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Earnings Call: Q1 2024

Apr 25, 2024

Hertta Närvänen
Communications Lead, Qt Group

Hello and welcome to Qt Group's first quarter 2024 results presentation. My name is Hertta Närvänen, I'm the Communications Lead at Qt Group, and today with me here are our CEO Juha Varelius and our CFO Jouni Lintunen to share the results. After the presentation we have time for questions, first starting from the room and if time permits then from the conference line. Without any further ado, Juha, please go ahead.

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to our Q1 results. As usual, we go through our agenda: first the business highlights, then Jouni will go through the financials, and then I'll talk about the guidance and outlook for 2024, and then we go into questions. So if we look at the first quarter highlights, it was a slow quarter. We weren't not very happy about it. Net sales grew 13%, reached EUR 45 million, and it is 14% on comparable currencies. Our EBIT margin was at 24%, EUR 11 million, which is a 40.5% increase. So this continues to be a very profitable business, although we would like to see a bit higher top line growth. Well, the profitability is where we were thinking it to be. We do have the comparable, like we said always, that the quarters are not brothers to each other.

So, we do have these big deals, and this quarter we had a comparable quarter was pretty good and therefore it was a tough quarter to compare, but still we were expecting actually a bit better quarter for ourselves. So it was a tough comparison. And where we were behind, or if I looked at how the business went, we did budget the consultancy revenue pretty much flat this year and that's going according to plan. And that's always been a business that we don't do it to support our customers, especially our new customers. We're not looking to grow in that particular business. It usually grows slowly as the business grows. Now we saw last year that as the market environment got tougher, our customers were looking where to save and the consultancy was the obvious that they tried to do a bit more by themselves and whatnot.

The consultancy went according to our plans. Our development license revenue actually grew very healthy. So we had, if we have our guidance on 20%-30%, our license revenue was growing on the top end of that guidance. So the license revenue was doing very well. Where we were behind on the first quarter was on distribution licenses. So that was the soft bit that actually made us to be a bit lower than we were expecting. The new customer acquisition has gone well and the renewals, which I've been highlighting to you, that this year we're going to be seeing more and more the one or three-year subscriptions coming first time into renewals. We've said that we don't think that there's going to be a big difference on that do people renew.

We do believe that people will renew their licenses because the projects are ongoing. But there is that, are they going to be renewing three-year licenses into three-year licenses and so on? Or instead of three-year licenses to one-year licenses? Well, that conversion rate is pretty much bang on what we've been expecting. So they are renewing and they are renewing on the rate that we have been expecting. And mainly that renewal goes into that they renew what was the old license. So we haven't seen a change over there. So now we are much more confident that if we were a bit reluctant, though we were hesitant to say how that looks like, I think that the renewal business will go pretty much bang on the budget that we've been thinking.

It seems that the developer license sales is going according to the plans and it's growing nicely. So on the distribution license revenue was the softness. And if I look at the regions, APAC is performing well and the U.S. is performing well. So mainly the slowness we had this quarter was in Europe. And so that's in a nutshell if we look where we are. I'm going to talk about the Q2 and the outlook after Jouni's presentation. Personnel 806 on March 31st, increase of 31 employees. We are continuing hiring new people as planned. So we haven't changed our growth plans anywhere. If we look into the future, I think that percentage-wise we've always hired on sales and we've hired on R&D. Now if we look at our businesses, I think that percentage-wise the increase is going to be the biggest on our quality assurance business.

That's what we are ramping up as we speak. If we look at the Q1 performance on quality assurance, it went pretty much like we were thinking. We see that the Froglogic Squish Coco is going forward fine and Axivion, well, it's a bit different type of a business. The deal on Squish, it's like selling licenses on a fairly quick fashion. Actually even quicker fashion than on Qt. Whereas on Axivion the sales process is a bit longer. There is proof of concept and whatnot. So there is more fluctuation. What I'm trying to say is that there is more fluctuation on Axivion deals quarter on quarter. So it's not so steady. Whereas Squish kind of grows very steady line and Axivion grows like a bit of a bumpy curve. If that made any sense.

Okay, with that I'm going to let Jouni to talk about financials and then we talk about well, I'm going to talk a bit more about these different revenue groups and how do we see them going forward this year. Please.

Jouni Lintunen
CFO, Qt Group

Thank you, Juha. Welcome from my behalf as well to the Q1 earnings presentation. I will talk through the P&L side and some words about the balance sheet before Juha continues. Juha touched pretty well about the net sales growth already. We grew by 13% reported and 14% in comparable currencies. And there was a negative, slight negative impact from FX, U.S. namely by EUR 0.4 million. The growth, as stated, did come from the licenses and consulting, which grew by 17%. And this contains as well the consulting and distribution license revenues. Meaning that the developer license bucket was growing nicely. Our maintenance revenue is going down as expected now in the first half year and then it will start gaining again in the second half year when the subscription or the old maintenance tails have been eaten. We will keep on seeing strong quarterly fluctuation.

It's because of the timing of the development license deals, timing of the distribution license deals. Then also we expect to see the FX impact going forward as well. If the exchange rate remains the current level, it's kind of a limited impact for this year. But no forecasts in that regard though. P&L, we are investing as per growth strategy. We are increasing our headcount in growth areas, sales, R&D, for example, QA specifically. And our headcount went up by 100 employees during the last 12 months or 14%. And that was a bit kind of tail end quarter heavy in that way. So towards the end of the quarter the headcount increase got stronger. This explains the personnel expense growth by 8% from EUR 22.6 million- EUR 24.4 million.

Our materials and services spend was in slight decline and that's the item that we use for adjusting the resourcing for our consulting projects. There's no change in depreciation, which is limited to EUR 800,000 per quarter. The other operating expenses were slightly up 6% to EUR 8 million. I guess one sign of the scalability here is that we grew our expenses and headcount cost by roughly EUR 2 million and revenues by EUR 5 million. That lands nicely to the EBITDA margin, which went up close to five points from 18.5%- 24.3% EBITDA. In absolute figures EUR 11.0 million. No change in amortization. There are no new acquisitions that we accomplished in Q1. This leads to EBIT of EUR 9 million or 20%. Due to a slight kind of USD higher value, the financial items were positive EUR 500,000 , out of which roughly half realized and half unrealized gains.

The profit before taxes lands to 9.4%. Out of which then income tax is EUR 1.8 million or roughly 19% effective tax rate, which is in the ballpark where it should be. We are reporting EUR 7.6 million net profit or 16.9% and this leads to EPS of EUR 0.30. In balance sheet side there are only minor movements. First, I mean not from balance sheet, but our operating cash flow was pretty good, EUR 18 million. Coming from the incoming payments from end Q4 deals. Ending cash balance was about EUR 1 million higher than where we reported December 2023. Despite the fact that we repaid the loan of EUR 16 million early in the quarter. Accounts receivable down by EUR 10 million and a slight reduction in the contract assets. There's a slight shift as well from long-term non-current bucket to short-term one during the first quarter.

In equity and liabilities side, the biggest change there is the repayment of a loan, EUR 16 million. And then some long-term liabilities move into short-term relating to the Axivion earnout accruals specifically. But not much else of significant changes in these numbers. Now it's time to give back to Juha for him to talk through the outlook and guidance for this year.

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Okay. So well, long-term, long-term I think that if we look this year well, like I said, we've budgeted the consultancy to be pretty much flat and that's what it might grow a bit faster. We've been gaining some new customers that they might need a bit more help than we've anticipated in the beginning. But that's roughly where it is. And I think that this market environment, U.S. economy is doing well. And on APAC we're seeing a lot of activity.

I think in Europe we're seeing, well, we do see activity, but we do see that our customers are cautious, might be the right word. Not hesitant, but cautious. And very cautious on cost side as well. Like said many times before, we don't see on developer license sales, we do see that all our customers, they do have their projects, they do have their plans. They're going to go according to those plans. So we don't think that the license sales, we see pretty much the steady, healthy growth we've been seeing in the past years and that's going to continue. We don't see any bumps on that. If we look on the distribution license revenue, we think that, well, in Europe we think that it's going to start picking up. There's been some cautiousness over there and slowness.

If we look in U.S. and in Europe in U.S. and in APAC, I think they're going to continue their good performance over there. That's the line item that I think we have the least visibility in some sense because it comes from many various sources and whatnot. But just yesterday I was speaking with our sales guys in Europe and some of the sales guys in Europe and they say that they think that the environment is now more optimistic than it was on Q1. So they see that it's probably going into more positive direction. If I look at the QA business, I think Squish, Coco, they're going to continue pretty much on a growth path they've been.

Like I said on Axivion, I think that, well, it's still such a small business and the deal making is a bit different in a way that each deal is negotiated. It takes a bit longer time like a Qt in the beginning, as a matter of fact. So if we look like the first half, I think it's going to be so it kind of peaks and the deals come in more on a random sequence. It's not so steady line as on the other business lines. However, we see that all the customers we've been talking to that are using our Axivion and our Squish products, they are very happy about them. So we see the same story a bit like on Qt, that the product is very good, the users are getting a very good feedback. And there is definitely a need.

We've talked many times about the Qt need, that there is a lack of developers, there is more software to be developed and therefore there is a need a tool like Qt to be that you can use the code all over again and cross-platform tool that increases the efficiency of the developers. Well, now that we do have this vast amount of code coming into the market, there is even more need to be able to automate the testing on graphical user interfaces. And there is even more need to be able to do the testing on a code even before it's ready. And there is even more need to get the architecture in place in a right manner. So we think that the QA market basically is double the market, potential market that we have on Qt. So it's twice the size.

Our target is that we would get roughly about 30% of our revenue in the future outside of the Qt ecosystem. Which means that the other languages, Windows, Java and so on and so forth. It also opens up the addressable market that we are very excited about that opportunity. We see that it's on very early phases and QA is going to have a nice Qt type of a story ahead of itself. We don't see on the long term that there is going to be a much change in this big picture. We do see that both on Qt and well, it's always difficult to say projections many years ahead. But let's say that the next couple of years that we see that what people are doing and how things are expanding, we see no slowness in that per se.

So we are keeping our guidance. We estimate that our net sales will increase 20%-30% and our operating profit will be on 25%-35% bracket. And as always, I think that unfortunately this year is not going to be any different. So what we see is that usually first quarter is a bit slow. Second quarter is better. Third quarter is a bit slow compared to the other quarters. And then the fourth quarter and the last month of the fourth quarter is very, very busy. And that's going to be pretty much the same this year as well. So the latter part of the year and specifically the fourth quarter is going to be far out the busiest and best quarter of the year. And this hasn't changed. Why this has to be so, I really don't know.

Maybe we should change our fiscal year, and then we would put it on the third quarter. I don't know. But that's how it seems to go. So we actually sell on December, we sell a substantial part of the whole year's revenue are coming in on December. And that's how it works. But yeah, one thing, if I looked at when you think about this guidance, so if I look at the pipeline we are having now and if we looked at we closed that pipeline into same ratio that we've been doing before, then that gives us the belief that we're still very good in this guidance that we are now giving. So we do have a healthy pipeline, and it's growing as we speak. So there is we haven't and we haven't seen any slowness in building that pipeline.

In that sense we're pretty comfortable that we're going to be meeting the whole year target this year. That's actually the end of slides and we can start questions. Matti.

Matti Riikonen
Senior Analyst, Carnegie

Hi, good afternoon. It's Matti Riikonen , Carnegie. A couple of questions about the distribution license business. Since you talked about distribution licenses in Q4, has there been any changes in your clients' thinking about their production volumes that they talk to you about? So have they indicated any kind of slowness in their volumes compared to three months ago or actually two months ago? So any kind of indication from their side?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

No, no. When we had COVID, then the customers were actually telling us that, "Hey, there is going to be a slowness." But no, we haven't had. I haven't heard such a. No, I haven't had such discussions with customers, no. And I think, well, the thing for us is what's a bit difficult. So the distribution license goes in a couple of ways. Either customers report us that so and so many things were sold and here is the distribution license revenue. Or they buy, for example, 500,000 distribution licenses and once they are used, they buy a next stack kind of. And then this distribution license revenue, we always or often we talk about automotive. But there are hundreds of clients paying us distribution license revenue. So it's coming from very multiple sources. We have 70 different industries.

So there are cars and then there are very small devices. So usually the clients don't tell us exact volume numbers. We do have if we suspect that they are wrong, we can do an audit later. But beforehand, they may give us an idea. But many customers don't tell exact production numbers because it's kind of a it's an information they want to keep themselves. And so therefore for us to estimate the distribution license revenue exactly for each quarter is a bit of a challenge. So we have an idea, but we don't have an exact figure.

Matti Riikonen
Senior Analyst, Carnegie

Right. Thank you. Then how much do the distribution license kind of payments and revenues that you book, how much do they fluctuate normally per quarter? So are we talking about kind of big fluctuations like EUR 5 million per quarter or is it more small?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Yeah, a lot. A lot. That's why we tell it on a yearly basis. It really fluctuates a lot.

Matti Riikonen
Senior Analyst, Carnegie

Right. Do you have any seasonal expectations on how the quarterly payments or revenue bookings land beforehand?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

No, no. They do fluctuate quarter-on-quarter throughout the year.

Matti Riikonen
Senior Analyst, Carnegie

Right. Okay. Maybe just to recap of what you have been talking about earlier about the average prices and prices in different product categories. Is it still so that you are getting roughly $1 per automotive screens and EUR 0.20-EUR 0.30 per inexpensive devices like coffee machines?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Yeah. So yeah, like I said, it's coming from many different various clients and different sources. So take those and I know that you try to evaluate the runtime potential. So those are the prices I've given you so that you can end up in a ballpark and that hasn't changed. And sometimes we do see that some of our competitors may be offering lower prices, but we don't go into that price competition and we don't think that it's a long-lasting story. So if we think that it's in automotive, if the screen is a $1 screen or €1 screen, it's such a small fraction of the end price of the product that it's better for the OEM, auto manufacturer to make sure that the car digital cockpit is the best possible that there is rather than trying to save $0.50 per screen.

So we don't see it. We do see sometimes the competition usually that is fading out. At their last resort is kind of trying to lower the prices, but we don't do that. But yeah, so I mean roughly like that. If you go on, well, on cars, it's per screen. If you go into MCU type of products, that's very little hardware, very little software, then you end up in that EUR 0.20-EUR 0.30 bracket. Then you usually end up in very high volumes too.

Matti Riikonen
Senior Analyst, Carnegie

Sure. Thank you. Then is the average price still around EUR 0.70 as you have discussed earlier?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Yeah. If I would be an analyst and I would be doing modeling, that's something I would be using.

Matti Riikonen
Senior Analyst, Carnegie

Okay. So you don't think that it would be changing over time since you have been closing quite a lot of these kind of small ticket items?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Yeah, it's going up.

Matti Riikonen
Senior Analyst, Carnegie

But it's going up.

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Yeah. Well, you know it's inflation. Prices are going up.

Matti Riikonen
Senior Analyst, Carnegie

That's not the sales mix reason.

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

No, not in a sales mix. I think that in some senses, yeah, you yeah, it's not that accurate. But I understand the logic that more and more we go into low high volume in the other industries, the average price might be dropping here in that sense. Yeah, I see. But you know at such a rough number, that's to give you an idea because I know that some analysts have been doing a calculation that they take the number of different devices and then they think that on how many devices we might end up. I've told that that's a bit mission impossible. But I've given this kind of a guidance that if you try to do it like that, then that would be roughly a price to look for. And to give you a guidance that how could you be able to calculate it.

But so we're talking about small prices and high volumes. Do I think that the distribution license prices per se will go up in the future? Yeah, I do. Like every other license price is going up. Is that mix going to, you know, it's such a rough number that even though we do get a higher volume, lower numbers more, I wouldn't—I still would use that as planning at this point of time.

Matti Riikonen
Senior Analyst, Carnegie

Okay. Fair enough. Then one question about the testing and quality assurance software. I understood that you have planned to hire a dedicated salesperson to sell the quality assurance product. And I think you highlighted that you have been recruiting or investing in that area. So since the kind of sales cycle can be longer there, is it fair to assume that the second half of this year would be stronger in terms of sales growth for quality assurance than the first half? Or should it be kind of even between the halves?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

I would keep it pretty even now. I mean, yeah, of course, you know, you're right. I mean, you know, your logic is right. That's probably going to happen. I mean, the fourth quarter is going to be the busiest, right? And we're building up specifically the Axivion activities and whatnot. So yes, it's accelerating. So but I mean, the difference is, monetary-wise, the difference is going to be so small that I wouldn't try to guess the number. But I mean, logically what you're saying is true and probably not this is going to happen. But I don't think the difference is going to be on euros. It's not going to be that big that I wouldn't spend too much time on it roughly.

But you know, we see, like I said, you know, when we started Qt, we started well. We were kind of very happy when we got a EUR 100,000 deal. Not opening champagne bottles, but very happy. And then it started slowly growing, and we hit EUR 30 million and then EUR 40 million, EUR 50 million and so on. We're pretty much on same track on QA. And then we were, of course, we were building our sales organization. So if we're looking to Squish sales and selling to existing Qt customers, our existing sales network can do that very well. Squish fits very well into majority of our Qt users. And there we are, you know, we have covered only a small portion of that customer base. So there is still a long way to go. And our existing sales force can do that sales.

When we're going selling Axivion outside of the Qt ecosystem, it is there you need more expertise. So some of the Axivion sales guys might be our own old Qt sales guys that are trained specifically for that. And then we've also hired new sales people mainly from a background that they've been selling testing software before in their career. So basically from competition, right? And to bring in more knowledge that how to sell QA in that sense. And they are all in the same sales organization. So they work under same management. But we need to start specializing because the products and the needs and the target groups are getting a bit different.

So for one salesperson or one pre-sales engineer, if we talk about our design tools, our MCU offering, our Qt offering, we talk about the Squish, Coco, and Axivion, it's getting so complicated that for one person to be able to handle the whole portfolio, it's probably too much. So we need to a bit specialize in ourselves as well as in the pre-sales in that sense.

Matti Riikonen
Senior Analyst, Carnegie

All right. So did I understand correctly that if we think about the modeling, the fluctuation between how different individual deals land in the quality assurance business, they are far more important than kind of seasonal thinking that there would be more deals in second half, less in first half? So on.

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Well, like I said, on Squish and Coco, the volume is higher and it's more like a steady growth quarter on quarter. On Axivion, there is more fluctuation. And over there we see that it's very important to build the pipeline. And where the deal lands, there is because the euro value, the euro revenue for Axivion is still so small. So you know percentage wise, it's a big fluctuation. But as it grows, it's going to be on more on a steady growth. Yeah. So in that sense, there is a bit more fluctuation. And it's a similar type of a business as Qt business in that sense that the QA business, it does have a quarter on quarter fluctuations. Yeah. On Axivion side, it's also very much like a Qt type of a business that in the beginning, the customers usually buy a bit smaller chunk of licenses.

The first deal is a bit smaller. And then it starts growing and the follow-up deals to existing customers are bigger. So we're going to see the same type of a revenue fluctuation on license sales on Axivion that we're seeing on we've seen on Qt as well. So in that sense, they are similar. Yeah.

Matti Riikonen
Senior Analyst, Carnegie

All right. Thank you. I'll stop here.

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Okay. Thank you.

Jaakko Tyrväinen
Equity Analyst, SEB

Hi. Jaakko Tyrväinen from SEB. I'd like to continue on the softness in the distribution licenses. Was it just the existing clients' end product sales volume were just lower than you expected? Or was it because of perhaps postponed new product launches? Or did you see some kind of inventory cycle issues in this quarter?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Well, inventory cycle issue, it could have been, which like I said, when some of our clients, they buy distribution licenses upfront. And once they are used, then they buy the next chunk. So what's the reason that there's been less than buying? Don't know. Have we seen any product launch postponements? Not that I'm aware of. Because usually when we are in that situation that you have the production facility, you have ordered all the parts and everything, you basically make the product. So what usually happens is that you produce the products, maybe you lower the prices. Like we've seen on electric vehicles that some brands are coming fast down on the prices.

But you know, so we don't usually see production cancellations or at this time when we're expecting everything. When we talk about distribution revenue, when we talk about the developer license revenue, early on in the process, we may see that everything is ready, but the customer doesn't sign the deal because they're postponing the start of the development design. So they don't start designing the new product. They postpone that start of the project. But if we are in a distribution license phase where the production is already everything is ready and you just produce the product, we don't see a cancellation on that. It's too late for that.

So what we see on the developer license sales that we may have everything is signed and everything is waiting, but the customer decides that, well, you know now it's let's wait another quarter before we start designing and well, designing that how are we going to be manufacturing this new product. So there we may see deals delays, but not on a distribution license. So not that. But of course, when people buy the distribution licenses upfront and they don't consume them, you know how long it's going to take them to consume? You know what are the reasons? We don't necessarily know.

Jaakko Tyrväinen
Equity Analyst, SEB

Could you point any specific end client industry where you saw the loans?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

No. I can say it was Europe.

Jaakko Tyrväinen
Equity Analyst, SEB

All right. Sure. Then on the license renewals, could you give us some kind of indication how the expected license renewals, both three-year licenses and one-year licenses, split throughout the quarters this year? Of course, the Q4 will be the highest, but any comments on Q1 to Q3 split?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Well, I don't think we've opened up that split that how that goes. But what I can say is that we were cautious that is that going to change? So that if the mix is going to change last year, we did have a bit that people were buying more one-year licenses than three-year licenses. And we were thinking that, well, if that split is going to change, that split has changed, that people are buying more one-year licenses than three-year licenses, is that going to affect our renewals business this year? That instead of three-year licenses, people will renew from three to one? Well, that seems not to be the case. So people are renewing pretty much on the rate that we were expecting. And we don't expect there now to be a bit of a change.

I think that over time, well, better not to give you a percentage out of my head. But so we do have roughly two types of customers. We have customers where the Qt usage is very extensive. And you can say that Qt is almost like a bedrock platform in the whole development. They do. And those customers tend to like longer licenses. They even talk about five or 10-year licenses, which we don't sell, right? Basically, it's just too long over time. But they are looking for certainty going into the future. They are looking for certainty that they do have those licenses and whatnot. Then we do see the same scenario also in China. And for very obvious reasons over there, the customers are thinking that they would like to buy perpetual licenses so that they are for the lifetime. We don't sell them either.

So there are these types of things. And then there are customers that are using Qt. They are using maybe other tools and whatnot. And it's business as usual. And they're usually a one-year license. They are happy to pay a bit more. All the other licenses, they are probably buying starting from Word and Windows. They buy one-year licenses and they pay a bit more. And then they adjust what they need year-on-year. And so those are kind of the two categories we see. When interest rates were zero and money was free, then we saw that people were thinking a bit that, well, you know if I buy a three-year license, it makes from a CFO point of view, let's spend the money and buy a three-year license now and we get a fixed price for three years and money doesn't cost anything.

Now the CFOs are looking that, well, you know it doesn't necessarily make sense just to get a lower price. But that's basically the brackets. I know I'm not answering your specific question here, but I don't think we've given out that split in public. But now it seems that it's kind of leveled. So it seems to be pretty steady. So it's not changing anymore like it was doing last year. At least this first quarter was pretty much steady what it was before.

Jaakko Tyrväinen
Equity Analyst, SEB

Thanks. Thanks for the good insights. You're sticking to your guidance. What are the key risks or concerns you have in terms of not reaching your guidance this year? What would have to happen? What keeps you up at night?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Nothing keeps me up at night. But, well, like I said, I'm pretty confident now on the renewal business. That's the renewal business. It looks to be going very steady. What we budgeted, it looks to go where we think on where we planned. So that seems to be very robust. People are renewing into the licenses they have and whatnot. It's going according to the plan. I see that the Qt developer license sales is going very steady. I mean, it's been amazingly steady all these years. So I don't expect there a much of a fluctuation. I think Squish is pretty much going steady bang on. It's the budget level. And of course, these three items, they may even exceed what we've been budgeting and what we've been guiding. So there is a chance that it goes even better.

Then if we go on to Axivion, it's an early business. And the timing of the last deals, are they going to come in the fourth quarter or are they going to slip into the first quarter? There you have a bit of a risk that they are going to hit the whole year number. But in the whole scheme of things, they are still small numbers in our big environment. If I look to consultancy, we've budgeted it to be small to flat basically. Is there a big risk that even if it would decline again, we're talking so small number? It's revenue-wise so small in this bigger picture that it doesn't have an effect. So I'm not too worried about that. And so that leaves that the biggest unknown fluctuation we really have is the distribution license revenue.

And that's the if I would have to be awake at night, that would be the one. Then if I look to markets, I think that U.S., I'm not too worried about it. We have a good team over there and there is a high level of energy and execution. I'm sure they'll find a way to meet their numbers. Europe is a kind of a well, I think that Europe is going to be slow forever. But some say that there might be some growth in this continent. We'll see. But from a business-wise, I think that the U.S. economy seems to be even the interest rates are high and whatnot, it seems to be amazingly strong and flexible, whereas Europe is kind of fragile. And if I look into Asia-Pacific, we see in there, I'm not too worried about. I mean, Japan, Korea.

Well, Korea is kind of a it's more like a key account market. We have a few very good and respected key accounts over there. China is doing really well. I think that China is going to be the biggest electric vehicle manufacturer in the world. That's not even far. We are very well positioned in China and we are doing very good in China. I think that the trade wars are behind the corner. So one day we're going to have challenges. I mean, global challenges regarding to China. But if I look to business for this year, the activity I mean, everybody talks that China is not growing that much, that it used to and all that. Yeah, that is true. But the activity over there is still very high. The energy level is very high. And we are having a lot of meetings over there.

And Japan is a big embedded market. We're there. We have our respected key clients over there. And we're getting new all the time. So Asia-Pacific as a region, not too worried about. So on the markets, I would say that Europe is a bit that we're kind of at that I was kind of thinking that we would be growing already in Europe. Well, not quite. So let's see when the growth starts and when the interest rates really start coming down. Then well, you all know that if the interest rates in Europe come down, euro is going to be weakened. And then again, you know what's going to be the effect on the European economy? We'll see. But so I'm not too worried about it does have effect. But then we are on three continents and two of them are doing really well.

I think that Europe is going to be doing okay. To summarize, distribution license. It was a long answer for one simple.

Jaakko Tyrväinen
Equity Analyst, SEB

Long and good one. Thanks.

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

You're welcome.

Felix Henriksson
Associate Director of Equity Research, Nordea

That's a good one. Felix Henriksson, Nordea, thanks for taking my question. I have three. I can take them one by one.

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Let's take one by one.

Felix Henriksson
Associate Director of Equity Research, Nordea

Yeah. Starting off with the list price increases for 2024, what have you implemented in your product suite so far? And how does that compare to the ones that you made in 2023?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

We haven't increased our prices so far yet. So that's yet to come. I think that all the price increases we're going to be having this year more or less like inflation or a bit more. I think that if I think that where we need to look into our pricing is the distribution license, I think if I look, the developer licenses are fairly on fair value, so to speak.

Felix Henriksson
Associate Director of Equity Research, Nordea

Thanks. That's quite clear. Then a housekeeping question. In Q2 2021, you signed a really large, I think it was, a EUR 6 million deal in the developer license business. Can you confirm whether or not that was a three-year deal and if that's coming up for renewal this quarter?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

No.

Felix Henriksson
Associate Director of Equity Research, Nordea

Clear.

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Is that, can't confirm, or not going to answer at all?

Well, last time we discussed that it's not going to happen this.

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay. Yeah. So it's not going to happen.

Felix Henriksson
Associate Director of Equity Research, Nordea

Fair enough. That's clear. Then a bit of a broader question. You've announced these collaborations with silicon vendors Infineon and Qualcomm and also your entry into the AWS Marketplace. So could you just talk through the commercial and financial implications of these deals to your business and how we should look at them as analysts?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Yeah, yeah. Well, first of all, to be able to do such deals with such household brand names means that you're a credible player. And your technology is credible and you're a credible company and you're a credible player and you're identified as such. So that's, of course, important for us. And so that's kind of a reference for the other players in the market that we can do such partnerships. If I look to Infineon, I think that well, first of all, I'm very happy to say that the cooperation has started very well. We've had our first successes on doing some deals together. They've put a lot of effort into this cooperation.

So it's not only that, "Hey, let's do this." Many times you have these types of deals is that, "Hey, let's make a deal and make an announcement and then you're on our partner portal and nothing happens," right? But in this particular case, they've been putting effort. We've been putting effort. We've been training our sales. We've been doing joint marketing and whatnot. And we've been gaining results, early results. And that's, of course, on the MCU side. I think per se that the MCU in years to come, it's going to be a big business. And because you have all these two-wheelers, scooters and whatnot. So you have a lot of products where the amount of hardware and software is very limited and the user interface is fairly simple. And so that market is kind of opening up.

So if we look, this business is a bit of internet. When internet started, it came into telcos and then finance and media. So what we saw on this digital came into cars, came into medical and whatnot. And now we're seeing digital user interfaces in smaller and smaller and simpler and simpler devices, so to speak. And that's where the MCU market kicks in. Do I think that it's a joint business starting from zero? So do I expect that there are going to be a huge amount of revenue this year? Of course not, because all businesses, when they start from zero, it's going to start slow. Do I believe in this cooperation that when we get our act together and we start working together on both customers that we have, is it going to be successful in the years to come? Yeah. On Amazon, same thing.

Pretty much the same story. It's starting from zero. I don't expect any meaningful revenue that would affect our top line this year at all. So it's early starts. But it kind of tells you that when we started this business, on Qt business, we had many small competitors. We were about equal size. What we did, we invested quite a lot on horizontal product and then we invested our own sales network. Whereas most of our competitors invested on very focused use cases on specific industries. And they relied on, well, maybe on their own sales because they had such a small number of clients to reach to or resellers by that time. And that led into those competitors are pretty much gone, sold, or they're still very small. So we were able to grow.

So if I now see that how are we going to get the next big boost on our sales? Of course, we have our own sales network. We're investing on more products. So many of our Qt users are also using our testing products and whatnot. But I also see that we need to build a meaningful partner network like Infineon and be able to combine two best products in the world and offer them commonly to our common customers and get even more visibility than we can do on ourselves. And I see that on a strategic level, if we can succeed on that, we're going to take a next big jump going forward. And that's what we're trying to do. So I'm very excited about these opportunities and we're going to have more in the future.

Felix Henriksson
Associate Director of Equity Research, Nordea

As a quick follow-up, can you disclose anything about sort of commercial and revenue models and the margin implications from these new sales channels?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Well, like I said, this year it's going to be very small. So it's going to be very small.

Felix Henriksson
Associate Director of Equity Research, Nordea

What about the margin profile in these news? I'm assuming that.

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

No, no, sorry.

Felix Henriksson
Associate Director of Equity Research, Nordea

Fair enough. Thank you. That's all from me.

Waltteri Rossi
Equity Research Analyst, Danske Bank

Hi, Waltteri Rossi from Danske Bank. Only a few questions that have not been answered yet. On the quality assurance, I understand that the quality assurance space is kind of very fragmented and competitive. And I do understand your edge when you kind of tailor the quality assurance tools to fit the Qt ecosystem. But what about when you look further than the Qt ecosystem? What's the competitive edge there with your QA tools?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Well, yeah, it's a good question. Well, one competitive edge obviously is that the market is fairly fragmented. It's a lot of small players and they don't have that much they can't put they don't have such a reach than we do. We do have the global sales network. We can roll out things globally. So basically just we are more capable and more effective on selling. We are more capable and more effective on marketing.

That's for sure. And if we looked at what that market is, it's like in Qt in the beginning that they are concentrating on a very focused market, very focused or very focused user industry group, maybe geographically also very focused, just like our competitors did with Qt in the beginning. And we are focusing on to be able to offer a more broader product portfolio. So our aim is that instead of you buying five different quality assurance tools to do your quality assurance testing, you can buy one or two tools from Qt and then you're covered. That's basically what we believe in. And that's what we are executing.

Waltteri Rossi
Equity Research Analyst, Danske Bank

All right. Sounds good. Thanks. Then thinking about the Qt current customer base, how big of a portion of that already has bought the quality assurance tools?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Well, we don't disclose that publicly, but to give some sort of an idea, way less than half. I mean, way less than half.

Waltteri Rossi
Equity Research Analyst, Danske Bank

All right. That's something. Thanks. Lastly, well, any ballpark kind of estimate on the growth this year in quality assurance?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

On quality assurance? Well, you know, we don't. I think we're going to start opening up the QA as a separate business next year, probably. But I've sort of given this kind of guidance that at least intentionally we would not buy anything that would dilute Qt numbers. So that gives you neither on top line or EBIT line. So you have at least some sense.

Waltteri Rossi
Equity Research Analyst, Danske Bank

All right. Thanks. That's all from me.

Antti Luiro
Head of Nordic Equity Research Development and Equity Analyst, Inderes

All right. Hi, Antti Luiro from Inderes. I'll try to do a quick one.

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Yeah, because we have three minutes.

Antti Luiro
Head of Nordic Equity Research Development and Equity Analyst, Inderes

Indeed. So on the new customer acquisition, you mentioned that's going to be a focus area for you. What are the concrete actions you're taking on that side? You mentioned partnerships as being one kind of channel sales kind of a thing. How does this look like otherwise?

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Well, new customer acquisition is always. We have an approach where we actually have big lists of target customers. Our marketing is targeting those customers. We're doing kind of different types of prospecting. We're using different kinds of prospecting tools and mechanisms and working. And then we have dedicated teams. So we have teams that their only purpose is to hunt new customers. So if an old customer wants to buy more, it goes somewhere else. So we do have new customer acquisition teams and they have targets. And then we have marketing and whatnot supporting. That's kind of and that's the pure new customer acquisition. Then we have, of course, many of our customers are like Fortune 500 companies, which they have very many different divisions throughout the world.

If you take a big international company, we might be on one or two divisions, but then there are 15 left. Those customers on our sales we've targeted we call it enterprise sales. If you're on enterprise sales, then you have a named customer, company X. Then your job is to take care of the existing business there is, but also to grow your business. In a sense, if you're in a big international company and you can win new divisions, we consider that as new sales as well.

Antti Luiro
Head of Nordic Equity Research Development and Equity Analyst, Inderes

All right. I'll let you finish up. Thanks.

Juha Varelius
CEO, Qt Group

Okay. So we have 30 seconds left, so we won't take any more questions. Thank you very much for coming here today. Really appreciate it. Thank you, everybody online over there. To sum up, well, I think we've had extensive, very good questions over here. So there is not much to sum up. We're not entirely happy on Q1. We're working very, very hard to make this look better. The market environment and the future gives us confidence. Our pipeline situation gives us confidence that this is going to be a good year. And we believe that we're going to meet our guidance target on 20%-30% revenue growth, which is definitely our number one priority. Thank you very much.

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