SAP, a market leader in enterprise application software and also one of the biggest analytics and business intelligence companies, has seen its stock rally by over 20% this year. While tech stocks in general have fared well this year amid cooling inflation and slower rate hikes by the U.S. Federal Reserve, SAP has seen a couple of other tailwinds as well. Firstly, the company divested its majority stake in a customer experience management company, Qualtrics
XM
We remain somewhat neutral on SAP stock at current levels, with a price estimate of $129 per share, which is roughly in line with the current market price. SAP is looking to cut costs, with plans to reduce about 3,000 jobs or roughly 2.5% of its total headcount. This could result in annual cost savings of Euro 300 million to Euro 350 million starting as early as 2024. SAP’s cloud transition should give the company a larger mix of recurring sales, with the company already classifying about 82% of its sales as very predictable, up from about 79% in the previous quarter. SAP also expected overall software and cloud revenue to rise by as much as 8% this year. That said, there are issues as well. There are clearly headwinds for the enterprise software market, with global economic growth set to cool and this could impact companies such as SAP. Moreover, SAP presently trades at about 22x consensus 2023 earnings. This is not exactly cheap compared to faster-growing cloud-only player Salesforce stock which trades at over 28x forward earnings. See our analysis of SAP Valuation: Is SAP Stock Expensive Or Cheap? for more details. For more information on SAP’s business model, key revenue streams, and how its revenues have been trending, check out our analysis on SAP Revenue: How Does SAP Make Money?
What if you’re looking for a more balanced portfolio instead? Our high-quality portfolio and multi-strategy portfolio have beaten the market consistently since the end of 2016.
Invest with Trefis Market Beating Portfolios
See all Trefis Price Estimates
Read the full article here