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SAP SE (SAP) Q3 2015 Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript


Executives: Stefan Gruber - Investor Relations Bill McDermott - Chief Executive Officer Luka Mucic - Chief Financial Officer Rob Enslin - President, Global Customer Operations Steve Singh - Head of SAP Business

Network
Analysts
: Walter Pritchard - Citi Philip Winslow - Credit Suisse Brad Zelnick - Jefferies Mohammed Moawalla - Goldman Sachs Ross MacMillan - RBC Capital Market Gerardus Vos - Barclays Patrick Walravens - JMP

Securities
Operator
: I’m your Chorus Call operator. Welcome and thank you for joining the SAP 2015 Third Quarter Earnings Results Conference Call. Throughout today’s recorded presentation, all participants will be in a listen-only mode. The presentation will be followed by question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr.

Stefan Gruber. Please go ahead sir.

Stefan Gruber: Thank you very much. Good morning or good afternoon. This is Stefan Gruber, Head of Investor Relations.

Thank you for joining us to discuss our results for the third quarter 2015. I’m joined by our CEO, Bill McDermott; and Luka Mucic, our CFO, who will both make opening remarks on the call today. Also, joining us on the call for Q&A, our Board Members Rob Enslin, who runs Global Customer Operations; and Steve Singh, Head of SAP Business Network. Today, we are hosting our 6,200 attendees at our TechEd event in Las Vegas, d-code with its product and innovation is giving a keynote there and they will therefore not join this call today. Before we get started, I would like to say a few words about forward-looking statements.

Any statements made during this call that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements as defined in the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Words such as anticipate, believe, estimate, expect, forecast, intend, may, plan, project, predict, should, outlook and will and similar expressions as they relate to SAP are intended to identify such forward-looking statements. SAP undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements are subject to various risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations.

The factors that could affect SAP’s future financial results are discussed more fully in SAP’s filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the SEC including SAP’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for 2014, filed with the SEC on March 20, 2015. Participants are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements which speak only as of their dates. Please keep in mind that unless otherwise noted, all numbers referred to on this conference call are non-IFRS and growth rates are non-IFRS as reported. And with that, I would like to turn the call over to Bill McDermott.

Bill McDermott: Thank you, Stefan, and thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for joining us on the call today. I’ll begin by offering some perspective on our very strong Q3 results. Businesses are making the shift to digital and complexity is their most intractable challenge. They need a trusted partner for digital innovation across every element of their landscape including applications, cloud, business networks and platform. This is why SAP’s strategy is more relevant than ever before and you’ve seen this validated in our

Q3 results: cloud revenue up 116%, new cloud bookings up 102%, cloud and software revenue up 19%, operating profit up 19% and earnings per share up 16%.

So, how are we doing this? Let’s start with applications. Customers want to digitize their core business processes with S/4HANA to harness real time a live system data strategy which enables decision making. Our next generation suite S/4HANA is becoming the mission critical control center for digital business. Think about this, no aggregates, four times fewer process steps in the work flow, 10 times smaller footprint, and 1,800 times faster than any other technology on the market. Customer adoption therefore continues to surge.

We now have over 1,300 customers to date after just eight months on the market, not only does S/4HANA show exceptional traction it also serves as a catalyst for growth across our entire solutions portfolio. We’re seeing strong S/4HANA adoption across all of our regions and industries with companies like China Railway and Metro in Germany as examples and customers were also going live including Bahrain Steel and Asian Paints to name a few. I’d especially like to call out the recently closed S/4HANA contract with the Bosch Group in Germany. With S/4HANA, Bosch will simplify their landscape enabling new business models to deliver better insights and connected services to their customers. When you think about the cloud, we now have the S/4HANA core, our best-in-class flagship suite also in the cloud and these applications are helping our customers to run simple.

Think about SuccessFactors and Fieldglass, SAP is the only company that delivers total workforce management solutions across permanent and contingent labor. Our flagship cloud HR product Employee Central has incredible traction, the numbers speak for themselves. We now have a rise of 79% in customers running Employee Central just over the last 12 months. We’ve now localized this solution for 73 countries and we have payroll localized for 30 countries. In Q3, top multinational organizations such as Bayer and Bertelsmann selected SuccessFactors HCM Solutions, and we are winning against key competitors with ALSTOM Transport choosing SAP over Workday, this is one of many examples by the way.

In Europe alone, we have approximately 1,000 customers using our HCM Solutions in the cloud compared to Workday’s 100 customers. We are also starting to see a new evolution which is replacing Workday installations. Customer engagement and commerce solutions are helping our customers engineer a different kind of relationship with their digital consumers engaging them with personalized information across every channel. This is a significant shift beyond traditional CRM. We are now moving to real time customer engagement where the lines between marketing, sales, service and commerce are fading.

In addition, no other vendor can connect the front office and the back office in real time the way SAP can connecting people, inventory, supply chain, pricing and customers together to seamlessly fulfill e-commerce in one end-to-end value chain. We had numerous wins over salesforce.com as a result in Q3 including Coca-Cola FEMSA as an example. And then there is business networks, the digital transformation doesn’t stop at the four walls of a business. While others consolidated the past, SAP invested in the future. We are now the undisputed leader in business networks.

Today, the SAP business network group includes Ariba, Fieldglass and Concur. Each of these businesses are leaders in their respective markets and to be a global leader in any business network requires scale. Scale in terms of the numbers of customers you serve and the open platform that you offer, this has to be embraced by a large ecosystem. This large ecosystem has to offer content and innovation and this further drives the scale. This is evident across SAP’s business networks as they soar, example, total revenue in our business networks segment grew more than 125% at constant currency to EUR 412 million.

Concur, the largest of our networks, helps over 30 million end users effortlessly process travel and expenses. We saw continued acceleration of Concur’s new customer bookings as it also leverages the SAP global scale. Even as Concur sign large multinational customers including Brita filters and Bombardier, they also saw the SMB business continue to accelerate. Ariba continues to scale now as the world’s largest procurement network with 1.9 million companies purchasing or selling more than $730 billion worth of goods and services annually across the Ariba network. Fieldglass, the best-in-class flexible labor solutions have placed more than 1.7 million contingent workers in over 100 countries in the past 12 months alone.

We couldn’t be more bullish on the future of SAP’s business networks. Now on to the platform where SAP is leading in Big Data and IoT. With HANA cloud platform, customers are building new applications. We helped companies like Under Armour go beyond their traditional business and connect millions of people on a digital health platform or Siemens with the help of SAP, they are now a software company connecting their industrial assets into cloud to enable brand new business models for growth. Our innovations are also on the frontlines of improving people’s lives.

ASCO is fighting cancer with Big Data using the SAP HANA platform to build its cancer link solution, this is a groundbreaking health information technology platform that will harness Big Data to deliver high quality care to patients. The SAP HANA enterprise cloud has rapidly emerged as a best-in-class option for customers that are seeking to migrate their mission critical processes to the cloud. We also leverage our partner network to deliver our HANA enterprise cloud solutions thereby increasing our global reach and scale. Our HANA enterprise cloud offering continues to grow in triple digits validating the strong trust our customers have placed in our private cloud offering. The university hospital Frankfurt example has decided to switch from Oracle database to SAP HANA to run their SAP applications in the HANA enterprise cloud.

In summary, ladies and gentlemen, our success is not just driven by our innovative technology solutions but also by the simplicity of our user experience. I am pleased that SAP Fiori UX has won a Red Dot Award. SAP earned the award in the fiercely competitive design category. SAP’s vision is to help the world run better and improve people’s lives, and that’s why we are joining forces with Imagine Dragons to launch the One4 project that encourages people to download the band’s newly released song “I Was Me” from iTunes worldwide, thanks to Rob Enslin and his team for leading this for SAP. Proceeds from this effort will be donated to the UN Refugee Agency and further SAP will also donate $0.10 for every download up to the first 5 million downloads from iTunes.

What’s it all about? SAP is a growth company. We are focused and purpose driven as ever and as always I’d like to thank our more than 75,000 employees whose commitment to our customers amazes me every day. I’d like to now turn the call over to Luka for a detailed look at our results. Luka, over to you.

Luka Mucic: Thank you very much Bill.

Indeed we delivered a very strong performance in Q3 and successfully validated our focus in helping our customers to run simple in the digital economy. So let me now comment on the detailed financials. In Q3, Bill has said it, we continued our fast growth in the cloud. Cloud subscription and support revenue was up 116% year-over-year, the organic contribution to this growth that is the contribution of everything other than Concur accelerated sequentially and for the first nine months is better than our long term growth aspirations. Our new cloud bookings were up 102% year-over-year.

This is likewise a very strong performance. You need to consider that this only includes committed revenue from our cloud business. Pay-per-use models such as the ones in play for Fieldglass and a large portion of Ariba are not included in this number. Our core license business was equally strong in the quarter, up 7%. This result along with our excellent performance in the cloud led to a 19% increase in cloud and software revenue exceeding EUR 4 billion for the first time ever in a third quarter.

Our strong double digit growth in cloud and software revenue was mainly driven by excellent results in mature markets. But having said that, we also did relatively well in quite a few emerging markets where we nevertheless expect continuing volatility and economic challenges. Let me provide some more color on the regional performance. We had a strong performance in the EMEA region with a 13% increase in cloud and software revenue. Our cloud revenue grew by 67% with high double digit growth in new cloud bookings.

I would in particular like to call out Germany and France which both had strong software license revenues in the quarter. Germany in particular continues to show strong results quarter-after-quarter. In the Americas region, we saw strong double digit growth in cloud and software revenue with an increase of 32%. We were also pleased with a great quarter in our cloud revenue which grew by 139% with New Cloud bookings growing by triple digits. An improved performance in Latin America, which stabilized the microeconomic challenges assisted with this growth.

In APJ, Cloud and Software revenue grew by 8%, with both Cloud revenue and New Cloud bookings growing in the double digits. Some highlights for India and South Korea with both strong Cloud and Software revenue results. A large part of our success is the ever steady nature of our software [ph] business, which grew at 12% right on track with our internal expectations and the implied performance from our full year 2015 outlook. We again continue to see very high renewal and enterprise support adoption rates. Consequentially our share of more predictable revenue, which comprises our Cloud revenue and Support revenue as a share of total revenue increased by 3 percentage points year-over-year to 62% in the third quarter.

Now moving to the bottom line, my personal favorite, the search and operating profit in the third quarter reflects our business transformations continued success and the improving profitability of our Cloud offerings. In the third quarter, we had a positive impact from our company-wide transformation program in the mid-double digit million euro range. On the other hand, to show our commitment to growth, we had a net increase of 1,200 employees year-to-date as we continue to invest in innovation and intergrowth markets. You can clearly see our progress in our key gross margins were for the second quarter in a row we expanded all margins sequentially. The overall gross margin was 72%, up 140 basis points sequentially.

Our Cloud and Software gross margin was 84.2%, up 80 basis points sequentially. Our services gross margin was up by 40 basis points as we saw growth continue in the third quarter. A real highlight of the quarter though, was the gross margin results in the Cloud. It increased sequentially by 300 basis points, but the really great progress we’re making there can be seen by the almost 9 percentage point increase year-over-year that’s an impressive performance. Our operating profit was 1.620 billion for the quarter, an increase of 19%.

In fact, our operating profit grew at the same pace as our Cloud and Software revenue for the quarter on a reported basis, but grew even faster on a constant currency basis. The IFRS tax rate in the third quarter was 27.1%, up from 26.5% in the prior year period. The non-IFRS tax rate in the third quarter was 28%, up from 27.7% in the prior year period. We maintain our tax outlook for 2015. Our earnings per share was $0.98 for the quarter, up 16% year-over-year as Bill alluded to earlier.

Operating cash flow for the first nine months was €3.2 billion, up by 5% year-over-year, while free cash flow for the first nine months was up 8% year-over-year. As a consequence of these strong results, we are firmly reiterating our outlook for the full-year. We also continue to expect the currency benefit for the rest of the year and have updated our expectations for the impact on a reported growth rate in 2015. For details on the reiterated outlook and the currency benefits please refer to our earnings release published earlier today. So to summarize, in Q3, we clearly see the results of the strategy we have implemented over the last five years.

We have a fast growing Cloud business and at the same time a solid performance in the Cloud. Overall Cloud and Software growth is strong and clearly ahead of our largest competitor. We substantially increased our operating profit. We are supporting customers in their journey to run simple, go digital, and stay ahead of their competition, and we are absolutely confident we will continue to deliver on our commitment to growth. Thank you and we will now be happy to take your questions.

Stefan Gruber: Thank you very much, Luka. I would like to turn back to the operator and you can start the Q&A session please.

Operator: Thank you. [Operator Instructions] The first question comes from the line of Walter Pritchard of Citi. Please go ahead.

Walter Pritchard: Thank you. Luka, I wanted to just one thing we noticed in the numbers was you did have maintenance revenue down slightly on a sequential basis, was there some impact there that we should be aware of that drove that?

Luka Mucic: No, Walter, actually we are absolutely satisfied with our support revenue performance. I noticed that some of you actually have modeled a slightly higher support revenue, but in our internal projections we are right at where we were supposed to be quite frankly. I think if you take a look at the support performance all you need to recognize couple of things, (a) in terms of our renewal rates as well as the enterprise support adoption there was really no change at all; [renewal] [ph] in the high 90s our enterprise support adoption rate was 99% in Q3 again. What we see as well is that the pattern in our conversion programs, as you know, we have the Cloud extension program in place, which allows customers to trade in if you will legacy maintenance that they don’t require any more from solutions that they want to convert into the Cloud, into Cloud subscription streams, entering into Cloud contracts.

This conversion program has an impact in the double-digit million euro range on a per-annum basis, but is pretty stable in that. So, there is no big change in patterns there and finally we also see of course, and this is good news, that we occasionally have customers that are buying new software licenses from us that entitle them then to opt into for our product support for large enterprise offering for our largest customers. They need to have a 30 million euro, or the respective local currency equivalent and maintenance base in order to do that, but then their maintenance would subsequently be adjusted from a 22% range to 17%. Now, that happens, it happens in some quarters with few more deals and some other quarters with a few less, but this is standard operational business and you should note that as part of that typically those customers engage into premium support contracts with SAP. So mainly makes attention, but those since the beginning of the year, not shown in support revenue anymore, but in services revenue and factoring all of these matters in we are exactly where we wanted to be, so there should be no cause for major concern around our support revenue streams.

Walter Pritchard: And then Bill on -

Luka Mucic: Please go ahead Walter.

Walter Pritchard: Oh, sorry, Bill on just you had a promo in the quarter on S/4 and I note here you had very strong incremental customer count with 1,300 customers on S/4HANA, can you talk about what impact that promotion had on that count versus just what impact you had from an organic basis with customers feeling more comfortable with deploying S/4?

Bill McDermott: Yes, thank you very much Walter, I appreciate it. I would just underscore this has been a value market and when companies decide on their digital strategy they’re not buying promos, they’re buying business outcomes and therefore to have a live system strategy on S/4HANA when you now can run your business in memory completely changes the game. So, that is the driving force between us and the 1,300 companies that have adopted it because they want to simplify their process steps as I mentioned, they want to radically change the footprint of their enterprise and of course they want their business to run faster. The business cases for this as you invent new business models, I gave the case of Under Armour or Siemens is irrefutable and that’s what’s driving it.

Incidentally, to be completely fair and transparent with our customers because it has been so highly sought after, we have extended the promotion through the end of the year and we continue to see extremely robust pipelines. I also have Rob Enslin, our Head of Sales here, Rob, if you like to offer any commentary?

Rob Enslin: Yeah, I think we launched the S/4 promo in February when we launched S/4, we decided to extend the promo for until December 31 because we will bring out the S/4 logistics release, which our customers have been clamoring for and I think the digital core is really driven by S/4 and where we’re taking these companies with S/4.

Bill McDermott: Okay. Thank you very much.

Walter Pritchard: Great.

Thank you.

Bill McDermott: Let’s move to the next question please.

Operator: The next question comes from the line of Philip Winslow of Credit Suisse. Please go ahead sir.

Philip Winslow: Hi, guys, thanks and congrats on a great quarter and also to Bill specifically, I think I speak for everyone on the call we wish you best luck in your recovery and it’s great to hear your positivity on this call.

A question on by the, sort of the revenue and the margin mix here, this is a strong quarter both in terms of the license revenue, the Cloud new bookings and billings, but also you guys certainly showed upside at least where consensus expectations were on margin. So I guess this is a question to both Bill and Luka, when you think about sort of where you guys stand in your investment cycle, where you are and sort of the maturity of the Cloud, kind of where you all are structurally I guess with the on-premise business, do you think we’re actually at that point where we actually start to see that leverage creep back in the model kind of going forward?

Luka Mucic: Yeah, maybe let me get to that and then Bill please join in and provide additional commentary as you see fit. So, in terms of the Cloud I think you see that we have now for a number of quarters seen a clear trend that our gross margins have been improving sequentially, and this is due of course to the scale that we have achieved in the cloud but also the fact that even our still nascent solutions are now quickly maturing if you take a look at the HANA enterprise cloud for example, our private cloud business, it is at the moment still running at a negative margin, however we have improved dramatically and clearly have now a line of sight where this business will break even in 2016 and will then be also a positive contributor, so that has obviously helped. In terms of our scale assets both in the public software-as-a-service cloud, the solutions around SuccessFactors as well as in the business network we are already operating at a very high efficiency, you have seen probably the results in the Business Network Group as part of the segment reporting with a 78% gross margin, this is an extremely, extremely efficient tight ship that we’re running here. Of course, we still need to continue to invest but the peak, the big peaks that we have seen in the build-out of our data center capacity in the last year are not matched to this year, you see this also in the free cash flow that we increase there is bigger and then on the operating cash flow that’s due to a slightly reduced CapEx investments, we believe that we still can do a lot of costs over time as we continue to scale our Cloud business to further increase the efficiency there, however you should not expect that each and every quarter we would come up with another year-over-year 9% raise that might be a little bit too ambitious to do, but of course we continue to remain focused on that.

The other point that contributed positively is that we really have found a way this year with our transformation program to put the investments to where innovation is and where innovation is needed and at the same time de-invest consciously in legacy areas where we have capacity overheads this year. As part of our transformation program, we have managed actually to increase net headcount by 1,200 heads, while taking out from a run rate from those legacy areas more than a 500 million annualized run rate savings effect and I think that is extremely important and definitely it should be sustainable also going forward while of course we need to continue to invest in the growth areas and you need to continue to expect that SAP will also add capacity and headcount in those areas as you have seen in the first three quarters. Bill?

Bill McDermott: Thank you, Luka, and so I want to thank you very much for your kind remarks, and ladies gentlemen that have been so kind to me during this recovery period, I appreciate it. I am 100% back in action up to and including in the air again, which makes me feel very comfortable because I feel very comfortable where the air is thin at 35,000 feet, it’s what I do. I thought a couple of things to support what Luka said may be of interest to you.

One is, I think we really now have turned the business model corner as it relates to becoming that Cloud company powered by HANA. Now, you’re seeing not only the revenue growth in the Cloud and also the sustainability of the core with S/4HANA, but as Luka said you’ve seen the expansion of the operating profit and the operating margins of the company which we’ve been saying all along. If you adjusted the core space for a Cloud-based world and you’re committed to be in the Cloud company powered by HANA you could actually pull this off and with the robust pipeline that we see of our flagship S/4HANA we have every reason to believe the business model is really, really strong. A couple of stats that I really like because we had a couple of thousand net new customers in the quarter and when I think about best-in-class companies and even our M&A strategy, we bought the best companies in the world and we also bought great leaders with those companies, one example is Concur and now that we’ve formed the Business Network Group around Steve Singh’s leadership, I think he’s got a couple of stats including that even with the scale of SAP, 20% of his revenue in the quarter came from SAP accounts, 80% came from non-SAP. So, we haven’t lost the focus on channel management and in fact that’s the idea we want to carry forward with all of our assets and Steve, perhaps you like to make a comment on that?

Steve Singh: Sure.

Maybe I’ll just add a couple of things, first of all, one of the great actions I think SAP has is that we literally have best-in-class applications in the public Cloud services, which – the real value there is, not only can we leverage the strength of the SAP sales organization, which is obviously led by Rob, but we have the capacity with these best-in-class applications to serve non-SAP customers and fundamentally, customers choose what’s right for them to solve their particular problems. So, we have whether it’s Concur or Ariba or SuccessFactors whatever it might be when you’re solving the right problem for the customer, you win. Now, the other piece I think that is really underappreciated still about the SAP acquisition strategy is that we’re also able to keep a large portion of the acquired sales organizations. I think that is particularly critical because that expertise helps us to win every one of these specific markets and being able to blend those sales organizations in partnership with Rob’s organization drives the kind of results that you’ve seen in this quarter.

Bill McDermott: Thank you Steve.

It’s interesting since 2010, we’ve added a couple of hundred thousand customers and what’s very, very nice and very pleasing is this idea of net new channel expansion and teamwork across the company, so we want to keep that going. Thanks, Bill.

Philip Winslow: Great. Thanks guys.

Stefan Gruber: Thank you very much.

Let’s take your next question please.

Operator: The next question comes from the line of Brad Zelnick of Jefferies, please go ahead.

Brad Zelnick: Great and thank you so much for taking my question and really nice quarter, just pretty simply if we look at Asia Pac, it seems to have underperformed EMEA and the Americas and particularly in Japan, can you just give us an update what’s happening there thanks.

Luka Mucic: Yeah, okay maybe I can start I and then Rob and Bill feel free to comment. You’re right.

I mean in Asia, we had both good and maybe not so good results although I would also caution everybody on Japan, actually Japan had a very good performance in the first half year and in Q3 had a very tough comparison as they closed some really big transformation with strategic deals in Q3 of last year. Asia, I think is characterized by good performance in some markets but in other ones as we all know there are microeconomic challenges and headwinds. China, for example, comes to mind. We had a – let’s say relatively okay-ish performance there, but we did not post a meaningful growth and of course this market would have the potential under different conditions to do much more for SAP. So, overall I would say a mixed performance in APJ, but the team, especially at the beginning of the year has been doing a terrific job and I’m pretty sure they will bounce back and come back in the fourth quarter.

Rob, Bill?

Rob Enslin: Yeah, I mean from my point of view I think amateur markets have done exceptionally well in both on premise world and S/4 in particular with the revitalization of S/4 bring our customers to the full in these mature markets both on premise and in the Cloud. We see that growth now starting to moving to Asia Pacific and into Latin America, Latin American business which – we’ve had a little bit of challenges we feel now with our new leader down there, Claudio Muruzabal we’ve got some level of stability and consistency in that market and I feel very confident that we’re going to see a much better performance in Latin America. And as Luka said on Japan, I’ve actually spent significant amount of time in Japan in the last couple of quarters, very, very happy with the Japanese numbers. They’ve had a great first half of the year, the comparisons are pretty tough. We have a really good cloud business going to emerge in Japan and I see a consistent performance with customers now starting to look for opportunities.

S/4 and HANA Cloud platform will be a big player in the Japanese markets and in all in all, Asia-Pacific has done really well considering the amount of economic challenges they’ve had to deal with and I feel speaking to [indiscernible] last night that they’re going to be having a pretty good outlook for the rest of the couple of quarters moving ahead.

Brad Zelnick: I appreciate the color and if I could just ask one follow-up, the license business was absolutely much better than we had modeled and I think everybody is pleasantly surprised by how well you’ve performed and I know you called out Germany and France as being strong in some other areas clearly as for in the promotional activities helping, but can you unpack that further for us and maybe call out other specific products or give us a sense of the mix in what’s really driving this. Thanks.

Rob Enslin: Yes. You know what to do, so we did see mature markets and – it’s not only France and Germany, but in general we saw mature markets, widely and broadly except that S4 is the foundation for them to create a digital transformation in their business.

If any business wants to be digital ready and ability to compete at scale going forward in the future they will need an S4 platform to move forward and there is no other piece of software in the world that actually looks, feels, or can move a company forward the way our S4 platform has provided these customers. We’ve seen as we mentioned Bosch, but we see that transformation not taking place across the board with all of our customers. I think 1300 customers plus 300 customers that have signed up for S4 is not a promotion move, but is much more a business transformation move that is taking place.

Luka Mucic: And one of the biggest things we have to do as a company frankly is make sure we not only educate our own workforce across all functions, but also our customers. So we put together a framework for design, thinking, and innovation so we can help the customers apply the knowledge around applications, Cloud platform, and business networks to really rethink and re-imagine how they are running their companies.

They all have the same problem. They have all the ambitions and they don’t have enough money to actually execute on. So by radically changing the process steps lowering the technology footprint especially crushing hardware and doing things on a live system strategy basis, they are able to build a business case for moving forward with SAP. Every CEO I meet, everyone I talk to, their comment is always the same, I didn’t know you guys do all that and I say well that’s why we’re travelling and meeting you so you know what we can do is quite amazing and it’s a matter of getting the word out there and as the team has done a great job in executing on our digital strategy with our customers you seeing that in the growth rates and also I would underscore in the pipelines. The pipelines have never been stronger.

Rob Enslin: I would also just add a little color, I mean Steve, Luka said [indiscernible] SAP TechEd in Vegas where they launched Vora and the new Orca product, the Cloud’s analytics products and these products are digital products that are actually changing the game in analytics as well. So together with S4 our new analytics package that we’re bringing into the market is seeing that level of change taking place now.

Brad Zelnick: Thanks again.

Stefan Gruber: Thanks a lot. Let’s move to the next question please.

Operator: The next question comes from the line of Mohammed Moawalla of Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Mohammed Moawalla: Yes thank you very much. I was wondering if you could elaborate a little bit more on the roadmap around S/4HANA, I mean we’ve got obviously the finance module, the districts is launching pretty soon, if you can give us a roadmap over that kind of the next 12 to 18 months, what modules are coming and your kind of anticipation of the take-up rate on that, is it going to be more about still existing install base selling or do you think that this can drive kind of incremental new customer wins particularly in the midmarket?

Rob Enslin: Yes, so first of all this piece will be available obviously in November, which will allow us from an S4 point of view to have all 25 industries available in an S4 world. I believe that will have a significant impact not only on our existing customers base, but new customers that choose to move into the space.

We will certainly choose S4 as the platform. As I said earlier on these no other platform that looks remotely like it, so in the midmarket we see this could be a significant player as well. I think S4 will have significant strength for a number of years and as we develop these new applications like SAP Cloud for analytics with the digital boardroom redefined, this is where you see a level of transformation that these customers have not seen before. So, I think it’s across the board the growth that you will see with the S4.

Mohammed Moawalla: Great, thank you thank you.

Stefan Gruber: Thank you very much. Let’s take next question please.

Operator: The next question comes from the line of Ross MacMillan of RBC Capital Market, please go ahead sir.

Ross MacMillan: Thank you so much and congratulations from me and Bill all the very best on your recovery. Two financial questions actually, so Luka, first question is, I think year-to-date the core license business is down 1%.

I think in your long term model you had assumed sort of down low single digits but I was just curious as to whether the strengths you’re seeing with S/4HANA is causing you to think about that long term model and whether there is any potential that you could see less declines on the license line on a consistent go-forward basis? And then the second question again for Luka I’m afraid but just on the cost savings you said a little over $500 million run rate, can you just remind us what you realized this quarter? I think you said couple of digit but I wasn’t quite clear on what that was? Thanks.

Luka Mucic: Yes, absolutely. So maybe let’s start with the second one because that’s very easy. I would say the mid double digit million euro is for Q3 and for Q4 we would expect that this figure would be approaching EUR 100 million contribution. So it builds up overtime of course and for next year we will then see the full effect once all of the employees that are affected have actually left the company.

But again be careful to not model this just as a net cost savings, we’re also using this to shift our overall capacity into the new innovation areas and therefore we will also in Q4 definitely also next year look at having a net count increase inside the group. Now, onto your first question with the core license modeling, you’re absolutely correct of course. S/4HANA has a huge potential to not only positively impact our license business but equally importantly overtime, it will also become a major contributor to our cloud storm revenues and it will be definitely our means to transform our customers desire to innovate across all of the deployment models that we acquired in this very specific business proxy. So we are extremely bullish about S/4HANA. I would also just mention and remind everybody that we have not only placed our implied license modeling as part of our midterm guidance on assumptions around products, we have also taken into account an unchanged macroeconomic environment.

So this is obviously a major swing factor in the overall equation at the moment. We see that the emerging markets performance and a quite few markets is dampened because of macro environmental factors. Now if we would see the macro environment in emerging markets in particular to improve that certainly would give us an upside to our current modeling. At the moment, as I said, we don’t see a lot of change in 2015 as oppose to what we have been seeing in 2014, but I would say we sail those stormy seas quite well. In terms of the overarching implications for core licenses, of course while S/4HANA is great success, we still see that in the areas of our line of business solutions, the world is migrating quickly to the clouds that goes for procurement, that goes for CRM, that goes the HR business as well and of course you need to take that into account as calendering effect.

So we feel very, very confident not only with our full year guidance as we have reiterated right now but I have to say also in terms of the midterm outlook that we have given. So I think there are enough pluses that we can count to the equation especially given hopefully in the future improved macroeconomic environment. So we are very confident from the place though we sit in at the moment.

Stefan Gruber: Good. Thank you very much.

Let’s move to the next question please.

Operator: The next question comes from the line of Gerardus Vos of Barclays. Please go ahead.

Gerardus Vos: Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question.

Just a couple of follow-ups, just one on the kind of bad debt provision and I just want to get a bit of a feeling. You took quite a significant increase in the third quarter, was it simply related due to the weaker macro and I was wondering if you could just explain how that works for the numbers and how that hits the revenues in the third quarter? And then just a follow-up on S/4, how many clients do you actually life at the moment on the platform? Thank you.

Luka Mucic: I’ll take the first one and clarify that hopefully because I think your question comes from the cash flow statement where we’re actually listing the impact from two factors both sales allowances as well as the debt provisions. And sales allowances obviously count for revenue whereas debt provisions are going against expenses, so that’s important to note that we are bundling this into cash flow statement but the impact is different in terms of both kinds. What we saw in the third quarter was actually a single sales allowance that we had to book for one single customer which actually decreased software revenue and obviously I cannot site the exact customer there, this was a similar impact that was one-time effect on software revenues.

So that maybe helpful to explain it and also to explain what is not – has had no effect on maintenance revenues and therefore it’s also not a factor that is influenced by the general macroeconomic environment.

Gerardus Vos: Luka, just following up on that quickly, you indicated that one-time effect from one client and that was taken against the license revenues? So would I take that is actually given that this is a fairly sizeable deal that the underlying licenses were actually a little better?

Luka Mucic: Well, it’s part of course it’s a revenue reduction and the consequence is obvious now.

Gerardus Vos: Okay. Thank you.

Bill McDermott: And S/4 world, out of the 1,200 customers that have license for S/4, roughly 25% have got ongoing projects to go live.

Stefan Gruber: Okay. Thank you. We have time for one final question please.

Operator: Final question comes from the line of Patrick Walravens of JMP Securities. Please go ahead sir.

Patrick Walravens: Oh, great. Thank you. Bill, it’s good to have you back. I’m going to give you a big picture question which is I’m sure you saw the comments from the CIO of GE two weeks ago that he plans to move 60% of his workloads to AWS over the next three years. I’d just love to hear your thoughts on how will this shift impact SAP and how you think it will impact some of your competitors?

Bill McDermott: Thank you very much for the question Patrick, appreciate it and your nice remarks means a lot to me.

Regarding AWS, one of the things we’ve done as a company is take a very open ecosystem approach to our innovation. So of course as you know we have the global public cloud offerings that also include our business networks and we now have S/4HANA in the public cloud, but we also have a very nice private cloud business with the HANA enterprise cloud growing in triple digits. At the same time, SAP has always been a company that believes in customer choice and we also believe in vibrant, healthy ecosystems and we don’t compete with a lot of the large hardware centric companies and therefore having partnerships with them utilizing their cloud assets, their global investment and reach, also helps us sell more software. AWS is a unique company and a unique partner and you haven’t seen any trash-talk in-between Amazon or AWS and SAP because we think that if the customer wants to run on that highly efficient infrastructure and they want to take our high profile innovation and combine those two things, they should be able to do that. So we’ve been very vigilant around working closely with Microsoft, with IBM, with HP, with Amazon to make sure that they are certified on the highest possible standards of performance and security of our technology so the customer gets the ultimate best benefit possible which is best software in the world at the best possible value and they should be able to run it where they want to run it.

And that also I think helps us within our own company, challenge ourselves to really leverage our cloud with HANA because we don’t think clouds are created equal. We think that HANA with its amazing performance on the process, the significantly lower hardware footprint and the speed advantage should give our cloud offerings and the customer every benefit that they should ever want. So therefore let’s let the customer choose, give them choice and make sure that our software is going into everyone’s cloud.

Patrick Walravens: Great. Thank you very much.

Stefan Gruber: Thank you very much. This concludes the financial analyst call for today. I would like to say thank you all for joining and looking forward to seeing you again in the near future later at our Q4 earnings announcement in January 2016. Thank you very much for joining and good bye.

Bill McDermott: Thank you, bye-bye.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes the SAP’s third quarter earnings call for today. Thank you for joining and good-bye.