Financial Results
Temenos Earnings Rise In 2023; Shares Weighed After Short-Seller Claims

The firm has issued 2023 and fourth-quarter results. While the figures were mostly positive, the share price remains under pressure. A short-seller has attacked the company, making allegations about its accounts. Temenos has rejected the claims.
Temenos, the
Zurich-listed banking and wealth technology firm whose share
price has been hit by a short-seller accusing it of wrongdoing
over accounts, has this week reported $301.3 million in earnings
before interest and tax (EBIT), rising 15 per cent
year-on-year.
Total revenues for last year rose 5 per cent to just over $1
billion. Total software licensing revenues stood at $443.6
million in 2023, up 10 per cent and also up 10 per cent in
constant currency terms. Term licence revenues fell by 42 per
cent, year-on-year, to $78.1 million, it said in a statement on
Monday.
Shares in the firm were
hit hard last week following a report from activist hedge
fund Hindenburg
Research – which said it has taken a short position in the
firm – claiming a series of wrongdoings and failings by Temenos
in its accounts. Temenos refutes the claims.
As of midday today, Temenos shares fetched SFr61.7 ($69.9) per
share, down 6.46 per cent. Since the start of January, prices
have fallen from SFr76.1 per share, with prices falling off a
cliff on 15 February after news of the Hindenburg Research note
circulated.
In its results statement, Temenos non-executive chairman Thibault
de Tersant, said: “With regards to the recent short seller report
and further to the statement made by the board in the press
release on 15 February 2024, we reiterate our position. As
chairman and former audit committee chair, I want to assure you
of my confidence that Temenos is running a sound business with
good financial controls in place. The board places the upmost
importance on its responsibilities to all stakeholders and will
oversee a thorough examination of the allegations raised, with
independent third parties.”
Details
Temenos said it achieved continued “strong performance in Europe”
during 2023, chalking up multiple deals with large banks signed
in the final quarter of the year. It has “sustained momentum”
with tier 1 and 2 banks, contributing 46 per cent of total
software licensing in Q4 2023 and 43 per cent in 2023 as a whole.
The firm said it has a net promotor score of +54, based on views
of more than 900 clients. It’s churn rate of clients is low, with
only 3 per cent of such churn, it said.
Annual recurring revenue (ARR) stood at $730 million last year,
rising 16 per cent on a constant currency basis.
The firm said its long-term profit and cash flow strength
supported its proposal to raise its dividend by 9 per cent
on a year before to SFr1.20.
“I am very pleased with our strong performance in 2023, where we
delivered results that significantly exceeded all our raised
guidance KPIs [key performance indicators], which was made
possible by the focus and determination of everyone at Temenos,”
Andreas Andreades, chief executive, said. “The sales environment
remained stable through Q4, with our European and American
businesses performing particularly well. We signed a number of
deals with tier 1 global banks that put their trust in Temenos as
a strategic partner to support their transformation programmes to
enable future growth.”