Summary

In the April 2020-February 2021 period following the start of the COVID crisis, the
software sector experienced a once-in-a-lifetime valuation multiple re-rating as investors priced-in not only lower yields but also an outlook that the crisis would kick-start a 鈥渄igital acceleration鈥 spending wave with IT budgets increasing as a portion of total revenues. Yet here we are a full 14 months after the start of the COVID crisis in March 2020 and objectively, we鈥檙e really not seeing tangible evidence of this playing out as expected. We reached out to several F500 IT executives (CIOs/CTOs) to ask why, and conclude that the 鈥渄igital acceleration鈥 theme is exaggerated and is proving to be more modest and slower to layer-in to software company growth rates than we expected.

What We Heard

Not a single IT executive pushed back on our view that we鈥檙e just not seeing a 鈥渄igital acceleration鈥 trend show up in the numbers reported by public software companies. The consensus view of our checks was that: 1. The magnitude of the post-COVID 鈥渄igital acceleration鈥 theme was being exaggerated by technology firms and their partners. 2. While efforts to modernize and transform are indeed real, large enterprises move very slowly and we鈥檙e likely not sitting in front of a 鈥渂ig bang鈥 spending pick-up in 2H21. The demand lift is being layered-in gradually, over several years. 3. We鈥檙e not seeing IT budgets ramp materially faster than overall corporate revenue growth largely because the dream of digital acceleration is meeting the reality of a still-prevalent focus on cost savings resulting from the massive economic hit that organizations absorbed in 2020. 4. The 鈥渄igital acceleration鈥 theme is not a blanket trend lifting everyone serving the technology sector. For many enterprises, 鈥渄igital acceleration鈥 has meant a faster move to the cloud and a rapid adoption in 2020 of work-from-home productivity tools.

What Does It Mean

Our base assumption is that what we鈥檙e seeing now is what we鈥檙e going to get 鈥 a still-positive demand backdrop for software spending but a gradual boost from 鈥渄igital transformation鈥 efforts that will help to keep the growth metrics of the well-positioned software firms stable (or help growth rates decelerate more gradually) in 2H21/2022. Of course, there will likely be pockets of spending where growth will be stronger than others, but this is always the case. With the software sector down 20% since mid-February and the 1Q21 results across the software sector solid but not above investor expectations, post-COVID 鈥渄igital acceleration鈥 enthusiasm has already started to wane. If we鈥檙e right 鈥 that we might see IT spending continue to improve in 2H21 as hard-hit sectors recover but that there probably won鈥檛 be an added 鈥渂ig bang鈥 boost as a wave of new digital transformation projects kick-in 鈥 then we might see some continued pressure on multiples in the high-growth segment of the software space.