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Docusign

DocuSign: The New Standard for Electronic Signatures

DocusignFounded in 2003 by Court Lorenzini, Tom Gosner, and Eric Ranft, and headquartered in San Francisco, DocuSign (NASDAQ: DOCU) becomes the most recent addition to our Battle Road IPO Review Software sector coverage. For its fiscal year ending on January 31, 2019, Consensus estimates call for $624 million in revenue, and a loss of $0.04 per share. In its next fiscal year, analysts predict the company will generate $769 million in revenue with earnings of $0.12 per share.

DocuSign debuted on the NASDAQ on April 27th, 2018, in a 21.7 million Class A common stock offering, with 16.1 million shares coming from the company and 5.6 million coming from shareholders. Due to increased demand, underwriters fully exercised their option to purchase 3.3 million additional shares. With an IPO price of $29 per share, the company generated roughly $725 million from the offering, with roughly $563 million of the proceeds going to the company. Morgan Stanley and J.P. Morgan were lead book-running managers for the offering, with Citigroup, BofA Merrill Lynch, and Deutsche Bank as book-running managers, and JMP Securities, Piper Jaffray, and William Blair as co-managers. Recently trading at a share price of $60, DocuSign holds a market cap of approximately $9.3 billion.

DocuSign boasts the world’s top e-signature platform through its automation of the agreement process for individuals and organizations. Quicker, cheaper, and with less potential risk than old-fashioned paper agreements, DocuSign’s solution allows customers to securely sign agreements in minutes rather than days. This cloud-based platform grants users the ability to sign agreements from nearly any device, anytime, anywhere.

The San Francisco-based company is a global firm with hundreds of millions of users including over 370,000 companies as customers worldwide. These customers include seven of the top 10 global technology companies, 18 of the top 20 global pharmaceutical companies, and 10 of the world’s top 15 financial services firms. In addition to this, DocuSign serves many smaller organizations and individuals in nearly every industry.

DocuSign is integrated with over 300 applications, including partnerships with NetSuite, Microsoft, Oracle, Google, Workday, Salesforce, and others. Furthermore, their solution can be integrated into custom applications for each individual user. Due to this, DocuSign can be easily leveraged by major organizations, and one of the company’s largest clients is able to utilize the platform in over 300 unique cases within its enterprise.

DocuSign offers its platform in the form of subscriptions. There are a multitude of subscription options with different functionalities specifically tailored to customers’ needs. These subscriptions are sold to businesses through DocuSign’s partnerships and direct sales force. For smaller organizations and individuals, DocuSign uses its company website to acquire subscriptions.

DocuSign’s business model shows great potential, as the company has recently expanded its revenue while shrinking its losses. In the fiscal year ending January 31, 2018, the company posted $382 million in revenue, albeit with a loss of $115 million. The following year, revenue jumped 36 percent to $519 million, while its loss was cut to $52 million. Having raised roughly $563 million in company proceeds from its IPO, DocuSign’s strong post-IPO balance sheet features $820 million in cash and no debt.

pivotal software logo

Pivotal Software: Helping Developers Code in the Cloud

pivotal software logoFounded in 2013, and based in San Francisco, Pivotal Software (NYSE: PVTL) provides a cloud-based software development platform and services for software development. Consensus estimates call for revenue of $622 million for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2019, along with a loss of $0.45, followed by revenue of $771 million in fiscal year 2020 the following fiscal year, along with a loss of $0.44.

Pivotal debuted on the NYSE on April 22, 2018, in a 43.6 million Class A common stock offering priced at $15 per share, which ultimately included 5.5 million shares sold pursuant to the exercise in full of the underwriters’ option to purchase additional shares. In total, Pivotal offered roughly 39 million shares, and General Electric, the selling stockholder, offered 3.9 million shares, which represented about 20 percent of its position in Pivotal. In the offering, Pivotal netted roughly $525 million. The IPO was led by a vast array of 15 investment banks, including Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, BofA Merrill Lynch Barclays, Credit Suisse, RBC Capital Markets, UBS, William Blair, and others. Post-offering, there are an estimated 65 million Class A shares and 176 million Class B shares outstanding, though we await further clarification, once the company reports results for its quarter ended April 30th. At a recent share price of $20, Pivotal’s market cap exceeds $4.8 billion.

Pivotal Software was formed in April of 2013, when DellEMC and VMWare (which was majority owned by EMC) spun off developer teams, assets, and technology to create the company. Since then, the company has raised $1.7 billion in funding from Microsoft, Ford Motor, and General Electric. The core of Pivotal Software is the cleverly-named Pivotal Cloud Foundry (PCF), a software development platform which is utilized to write and manage cloud native applications, as well as modernize legacy apps written for other computing platforms. PCF integrates both open source and proprietary software. The other piece of Pivotal Software is comprised of strategic services, which the company refers to as Pivotal Labs.

Within large industrial, technology and services companies there is still quite a lot of custom software development taking place, despite the rise of packaged applications for the cloud. PCF can be utilized to manage and develop applications across the key cloud and open source environments, including Amazon AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Platfrom, VMWare, and OpenStack. In addition, companies have invested millions of dollars in proprietary applications, some of which need to be updated for cloud environments. Pivotal counts more than 300 companies spread across the automotive, transportation, industrial and services industries, including financial services, healthcare, insurance, technology, media, and government sectors. Pivotal cites as its goal the improvement of ratio of developers to operators, and an increase in the amount of time writing code and making “meaningful” updates to software applications, which it claims can be improved by 50 percent utilizing PCF.

Pivotal recorded revenue of $509 million in its fiscal year ended January 31, 2018, an increase of 22 percent over the prior year. Subscription revenue, which carries an 88 percent gross margin, contributed 51 percent of revenue and grew by 73 percent over the prior year, while services, which carries a gross margin of only 22 percent contributed the remaining 49 percent. Despite this relatively favorable gross margin structure, which yielded a weighted average total of 56 percent in its last fiscal year, Pivotal recorded a rather astounding operating loss of $168 million in FY’18. Though this was not as egregious as the $227 million operating loss of the prior fiscal year, it still raises a major red flag with respect to the company’s glaring lack of profitability, given its critical mass of more than $500 million in revenue. Pivotal has a solid post-IPO balance sheet thanks to its mammoth IPO, with nearly $600 million in cash, and long term debt of just of $20 million for a net cash position of $580 million, which is likely to prove to be temporary, given the company’s operating losses.