAAP SaaS and PaaS gross margins up to 51% in Q3 as compared with 43% in Q2. Our cloud business is now in a hyper-growth phase.” Oracle had closed up a fraction in Tuesday’s regular session. Rival Microsoft ( MSFT ), which does many things other than developing software, also rose a fraction and did enterprise software rival  SAP ( SAP ), while cloud rival Salesforce.com ( CRM ) fell a fraction Tuesday.