AP
Accenture plc (ACN)·Q4 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 FY25 revenue was $17.60B, at the top end of guidance and up 7% YoY (+4.5% LC); adjusted EPS was $3.03 (+9% YoY) while GAAP EPS fell to $2.25 due to a $615M business-optimization charge .
- Versus consensus, Accenture modestly beat on revenue (+1.36%) and EPS (+2.0%), but missed EBITDA (~2.5%) as optimization costs and gross margin compression weighed on reported profitability; AI-related bookings continued to scale ($1.8B in Q4; $5.9B for FY25) *.
- FY26 outlook introduced: LC revenue growth 2–5% (3–6% ex-U.S. federal), GAAP op margin 15.3–15.5%, adjusted op margin 15.7–15.9%; adjusted EPS $13.52–$13.90; capital return ≥$9.3B; quarterly dividend raised 10% to $1.63 .
- Stock reaction catalysts: sustained large-deal momentum (Q4 bookings $21.3B; book-to-bill 1.2), AI pricing accretion, and FY26 margin expansion vs. near-term GAAP EPS noise from optimization charges and a mid-teens AFS contraction in Q1 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Large-deal momentum and bookings strength: Q4 bookings $21.31B (+6% USD) with 37 clients ≥$100M in the quarter; AI bookings $1.8B in Q4 and $5.9B in FY25, reflecting scaling adoption and accretive pricing for advanced AI .
- Revenue at top of guidance, broad-based growth: Q4 revenues $17.60B (+7% USD, +4.5% LC), with Managed Services +8% USD and Consulting +6% USD; Americas +5% LC; EMEA +3% LC; Asia Pacific +6% LC .
- Management confidence on AI as expansionary: “We do not see AI as deflationary… savings are reinvested into new priorities,” underscoring durable demand and AI-led share gains .
What Went Wrong
- GAAP margin and EPS compressed by optimization charges: GAAP op margin fell to 11.6% (−270 bps YoY) and GAAP EPS to $2.25 (−15% YoY) due to a $615M charge tied to talent rotation and divestitures; adjusted metrics were stable-to-up (15.1% adj. margin, $3.03 adj. EPS) .
- Gross margin declined: Q4 gross margin 31.9% vs. 32.5% YoY; adjusted tax rate rose to 27.9% vs. 26.2% YoY, limiting EPS leverage despite revenue strength .
- Federal headwind persists: AFS contracting mid-teens in Q1 FY26, with ~1.5% impact embedded in near-term growth; procurement improving but still slower than past years .
Financial Results
Consolidated Results (USD)
Notes: Adjusted figures exclude business optimization costs; Q4 FY25 includes $615M charge; Q4 FY24 includes prior optimization costs .
Bookings and Mix
Q4 FY25 Revenue Breakdown
Type of Work:
Geographic Markets:
Industry Groups:
KPIs and Cash
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “I am very pleased with our 7% growth in fiscal 2025… clients… need help to build their digital core, prepare data and reimagine processes… This is what Accenture does best…” — Julie Sweet .
- “We do not see AI as deflationary. We do see and are seeing it as expansionary… savings… are being reinvested into new priorities.” — Julie Sweet .
- “We recorded a charge of $615 million [in Q4] and expect… ~$250 million in Q1 [FY26]… These actions will result in cost savings, which will be reinvested in our people and business.” — Angie Park .
- “For FY26… adjusted operating margin… 15.7% to 15.9%… adjusted EPS… $13.52 to $13.90… return at least $9.3 billion to shareholders.” — Angie Park .
Q&A Highlights
- AI impact and pricing: Management emphasized AI as expansionary with accretive pricing; projects increasingly moving from POCs to production, though cadence can be lumpy .
- Consulting vs Managed Services balance: Both expected low-to-mid single-digit growth in FY26; managed services increasingly strategic to accelerate AI-enabled transformations .
- Federal business: Procurement improving but slower than past; Q1 headwind mid-teens contraction; partnerships (e.g., Palantir) support federal demand .
- Capex and workplace: FY26 capex ~$1B tied to expanding real estate and bringing more people back to offices .
- Optimization program savings: >$1B savings to be reinvested; utilization expected to remain low-90s with no structural change from AI .
Estimates Context
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Implications: Slight beats on revenue/EPS reflect top-end delivery vs guidance and FX tailwind (+~2.5%) aiding Q4 USD results, while EBITDA softness aligns with gross margin compression and the timing of optimization charges .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- AI flywheel is accelerating with accretive pricing and expanding large-deal wins; expect continued share gains and AI pull-through into data, cloud, security, and operations .
- Near-term GAAP optics are noisy due to $615M Q4 and ~$250M Q1 optimization charges; adjusted margin expansion (10–30 bps in FY26) and dividend raise support capital return resilience .
- Federal (AFS) remains a transitory headwind in Q1; growth ex-U.S. federal (3–6% LC) underscores core demand strength .
- Bookings trajectory (Q4 $21.3B, FY $80.6B; book-to-bill 1.2) and record large deals signal durable backlog and FY26 revenue visibility .
- Watch gross margin trajectory and tax rate normalization; adjusted margin discipline vs. reinvestment for AI/talent rotation is key to EPS leverage .
- Capex step-up reflects office utilization and growth; expect disciplined inorganic investment (~$3B in FY26) to support capability expansion .
- Trading lens: Modest beat/miss mix with constructive FY26 margin/FCF guide and dividend increase; monitor AFS impact and proof of sustained AI-led pricing/mix to support multi-quarter re-rating .
Appendix: Additional Notes
- Q4 FX tailwind: Q4 revenues reflect ~+2.5% FX impact vs assumption provided in Q3 release .
- Segment strength: Financial Services (+15% USD), Products (+9% USD) led Q4; Health & Public Service down modestly YoY .
- Cash and returns: FY25 FCF $10.87B; returned $8.3B to shareholders (repurchases $4.6B; dividends $3.7B); declared $1.63 dividend (+10%) and added $5B repurchase authority .
Citations: All figures and statements are sourced from Accenture’s Q4 FY25 8‑K and press release and the Q4 FY25 earnings call transcripts .