APPLICATION SERVICES

SAP Q4 revenue sinks 9 percent, net income drops 12 percent

Jan 27, 2010 11:46 am | IDG News Service
But SAP sees a return to growth and improved profitability in 2010
by Peter Sayer

SAP reported a 9 percent year-on-year fall in revenue for the fourth quarter of 2009, with net income dropping 12 percent from its record level a year earlier. But the company sees a return to growth and improvements in operating income this year, it said Wednesday.

Revenue totalled €3.19 billion (US$4.57 billion as of Dec. 31, the last day of the period reported), down 9 percent from €3.49 billion a year earlier. Net income of €727 million was 12 percent down on the €830 million reported a year earlier.

"Q4 2008 was a record quarter, the best in the history of the business. That's the main reason for the decline," CEO Léo Apotheker said in a webcast news conference to discuss the results.

Software revenue fell 15 percent, to €1.12 billion, while revenue from software and software-related services slipped 4 percent to €2.57 billion.

One bright spot for SAP was its support revenue, which rose 7 percent year on year to €1.36 billion. The company angered many customers when it introduced its higher-priced Enterprise Support service, requiring customers to upgrade whether they needed its additional features or not. Last week, however, SAP gave in to those customers wanting to stick with Standard Support, allowing them to continue paying less for fewer features.

That won't pose a threat to SAP's support revenue stream, though, McDermott said.

"We'll be fine," he said. "We anticipate that the majority of our customers will stay on enterprise support."

One reason for that is that Enterprise Support customers know how their support costs will evolve through 2016, as SAP raises the rate for existing customers from 18.36 percent of the software license fee to 22 percent according to a set schedule, whereas Standard Support charges are less predictable as they are subject to inflation, McDermott said.

In 2010, SAP will adopt International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), after years of following U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles in reporting its results. The nature of SAP's activities means that the effect of the change on published figures will be minimal, Chief Financial Officer Werner Brandt said during the same news conference.

For the full year 2010, SAP expects software and software-related service revenue to increase by between 4 percent and 8 percent at constant currencies, from a 2009 base of €8.2 billion under IFRS, Brandt said.

It also expects to increase its full-year operating margin to between 30 percent and 31 percent at constant currencies, from 27.4 percent in 2009, he said.

The focus on margin is important, CEO Léo Apotheker said during the news conference. "We want to grow but we want to grow profitably," he said.

The company expects to begin hiring again this year, Apotheker said, although he declined to say how many jobs will be created. McDermott said the new hires will likely be in customer-facing roles such as sales, in fast-growing markets such as Europe, Brazil, India and China.

2010 will also be the year that Business ByDesign, SAP's software-as-a-service (SaaS) offering, goes mainstream, Apotheker said.