PS
PROGRESS SOFTWARE CORP /MA (PRGS)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 delivered $237.355M revenue (+36% YoY) and non-GAAP EPS of $1.40 (+28% YoY); ARR reached $838M (+46% YoY constant currency) with NRR at 100% .
- EPS was above the high end of prior guidance ($1.28–$1.34), and the company raised FY25 guidance for revenue, operating margin, EPS, and cash flow .
- ShareFile integration is “ahead of schedule” with primary operational synergies completed; Progress repaid another $40M on its revolver in Q2 and is tracking toward $160M FY25 debt reduction .
- Progress announced the acquisition of Nuclia (agentic RAG-as-a-service), immaterial financially but strategically broadening AI capabilities across the Data Platform and potentially into Sitefinity and ShareFile .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “We’re extremely pleased with our solid Q2 results… ARR of $838 million or 46% year-over-year growth. Our Net Retention Rate was 100%… integration of ShareFile is going extremely well… confident in our ability to reach all our ShareFile targets by the end of the year.” — CEO Yogesh Gupta .
- Non-GAAP operating margin expanded to 40% (+200 bps YoY) on strong execution and cost discipline; EPS came in $0.06 above the high end of guidance .
- ShareFile and OpenEdge were notable drivers of performance; major renewals and expansions across global pharma, biotech, European retail, and infrastructure customers underscore product relevance amid AI adoption .
What Went Wrong
- Cash from operations fell to $29.996M (–53% YoY) as DSO rose to 53 days (vs 48 in Q1), largely due to the cutover of ShareFile’s $250M business onto Progress’s billing system (temporary collections timing impact) .
- Software license revenue declined 6% YoY to $50.795M, reflecting mix shift toward recurring SaaS/maintenance and lower upfront license sales .
- Other expense increased to $(18.752)M (+167% YoY), and amortization of acquired intangibles rose materially (reflecting ShareFile), which weighed on GAAP profitability metrics .
Financial Results
Revenue, EPS, and Margins (Quarterly)
Q2 2025 Actuals vs Wall Street Consensus (S&P Global)
Values with an asterisk (*) retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment Revenue Mix
KPIs and Cash Metrics
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our Net Retention Rate was 100%, demonstrating the consistent strength of our product portfolio… our integration of ShareFile is going extremely well… confident in our ability to reach all our ShareFile targets by the end of the year.” — CEO Yogesh Gupta .
- “Operating margin was 40%… EPS $1.40, above the high end of prior guidance… we have raised guidance for the remainder of the year.” — Supplemental deck summary .
- “We again made significant progress on paying down our revolving credit facility, with another $40 million this quarter, putting us on a solid trajectory to hit our goal of $160 million debt paydown this year.” — CFO Anthony Folger .
- “We went live on the Progress billing platform for ShareFile… anytime you do a major lift and shift like that, there is always a little bit of a… slower approach… we were more careful about customer experience… this was a big milestone.” — CFO Anthony Folger on DSO and collections timing .
- “Nuclia… brings leading-edge agentic RAG capabilities… we expect to integrate across our product portfolio… value to Sitefinity and ShareFile; ShareFile has 86,000 customers.” — CEO Yogesh Gupta .
Q&A Highlights
- Nuclia rationale: Strategic tech acquisition to accelerate AI features across Progress products; modest price, portfolio-wide integration expected (Data Platform, Sitefinity, ShareFile) .
- Free cash flow/DSO: Q2 FCF below expectations due to cautious ShareFile billing system migration; timing impacts expected to normalize; collection processes now fully under Progress control .
- Capital allocation: Continued deleveraging ($40M Q2, $70M H1; plan $160M FY25) and buybacks ($50M YTD), maintaining disciplined M&A framework .
Estimates Context
- Q2 2025: Revenue $237.355M vs S&P Global consensus $237.229M* (in-line to slight beat); EPS $1.40 vs $1.300* (beat). Management also exceeded the high end of its own EPS guidance range .
- Q3 2025 setup: Guidance implies revenue $237–$243M and non-GAAP EPS $1.28–$1.34; consensus at quarter-end was $240.106M* revenue and $1.297* EPS, broadly consistent with guidance ranges .
- FY25: Raised guidance to revenue $962–$974M and non-GAAP EPS $5.28–$5.40; S&P Global consensus stood at $978.182M* revenue and $5.527* EPS, suggesting potential for estimate recalibration toward company’s updated range .
Values with an asterisk (*) retrieved from S&P Global.
Detailed Estimates Comparison
Values with an asterisk (*) retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Execution remains strong: broad-based ARR growth (+46% YoY) and NRR at 100% signal durable recurring revenue and retention; non-GAAP margin expansion to 40% underscores disciplined cost control .
- ShareFile integration progress and synergy realization are tracking ahead of plan, catalyzing raised FY25 guidance across revenue, margins, EPS, and cash flow .
- Temporary working capital friction from the ShareFile billing migration elevated DSO and depressed Q2 operating cash flow; management expects normalized collections post-cutover .
- AI is a central growth vector: Nuclia adds agentic RAG capabilities; AI assistants and internal AI use aim to enhance product velocity and efficiency—potentially improving retention and cross-sell over time .
- Deleveraging and buybacks provide capital flexibility while maintaining a disciplined M&A framework; $160M debt paydown modeled for FY25 and $50M buybacks YTD .
- Near-term trading implication: Raised guidance and an EPS beat above the high end are positive sentiment drivers; watch cash flow normalization and incremental AI-product announcements as catalysts .
- Medium-term thesis: High recurring revenue profile, continued integration of ShareFile, and expanding AI feature set support stable top-line growth and margin resilience; monitor MOVEit-related legal costs and acquisition amortization impacts on GAAP optics .