SCISYS — Space division is flying in spite of Brexit

SCISYS — Space division is flying in spite of Brexit

2017 was a transitional year for SCISYS, with the key Space division flying and ANNOVA’s integration progressing in line with expectations. The attainment of an €18m prime contractor role in H2 is a significant endorsement of SCISYS Space’s proprietary PLENITER software suite, with which SCISYS is targeting the commercial space sector. In August, ANNOVA achieved a key milestone with its BBC contract, which means it is trading ahead of initial management targets. This comes on the back of H1 results, which revealed 6% organic growth across the group and a record half-year order book. Management’s goal to achieve £60m in revenues and double-digit margins within three to five years looks conservative, and we believe the stock looks attractive on c 11x our maintained FY18e EPS.

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SCISYS

Space division is flying in spite of Brexit

Trading update

Software & comp services

26 January 2018

Price

130p

Market cap

£38m

Net debt (£m) at 30 June 2017

9.0

Shares in issue

29.3m

Free float

63.7

Code

SSY

Primary exchange

AIM

Secondary exchange

N/A

Share price performance

%

1m

3m

12m

Abs

11.6

2.8

22.1

Rel (local)

11.2

0.5

13.4

52-week high/low

136.5p

92.0p

Business description

SCISYS provides a range of professional services in support of the planning, development and use of computer systems in the space, media/broadcast and defence sectors, as well as to other public and private sector enterprises.

Next events

Final results

27 March 2018

Analysts

Richard Jeans

+44 (0)20 3077 5700

Dan Ridsdale

+44 (0)20 3077 5729

SCISYS is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

2017 was a transitional year for SCISYS, with the key Space division flying and ANNOVA’s integration progressing in line with expectations. The attainment of an €18m prime contractor role in H2 is a significant endorsement of SCISYS Space’s proprietary PLENITER software suite, with which SCISYS is targeting the commercial space sector. In August, ANNOVA achieved a key milestone with its BBC contract, which means it is trading ahead of initial management targets. This comes on the back of H1 results, which revealed 6% organic growth across the group and a record half-year order book. Management’s goal to achieve £60m in revenues and double-digit margins within three to five years looks conservative, and we believe the stock looks attractive on c 11x our maintained FY18e EPS.

Year
end

Revenue
(£m)

PBT*
(£m)

EPS*
(p)

DPS
(p)

P/E
(x)

Yield
(%)

12/15

36.1

0.6

1.3

1.78

98.3

1.4

12/16

45.7

3.0

9.2

1.96

14.2

1.5

12/17e

55.2

4.0

11.2

2.16

11.6

1.7

12/18e

55.8

4.4

11.8

2.38

11.0

1.8

Note: *PBT and EPS are normalised, excluding amortisation of acquired intangibles, exceptional items and share-based payments.

Pre-close trading update

SCISYS says that its “trading results will comfortably meet current market guidance, both in respect of revenues and adjusted operating profit.” The order book is at record levels, and cash flow was “particularly healthy”, with year-end net cash £0.6m better than we forecasted at £5.9m.

Space division’s €18m prime contractor win

In October, SCISYS was awarded an €18m contract by OHB System AG to deliver the ground station control and communications infrastructure for the German national satellite communications mission, Heinrich Hertz, as prime contractor. The project will commence in 2017 and the majority of project revenues will be delivered between 2018 and the scheduled completion date in 2021.

Annova’s key BBC commercial milestone is achieved

In August, SCISYS’s ANNOVA unit achieved an important commercial milestone in its BBC contract, for the supply of ANNOVA's OpenMedia software. Given that the critical software functionality implementation and live pilot milestones have been successfully completed, the roll-out of OpenMedia across the BBC has begun.

Forecasts and valuation: Profits maintained for now

The recent contract news comfortably underpins our forecasts. Given the risks from Brexit on Galileo revenues, we are conservatively maintaining our profit forecasts. The stock trades on c 0.85x our FY18e sales and c 7.9x EBITDA, which we believe is attractive if SCISYS can maintain the momentum. Our DCF model – which is based on a weighted average cost of capital of 10% and a 10.7% long-term margin target – values the stock at 160p (previously 149p), 23% above the current level.

Investment summary: Space and media-led growth

Company description: Leader in European IT services

SCISYS is a specialist IT services provider that builds and operates bespoke and product-based mission-critical IT systems for customers across a range of sectors including media & broadcast, space, government, and defence & commercial sectors. The group has blue-chip clients, and industry expertise with strong and growing revenue visibility. Supported by this backdrop, management's strategic objective is to grow revenues, operating profit and operating margin to deliver sustainable long-term value to shareholders. The media & broadcast operations were boosted by the acquisition of ANNOVA at end-FY16 while the Space division is performing strongest with 20% H1 revenue growth and a significant new business win.

Exhibit 1: SCISYS H117 revenue breakdown by sector and key customers

Source: SCISYS

Financials: Cash generation was strong in H1

The highlights in FY17 were the strong organic growth from the Space division (20% in H117 supported by the coveted contract with OHB in H2) and the attainment of the BBC milestone by ANNOVA. We estimated that FY17 operating cash flow before taxes was £7.8m and free cash flow was £5.8m. We forecast operating cash flow to dip to £5.7m in FY17 and rise to £6.3m in FY18, and for net debt to remain broadly unchanged at end-FY18 after an earnout payment for ANNOVA.

Sensitivities: Pressure sector spending

The UK government’s commitment to reduce public sector spending put pressure on some of the group’s public sector customers (eg c 25% of FY11 group profits were from Environment Agency contracts). Following the Brexit vote and subsequent changes in the UK government, the focus on cost-cutting in the public sector has abated. However, this is balanced by the uncertain economic outlook. Following the Brexit vote, there is uncertainty around the group’s ongoing work on the EU’s Galileo satellite navigation system, but we note that SCISYS has the ability to bid for work through either its UK or German offices. There is a risk of cost overruns on fixed-price projects. In all, we view SCISYS as a relatively robust business with a low-risk customer base, and we note that the group has no bad debtors and 55% of revenues are outside the UK.

Valuation: Growth with 10%+ margins within five years

The stock trades on 11.6x our earnings forecasts in FY17, falling to 11.0x in FY18 and to 9.9x in FY19. In our view, this is attractive given the positive momentum, with the significant new contracts in Space and the ANNOVA acquisition integration progressing well. Based on our forecasts and a conservative weighted average cost of capital (WACC) of 10%, and a long-term margin target of 10.7%, our DCF model values the shares at 160p, or 23% above the current share price. In our view, this valuation is supported by the group’s strong record of cash generation, margin growth potential, a healthy balance sheet, the increasingly diverse customer base and the potential for further value-enhancing acquisitions.

Company description: Leader in high-end ICT services

SCISYS group is a leading UK-German developer of information and communications technology services, e-business, web and mobile applications, editorial newsroom and advanced technology solutions. The company operates in a broad spectrum of market sectors, including media & broadcast, space, government, defence & commerce sectors. In the UK the group operates through SCISYS UK (with offices in Bristol, Chippenham, Reading and Leicester and c 250 employees). In Germany (with offices in Bochum, Dortmund, Darmstadt and Munich and c 270 employees) it operates through its wholly owned subsidiary SCISYS Deutschland GmbH.

SCISYS has a long history, having formed in 1980 and floated on AIM in 1997. The company acquired CODA, an accounting software business, in 2000. CODA was spun off in 2006 and subsequently acquired by Unit 4 Agresso in 2008. At the time of the CODA demerger in 2000, SCISYS sold its Chippenham head office for £9m, but it repurchased the property in 2011 for £5m. The group’s German business was acquired in 2007 with the acquisition of VCS for €16.7m. After a five-year break from acquisitions, it acquired MakaluMedia in 2012 for c €2m, which doubled the size of the group’s Darmstadt-based space consultancy business. Xibis was a small acquisition made in late 2014 that extended the group’s offerings into web and mobile apps. The Xibis deal enabled SCISYS to add breadth to its offerings when its bids for new business. At the end of 2016, SCISYS acquired ANNOVA (for an initial €11.35m along with an earnout spread over three years), beefing up the group’s media & broadcast operations and extending its capabilities into television.

Exhibit 2: SCISYS's share price (p) history over last 10 years

Source: Bloomberg, regulatory news

SCISYS’s clients are predominantly blue-chip and public sector organisations and include the Ministry of Defence, Environment Agency, Airbus Defence & Space, Arqiva, Vodafone, the European Space Agency, EUMETSAT, the BBC, RNLI, Interflora and the National Trust.

Business model: IT consultancy, software development and support

SCISYS’s business model has predominantly been fixed-price and managed budget projects with a reasonable proportion of time and materials work. The group is increasingly able to price on a ‘value proposition’ basis (charging for its IP and software), as well as improving the focus on contract project management. Every project is different and the group therefore has the expertise (and the cost and project management required) to customise its approach for each customer assignment. SCISYS’s offering can be broadly split into three stages:

Consultancy: this includes fairly traditional business case development, programme and project management, business process analysis, IT architecture review and strategy, procurement management, solution architecture, business change etc. The consultancy process focuses on maximising business benefits matched with value for money. This therefore means that when scoping a project specification, SCISYS will often recommend ‘off-the-shelf’ and ‘open source’ software alongside its own bespoke designs.

Implementation: the challenge then is to seamlessly integrate the software into a platform solution for the customer. Many of the group’s complex projects take many months in the design stage and often even longer to implement on customer sites (as customers often ‘roll-out’ a new software platform in stages across multiple sites). Clearly, there is a significant overlap in personnel and in-house expertise on the consultancy and implementation teams. When pricing the implementation of projects, the group is moving towards a more total value-based approach. In some cases this involves charging customers (by the ‘user’) for software licences.

Support: SCISYS has grown its ongoing support function quickly over the last few years. As well as SCISYS projects, the teams also support third-party software sitting on customers’ premises (in many cases these are older software solutions where there is little support from the developer, but SCISYS has the in-house experience to help). There are a number of pricing models for the support function but, in line with typical IT services companies, this activity has healthy underlying gross margins.

Strategy: Growth and margin improvement with acquisitions

Management's focus remains on generating revenue growth and margin improvement. The objective to generate £60m in annual revenues and double-digit operating margins in the medium term was suspended following the untypical problem project of FY15 that put an increased emphasis on the management and control of risk. However, this objective was reintroduced in the 2016 annual report. Management plans to continue a progressive dividend policy. We note that the company will transition to the new revenue recognition accounting standard IFRS 15 in 2018. While there is not expected to be any discernible shift in bottom line figures as a results of IFRS 15, revenues could drop by c £2m from FY18 as a result of some pass-through activity being classified as “agent revenue” where the new standard only allows recognition of SCISYS’s margin on the deal being reflected in revenue. This will have the impact of increasing the margin as profits do not change while revenues drop.

We note that SCISYS has established strong operational and cost disciplines, which is reflected in the margin progression over the period of FY07-14, along with strong cash generation. The problem project of FY15 was likely a one-off. Management’s aim is to grow revenues both organically and through selective acquisitions. A major focus in FY17 has been to integrate ANNOVA, acquired at end-FY16, which has already passed a key milestone. Overall, management seeks to expand the business into adjacent sectors and new regions, with a focus on Northern Europe. The acquisition strategy is led by Dr Klaus Meng, who has a 9.7% shareholding in SCISYS, and Steve Brignall, technical director. Cyber security is an area of potential interest as it could have synergies with the defence segment (within ESD). Opportunities to grow organically exist in potentially transferring its public sector domain knowledge and IP (eg environmental regulations to private sector utilities, media to commercial radio and space and electronic architecture to the commercial sector).

Exhibit 3: SCISYS revenues (£m) and operating profit margin (%)

Source: Company accounts, Edison Investment Research forecasts

Market environment

SCISYS reports its business in five divisions – Space, Enterprise Solutions and Defence, Xibis, Media & Broadcast and ANNOVA Systems. Along with Space and Media & Broadcast, the group has a strong presence in the following sectors through its ESD division: defence, security & maritime; government and emergency services; and commercial. The group’s customers are large, competitors can be sizeable and the software requirements are often complex and expensive. Therefore, winning business is a challenge (on average, sales cycles are six to 18 months), but equally, once the customers have signed up, there are often significant opportunities to win additional projects. Typically, the offering is bespoke, tailored to the specific requirements of a customer. We estimate that across the group over 80% of revenues come from existing customers which, together with the long-term contract profile of many of the deals, highlights the ‘visibility’ in the business.

Exhibit 4: Areas of operation

Main operations

Main regions

End-markets

Functions

Space

Projects from Bochum, Germany and Bristol, UK. Support from Darmstadt, Germany

Germany & UK

Space - both public and private sectors

On-site engineering and operations support along with integrated solutions and products for ground and onboard space systems

Enterprise Solutions and Defence

Chippenham and Reading, UK

UK

Defence, security & maritime; government and emergency services; and commercial

Provision of bespoke software solutions and application support

Xibis

Oadby, UK

UK

Retail and broader commercial

Provision of web and mobile app solutions

Media & Broadcast

Dortmund, Germany

Germany & UK

Public and private sector broadcasters

Radio production and playout systems

ANNOVA Systems

Munich, Germany

Germany, UK, France

Public and private sector broadcasters

Software-based editorial solutions

Source: SCISYS

Space division (43% of H117 revenues, 46% of contribution)

SCISYS Space, the largest division, is currently experiencing the strongest growth among the group’s divisions, benefiting from work on Galileo, several programmes for the European Space Agency (ESA) and delivering the initial sale of the PLENITER software suite. It is the group’s oldest division, having operated for nearly 30 years, and has grown into a significant player in the space industry. The unit has become a long-term supplier to large space industry prime contractors, as well as operating as a prime contractor itself. It works in partnership with large system integrators, satellite operators and European space institutions such as the ESA, EUMETSAT, the UK Space Agency (UKSA) and the German Space Agency (DLR). SCISYS Space bids for framework contracts with these customers for regular work and consequently fosters long-term relationships with them. The division’s performance is underpinned by long-term programmes with customers including the ESA, where SCISYS experts are in charge of developing the rover visual localisation flight software for its rover mission to Mars, and the European satellite navigation system, Galileo, where SCISYS Space takes responsibility for a large proportion of the ground segment software. SCISYS Space employs c 170 staff – c 70 in the UK (Bristol) and c 100 in Germany (Bochum and Darmstadt). Projects are delivered out of Bristol and Bochum, while spacecraft operations support activities, including for ESA's Space Operations Centre, are handled from Darmstadt.

SCISYS Space’s solutions include high-integrity, onboard flight software, data systems, and ground control solutions and engineering services. Coverage includes human space flight, navigation, telecommunications, earth observation and exploration missions, including robotics as well as related ground system infrastructures. The unit offers consulting work for space institutions and off-the-shelf software, as well as bespoke software solutions to commercial space operations. Software platforms include PLENITER (planning, implementation and operation of complete satellite missions), 2met! (multi-mission concept for real-time data acquisition, processing, visualisation and distribution of earth observation satellite data) and egmc² (provides a complete system for supporting platform operator and space ground interoperability in robotics). The plan is to expand away from the public space, eg PLENITER serves the commercial space market, while the group’s expertise in earth observation and robotics and autonomy will be taken to adjacent sectors.

The unit benefits from healthy growth drivers underpinned by government funding. The ESA’s budget rose from €3bn in 2008 to €5.6bn in 2016 for a CAGR of 6.4%, in spite of a challenging economic backdrop and tight public sector environments. We note that ESA apportions work to its suppliers based on location, matching their country’s contribution to its overall budget, and SCISYS has operations in Germany and the UK. ESA’s combined German and UK contribution rose to €1.26bn in 2017, representing 22% of its total budget. The UK Space Agency has said it will contribute €1.4bn over the next five years to ESA programmes, or c €280m per annum, which indicates a small decline from 2017 levels. However, the division could benefit from the UK Space Agency’s objective to help UK industry capture 10% of the global space market, or £40bn, by 2030.

Exhibit 5: European Space Agency annual budget

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

Germany

772.7

765.7

797.4

872.6

858.4

920.7

UK

300

270

322.3

324.8

300

334.8

Germany + UK

1072.7

1035.7

1119.7

1197.4

1158.4

1255.5

(3.4%)

8.1%

6.9%

(3.3%)

8.4%

Other

3209.4

3066.4

3313.3

4052.6

4591.6

4344.5

Total

4282.1

4102.1

4433.0

5250.0

5750.0

5600.0

(4.2%)

8.1%

18.4%

9.5%

(2.6%)

Source: ESA

The division is highly exposed to the movement of the euro against sterling since almost all its revenues are euro denominated, while the UK Space unit has costs in sterling.

Record €18m contract win with OHB System (ETR:OHB)

In late 2017, SCISYS was awarded a coveted €18m contract by OHB System covering the ground segment of the German national satellite communications mission, Heinrich Hertz. As prime contractor, SCISYS will design and implement the complete ground segment of the Heinrich Hertz mission including the preparation of the mission operations concept. This is the first time that SCISYS has won a role as prime contractor for the entire ground infrastructure of a mission. Heinrich Hertz is an experimental satellite mission aimed at conducting scientific and technical studies and tests of new communication technologies in space. In addition, the satellite will carry an independent telecommunication payload (MilSatcom) that will be used by the German Federal Ministry of Defence. It is scheduled for launch in 2021.

The contract utilises SCISYS’s proprietary PLENITER software suite and this will be the second major installation of PLENITER, following the win with OneWeb satellite constellation in 2016. Both these deals reflect the drive from SCISYS to extend the group’s activities beyond the public sector.

The contract is valued at €18m, of which around half will be pass-through revenue, which is mainly ground station infrastructure along with subcontractors. The PLENITER software platform is bundled in the contract and there will be ongoing software support revenue. As prime contractor for the Heinrich Hertz ground segment, SCISYS is responsible for the complete satellite ground segment, ranging from the technology to the implementation of the operations concept. Nevertheless, other companies including OHB will be involved in this segment. OHB required SCISYS’s skills for the ground segment, because it is primarily focused on the space segment. The companies have worked together over 10 years. Recent major contributions working on the Control Centres of the Columbus module onboard the International Space Station and the European satellite navigation system, Galileo, helped SCISYS win the business. The contract will be managed by SCISYS out of its Bochum offices in Germany. OHB awarded the contract originated by the German Aerospace Center (DLR) for the implementation of Phase C/D plus launch of the mission. As the overall industrial prime contractor, OHB takes responsibility for the realisation of the entire mission, including satellite, launch and ground infrastructure.

About PLENITER

PLENITER, launched in 2016, is a modular software suite for the planning, implementation and operation of complete satellite missions. It collates many years of experience at SCISYS, incorporating a number of tools that were created from customer-funded development, along with a small amount of internal development. Consequently, its initial investment is complete, while there will be some additional improvement and ongoing maintenance going forward. SCISYS says that PLENITER matches the latest technology in the sector.

The use of automated functions significantly reduces the number of manual operating steps and hence enables space and satellite operators to reduce their total cost of ownership.

PLENITER competes with GMV, a private Spanish company, and the US company, Kratos (NASDAQ:KTOS).

Implications for SCISYS

Most of SCISYS Space’s business has traditionally been as subsystem supplier. Hence, this deal, as prime contractor for the ground segment, is a major breakthrough, reflecting the group’s decades of experience and strong reputation in the space sector. SCISYS is confident it can move downstream in future, ie expanding from satellite control into flight dynamics and mission planning. Indeed, SCISYS believes it has a chance to move downstream on Heinrich Hertz and get more involved in the mission, with the next phase starting after the 2021 launch. The contract is an additional product reference for SCISYS, and a major reference for further commercial work. SCISYS believes it is well positioned to benefit from the ongoing need for innovation in satellite operations and sees significant opportunities ranging from aviation manufacturers to telecoms companies. SCISYS says customers often get fed up with fixed suppliers and believes there is an increasing need for an open system. It believes automation will become increasingly important.

Contract win with Sky and Space Global (UK)

Late last year SCISYS was awarded a contract by Sky and Space Global (UK) (ASX:SAS) to deliver the network management simulator for SAS’s Pearls constellation of nanosatellites. SCISYS Space will utilise its state-of-the-art software solutions and specialist know-how to deliver the Pearls Constellation Simulator within a 12-month period. The simulator will provide a representation of the constellation, its communication infrastructure, customer activity and mission operations. The simulator will also integrate the network management and fuel consumption optimisation algorithms, hence providing SAS with an essential operational analysis tool.

The Sky and Space Global Pearls constellation mission will operate c 200 narrowband communication nanosatellites in carefully selected orbits by 2020, giving equatorial coverage of the earth. This constellation of nanosatellites will create an affordable global communication network for voice, data and instant messaging for over three billion people currently without any mobile coverage.

Enterprise Solutions & Defence (ESD) (29% of H117 revenues, 34% of contribution)

In FY13, the group’s three UK-based, non-space divisions (Environment, Government & Defence and Application Support) merged to form this enlarged division. ESD supplies mission-critical software systems across its three business groups (Defence, Security & Maritime; Government and Emergency Services; and Commercial). It enjoys a strong reputation and is known in a number of microsegments of larger markets. While the division has the capability to integrate existing commercial, off-the-shelf (COTS) solutions, its niche specialisms are in creating high-value, bespoke software solutions using the ability to draw on reusable intellectual property. The defence sector is key to ESD, where it is regarded as a specialist in a number of subsectors. In particular, ESD has a strong presence as a software solution provider to military vehicles (the MOD’s Warrior upgrade programme) and naval command rooms (RNLI). Additionally, the division is a respected supplier to blue-chip commercial customers, where it has continued to foster longstanding relationships. It is also a recognised supplier to local government customers.

Going forward, we anticipate further expansion in defence, with growth coming from transitioning the group’s reusable IP into adjacent areas.

Media & broadcast (M&B) (13% of H117 revenues, 14% of contribution)

SCISYS’s Media & Broadcast division has been established in the sector for over 20 years, primarily serving the institutional public broadcast market across Europe. It is a leading provider of premium radio broadcasting solutions known globally as the dira! software solutions suite. dira! is a suite of television, radio, newsroom and new media production and playout applications, supporting core workflow at broadcasting companies. SCISYS has supplied the BBC since 2001 and today provides radio audio editing and production systems for all of the broadcaster’s radio channels, paving the way for leading-edge integrated radio audio production systems. The unit’s competitors are small players including Euronext Paris-listed Dalet (EPA:DLT) and private companies, GlobeCast, Jutel and David.

Going forward, the focus will be on exploiting the relationship with ANNOVA in new business pitches and expanding more deeply into the private sector.

ANNOVA Systems (13% of H117 revenues, 5% of contribution)

In late 2016, SCISYS acquired ANNOVA Systems for up to €27.8m, doubling the revenues of SCISYS’s media and broadcast operations and taking it up to a similar level to the group’s other two major divisions. Given that there is a three-year earnout, the unit continues to act on a standalone basis. However, it operates closely with M&B.

ANNOVA is a leading supplier of software-based editorial solutions for the media sector. With c 70 employees, it is based in Munich, Germany and has smaller offices in Paris, to service its significant French customer base, and London, to service the landmark 12-year contract with the BBC it won in 2015. Its OpenMedia product is used by broadcast journalists to manage all their workflows – planning, creating content and filing their stories. OpenMedia is a mature product that is in use by more than 50,000 journalists, including those with major European broadcasters such as RTL, Deutsche Welle, WDR and Radio France. OpenMedia does not compete with M&B’s dira! In fact, the two products complement each other in the radio space and interface in a number of installations, including at German state radio broadcasters NDR, WDR and Deutsche Welle, and OpenMedia and Dira are already interfacing on live systems in BBC Salford and West Midlands.

The BBC deal boosted ANNOVA’s December 2015 order book to €35m, although this is spread out to 2027. This order book included a £4m payment from the BBC contract for consultancy services for the proof of the pilot stage, including configuration work, which was due on reaching a milestone and which was passed in August 2017. Consequently the roll-out of OpenMedia software across the BBC has begun and licences are payable as part of the post-milestone regular monthly invoicing as the BBC rolls out the system across its estate. The services element of the BBC contract involves significant customer-funded R&D work, worth up to £8m, as the BBC wanted to ensure that the product would be developed and enhanced.

ANNOVA operates a traditional enterprise software business model (a perpetual licence sale with an implementation/customisation project and ongoing support and maintenance at c 15% of the licence value). Recurring support and maintenance typically represents 25% of total revenues, while ANNOVA also has significant repeat services revenues from some key accounts.

Xibis (1% of H117 revenues, 1% of contribution)

This unit, which provides web and mobile app solutions largely to the retail sector, was acquired in 2014. Based in Leicester, it operates independently, hence is shown as a separate division despite its small size. The unit often works closely with the ESD division, working on joint projects and jointly bidding for new business. This improves ESD’s negotiating position when pitching for new business.

FY17 pre-close trading update

SCISYS says that its “trading results will comfortably meet current market guidance, both in respect of revenues and adjusted operating profit.” The order book is at record levels, boosted by the OHB contract, while additional contract wins across the group in Q417 mean that SCISYS is “entering 2018 with positive momentum across all divisions” hence the strong organic growth enjoyed at the end of 2017 is continuing into 2018. FY17 cash flow was “particularly healthy”, with year-end net cash £0.6m better than we forecast at £5.9m.

The integration with ANNOVA is progressing steadily. 2018 is the final ring-fencing year with ANNOVA and SCISYS has already commenced a programme to align ANNOVA's internal processes with SCISYS's high standards. The company highlights cross selling and synergies between ANNOVA and the Media & Broadcast division continue with contract wins at both MDR and RTL, respectively. MDR is a German public broadcaster and has been a customer for M&B since 1994; RTL France has been a long-standing customer with ANNOVA and is a large commercial customer for M&B and their first in France.

Interim results: Space division revenues grew by 20%

Revenues jumped 23% to £27.2m, including 6% organic growth and an initial £3.6m from ANNOVA, which was consolidated from 1 January 2017. The Space division drove the organic growth, with revenues rising by 20% to £11.6m and contribution gaining 23% to £2.4m. The other three divisions all posted small revenues declines. Net debt shrank by £1.2m over the six months to £9.0m. The order book stood at £64m, up from £35m a year earlier, and c £69m at the start of the year. The order book position includes revenues from ANNOVA‘s BBC contract which are scheduled to run over another c 11 years.

H1 operating cash flow after taxes rose by 21% to £2.7m, aided by a £0.3m tax credit after a £0.3m payment in the prior period. After interest (£0.4m) and capex (£0.8m), free cash flow was £1.5m. We note that the group’s annual cash flow is highly sensitive to the timing of cash receipts in the December/January period.

The interim dividend was increased by 11% to 0.59p.

Exhibit 6: Half-by-Half Analysis

2016

2017e

2018e

2019e

(£'000s)

H1

H2

FY

H1

H2e

FYe

FYe

FYe

Space

9,601

10,273

19,874

11,561

11,187

22,748

22,381

22,983

ESD

8,598

8,054

16,652

7,901

7,745

15,646

16,027

16,457

Media & Broadcast

3,503

4,523

8,026

3,539

4,547

8,086

7,797

8,007

Xibis

359

513

872

402

598

1,000

1,028

1,055

Annova

 

 

 

3,610

3,790

7,400

8,200

8,815

Central

162

158

320

162

158

320

329

338

Total Revenue

22,223

23,521

45,744

27,175

28,025

55,200

55,762

57,655

Operating costs

(21,146)

(21,384)

(42,530)

(25,938)

(24,662)

(50,600)

(50,830)

(52,142)

Adjusted operating profit

1,077

2,137

3,214

1,237

3,363

4,600

4,932

5,513

Operating Margin

4.8%

9.1%

7.0%

4.6%

12.0%

8.3%

8.8%

9.6%

Associates

13

4

17

15

10

25

30

30

Net interest

(98)

(87)

(185)

(382)

(255)

(637)

(567)

(567)

Edison Profit Before Tax (norm)

992

2,054

3,046

870

3,118

3,988

4,395

4,976

Share-based payments

(19)

33

14

(14)

(26)

(40)

(45)

(50)

Exceptional items

0

(458)

(458)

(1,561)

0

(1,561)

0

0

Amortisation of acq'd intangibles

0

0

0

(991)

(991)

(1,982)

(1,982)

(1,982)

Profit before tax (FRS 3)

973

1,629

2,602

(1,696)

2,101

405

2,368

2,944

Contributions

Space

1,917

2,240

4,157

2,423

2,157

4,580

4,629

4,787

ESD

2,526

1,936

4,462

1,809

1,915

3,724

3,999

4,318

Media & Broadcast

959

1,553

2,512

728

1,775

2,503

2,598

2,750

Xibis

5

99

104

44

131

175

180

185

ANNOVA

283

1,937

2,220

2,501

2,733

Total

5,407

5,828

11,235

5,287

7,915

13,202

13,907

14,772

Central overheads

(4,336)

(4,112)

(8,448)

(5,610)

(4,568)

(10,178)

(8,990)

(9,279)

EBITA

1,071

1,716

2,787

(323)

3,347

3,024

4,917

5,493

Add back: Sh-based payments

19

(33)

(14)

14

26

40

45

50

Add back: Exceptional items

0

458

458

1,561

0

1,561

0

0

Add back: Associates

(13)

(4)

(17)

(15)

(10)

(25)

(30)

(30)

Adjusted operating profit

1,077

2,137

3,214

1,237

3,363

4,600

4,932

5,513

Contribution margins

Space

20.0

21.8

20.9

21.0

19.3

20.1

20.7

20.8

ESD

29.4

24.0

26.8

22.9

24.7

23.8

25.0

26.2

Media & Broadcast

27.4

34.3

31.3

20.6

39.0

31.0

33.3

34.3

Xibis

1.4

19.3

11.9

10.9

21.9

17.5

17.5

17.5

ANNOVA

7.8

51.1

30.0

30.5

31.0

Total

24.3

24.8

24.6

19.5

28.2

23.9

24.9

25.6

Source: SCISYS, Edison Investment Research

Exhibit 7: Professional fees

£000s

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

H117

Space

10,685

11,312

11,566

15,319

12,481

15,732

14,531

12,898

16293

8631

ESD

13,041

14,704

14,560

13,163

13,088

12,168

10,753

9,920

13284

6394

M&B

6,671

6,584

7,147

8,443

7,651

7,568

7,149

6,179

7541

3326

Xibis

21

805

460

368

ANNOVA

3610

Total Professional fees

30,397

32,600

33,273

36,925

33,220

35,468

32,454

29,802

37,578

22,329

As % total revenue

79.9%

78.1%

76.3%

87.3%

84.2%

83.3%

80.4%

82.5%

82.7%

82.2%

Other revenue

7,333

8,777

10,127

5,181

6,165

6,916

7,676

6,088

7,846

4684

Other external revenue

326

343

191

170

68

214

229

216

320

162

Total revenue

38,056

41,720

43,591

42,276

39,453

42,598

40,359

36,106

45,744

27,175

Source: SCISYS

Exhibit 8: Contribution by division

Contribution (£000s)

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017e

2018e

2019e

Space

2,932

1,877

1,348

3,635

3,007

3,974

3,980

3,283

4,157

4,580

4,629

4,787

Enterprise Solutions and Defence

1,823

3,912

4,255

2,529

3,522

3,972

3,203

1,745

4,462

3,724

3,999

4,318

Xibis

 

 

 

 

 

 

(13)

27

104

175

180

185

Media & Broadcast

1,635

1,809

2,734

3,259

2,980

2,395

2,481

2,011

2,512

2,503

2,598

2,750

ANNOVA

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2,220

2,501

2,733

Gross contribution

6,390

7,598

8,337

9,423

9,509

10,341

9,651

7,066

11,235

13,202

13,907

14,772

Central overheads (adjusted)*

(5,722)

(6,162)

(6,670)

(7,259)

(7,224)

(8,346)

(6,467)

(6,256)

(8,448)

(10,178)

(8,990)

(9,279)

Share-based payments

161

67

128

113

49

35

42

11

(14)

40

45

50

Associates

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

(3)

(17)

(25)

(30)

(30)

Exceptional items

28

173

341

88

328

1,191

135

0

458

1,561

0

0

Adjusted operating profit (loss)**

857

1,676

2,136

2,365

2,662

3,221

3,361

818

3,214

4,600

4,932

5,513

Contribution margins

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017f

2018f

2019f

Space

17.5%

11.2%

8.6%

22.9%

18.7%

20.1%

21.4%

20.0%

20.9%

20.1%

20.7%

20.8%

Enterprise Solutions and Defence

12.8%

23.3%

25.6%

16.1%

23.5%

27.5%

23.8%

14.3%

26.8%

25.4%

25.0%

26.2%

Xibis

-44.8%

3.0%

11.9%

17.5%

17.5%

17.5%

Media & Broadcast

24.2%

22.9%

24.7%

31.0%

35.5%

29.4%

30.8%

31.6%

31.3%

33.0%

33.3%

34.3%

ANNOVA

32.5%

33.0%

33.5%

Total

16.8%

18.2%

19.1%

22.3%

24.1%

24.3%

23.9%

19.6%

24.6%

25.0%

25.3%

26.0%

Source: SCISYS, Edison Investment Research. Note: *Central overheads have been adjusted for exceptional items and share-based payments. **Includes associates.

The group operates a currency hedging programme, whereby it hedges its euro contribution exposure over the rolling following18 months. Both realised and unrealised gains and losses are reflected in adjusted operating profit. Hence, if excluded, the FY16 operating margin was 200bp higher at 9.0%. In its FY17 pre-close trading update, SCISYS said it does not anticipate any major impact from exchange-rate movements in 2018.

Exhibit 9: Currency hedging

2014

2015

2016

Realised gains/(losses)

 

300

(600)

Unrealised gains/(losses)

100

(100)

(300)

Total

100

200

(900)

Source: SCISYS

Forecasts: Revenues edged up, otherwise maintained

Trading updates were buoyant through FY17 and management says that momentum has continued in FY18. We have edged up our revenue forecasts, due to higher pass-through revenues in FY17, and the strong Space division. However, we anticipate that c £2m of pass-through revenues will disappear from FY18, due to the implementation of IFRS 15. We have reduced our end-FY17 net debt forecast by £0.6m, in line with the update, with subsequent years falling accordingly. Otherwise, our forecasts remain unchanged. Our forecasts are underpinned by the record orderbook, and we believe there is potential for upgrades as the year progresses. With the integration of ANNOVA progressing well and in the advanced stages we believe there is increasing potential for acquisitions. Management has said it is looking for appropriate acquisitions “where there is a good market, product and cultural fit”.

Exhibit 10: Forecast changes

Revenue (£m)

Adjusted operating profit (£m)

EPS (p)

Old

New

Change (%)

Old

New

Change (%)

Old

New

Change (%)

2017e

53.4

55.2

3

4.6

4.6

0

11.2

11.2

0

2018e

55.1

55.8

1

4.9

4.9

0

11.8

11.8

0

2019e

57.0

57.7

1

5.5

5.5

0

13.1

13.1

0

Source: Edison Investment Research

Our key forecast assumptions are as follows:

Revenues: we forecast FY17 revenues to rise by 20.7% to £55.2m, including c 4.5% organic growth and £7.4m from ANNOVA. We forecast FY18 revenues to rise by 1% to £55.8m. In our view, the current growth in Space is unsustainable and we forecast a £2m hit from IFRS 15 in FY18.

Operating costs/margins: roughly 60% of costs are staff costs, including c £4m of annual research and development, which is largely customer-financed, although there is some direct R&D in Media & Broadcast relating to dira!, as well as a small amount in the mobile apps business. We assume operating costs rise by 19.0% to £50.6m in FY17 and edge higher to £50.8m in FY18. Consequently, our operating margin forecasts are at 8.3% and 8.8% in FY17 and FY18.

Investment: we continue to forecast a capex/sales ratio of 2.0%, to support management’s plans to grow the business. We forecast working capital to shrink by £2.2m in FY17, after the £3.4m expansion in FY16, and for outflows of 0.5% of sales thereafter.

Acquisition earnouts: we continue to forecast earnouts for ANNOVA of £2.8m in FY18 and £3.9m in FY19.

Tax: we have maintained our assumptions of an 18% charge in FY17 and 20% thereafter. SCISYS claims R&D tax credits of c £0.4-0.5m a year, which offsets UK taxable profits, while it pays c 30% on German profits. Further, it has c £4-5m of brought-forward UK tax losses.

Exhibit 11: Forecasts

 Revenues (£000s)

2015

2016

2017e

2018e

2019e

Space

16,432

19,874

22,748

22,381

22,983

Enterprise Solutions and Defence

12,202

16,652

15,646

16,027

16,457

Xibis

901

872

1,000

1,028

1,055

Media & Broadcast

6,355

8,026

8,086

7,797

8,007

ANNOVA Systems

 

 

7,400

8,200

8,815

Central

216

320

320

329

338

Group revenue

36,106

45,744

55,200

55,762

57,655

Growth (%)

(10.5)

26.7

20.7

1.0

3.4

Administrative expenses

(35,288)

(42,530)

(50,600)

(50,830)

(52,142)

Adjusted operating profit

818

3,214

4,600

4,932

5,513

Operating margin (%)

2.3

7.0

8.3

8.8

9.6

Growth (%)

(75.7)

292.9

43.1

7.2

11.8

Associates

3

17

25

30

30

Net interest

(196)

(185)

(637)

(567)

(567)

Profit before tax norm

625

3,046

3,988

4,400

4,981

Amortisation of acquired intangibles

0

0

(1,982)

(1,982)

(1,982)

Share based payments

(11)

14

(40)

(45)

(50)

Exceptional items (net of tax)

0

(458)

(1,561)

0

0

Profit before tax (FRS 3)

614

2,602

405

2,368

2,944

Tax charge

(241)

(380)

(706)

(864)

(979)

Profit after tax

373

2,222

(301)

1,504

1,965

Adjusted EPS (p)

1.3

9.2

11.2

11.8

13.1

P/E - Adjusted EPS

98.3

14.2

11.6

11.0

9.9

Source: SCISYS, Edison Investment Research

Sensitivities: Public sector and fixed-price projects

We highlight the following sensitivities:

Economic downturn: future economic downturns affecting the eurozone and the UK economies may cause the group’s customers to cancel, postpone or reduce spending on existing or future ICT projects.

Public sector exposure: the UK government’s commitment to reduce public sector spending has put pressure on some of the group’s customers. Following the government’s spending review in 2010, Defra, which includes the Environment Agency (one of SCISYS’s main customers), had its budget cut by 30%. Following the Brexit vote and subsequent changes in the UK government, the focus on cost-cutting in the public sector has abated. However, this is balanced by the uncertain economic outlook in Britain, while the European outlook is improving.

Project risks: there is a risk of cost overruns on fixed-price projects, as we saw in 2015, but SCISYS has put in place rigorous risk monitoring and control procedures and, following the FY15 problem project, it has tightened the criteria for which bids need the board’s sign-off.

Subcontractors and suppliers: the failure of a subcontractor to perform to an appropriate standard or a supplier to deliver products could result in delays to a project and adversely affect

the group’s capability to meet contractual requirements and damage its reputation.

Technology risks: products are at risk from being bettered by competitors.

Human resources. if the group loses the services of key personnel or is unable to attract and retain employees with the right capabilities and experience, it would likely have an adverse effect on its ability to implement its business plans and impact on delivering the strategy.

Customer exposure: the group has significant exposure to the public sector (we estimate 85% including ESA and other non-UK organisations). The top three customers represent c 20% of revenues. The bulk of group revenues are conducted in the EU including the UK. The group has no bad debtors and 55% of revenues are outside the UK. Further, SCISYS is seeking to broaden its offering to the private sector.

Brexit: the primary concern is the EU-funded Galileo Global Positioning System, which generated €6m of revenues for SCISYS in 2016, and SCISYS continues to have a substantial involvement. However, we understand that the UK government remains committed to Galileo. Further, there is no indication that the UK would change its position with regard to the ESA. Nevertheless, SCISYS has trading subsidiaries in both Germany and the UK that would allow local contracts to be entered into in each respective country.

Currency: a rise in £ against the € will hurt Space (some costs are sterling but revenues are in euros) and M&B (most revenues and costs are in euros, albeit the BBC contract has revenues in sterling and some costs in euros). We note that the group partially hedges its euro-denominated cash flows.

Acquisitions: there are implementation risks in the acquisition strategy.

Valuation: Space & broadcasting developments boost the growth story

SCISYS has developed a strong niche as an expert player in highly specialised IT markets. As these markets continue to gain in complexity, SCISYS should, in our view, benefit from an improving negotiating position. Several factors should help the group continue to expand margins, including the reuse of bespoke software platforms, better project management and a continuing de-emphasis on third-party software and hardware resales. Further, albeit for the impact of the problem project of FY15, the management has built an excellent track record in driving margins higher and has an objective to return margins to 8% within five years. The peer group’s mid-cycle margins have traditionally been in the 8-10%+ range, while its larger IT services competitors typically trade on around 16x year two earnings with operating margins at around 12%.

We believe there are several factors that will contribute to our current assumption of operating margin recovery to 9.6% by FY19, and potentially towards double digits in the longer term. This includes the development of specialist software platforms that can be sold across multiple customers, a focus on ‘value pricing’ (charging for core software, pricing based on customer ROI), smarter bidding and more effective management of the workforce.

We highlight the following points on the group’s valuation:

Traditional valuation measures: in traditional P/E valuation terms, the stock trades on 11.4x our forecasts in FY17, falling to 10.8x in FY18 and to 9.7x in FY19.

Peer comparison: comparison with fellow IT services businesses is difficult, given the different business mixes. However, the stock trades at a significant discount to the average of its small IT services peers in Exhibit 12 (noting considerable dispersion), as well as its North American and Europe-based large caps.

Exhibit 12: Peer analysis

Share price

Market cap

Market cap

EV/sales (x)

Operating margins

EV/EBITDA (x)

PE (x)

Local curr

Local curr (m)

£m

Year 1

Year 2

Year 1

Year 2

Year 1

Year 2

Year 1

Year 2

SCISYS

130.00

38

38

0.86

0.85

8.3%

8.8%

8.4

7.9

11.6

11.0

1) Small IT services companies / VARs with a significant own software strategy (local currency m's)

D4T4 Solutions

130.00

50

50

2.0

1.8

20.3%

20.9%

9.3

8.2

12.9

11.3

First Derivatives

4240.00

1,087

1087

6.1

5.4

14.5%

14.4%

34.2

30.3

63.1

56.2

Learning Technologies

80.10

460

460

9.0

8.1

26.1%

27.0%

30.4

28.1

40.1

38.1

SNP Schneider-Neureither

34.05

186

164

1.6

1.3

0.0%

4.9%

55.6

16.1

N/A

38.5

TXT e-solutions

9.88

129

113

3.6

3.3

8.9%

8.6%

39.5

33.5

3.0

49.4

Medians

 

3.6

3.3

14.5%

14.4%

34.2

28.1

26.5

38.5

2) Large cap IT services companies (local currency m's)

Accenture

161.67

104,052

76973

2.6

2.5

15.0%

15.2%

15.4

14.3

24.3

22.3

Atos

126.50

13,337

11767

1.1

1.0

9.2%

9.6%

8.4

7.8

15.5

14.0

Cap Gemini

105.70

17,809

15713

1.5

1.5

11.0%

11.6%

11.4

10.6

17.9

16.7

CGI group

68.35

19,691

11689

1.9

1.8

14.7%

15.3%

10.3

9.8

16.9

15.7

HP Enterprise

16.57

26,403

19532

1.1

1.1

9.1%

9.3%

6.1

6.0

14.0

13.0

Medians

 

1.5

1.5

11.0%

11.6%

10.3

9.8

16.9

15.7

3) Media & Broadcast competitors (local currency m's)

Avid Technology

5.52

227

168

0.90

0.89

8.9%

8.0%

7.4

8.1

11.4

21.2

Dalet

10.80

39

34

0.73

0.70

4.1%

5.8%

6.3

N/A

36.0

21.6

Medians

 

0.82

0.80

6.5%

6.9%

6.8

8.1

23.7

21.4

Source: Edison Investment Research, Bloomberg. Note: Prices as at 25 January 2018.

Cash generation: on our estimates, the group generated free cash flow of c £16m over the nine years to end-2017. Based on our forecasts, the FCF yields for FY17-19 are c 15%, c 9% and c 10% respectively. We note the strong balance sheet (£7.2m bank deposits and £16.2m debts as at 30 June 2017, unutilised working capital facilities of £4.7m, while the Chippenham freehold and other smaller properties provide extra flexibility).

Exhibit 13: Cash flow

£000’s

FY09

FY10

FY11

FY12

FY13

FY14

FY15

FY16

H117

H217

FY17e

FY18e

FY19e

Adjusted operating profit

1,676

2,136

2,365

2,662

3,221

3,361

818

3,214

1,237

3,363

4,600

4,932

5,513

Depreciation

662

626

769

919

958

795

730

781

524

525

1,049

1,059

1,067

EBITDA

2,338

2,762

3,134

3,581

4,179

4,156

1,548

3,995

1,761

3,888

5,649

5,992

6,580

Working capital

446

1,563

(302)

1,902

(4,367)

753

22

(3,413)

640

1,596

2,236

(279)

(288)

Deferred consideration

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

3,318

0

0

0

0

0

Exceptional items/misc

(170)

(341)

(88)

(373)

(1,191)

(135)

0

(458)

0

(125)

(125)

0

0

Operating cash flow

2,614

3,984

2,744

5,110

(1,379)

4,774

1,570

3,442

2,401

5,359

7,760

5,712

6,292

Net interest

(69)

(91)

(158)

(214)

(217)

(177)

(196)

(185)

(382)

(255)

(637)

(567)

(567)

Tax paid

(355)

(356)

(951)

(157)

(1,325)

100

(583)

(1,250)

296

(496)

(200)

(638)

(791)

Purchase of tangible assets

(681)

(663)

(987)

(1,116)

(666)

(618)

(619)

(663)

(788)

(316)

(1,104)

(1,115)

(1,153)

Free cash flow

1,509

2,874

648

3,623

(3,587)

4,079

172

1,344

1,527

4,292

5,819

3,392

3,780

Source: SCISYS, Edison Investment Research. Note: FY11 is before the purchase of the Chippenham HQ

Discounted cash flow valuation: based on our conservative forecasts (which include 3.0% compound annual revenue growth over the next 10 years, a 10.7% long-term margin target and 2% terminal growth rate) and a weighted average cost of capital (WACC) of 10%, our DCF model values the shares at 160p, or 23% above the current share price. Discounting back from our forecasts, the market is attributing a break-even WACC of 11.5% to the stock. A 1% cut in the WACC to 9% would lift the valuation to 189p, while a 1% rise to an 11% WACC would reduce the valuation to 138p.

Exhibit 14: Financial summary

£'000s

2014

2015

2016

2017e

2018e

2019e

Year end 31 December

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

PROFIT & LOSS

Revenue

 

 

40,359

36,106

45,744

55,200

55,762

57,655

Cost of Sales

0

0

0

0

0

0

Gross Profit

40,359

36,106

45,744

55,200

55,762

57,655

EBITDA

 

 

4,156

1,548

3,995

5,649

5,992

6,580

Adjusted operating profit

 

 

3,361

818

3,214

4,600

4,932

5,513

Amort'n of acq'd intangibles

0

0

0

(1,982)

(1,982)

(1,982)

Exceptionals

(135)

0

(458)

(1,561)

0

0

Share based payments

(42)

(11)

14

(40)

(45)

(50)

Operating Profit

3,184

807

2,770

1,017

2,905

3,481

Net Interest

(177)

(196)

(185)

(637)

(567)

(567)

Associates

0

3

17

25

30

30

Profit Before Tax (norm)

 

 

3,184

625

3,046

3,988

4,395

4,976

Profit Before Tax (FRS 3)

 

 

3,007

614

2,602

405

2,368

2,944

Tax

(766)

(241)

(380)

(706)

(864)

(979)

Profit After Tax (norm)

2,394

384

2,666

3,282

3,531

3,997

Profit After Tax (FRS 3)

2,241

373

2,222

(301)

1,504

1,965

Average Number of Shares Outstanding (m)

29.0

29.0

29.0

29.3

29.9

30.5

EPS - normalised (p)

 

 

8.2

1.3

9.2

11.2

11.8

13.1

EPS - FRS 3 (p)

 

 

7.7

1.3

7.6

(1.0)

5.0

6.4

Dividend per share (p)

1.61

1.78

1.96

2.16

2.38

2.62

Gross Margin (%)

100.0

100.0

100.0

100.0

100.0

100.0

EBITDA Margin (%)

10.3

4.3

8.7

10.2

10.7

11.4

Operating Margin (%)

8.3

2.3

7.0

8.3

8.8

9.6

BALANCE SHEET

Fixed Assets

 

 

17,155

16,553

31,955

30,028

28,102

26,206

Intangible Assets

8,233

7,831

22,441

20,459

18,477

16,495

Tangible Assets

8,899

8,635

9,057

9,112

9,168

9,254

Deferred tax asset & associates

23

87

457

457

457

457

Current Assets

 

 

18,886

17,839

27,895

32,254

33,044

33,061

Stocks

325

211

261

315

318

329

Debtors

12,334

12,299

19,621

21,146

21,360

22,084

Cash

5,798

4,352

6,915

9,695

10,267

9,549

Current Liabilities

 

 

(10,561)

(12,003)

(18,763)

(22,367)

(22,058)

(22,262)

Creditors

(9,686)

(8,699)

(14,959)

(18,813)

(18,754)

(19,208)

Short term borrowings

(875)

(3,304)

(3,804)

(3,554)

(3,304)

(3,054)

Long Term Liabilities

 

 

(5,023)

(2,333)

(18,374)

(16,522)

(15,146)

(14,935)

Long term borrowings

(4,595)

(2,007)

(13,355)

(12,042)

(12,929)

(13,318)

Other long term liabilities

(428)

(326)

(5,019)

(4,480)

(2,217)

(1,617)

Net Assets

 

 

20,457

20,056

22,713

23,393

23,942

22,070

CASH FLOW

Operating Cash Flow

 

 

4,774

1,570

3,442

7,760

5,712

6,292

Net Interest

(177)

(196)

(185)

(637)

(567)

(567)

Tax

100

(583)

(1,250)

(200)

(638)

(791)

Capex

(618)

(619)

(663)

(1,104)

(1,115)

(1,153)

Acquisitions/disposals

(358)

(889)

(7,521)

(600)

(2,800)

(3,900)

Financing

(61)

(14)

15

(287)

()

0

Dividends

(435)

(340)

(671)

(589)

(656)

(737)

Net Cash Flow

3,225

(1,071)

(6,833)

4,343

(64)

(857)

Opening net debt/(cash)

 

 

2,672

(328)

959

10,244

5,901

5,965

Other

(225)

(216)

(2,452)

0

(0)

(0)

Closing net debt/(cash)

 

 

(328)

959

10,244

5,901

5,965

6,822

Source: SCISYS, Edison Investment Research

Contact details

Revenue by geography

Methuen Park
Chippenham, Wiltshire,
SN14 0GB
UK
01249 466 466
www.scisys.co.uk

Contact details

Methuen Park
Chippenham, Wiltshire,
SN14 0GB
UK
01249 466 466
www.scisys.co.uk

Revenue by geography

Management team

Chief executive officer: Klaus Heidrich

Finance director: Chris Cheetham

Klaus joined the executive board in 2009, became COO in January 2012 and CEO in January 2014. He joined VCS (now SCISYS Deutschland) in 1989 as a sales engineer. From 1992 he was responsible for marketing & sales of VCS and developed VCS media activities. He left VCS for Management Data in Hamburg, but returned to VCS a year later to take responsibility for strategic business development. From 2005 until January 2012 he was a director of the Media Broadcasting Solutions business unit.

Chris qualified as a chartered accountant with Ernst & Young in 1990 and worked in the corporate finance department until 1996. He has extensive experience gained from working as a financial director and company secretary in the software industry for the last nine years. He was appointed financial director on 1 January 2007.

Non-executive chairman: Mike Love

Non-executive deputy chairman: David Jones

Mike was CEO of SCISYS (formerly CODASciSys) from 1986 (when he led the management buy-in of the business) until 2003, when he became non-executive chairman. He stepped back in as executive chairman in late 2007 and returned to a non-executive role in January 2012. Mike entered the software industry in 1976 with Logica, moved to the European Space Agency in the late 1970s and joined SCISYS in 1981.

David joined the board as a non-executive director in 2002 and took an executive role in 2007 when he became operations director for the government division. He was promoted to COO in January 2010, CEO in January 2012 and deputy chairman in January 2014. His earlier career includes some 20 years at Admiral and Allied Worldwide, and he was a founding member of the DRA Software Engineering Centre Advisory Board.

Management team

Chief executive officer: Klaus Heidrich

Klaus joined the executive board in 2009, became COO in January 2012 and CEO in January 2014. He joined VCS (now SCISYS Deutschland) in 1989 as a sales engineer. From 1992 he was responsible for marketing & sales of VCS and developed VCS media activities. He left VCS for Management Data in Hamburg, but returned to VCS a year later to take responsibility for strategic business development. From 2005 until January 2012 he was a director of the Media Broadcasting Solutions business unit.

Finance director: Chris Cheetham

Chris qualified as a chartered accountant with Ernst & Young in 1990 and worked in the corporate finance department until 1996. He has extensive experience gained from working as a financial director and company secretary in the software industry for the last nine years. He was appointed financial director on 1 January 2007.

Non-executive chairman: Mike Love

Mike was CEO of SCISYS (formerly CODASciSys) from 1986 (when he led the management buy-in of the business) until 2003, when he became non-executive chairman. He stepped back in as executive chairman in late 2007 and returned to a non-executive role in January 2012. Mike entered the software industry in 1976 with Logica, moved to the European Space Agency in the late 1970s and joined SCISYS in 1981.

Non-executive deputy chairman: David Jones

David joined the board as a non-executive director in 2002 and took an executive role in 2007 when he became operations director for the government division. He was promoted to COO in January 2010, CEO in January 2012 and deputy chairman in January 2014. His earlier career includes some 20 years at Admiral and Allied Worldwide, and he was a founding member of the DRA Software Engineering Centre Advisory Board.

Principal shareholders (as at 7 September 2017)

(%)

Dr Mike Love

14.83

Dr Klaus-Gunter Meng

9.75

Herald Investment Management

8.43

Hargreaves Landsdown

7.07

Charles Stanley

5.60

Downing LLP

5.42

PK Taylor

4.13

Alto Invest AS

3.72

Rowan Dartington & Co

3.56

Ruffer

3.54

RC Brown Investment Management

3.15

Trustees of the SCISYS PLC Share Incentive Plan

3.07

Companies named in this report

D4T4 (D4T4), First Derivatives (FDP), Learning Technologies (LTG), SNP Schneider-Neureither (SHF), TXT e-solutions (TXT), Accenture (ACN), Atos (ATO), Cap Gemini (CAP), CGI Group (GIB.A), HP Enterprise (HPE), Avid Technology (AVID), Dalet (DLT).

Edison is an investment research and advisory company, with offices in North America, Europe, the Middle East and AsiaPac. The heart of Edison is our world-renowned equity research platform and deep multi-sector expertise. At Edison Investment Research, our research is widely read by international investors, advisers and stakeholders. Edison Advisors leverages our core research platform to provide differentiated services including investor relations and strategic consulting. Edison is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Edison Investment Research (NZ) Limited (Edison NZ) is the New Zealand subsidiary of Edison. Edison NZ is registered on the New Zealand Financial Service Providers Register (FSP number 247505) and is registered to provide wholesale and/or generic financial adviser services only. Edison Investment Research Inc (Edison US) is the US subsidiary of Edison and is regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Edison Investment Research Pty Limited (Edison Aus) [46085869] is the Australian subsidiary of Edison. Edison Germany is a branch entity of Edison Investment Research Limited [4794244]. www.edisongroup.com

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Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

295 Madison Avenue, 18th Floor

10017, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 8249 8342

Level 12, Office 1205

95 Pitt Street, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Edison is an investment research and advisory company, with offices in North America, Europe, the Middle East and AsiaPac. The heart of Edison is our world-renowned equity research platform and deep multi-sector expertise. At Edison Investment Research, our research is widely read by international investors, advisers and stakeholders. Edison Advisors leverages our core research platform to provide differentiated services including investor relations and strategic consulting. Edison is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Edison Investment Research (NZ) Limited (Edison NZ) is the New Zealand subsidiary of Edison. Edison NZ is registered on the New Zealand Financial Service Providers Register (FSP number 247505) and is registered to provide wholesale and/or generic financial adviser services only. Edison Investment Research Inc (Edison US) is the US subsidiary of Edison and is regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Edison Investment Research Pty Limited (Edison Aus) [46085869] is the Australian subsidiary of Edison. Edison Germany is a branch entity of Edison Investment Research Limited [4794244]. www.edisongroup.com

DISCLAIMER
Copyright 2018 Edison Investment Research Limited. All rights reserved. This report has been commissioned by SCISYS and prepared and issued by Edison for publication globally. All information used in the publication of this report has been compiled from publicly available sources that are believed to be reliable, however we do not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of this report. Opinions contained in this report represent those of the research department of Edison at the time of publication. The securities described in the Investment Research may not be eligible for sale in all jurisdictions or to certain categories of investors. This research is issued in Australia by Edison Investment Research Pty Ltd (Corporate Authorised Representative (1252501) of Myonlineadvisers Pty Ltd (AFSL: 427484)) and any access to it, is intended only for "wholesale clients" within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001 of Australia. The Investment Research is distributed in the United States by Edison US to major US institutional investors only. Edison US is registered as an investment adviser with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Edison US relies upon the "publishers' exclusion" from the definition of investment adviser under Section 202(a)(11) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and corresponding state securities laws. As such, Edison does not offer or provide personalised advice. We publish information about companies in which we believe our readers may be interested and this information reflects our sincere opinions. The information that we provide or that is derived from our website is not intended to be, and should not be construed in any manner whatsoever as, personalised advice. Also, our website and the information provided by us should not be construed by any subscriber or prospective subscriber as Edison’s solicitation to effect, or attempt to effect, any transaction in a security. The research in this document is intended for New Zealand resident professional financial advisers or brokers (for use in their roles as financial advisers or brokers) and habitual investors who are “wholesale clients” for the purpose of the Financial Advisers Act 2008 (FAA) (as described in sections 5(c) (1)(a), (b) and (c) of the FAA). This is not a solicitation or inducement to buy, sell, subscribe, or underwrite any securities mentioned or in the topic of this document. This document is provided for information purposes only and should not be construed as an offer or solicitation for investment in any securities mentioned or in the topic of this document. A marketing communication under FCA Rules, this document has not been prepared in accordance with the legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and is not subject to any prohibition on dealing ahead of the dissemination of investment research.
Edison has a restrictive policy relating to personal dealing. Edison Group does not conduct any investment business and, accordingly, does not itself hold any positions in the securities mentioned in this report. However, the respective directors, officers, employees and contractors of Edison may have a position in any or related securities mentioned in this report. Edison or its affiliates may perform services or solicit business from any of the companies mentioned in this report. The value of securities mentioned in this report can fall as well as rise and are subject to large and sudden swings. In addition it may be difficult or not possible to buy, sell or obtain accurate information about the value of securities mentioned in this report. Past performance is not necessarily a guide to future performance. Forward-looking information or statements in this report contain information that is based on assumptions, forecasts of future results, estimates of amounts not yet determinable, and therefore involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of their subject matter to be materially different from current expectations. For the purpose of the FAA, the content of this report is of a general nature, is intended as a source of general information only and is not intended to constitute a recommendation or opinion in relation to acquiring or disposing (including refraining from acquiring or disposing) of securities. The distribution of this document is not a “personalised service” and, to the extent that it contains any financial advice, is intended only as a “class service” provided by Edison within the meaning of the FAA (ie without taking into account the particular financial situation or goals of any person). As such, it should not be relied upon in making an investment decision. To the maximum extent permitted by law, Edison, its affiliates and contractors, and their respective directors, officers and employees will not be liable for any loss or damage arising as a result of reliance being placed on any of the information contained in this report and do not guarantee the returns on investments in the products discussed in this publication. FTSE International Limited (“FTSE”) © FTSE 2018. “FTSE®” is a trade mark of the London Stock Exchange Group companies and is used by FTSE International Limited under license. All rights in the FTSE indices and/or FTSE ratings vest in FTSE and/or its licensors. Neither FTSE nor its licensors accept any liability for any errors or omissions in the FTSE indices and/or FTSE ratings or underlying data. No further distribution of FTSE Data is permitted without FTSE’s express written consent.

Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

295 Madison Avenue, 18th Floor

10017, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 8249 8342

Level 12, Office 1205

95 Pitt Street, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

295 Madison Avenue, 18th Floor

10017, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 8249 8342

Level 12, Office 1205

95 Pitt Street, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

StatPro Group — StatPro Revolution ARR up 13% organically

StatPro has released an in-line trading update for FY17. Annualised recurring revenue (ARR) for StatPro Revolution grew by 13% organically. Statutory revenues, EBITDA and cash were broadly in line with our forecasts and we are maintaining our FY18 forecasts. Given the busy M&A backdrop, which saw competitor BISAM sold for 7.3x sales earlier in the year, and the significant valuation disparity between StatPro and its US-listed financial software peers, we continue to see strong upside potential in the shares.

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