Oracle sales miss estimates on slow transition to cloud

Business Friday 16/September/2016 14:17 PM
By: Times News Service
Oracle sales miss estimates on slow transition to cloud

San Francisco: Oracle reported quarterly revenue that fell short of analysts’ estimates, highlighting its struggles to transition to new cloud-based services amid the sluggish performance of its traditional database and business software.
Fiscal first-quarter revenue declined 1.7 per cent to $8.6 billion, falling short of estimates of $8.7 billion. Cloud revenue increased 59 per cent in the quarter ended on August 31. Profit excluding certain items was 55 cents a share in the period. Analysts on average had forecast profit of 58 cents. Shares fell as much as 3.9 per cent in extended trading after closing at $40.86 in New York.
Oracle, while revamping its products, is searching for new ways to spark growth as it comes under growing pressure for customers who prefer cloud-based software from rivals such as Microsoft and Salesforce.com. In July, the Redwood City, California-based company stepped up that effort when it agreed to buy cloud-service provider NetSuite for $9.3 billion, one of Oracle’s biggest deals one record.
Core cloud revenue climbed 77 per cent to $798 million in the quarter. Oracle’s older on-premise software revenue declined slightly to $5.82 billion. Short-term deferred revenue was $9.5 billion, up 4 percent from a year earlier.
Core cloud-based gross margins are expected to climb from 62 per cent this quarter toward the company’s 80 per cent target, co-Chief Executive Officer Safra Catz said in the statement.
"Next week at Oracle OpenWorld, we will introduce the second generation of our Infrastructure as a Service,” which "represents a huge new cloud opportunity for Oracle,” Larry Ellison, Oracle chairman, said in the statement.
Company added more than 750 new customers to its key cloud software-as-a-service line, co-CEO Mark Hurd said in the statement.
Net income rose 4.9 per cent to $1.8 billion in the quarter from a year earlier. New software license revenue declined 11 per cent to $1.03 billion.
Fiscal second-quarter adjusted revenue, in constant currency, is projected to be in a range of unchanged to a three per cent increase from a year earlier, Catz said on a conference call. Second-quarter earnings per share, excluding some items, are forecast to be from 59 cents to 62 cents in constant currency, she said. Adjusted sales of Oracle’s core cloud products are projected to increase about 67 per cent year over year in constant currency, Catz said. Street View
"At a high level, the company missed expectations, but if you peel back the onion, the company continued to make significant traction in the cloud,” said Bill Kreher, an analyst at Edward Jones & Co.
"Oracle was slow to recognise the shift to the cloud. But now that they’ve decided to invest heavily behind it, it appears that the narrative is shifting from a company losing to the cloud to a company who is now regaining share,” he said.