Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Cerence Q2 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a Q&A session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one on your telephone keypad. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. If you require assistance during the conference, please press star, then zero. I would now like to turn the conference over to your speaker today, Rich Yerganian, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Christy. Welcome to Cerence's Q2 fiscal year 2022 conference call. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that this call may involve certain forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties as described in the press release preceding today's call. Cerence makes no representations to update those statements after today. In addition, the company may refer to certain non-GAAP measures, key performance indicators, and pro forma financial information during this call. Please refer to today's press release for further details of the definitions, limitations, and uses of those measures and reconciliations of non-GAAP measures to the closest GAAP equivalent.
Joining me on today's call are Stefan Ortmanns, Chief Executive Officer of Cerence, and Tom Beaudoin, Chief Financial Officer of Cerence. As a reminder, the only authorized spokespeople for the company are Stefan, Tom, and myself.
Before handing the call over to Stefan, I would like to announce several upcoming investor events. The exact timing of our participation is subject to change, so please go to the events section of our IR website for the latest information. The conferences include the virtual 19th Annual Craig-Hallum Institutional Investor Conference on June 1, the Baird 2022 Global Consumer Technology and Services Conference on June 6 in New York, and the 6th annual Needham Virtual Automotive Tech Conference on June 7. Now on to the call. Stefan?
Thank you, Rich. Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us to discuss our Q2 earnings. As you saw in our release this morning, we delivered solid results for the quarter against a backdrop of continuing disruptions in auto production. We either met or were at the high end of the range for most key financial metrics in the quarter. In addition to the quarterly metrics, we delivered very strong bookings in the first half of the year, up 53% from the same period in the prior year. We see a strong pipeline of potential bookings for the second half of the year, including several competitive takeaway opportunities. I'm especially pleased with our performance since every day we see news about the market conditions playing a major role in our industry.
Semiconductor shortages, factory and city shutdowns due to COVID-19, and the impact from the war in the Ukraine all continue to contribute to challenges in auto production. We are carefully managing the business through these headwinds, and despite the challenges, we remain confident in our full year guidance. Before we dig into our performance and outlook, I want to welcome our new executive officers. First, I'm pleased to welcome Jennifer Salinas to Cerence as our new General Counsel. We are fortunate to have Jennifer on the Cerence team. She is an experienced and progressive public company legal leader who most recently served as general counsel of the Infrastructure Solutions Group and Global Head of Litigation at Lenovo. In just six weeks, Jennifer has proven to be a tremendous addition to the team.
Second, I'm excited to welcome Tom Beaudoin as our new Chief Financial Officer with the departure of Marc Montagner.
I've known Tom for years, and I'm confident that he will be instrumental to our operations and in helping us execute. Tom has a proven track record of driving change and significant experience leading finance in the software and automotive industries. Many of you recall Tom from his time at Nuance, where he was Chief Financial Officer and then led its business transformation office. He knows our business extremely well, first in his role leading the successful Cerence spin from Nuance, and then for the last two and a half years as a very active director on our board. It's my pleasure to welcome Tom in an operational role and have him join us today.
You will hear from him in a moment, but before I turn it over, I will share a few highlights and observations. At the beginning of the call, I mentioned our strong first half bookings performance.
At $448 million, our first half bookings were up 53% compared to the same period last year. For additional perspective on the achievement, bookings for our entire fiscal year 2021 were $590 million. Our continued success in accounts and markets is due to our strong competitive position in the automotive industry and our ability to reach beyond traditional automotive markets. Regarding our competitive position, 80% of our first half bookings were with existing customers, including a significant expansion with a marquee North American OEM for its current and next gen platforms. It also includes, as we previously announced, a significant contract, the largest in our history, with a large European OEM that called upon us to help with their expansions program underway in Greater China. Aside from traditional automotive, we have also seen acceleration in newer areas.
Of note, we secured several important wins with EV car companies. Signing five new contracts, including four in China, the world's hottest EV market. These Chinese EV makers turn to Cerence to create a unique AI experience as they expand out of China into other regions. We are the only supplier with the portfolio and language coverage to support their aggressive plans and deliver the experience they want in their vehicles. Another prime example of our expansion is our growing success in trucking. A major European heavy truck supplier recently signed on for our Cerence Assistant offering. This new contract represents the first customer in this space. Our Cerence Ride product continues to attract new two-wheeler customers.
This offering combines our core AI innovation with new capabilities such as the group ride function, transforming the two-wheeler experience as ridership grows worldwide.
We added four new customers, including some of the top two-wheeler manufacturers. Finally, as we mentioned on our last conference call, we won a new fitness customer, which falls under our new mobility market opportunities. Collectively, these wins and bookings are a strong sign for the business, with new connected services now comprising more than 40% of our backlog. As a reminder, at the end of fiscal 2021, we reported backlog of approximately $2.1 billion. After such a solid first half of the fiscal year, I am pleased that the pipeline for the second half remains robust. With our strength in the Q2 and attractive pipeline, we are now focused on the second half and several key priorities.
First, we are deeply focused on accelerating design wins and new bookings momentum across the market we serve by leveraging our strong pipeline.
These are the single biggest contributor to our future, and we plan to capitalize on every opportunity. Second, we remain intensely committed to delighting our customers by continuing to deliver high-quality products and implementations on schedule and on budget. We are intently focused on bringing several key customer programs to successful launches, which will position us for future success. Part of this, we expect a significant increase in professional services revenue for the second half of the year, which is another leading indicator for future business potential. Third, we are prioritizing and allocating funds to innovation and areas of our business that generate the highest rates of return. Finally, we will continue advancing our strategy and operational plans in a manner that best positions the company to achieve long-term sustainable growth.
With that, I will now turn the call over to Tom to review the financial results of the quarter. Tom, please.
Thank you, Stefan. As Stefan mentioned, I know the business and the company extremely well from the role I played in separating the business from Nuance, and most recently, serving on the Cerence board since the spin. I know firsthand the exciting opportunities ahead for the company, and look forward to working with Stefan and the team to maximize the future growth potential of Cerence. I look forward to meeting all of you. I'll now review our performance for the quarter, and then I'll provide guidance for our Q3 and review our full year guidance. Revenue came in at $86.3 million, slightly above the high end of our guidance, due to a stronger than expected contribution from professional services.
Our profitability metrics performed well as most of the key profitability metrics came in at the midpoint of guidance. Non-GAAP gross margin was 74.7%.
Non-GAAP operating margin was 25.2%. Adjusted EBITDA was $24 million or 27.9% margin, and non-GAAP earnings per share were $0.33. During the quarter, we generated approximately $2 million of cash flow from operations, and our balance sheet remains strong, with total cash and marketable securities of approximately $146 million. Now let's review a detailed breakdown of our revenue. We have added some additional insight into the breakout of our fixed licenses, separating the prepay fixed contracts from the minimum commitment contracts. As previously communicated, revenue recognition for each is the same. The full value of the contract is taken at the time of signing and delivery. The difference between the two types of contracts is mainly the timing of cash collection.
For prepaid contracts, the cash is typically paid upfront, and for our minimum commitment contract, the cash per license is paid at the time of auto production. Our variable license revenue was down 46% from the same quarter last year due to the combined effects of lower auto production and consumption of fixed license contracts. Connected services revenue was down 8% from last year, driven primarily by the drop-off of revenue from our legacy contract, which was expected and previously communicated, as well as lower auto production. Our new connected services revenue was down because of expiring contracts for older technology and therefore not candidates for renewal. For the full fiscal year, these expiring contracts create about a $5 million headwind to connected services growth. We don't expect this to negatively affect growth next fiscal year.
Finally, our professional services revenue was up 25% year-over-year and 6% quarter-over-quarter. Growth in professional services is a key indicator of future license and connected services revenue, as the pro services team are the individuals directly interfacing with customers to customize and implement Cerence technology in our customers' next generation platforms. Moving into our guidance for Q3, our Q3 guidance detailed on this slide takes into consideration the currents and uncertainties of the semiconductor device shortages, factory shutdowns, and the effects of the Ukraine war that are affecting auto production. However, as we have seen in the past, the impact from these events on our business can shift quickly. Collectively, our Q3 guidance represents continuing positive trends in the business over Q2.
We are affirming guidance for the full fiscal year. In summary, we had another quarter of good financial performance. While we remain cautious in the near term due to the factors impacting the auto industry as outlined above, our long-term prospects remain upbeat. Our focus is on innovation and growth, while at the same time driving a profitable business model that will benefit the company and our shareholders well into the future. This concludes our prepared remarks, and now we will open the call for questions. Thank you.
As a reminder, to ask a question, you'll need to press star one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, press the pound key. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from David Kelley, Jefferies.
Hey, good morning, guys, and thanks for taking my questions. Maybe wanted to dig into the revenue drivers for the quarter a bit and maybe starting with the connected services, specifically the subscription, you know, pullback. Clearly, it's been a tough couple of years for underlying auto production, so we think about the compounding impact there. But at the same time, there's been a mix shift to premium and luxury and, you know, we've seen kind of ongoing vehicle technology adoption. You know, can you talk about maybe what you're seeing in the connected services subscription business, you know, the drivers of that decline year over year?
Maybe first of all, let me just make sure we all understand the financials, and then I think Stefan can talk a little bit about the business parameters. We have provided a little further breakout of connected services. We, I think, historically have separated the new connected services from the legacy contract that we had talked about previously. I think probably people understand the trends in the legacy. With respect to the new connected services, we've split out the two elements. That's one of the factors affecting that is that we have these old contracts that are Cerence pre-spin. Some of them were through acquisitions at Nuance that are creating this $5 million headwind for FY 2022. As I noted, we don't expect that to continue into next year.
Okay. Thanks, Tom, and good morning, David. Let me also add a few more words to connected services. As you have heard, we had a fantastic first half of bookings. We had also signed with one of the European OEMs, the largest contract in our history. That is all related to connected, and as we have mentioned also, new connected services comprising now more than 40% of the total backlog. At the end of last year, we had $2.1 billion. We are well-positioned also for new connected services. We see a lot of traction also on our new products with respect to connected services, right? Overall, I think it depends heavily also on the recovery of the auto production.
Yeah, we are well-positioned here, especially on connected.
Okay. Got it. That's helpful. You noted the ongoing consumption, the fixed license contracts. Can you give us a bit more color on the impact of that headwind in the quarter and maybe how you're thinking about, you know, the ongoing impact here into the back half of the year?
Yeah. Let me go first, and then I will also ask Tom for his view. You know, I think it's long-standing practice in our business, and when looking back over the last couple of years, the range for fixed licenses have been within 15%-20% of the total revenue over the last couple of years. Yeah. Now we saw for the first half of the fiscal year a tick up to 25%. Yeah. Based on recent customer requests, we expect that the trend will continue for the second half of the year.
Now, in some regions and also for some of our customer is a common practice, yeah, they actually prefer these types of contracts, and we all know that some of the first-tier supplier are under tremendous pressure, so the benefit to them is cost savings, especially given their rising material costs. The benefits to us are, one, we are winning in a highly competitive environment. Two, we are cementing our relationships with our customers, right? And three, we have huge upsell potential during the course of a specific program. And for example, this was also reflected in our strong first half bookings, yeah.
Yeah. I have been involved with the auto and mobility business, which was a very large division within Nuance since 2008. This has been a buying pattern and a contracting pattern with, as Stefan noted, particularly some regional customers, but also some customers that have been doing this practice for a very long time. I think a lot of the factors contributed from what I can see to that tick up that Stefan talked about from about 15% to 20% to up to 25%. You know, all the auto manufacturers are under pressure to manage costs, particularly in this environment. They all have very strong purchasing organizations. I would note that the discounts that we provide on the minimum commitments is quite smaller than the discounts we provide on the prepays.
Now of course, it does have a different cash flow impact, but I would point out the discounts are quite lower than on the prepays.
Okay. Perfect. That's helpful. I will pass it along. Thank you.
Your next question comes from Rajvindra Gill from Needham.
Yeah, thanks for taking my questions. Just a follow-up on the fixed contracts. I think, you know, in the past, it seemed like that customers were entering fixed pay contracts because they were getting more price discounts because they wanted to drive down the cost. I just wanna clarify, so you're expecting fixed contracts to kind of maintain that higher level at 25% of sales for the second half of the fiscal year, so that would be indicative that the customers are continuing to kind of enter into these type of contracts in order to benefit from the price discounts. That customer behavior seems to be continuing. Is that a fair assessment?
Yeah. That's what we're seeing in the pipeline from some of, as I said, customers that we've seen prefer this contractual way. I think our sales team's done a good job of maybe trying to minimize the discounts there. We are in a strong capital position, so we do get that cash over time, so.
You mentioned that there was, you know, again, the trying to understand the difference between the fixed contract versus the prepay contract. You said there was a change in the discount. Maybe you could kind of elaborate a little bit on that, because,
Oh, yeah.
Because, I mean, I think, you know, the challenge will be, you know, how much of a discount are you offering, you know, customers to get these contracts, and if this is kind of more indicative of a longer term trend, and does that impact the, you know, the gross margins and the pricing as you go forward?
Yeah. Just to be clear, and we've broken this out on the information provided. What we broke out this time, which is new, is the two types of contracts that are both under fixed contracts.
Uh-huh.
The prepaids, which is the cash more upfront, and then the minimum commitments where the cash is as the autos are produced. The prepaids have historically had a higher discount. The minimum commitments have a fairly significantly lower discount. It still benefits the customers. As we said, we've ticked up a little as an overall percentage of revenue. We expect that to continue in the second half. Then, of course, we'll be assessing that as we develop our long-range plan over the next couple of months, few months.
I see. Okay. On the connected services portion of the business, the legacy's dropping to kind of $8 million. Is that kind of the range we should be kind of forecasting on a go-forward basis? You mentioned that, you know, despite the $5 million headwind and overall connected that you still expect to grow, sorry, the new connected revenue. Can you just kinda talk about, you know, what's driving that growth above and beyond that $5 million headwind?
Yeah. Let me just make sure we're clear on the elements of the connected services. As you pointed out, there is that legacy contract. It's on a amortization schedule, so it's highly predictable. It has 11 quarters left. It's a contract that goes back to 2013, and that'll run out. In the new subscription connected services, there's the $5 million headwind, based on these are very old technology contracts. Some of them came through acquisitions done when auto was part of Nuance. Those technologies are not renewable. The customers may have moved on to a different Cerence technology platform, but of course, that wouldn't be classified as a renewal. That $5 million headwind will not exist in 2023.
Right. Because the contracts will be on the new technology.
Yes. Correct.
Yeah.
I'll let Stefan talk about the.
Here we see also some strong revenue growth vectors here, right? Also with respect to new products and program expansion or the original expansion, right? Just referring again to the biggest deal in our history that was for China with all various flavors for connected services. So overall, I think our new applications, our new products, what we also showed at CES are now taking off, right? We see a good traction here, and this keeps us confident that we will see also a growth in new connected services.
Just last question, I'll step back in the queue. Connected services was $20.6, $20.7. You mentioned that's gonna ramp in the second half. Can you give us kind of a sense of kind of what you're thinking about in terms of magnitude? Thank you.
Well, we don't guide specifically on the elements of the revenue.
Correct.
Great. Your next question is from Luke Young of Baird.
Yeah. Good morning, and thank you for taking the questions. I wanna start with the guidance. Of course, you're maintaining the full-year guidance, but I'm wondering if you're guiding within the range to any extent, or maybe more importantly, if I look at the implied guidance for the Q4 , at the midpoint, it does imply a really significant ramp, and I just wanted to better understand what is going on, specifically later in the year, from a fundamental standpoint driving that assumption. Thank you.
We had strong bookings, as we noted in the first half. We have the strong PS, which will equate to implementations of programs which will help to drive revenue. Through those strong bookings, we'll also see higher professional services. It's all of those elements that we believe will allow us to achieve the guidance that we put out there.
Maybe one additional comment. Tom is absolutely right. We predict a strong professional services performance for the second half of the fiscal year. Equally important, what you also mentioned in the last earnings call, right, that we are working on some specialty deals.
Okay. Thank you for that. Switching gears, wanted to ask a little bigger picture question for you, Stefan. You know, with the announcement of the four two-wheeler awards during the first half, can you just reset us on where that opportunity stands bigger picture for the company? Thank you.
Two-wheelers.
For the two-wheelers, yeah. I think as we launched this program 1.5 years ago, right? We see a lot of traction here on the two-wheeler side, yeah, especially in Asia Pacific, yeah. We also won one of the top two-wheeler manufacturers. On a broader picture, you know, I mean, the two-wheeler is a very attractive market to us, roughly 50 million -60 million two-wheelers on a yearly basis, right? We are leveraging the core AI stack, yeah, and adding on an application level new features on it, what we just described in the call here. Overall, that's an important market for us, right? We see a lot of potential for us in the future.
It's all a hybrid solution, meaning edge and connected cloud services.
Okay, great. Yeah, appreciate the responses. I'll go ahead and leave it there. Thank you.
You have a question from Jeff Van Rhee of Craig-Hallum.
Sure. I've got a couple. First on the prepaid, I think the original guide last quarter given was $60 for the year, obviously you're $45 so far, but now you're guiding to $75-$100. I get the explanation of the two different models. My question is what's changed since the last guide till now?
The biggest change is actually that we are seeing a lot of inquiries from customers over the last couple of weeks, right? Especially from the Asia region.
Okay. Can you talk to connected services and particularly usage of connected services? You mentioned the legacy connected services has got some headwinds, and aren't gonna renew, but you've got some more modern connected services out there, and I'm sure you're watching the usage very closely.
Yeah.
What observations have you got about absolute levels of usage and trends in usage?
When comparing the usage in a car, right, and we're doing this with our analytics tools, right, and also with some of the OEMs, right? You can compare the usage in a car, for example, with an Amazon Echo solution, right? Same number of transaction. We see a tremendous growth in monthly active users, so overall it's picking up, right? On the other hand, of course, we saw also a short decline when in China some cities were shut down for COVID. Overall, it's trending into the right direction.
Okay. Just backing up a little bit to a very high level in terms of the revolving door on the leadership front. You know, I mean, at this point, we've got two Chief Executive Officers and three Chief Financial Officers in five months. What are the learnings here? I mean, is the due diligence process broken, and how do you avoid that kind of turnover in the future?
I think we are working closely with the board here. I think the process, in my view, is not broken. You know, I mean, when referring to the Chief Financial Officer, I think. Let me explain in a different way, right? Mark Gallenberger's retirement in March, yeah, was planned, and Mark is now serving in a consultant role until November of this calendar year. Yeah. We had a short-term interim financial consultant during the Chief Financial Officer search, right? After an extensive search, we identified Marc Montagner. Unfortunately, it wasn't a good fit, yeah? I'm really excited and feel strongly that Tom is a natural fit for the Chief Financial Officer position, right? He brings in all the experience. I'm working with Tom for more than 14 years now, right?
He was quite active as a board member, and you could also hear from the call now, he knows everything. He's well-connected. He knows the automotive, the mobility space, right? He is quite familiar with software, right? In his role when he was running at Nuance, the chief transformation officer, right? He was fully responsible for the spin-off of Cerence from Nuance, right? He put everything together, including G&A and the policies.
Okay. Yeah, thanks for that. I mean, I'm certainly familiar with Tom. I've known him for a long time, so no disagreements there. I just think when you get this many turns, the explanations sort of start to fade in relevance, and it seems to point to process issues. I'll leave it there. One other brief question. In terms of the bookings, you mentioned pretty strong connected bookings. You know, I'm just curious what you've learned on implementations where you're coexisting, right? The cognitive arbitration argument. You know, what are you seeing in win rates in connected? What are you seeing in win rates when you coexist? And then, you know, what is that leading to in pricing, in particular when you're coexisting?
You know, I think we are uniquely positioned here for three reasons. One, I think the OEMs or most of the OEMs, they want their own branded experience. Yeah. Two, most of the OEMs want to own the data for potential data monetization afterwards, right? We provide an OEM friendly platform with global multi-assistant capabilities, right? That's a big advantage of our solution. Yeah. We have all the tools from simple wake words to very interesting new technologies like Just Talk, and we are supporting the OEMs. The OEMs, they own the business flow and the business logic.
Okay, I'll leave it there. Thank you.
Your next question is from Mark Delaney of Goldman Sachs.
Yes. Good morning, and thank you very much for taking the questions. First, I was hoping to understand the revenue trajectory in terms of revenue per vehicle, increase in revenue per vehicle as part of the company's long-term opportunity. You had a couple of big programs you booked that you spoke about. Maybe you can give us a sense about what kind of revenue per vehicle you're expecting, you know, when you look at a couple of these big new programs you've won and how those compare to what revenue per vehicle was with those customers on the prior contracts.
Yeah. We see also an uptick in our price per unit, so because we are adding more and more new applications to it. You know, just think about karaoke. Think about Browse. Think about Co-Pilot. Think about our new Cerence Assistant, right? Which is actually a unique solution also, not just for four-wheelers, two-wheelers, but also for trucks, right? What we mentioned. The more we can add on, right, of course, then we're going to increase also the unit price. On the connected side, right, we are adding more and more new applications to it. Yeah. It takes some time. What we also discussed last earnings call, right? The bookings-to-ship conversion takes, but is a long-term game here, right? Also here we are well-positioned.
Overall, I'm very confident with our future.
Okay. That's helpful directional color. My second question is on consumption of these upfront license deals that are being struck. I think the company had talked about a consumption of fixed licenses sold in prior years was gonna be in the mid-$70 million range this year. Maybe you could talk about what you expect consumption to be at this point. Has there been a change to that? More broadly, you know, when you think about the fixed licenses you've sold ahead of auto production in prior years, as well as your updated expectation for these licenses you're gonna sell this year before auto production, you know, when does that get consumed? Thank you.
Well, we don't guide on the consumption levels. As we said, this is a long-standing practice, so it has. There's been a flow to it. We continue to make the assessment and the trade-offs on these particular deals.
Okay. Thank you very much.
As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star then 1 on your telephone keypad. I'm showing no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the call back over to the speakers for any further comments.
Thank you, Christy, and thank you to everyone for joining us on our call this morning, and we hope to see you or have a meeting with you at one of the upcoming conferences. Thank you, and have a good day.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.