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New Relic Experiences Growing Pains

New Relic (NYSE: NEWR), a software-as-a-service (SaaS) company that focuses on application-performance management, reported its fiscal first-quarter 2020 results on Tuesday. On the surface, the headline numbers continue to look great. Revenue grew 30%, to $141 million, while adjusted earnings per share (EPS) expanded 26%, to $0.19. Both of these figures exceeded the high end of management's guidance range.

However, the company's dollar-based net expansion rate (DBNE), which measures existing customer spending from period to period, dropped to just 109%. That represents a significant slowdown from the 131% that was reported last quarter.Deferred revenue dropped 6% sequentially, which suggests that customer demand wasn't as robust as investors are used to seeing.

New Relic fiscal Q1 results: The raw numbers

Metric

Q1 2020

Q1 2019

Change

Revenue

$141 million

$108.2 million

30%

GAAP net income

($15.6 million)

($5.3 million)

N/A

Non-GAAP net income

$11.3 million

$9.0 million

26%

Non-GAAP EPS

$0.19

$0.15

26%

Data source: New Relic. GAAP = generally accepted accounting principles. Non-GAAP = adjusted. EPS = earnings per share.

What happened with New Relic this quarter?

  • Adjusted gross margin declined slightly, to 85%.

  • Customer accounts that exceed $100,000 in annual revenue grew 18%, to 881.

  • The DBNE rate of 109% represented a 900-basis-point drop when compared to the year-ago period and a 1,200-basis-point drop sequentially.

  • Deferred revenue was $255 million, which was up 40% year over year but down 6% sequentially.

  • Non-GAAP EPS of $0.19 was significantly higher than guidance. Management said that it experienced lower-than-expected head count, commission, and bonus expenses during the quarter.

  • Free cash flow was $18.9 million.

  • Cash balance at quarter-end was $769 million.

Man with hands on hips standing in front of screen showing data
Man with hands on hips standing in front of screen showing data

Image source: Getty Images.

What management had to say

CEO and founder Lew Cirne stated that new-product launches are having an impact on the company's ability to execute:

We launched New Relic One, released monitoring for AWS Lambda, and finalized operating model enhancements to product and sales organizations during the first quarter. Navigating these changes proved challenging and impacted our Q1 results.

On the conference call with Wall Street, Cirne added some color to the weak DBNE and stressed that the recent strategic changes will lead to long-term growth:

We did not execute well enough to meet quarterly sales and headcount targets. This resulted in a lower-than-expected deferred revenue balance and net dollar base expansion rate. We are not pleased with these results. But we do believe they are an anomaly, limited to the first half of the fiscal year and largely the consequence of our moving aggressively to complete go-to-market and product-related organizational transitions. At the same time, this was compounded by the release of a new product and user interface platform against the backdrop of a seasonally soft quarter. Longer-term, we anticipate the benefits of these initiatives which will align our operations to a common powerful platform, New Relic One.

Looking forward

CFO Mark Sachleben stated that the first-quarter's DBNE will be the "low point for the fiscal year" and he expects a sequential improvement in the upcoming quarter. However, the number is still expected to decline year over year.

Here's the guidance that's being shared with investors for the current quarter:

Metric

2nd Quarter 2020 Guidance Range

Implied Change
at Midpoint
(YOY)

Revenue

$143 million to $145 million

25%

Non-GAAP operating income

$5 million to $6 million

(43%)

Non-GAAP EPS

$0.14 to $0.16

(25%)

YOY = year-over-year. Data source: New Relic.

For context, Wall Street was expecting $145.9 million in revenue and $0.12 in non-GAAP EPS in the quarter.

Management also took the opportunity to tweak some its guidance for the full fiscal year:

  • Revenue is still expected to land between $600 million and $607 million. This represents growth of about 26% at the midpoint.

  • Non-GAAP operating income is still expected to be in the range of $20 million to $25 million. This represents a change of negative 25% at the midpoint.

  • Non-GAAP EPS is now projected to land between $0.55 and $0.63. This is a slight increase from its prior range of $0.54 to $0.62.

  • Cash from operations is expected to land between $100 million and $110 million, which is a drop from its prior range of $115 million to $125 million.

  • Free cash flow is expected to land between $40 million and $50 million, which is down from its prior range of $55 million to $65 million.

New Relic's stock dropped nearly 29% on Wednesday. The significant drop is most likely attributable to the big drop in its DBNE, mixed guidance, and management's admission that it's experiencing execution challenges.

Management did their best to stress that the situation will get better in the second half of fiscal 2020, but they've clearly got some work to do before they can regain Wall Street's trust.

Brian Feroldi owns shares of New Relic. The Motley Fool recommends New Relic. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

This article was originally published on Fool.com

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