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Hughes Software: Hold

Krishnan Thiagarajan


Business acceleration will ride on the shoulders of an enabling telecom environment.

AIDED by a strong order pipeline, Hughes Software Systems (Hughes) recorded a robust performance and exceeded the higher end of the financial guidance for the second quarter ended September 30. The salient features of the financial performance are:

  • Sales of Rs 85 crore — a 63 per cent growth over the corresponding previous period. On a sequential (quarter-on-quarter) basis, Hughes Software recorded a buoyant 11.1 per cent growth in sales.

    This is an encouraging trend, as it follows a robust sequential growth of 20 per cent in the first quarter of 2003-04.

  • Post-tax earnings of Rs 16.9 crore — a 103 per cent rise over the corresponding previous period. On a sequential basis, the momentum has been maintained, with a 11 per cent growth in post-tax earnings.

  • The operating profit margins (OPM) improved by 5.9 percentage points to 25.3 per cent. On a sequential basis also, there has been a marginal 0.7 percentage point improvement in OPMs.

    Bolstered by this strong performance, Hughes has further revised its post-tax earnings guidance upwards, while retaining the original sales guidance for 2003-04. The revised guidance is:

  • Sales growth guidance retained at 55-60 per cent. The sales target for the year stands at Rs 341.6-352.6 crore.

  • Profit after tax growth guidance up from 60-70 per cent to approximately 80 per cent. The revised profit after tax for the year revised upwards from Rs 60.6-64.4 crore to Rs 68.2 crore.

    Based on the healthy order backlog and the financial guidance for the third quarter, Hughes is on track to achieving its sales guidance for the year. Hughes' top seven customers (its large accounts such as NEC, Nokia and Johnson Controls) accounted for about 90 per cent of its revenues.

    For the second successive quarter, Hughes has added 14 customers in products and services. Despite this strong addition of clientele, the company has been conservative in retaining in sales guidance.

    This is mainly attributed to the global telecom environment which continues to be hazy. In this environment, it may be prudent to remain conservative till firm signs of capital spending emerge.

    Till then, cutbacks or freeze in capital spending may happen swiftly or billing rate pressure can rear its ugly head.

    At the same time, it is encouraging to note that in this quarter, the product revenues of Hughes grew sequentially by 56 per cent. The management has indicated that royalties have contributed to a part of this growth. As a contributor to the revenues, the share of products rose from 14 per cent in the first quarter to 19 per cent in this quarter.

    This is in stark contrast to the first quarter, in which professional services with a 34 per cent sequential growth helped drive revenues.

    Since the dependence on revenues from its parent, Hughes Network Systems, has been coming down steadily, the rise in product revenues may be the right trigger necessary to balance the revenue contribution of Hughes.

    Even this revised post-tax earnings guidance seems achievable as it places the net profit margin (NPMs) in the 19.3-19.6 per cent bracket, which is in line with NPMs recorded in the first two quarters of 2003-04. Based on the current visibility and order backlog, this revision seems justified.

    Recommendation: At the current market price, the stock trades at a price-earnings multiple of almost 19 times its per share earnings of about Rs 20 for 2003-04. Shareholders can stay invested. But risk-averse investors can use every uptrend to liquidate their holdings in small lots.

    Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication

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