
TSE:ENGH
This summary was created by AI, based on 11 opinions in the last 12 months.
Enghouse Systems (ENGH) has been facing significant challenges in its execution and fundamentals, leaving many experts skeptical about its future. The software sector, particularly for smaller-cap companies, is under strain, with concerns about AI's impact leading to multiple contractions in valuations. While the company has a strong cash position, insights suggest that it has struggled to reinvest for growth, leading to a negative long-term return for shareholders. Although seen as a potential income investment due to its high yield, it is viewed as a value trap by some, especially given its stagnant revenue and aggressive declines. Experts are mixed in their outlook, with some advising caution and preference for larger companies in better growth positions.
Small caps get whacked when interest rates rise. If investment-grade companies borrow at 6%, small caps borrow at 10%. Russell 2000 rallied after the election, and has fallen ~8% in December. ENGH has no debt. Strong FCF, dividend grows 15-20% every year.
Q4 earnings were a bit light, so stock's fallen. They also made 2 acquisitions in the quarter. With small caps, you have to be patient. Yield is 3.87%, almost unheard of for a small-cap stock. Switching business model to SaaS, which should improve margins over time and you'll eventually get increased profitability. Stock's at a new 52-week low, and he's buying.
EPS of 37c beat estimates of 35.7c. Revenue of $130.5M slightly beat estimates of $129.7M. EBITDA of $37.7M beat estimates by 4.6%. Revenue rose 18%. EBITDA rose 13%. Recurring revenue rose 22.8%. Net income rosr 17%. Seachange is being integrated well. Net cash is $245M. Nothing too extraordinary here, but a beat and decent overall growth. Earnings are expected to rise 13% in 2025.
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Likes it, especially for the long term. He owns it in a few separately managed accounts. Well run, financially disciplined. Cleaned up debt. Has $200M in cash. Focus is like a mini-CSU, but doesn't have the scale yet. 40 global acquisitions over its history. 12-month price target of $36.50.
Pick it up in thirds here around $30, $28, and $26.50.
Shares have fallen since the pandemic, but they've re-created themselves and changed their business model. Like MSFT, they stopped selling software and license it through subscriptions. So operating margins are starting to rise and they just raised the dividend by 18%. Also, they have strong free cash flows and the dividend is growing from 3.5%, rare for a smallcap.
(Analysts’ price target is $38.00)They reported a beat last Thursday. They're turning their software business into the monthly subscription model like Microsoft's. Margins will be smaller, but incremental revenues will be more regular and less lumpy. Earnings were good. Dividend rises 10% annually. He holds it in TFSAs and just made a major purchase.
ENGH recorded EPS of $0.45 in Q4, beating analysts revenue expectations of $0.42. Revenue came in at $123.1M, displaying year-over-year growth of 13.9% but missed estimates of $125M. Recurring revenue grew 35%. Cash from operations was decent at $28.3M. Cash was strong at $240.4M while total debt was only $12.4M, but the company stated that none of the debt was external. Net income was $25.1M but decreased from the prior year’s total at $36.9M. This was a decent quarter for ENGH as the company shifts its focus to expanding its recurring SaaS revenue base.
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All his past picks on this date were small-caps and chosen, based on him expecting US interest rates to fall. All were turnaround plays. He used dollar-cost averaging. Fading interest in small-caps now, but he still likes ENGH. They are a serial buyer of private companies at good prices. Margins are rising so are increasing the dividend to 4.5%. But they're not large nor liquid. Is adding at these levels.