Accenture Plc has maintained its revenue growth guidance for the fiscal ending August 2024 but warned of near-term pain even as its first-quarter earnings met analyst estimates.
FY24 Guidance
The Dublin-headquartered company expects its top line to grow at 2-5% in the fiscal ending Aug. 31, 2024, with an operating margin of 14.8-15%—an expansion of 110-130 basis points from fiscal 2023. EPS is seen at $11.41 to $11.76—an increase of 3-6% year-on-year. That's below the consensus estimate of $12.23.
Its second-quarter expectations, however, disappointed. At $15.40-16 billion, Accenture expects its revenue growth at -2% to 2% due to a negative foreign-exchange impact.
Business Performance
According to Accenture, its revenues for the September-November quarter included positive foreign exchange impact of 1.5% as against 2.5% estimated earlier. Adjusting for the actual forex impact, the company’s guided range for quarterly revenue was $15.70-16.30 billion— the print is at the upper end of this guidance.
Consequently, the company’s total cash balance has taken a hit—as on Nov. 30, Accenture had $7.1 billion on its books as against $9.0 billion on Aug. 31. Operating cash flow for the quarter stood at $499 million while free cash flow was $430 million.
The days services outstanding—or the time taken for deals to convert into revenue—stood at 49 days as on Nov. 30, compared to 42 days on Aug. 31 and 48 days a year ago.
Revenue By Geography
North America: $7.56 billion, down 1% year-on-year
EMEA: $5.80 billion, up 9% year-on-year
Growth Markets: $2.86 billion, up 2% year-on-year
Revenue By Industry Group
CMT: Down 10% year-on-year at $2.67 billion
Financial Services: Up 2% year-on-year at $3.03 billion
Health & Public Services: Up 13% year-on-year at $3.38 billion
Products: Up 4% year-on-year at $4.86 billion
Resources: Up 7% year-on-year at $2.28 billion
Accenture anticipates clients, who are in the midst of a budget cycle, to stay cautious on near-term spending as macro uncertainty continues to weigh on finances. Discretionary deals, as a consequence, are still largely absent or hard to come by—hence the flat consulting book.
“Discretionary spending is down and we’re right in the middle of the budget cycle,” Sweet told analysts during an earnings call. “So next quarter, we'll have a much better view of what they are, but if you look around in the environment, there aren't a lot of green shoots on the economic side and obviously, the volatility on the geopolitical side continues.”
Cash To The People
Separately, Accenture paid a dividend of $1.29 per share to shareholders during the quarter, totalling $810 million. The company has declared another dividend of $1.29 per share, payable on Feb. 15, 2024.
The company also effected a share buyback worth $1.12 billion during the first quarter, repurchasing as many as 3.4 million shares from the open market. As on Nov. 30, Accenture had 628 million shares outstanding, worth $5.4 million.
(Corrects an earlier version that misstated Accenture missed estimates. Its guidance was lower than expected)