By Hakan Ersen
FRANKFURT (Reuters) -Shares in SAP were up 5% at market open on Tuesday, hitting an all-time high of 221 euros ($239.21) after the German software company raised its full-year targets on a strong cloud business in the third quarter.
Cloud revenue grew 27%, adjusted for currency effects, to 4.35 billion euros ($4.71 billion) in the third quarter, boosted by a 36% rise in sales of Cloud ERP Suite resource planning software.
Artificial intelligence was a key growth driver, according to CEO Christian Klein. "Around 30% of our cloud contracts in the third quarter included AI use scenarios," he said late on Monday.
With its guidance for 2025 unchanged, Barclays analysts wrote in a note that "even the new guide looks conservative".
They added that management "encouragingly" spoke on this conservatism.
Operating profit grew by 28% to 2.24 billion euros, exceeding expectations, helped by cost-cutting and a comparatively low number of new hires, CFO Dominik Asam said.
The company expects the cost of its restructuring to come at around 3 billion euros as it evaluates up to 10,000 jobs out of its 100,000 total headcount to prepare for the era of AI.
On this basis, the Walldorf-based group nudged up its full-year cloud and software revenue target to 29.5-29.8 billion euros from 29-29.5 billion euros.
It now sees 2024 operating profit at 7.8 billion euros, up from a forecast of 7.6-7.9 billion euros.
JPM analysts see SAP's performance as "a read-across to the health of Enterprise IT spending and specifically software within that," pointing to rivals Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) , Workday (NASDAQ:WDAY) and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) .
($1 = 0.9239 euros)