Accenture Results Top Expectations
September 24 2015 - 7:20AM
Dow Jones News
Accenture PLC said Thursday that its profit and revenue held up
better than expected in its August quarter despite the impact of
currency fluctuations, while the consulting company offered an
earnings outlook for its newly started fiscal year that was mostly
below Wall Street expectations.
Accenture also said it has boosted its semiannual dividend by
8%, to $1.10 a share, and added $5 billion to its share-buyback
program.
Accenture's earnings have grown steadily in recent years, as its
outsourcing and consulting businesses have enjoyed strong growth.
Accenture was tapped last year to help fix the embattled
HealthCare.gov website, and last December the company said it won a
five-year $563 million contract to continue its work on the federal
insurance site.
Meanwhile, Accenture's digital revenues have surged and the
company has moved to boost its cloud services. Earlier this month,
the company agreed to buy cloud-computing consultancy Cloud
Sherpas, which provides services to companies such as Google Inc.
and Salesforce.com Inc.
In the latest quarter, the consulting unit's revenue grew 14%
excluding currency impacts, while outsourcing revenue jumped 9% in
the local currency.
Overall, Accenture reported fourth-quarter earnings of $737.6
million, up from $701 million a year ago. On a per-share basis,
which includes profit from some noncontrolling interests, earnings
rose to $1.15 a share from $1.08 a share.
Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had projected earnings of
$1.12 a share.
Net revenue, or revenues before reimbursements, ticked up 1.4%
to $7.89 billion. But excluding currency impacts, revenue would
have grown 12%.
Accenture had forecast net revenue to be between $7.45 billion
and $7.70 billion.
For the year ending next August, Accenture said it expects
earnings of $5.09 to $5.24 a share. Analysts polled by Thomson
Reuters had forecast $5.22 a share in earnings.
The company forecast revenue growth of 5% to 8%, excluding the
impact of foreign currency, which would represent a slowdown from
the 11% growth in its 2015 fiscal year.
For its current quarter, Accenture said it expects revenue of
$7.7 billion to $7.95 billion, including a negative 8.5% impact
from foreign exchange. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had
forecast $8.1 billion in revenue.
Write to Chelsey Dulaney at chelsey.dulaney@wsj.com
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 24, 2015 08:05 ET (12:05 GMT)
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