Palo Alto Networks (TICKER: PANW) Palo Alto Networks Inc Panw Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
Palo Alto Networks, Inc. (NASDAQ:PANW) Q1 2024 Earnings Conference Call
November 15, 2023 4:30 PM ET
Company Participants
Walter Pritchard - SVP, IR
Nikesh Arora - Chairman and CEO
Dipak Golechha - CFO
Lee Klarich - Chief Product Officer
Conference Call Participants
Saket Kalia - Barclays
Hamza Fodderwala - Morgan Stanley
Brian Essex - JPMorgan
Gabriela Borges - Goldman Sachs
Roger Boyd - UBS
Brad Zelnick - Deutsche Bank
Fatima Boolani - Citibank
Joel Fishbein - Truist
Joe Gallo - Jefferies
Gray Powell - BTIG
Ben Bollin - Cleveland Research
Ittai Kidron - Oppenheimer
Patrick Colville - Scotiabank
Walter Pritchard
Good day, everyone, and welcome to Palo Alto Networks' Fiscal First
Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. I am Walter Pritchard, Senior
Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Development. Please
note that this call is being recorded today, Wednesday, November 15,
2023 at 1:30 p.m. Pacific Time.
With me on today's call to discuss first quarter results are Nikesh
Arora, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; and Dipak Golechha,
our Chief Financial Officer.
Following our prepared remarks, Lee Klarich, our Chief Product Officer,
will join us for the question-and-answer portion. You can find the
press release and other information to supplement today's discussion on
our website at investors.paloaltonetworks.com. While there, please
click on the link for events and presentations to find the Q1 2024
earnings presentation and supplemental information.
During the course of today's call, we will make forward-looking
statements and projections regarding the company's business operations
and financial performance. These statements made today are subject to a
number of risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results
to differ from these forward-looking statements. Please review our
press release and recent SEC filings for a description of these risks
and uncertainties. We assume no obligation to update any
forward-looking statements made in the presentations today.
We will also refer to non-GAAP financial measures. These measures
should not be considered as substitute for financial measures prepared
in accordance with GAAP. The most directly comparable GAAP financial
metrics and reconciliations are in the press release and the appendix
of the investor presentation. Unless specifically noted otherwise, all
results and comparisons are on a fiscal year-over-year basis. We also
note that management is participating in the UBS Conference on November
29.
I will now turn the call over to Nikesh.
Nikesh Arora
Thank you, Walter, very good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for
joining us today for our earnings call.
Q1 was the first quarter of our three-year plan we presented in August.
If I were to summarize the quarter I would say the following. We
continue to execute amazingly well in what is a volatile environment.
On the geopolitical front, we've been contending with what's happening
in Israel and Ukraine.
On the hardware or product front, as you see, there has been
normalization in the industry, it's something we've been indicating for
a while. Backlogs is being shipped, supply chain issues are behind us
and product growth is normalizing in the industry, we continue to seize
normal strength as we indicated in prior quarters in that category.
On the macroeconomic front, business practices continue to adapt and
adjust to a new normal with higher interest rates for longer.
Internally, on the product side, we've had one of the strongest start
to our fiscal year. In addition to various recognitions, we have
delivered strong innovation across all three platforms.
We launched an AI-enabled Cloud Manager and Network Security to
continue our consolidation platformization efforts towards Zero Trust.
In SASE, we announced our intent to deliver enterprise browsers, the
Talon acquisition, which will solve one of the critical issues that
more access, which is not addressed today by any SASE vendor.
We released the industry's first integrated UI for Code to Cloud and
Prisma Cloud and announced the acquisition of Dig Security, double-down
on data security for Generative AI and Prisma Cloud. Last but not the
least, in Cortex, we launched XSIAM 2.0 to bring your own AI. On-the-go
to-market side, Q1 is seasonally a slower start as we kick off the new
year, but the team delivered superior revenue and profitability and we
had our highest cash collection quarter in our history.
We continued to see steady execution - excuse me, in our firewall cloud
and endpoint businesses and SASE, we continue to position ourselves in
larger and more strategic deals, and XSIAM while in it's early days,
continues to garner tremendous interest, giving us more comfort around
our long-term intentions.
So in summary, a strong start in Q1 towards our three-year journey,
early days, but confidence is fired. Let's dig in the details. Our Q1
revenue grew 20% and our billings grew 16%, while our RPO growth of 26%
exceeded both of these and was driven by our next-generation security
capabilities.
I would like you to pay particular attention to RPO versus billings,
Dipak will talk about the difference at plan and explain why the street
might be confused with our future billings guidance. Our Q1 non-GAAP
operating margins expanded by 760 basis points, driving 1.38 in
non-GAAP earnings per share and we generated record $1.5 billion
adjusted free cash flow in Q1.
If you look at what's going on from an overall cybersecurity
perspective, we have never seen as much adversarial and consistent
activity at scale as we have seen in the first quarter. Unfortunately,
we don't expect this to abate anytime soon.
As a consequence of this increased activity and in recognition of our
customer's commitment to us, this week we announced the Unit 42 Rapid
Incident Response Retainer at no cost to all of our strategic
customers, and are providing additional support during this escalating
threat landscape. Ransomware attacks are increasing in frequency and
severity, the ransom amounts being paid are also increasing. Bad actors
are doing damage in a much shorter amount of time. As an example, in
the recent engagement of our Unit 42 team, we saw an instance where bad
actors extracted 2.4 terabytes of data in just 14 hours.
There is also some evidence that the adversaries are beginning to
leverage Generative AI as a tool to make attacks more sophisticated.
Not just that, based on what we're seeing in Unit 42, most attacks are
not happening on the back of vulnerabilities in widely used software
and APIs such as a widely exploited move it file transfer software.
Unfortunately, these bad actors remain elusive with no apparent
significant increase in convictions and high-profile attacks, and
therefore not surprisingly this malicious activity continues.
At the same time, U.S. publicly listed companies in the Board are
confronted with new SEC disclosure requirements that are on prompt
public reporting a material cybersecurity incident, the enhanced
oversight responsibility that comes with them. This result is a
continued focus across organizations and understanding security
posture, cybersecurity risks, and how to mitigate this risk
effectively.
This increasingly involves not only the CISO, but the entire IT
organization, legal, finance, and the CEO and the full Board of
Directors. This pace of malicious activity and the Board-level focus on
cyber security risk is fueling a strong demand environment. Customers
have often have multiple strategic priorities in cyber security and our
broad portfolio enables us to align with these priorities.
In Q1, the cost of money remained a constant discussion and customers'
significant focus on this topic is becoming the new normal. The way it
manifests itself in our business is that there's always a payment in
duration discussions in final negotiations.
Given our strong balance sheet, we can use a mix of strategies to
navigate the environment. This includes annual billing plans, financing
through PANFS, and partner financing. Whilst this does not impact our
business demand or the impact to annual revenue or annual metrics, it
does create variability on total billings more than before depending on
financing used or the duration of contracts.
I'm not concerned about the demand for cyber security, for this quarter
and upcoming quarters, though my concern about our ability to execute,
the billings variability is a pure consequence of the payment
conversation that we're having with our customers and this is validated
by the fact that we continue to see strong RPO and low churn suggesting
this is a cosmetic impact to our business.
We continue to see strong interest across our next-generation security
portfolio, and we're making progress on our platformization journey.
I'll highlight a few deals to talk about the diversity of opportunity,
cross-platform buys, as well as the geographical distribution of our
deals. For example, the federal government agency signed a $25 million
expansion transactions including adding Cortex XDR and Prisma Access in
highly competitive situations, expanding the network security
footprint.
This customer has now spent over $100 million for its lifetime across
SASE platform. A large global SaaS provider signed an $18 million
Prisma Cloud transaction to consumer modules across the portfolio. The
customer is already a customer for our network security and Cortex
platforms. A large education organization expanded its relationship
with us in the first quarter in a $15 million transaction adding XSIAM,
Prisma Cloud, and an expansion of its network security footprint.
And lastly, a nation-state signed a $28 million deal that is a
first-of-its-kind, standardizing on both SASE and XSIAM. This is a long
sales cycle and represents our systematic approach to platformization.
Storing these deals have been playing out across our large customers,
as of Q1, 56% of the Global 2000 has transacted with us across Startup,
Prisma, and Cortex.
This continued focus on customer cyber transformation has fueled a 53%
growth in NGS ARR we reported this quarter as we broke through the $3
billion milestone. Another exciting news, as of Q1, recurring revenue
across Palo Alto is 83% of our total revenue from 77% a year ago.
Let's turn on to updates from our three platforms that are the engine
driving our success. First, in network security, we continue to drive
innovation across our portfolio and see momentum as customers drive
towards Zero Trust architecture. This month we unveiled PAN-OS 11.1 or
Cosmos and Strata Cloud Manager, unifying the management of all of our
three form factors and all security services in a single pane of glass,
and also leveraging AI to analyze security policies, reduced miss
configuration that predict and prevent disruptions.
Customers who have invested in our platform by deploying all three form
factors continue to grow rapidly, up 34%. Of our top 100 network
security customers, 60% have purchased all three form factors, up from
63% a year ago. On average, these platform customers spend more than 15
times of the rest of our network security customers spend.
The story is similar in SASE. Having just seen our innovations gain
multiple industry recognition in SASE in the second half of our fiscal
year, we've continued to invest to build on our leadership position.
We're seeing strong momentum in SASE with ARR growth of approximately
60% in Q1.
We also saw a 35% of our 5 million or greater network security
transaction includes SASE, up from less than 10% a year ago. Today, it
was the first day of our event called SASE Converge, where we unveil
several enhancements. We were able to SASE to access applications with
performance faster than the Internet. We added visibility and control
over interconnect SaaS applications, and enable safe access to Gen-AI
tools and ensure data isn't inadvertently leaked. Lastly, we added
Remote Browser isolation technology for an extra layer of security.
M&A has always been an important part of our strategy. Last week, we
announced our intent to acquire Talon Cyber Security. We see an
opportunity to expand the addressable market for SASE and solve an
important customer problem. As many as 36% of workers classify
themselves as independent workers, who often use unmanaged devices for
work.
In addition, employees increasingly use personal devices for accessing
business applications. To enable access of these devices, security
teams have an impossible trade-off. There are forced to either ignore
security entirely in favor of flexibility and user experience or
trade-off cumbersome technologies like VDI. Talon is a pioneer in the
emerging enterprise browser category and when combined with Prisma SASE
after closing, we will enable users to securely access business
applications from any device, including mobile devices and
non-corporate devices for the seamless user experience.
We intend to include this capability with Prisma Access after closing
and customers will be able to extend the same best-in-class security to
unmanaged devices. Moving on to Prisma Cloud. We continue to see a
strong endorsement of our integrated platform strategy. This traction
is evident in the strong growth of our multi-module customers. We have
seen particular success here with modules released over the last two
and a half years.
There has been a consistent pattern of seeing 100 plus customers for
new modules in the first full quarter of launch and rapid growth after
that, as the benefits of these new modules are broadly understood. This
enthusiastic adoption has driven our strong conviction in adding key
new modules, including some through acquisitions. our IaC scanning
capability which came through the Bridgecrew acquisitions and CICD
Security, which came through Cider are two such examples.
This new module traction is helping to accelerate Prisma Cloud new
business ACV in the last quarter. In Q1, we also unveiled a major new
Prisma Cloud released Darwin. Darwin further differentiates our unique
position across code cloud infrastructure and cloud runtime, Darwin
enables a view across all elements of cloud applications including
cloud services, infrastructure assets, compute workloads, API endpoints
data, and code, Darwin can also help customers understand risks with
deep context and overlay active attack attempts in near real-time.
Our full coverage from code to cloud to enables fixes to be applied
immediately versus the months most vulnerabilities stake to be passed.
About two weeks ago, we announced our intention to acquire Dig
Security, which will bring an award-winning Data Security posture
management capability Prisma Cloud.
With almost 70% of organizations having data stored in the public
cloud, the sprawl of new cloud data services and the adoption of
generative AI, we see an increased need to identify sensitive data,
effectively manage user access, and implement robust security measures
to prevent unauthorized internal and external access to this data
stored in the cloud. After the close of proposed acquisition. Dig's
capabilities will be integrated into Prisma Cloud platform to provide
near real-time data protection from code to cloud.
Moving on to Cortex, we continue to invest across our product portfolio
and expand our customer count, as we see continued adoption of XDR,
XSOAR, Xpanse, and XSIAM. In Q1, we had several industry recognitions
of our innovation, Cortex XDR is the only product in the industry to
achieve 100% protection and detection in the Round 5 MITRE evaluation.
Additionally, XSOAR, Xpanse, and XSIAM are all name leaders by
third-parties this quarter.
We grew our Cortex active customer count by 25% to over 5,300
customers. Attraction overall in Cortex is essential, as it allows us
to sell our transformational offering XSIAM. XSIAM has had a very fast
start since we released the product just over a year ago. After a
strong FY '23, XSIAM's first year release which included over $200
million in bookings, we followed up with a strong Q1.
You saw our first expansion purchase of XSIAM, an eight-figure deal,
and in Q1, our largest XSIAM customer to date was deployed with over
300,000 endpoints. We're seeing XSIAM transform customer security
operations and significantly improve their security outcomes. This
includes significant reductions in the meantime to detect and resolve
security incidents. On the back of potential customers, hearing about
early XSIAM success, our pipeline for XSIAM is over $1 billion of which
$500 million was created just in this past quarter.
As I began my remarks, Q1 was the first quarter of us delivering on the
three-year plan we presented in August. We're driving profitable
growth, investing in innovation, next-generation security, and the
industry's largest dedicated security go-to-market organization, at the
same time, leveraging the scale of Palo Alto Networks. Demand for cyber
security is strong given the backdrop of attacks, the ever increasing
focus and scrutiny around cyber risk, execution continues to be
paramount given the macro conditions and we will continue to adapt and
respond to changes in the environment.
We will manage for long-term growth, operating margin, and free cash
flow, and ensure we continue to transform the business and build
revenue predictably. You will also see this through RPO and most
importantly our current RPO. Our long-term forecast thesis remains
intact whilst we expect short-term variability in billings, we don't
expect this to have a meaningful impact on our ability to deliver our
three-year targets.
With that, I will turn it over Dipak.
Dipak Golechha
Thank you, Nikesh, and good afternoon, everyone.
I'll cover the specifics of our Q1 results, additional details on
drivers behind the results and our Q2 and fiscal year 2024 guidance.
For Q1, revenue was $1.88 billion and grew 20%. Product revenue grew
3%, total service revenue grew 25%, with subscription revenue of $988
million, growing 29%, and support revenue of $549 million, growing 17%.
We saw consistent revenue contribution across all theaters, Americas
grew 20%, EMEA was up 19%, and JPAC grew 23%. The strength of our
next-generation capabilities continues to drive our results with NGS
ARR exceeding $3 billion for the first time and growing 53%. We saw
strong contributions across the portfolio in Q1.
We delivered total billings of $2.02 billion, up 16%, total deferred
revenue in Q1 was $9.4 billion, an increase of 32%. Remaining
performance obligation or RPO was $10.4 billion, increasing 26%, with
current RPO just under half of our IPO. As Nikesh mentioned, we saw the
rising cost of money have an important and incremental impact on
customer behavior in Q1. We're responding to this in the ways we have
discussed previously, including using annual billing plans, financing
through PANFS, and partner financing.
In Q1, this had a negative impact on our billings, although as you can
see, we saw strength in NGS ARR and revenue. Our non-GAAP earnings per
share was significantly ahead of our guidance, growing 66%. This was
driven primarily by the significant increase in our non-GAAP operating
margins, which expanded 760 basis points year-over-year.
We continue to benefit from the scale inherent in our business,
especially as some of our next-generation security offerings scale. We
again delivered strong cash flow in Q1 with trailing 12-month adjusted
free cash flow of $3 billion, achieving trailing 12-month free cash
flow margins of 41%. Moving beyond the top line, gross margin for Q1 of
78% increased 370 basis points year-over-year. We again saw
year-over-year improvements in product margins with the
Normalization of the supply chain environment. Service gross margin
improved to 78% as our new offerings continue to gain scale. Our
operating margin expanded by 760 basis points in Q1 as we saw higher
gross margins and efficiencies across our three operating expense
lines. We are pleased with our operating efficiency progress against
our medium-term targets. We continue to make significant investments to
support our top-line growth expectations, including investments in
-product and engineering, building sales capability, and supporting our
ecosystems in our go-to-market organization.
Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow statements. We ended Q1 with
cash equivalents and investments of $6.9 billion. Q1 cash flow from
operations was $1.526 billion with the total adjusted free cash flow of
$1.489 billion this quarter. As is typical for our Q1, this cash flow
performance was primarily driven by strong collections in the prior
quarter based on the strength of our Q4 bookings - sorry, collections
in the quarter but based on the strength of our Q4 bookings.
Over the last several weeks, we announced that we have entered into
definitive agreements to acquire two companies. On October 31, we
announced our intent to acquire Dig Security Solutions for
approximately $232 million in cash, excluding the value of replacement
equity awards. On November 6, we announced our intent to acquire Talon
Cyber Security for approximately $435 million, excluding value of
replacement equity awards and an inclusive of cash on Talon's balance
sheet at closing.
We expect both transactions will close in our second quarter of fiscal
year '24. During Q1, we repurchased approximately 300,000 shares on the
open market at an average price of approximately $227 per share for a
total consideration of $67 million. As a reminder, our share repurchase
program is opportunistic and we're committed to returning cash to
shareholders over the medium-term. Stock-based compensation expense
declined by 250 basis points as a percent of revenue year-over-year.
As expected, stock-based compensation ticked up slightly as a percent
of revenue quarter-over-quarter with the issuance of a portion of our
fiscal year '24 grounds. On a year-over-year basis, we continue to
manage our SBC down as a percent of revenue in-line with our long-term
plans. Before turning to guidance, I want to frame some of the impacts
that we're seeing in our billings.
As Nikesh noted, we see strong demand in the market and continue to see
customers make a technical selection of offerings across our portfolio.
From here, we see more customers asking for deferred payment terms
either with annual billings, financing through PANFS, or pursuing
external financing. Some customers are looking for additional discounts
upfront payments as they grapple with the cost of money.
Our strong financial position which includes $7 billion in cash, cash
equivalents, and investments, combined with our many options in dealing
with this dynamic, it gives us significant flexibility. This can impact
our billings trends quarter-to-quarter and we are reducing our billings
guidance to account for this through fiscal year 2024. RPO and cRPO
have more of a direct impact on future revenue this quarter with
duration towards the low-end of the range we've seen over the last
several quarters, we saw strong trends in cRPO. As we see low customer
churn, we're confident that independent and specific billing terms and
contract lengths, we can continue to grow RPO at levels that support
our forward revenue growth ambitions.
Now moving on to our guidance for Q2 In the year. For the second
quarter of 2024, we expect billings to be in the range of $2.335
billion to $2.385 billion, an increase of 15% to 18%. We expect revenue
to be in the range of $1.955 billion to $1.985 billion, an increase of
18% to 20%. We expect non-GAAP EPS to be in the range of $1.29 to $1.31
per share, an increase of 23% to 25%.
For the fiscal year 2024., we expect billings to be in the range of
$10.7 billion to $10.8 billion, an increase of 16% to 17%. We expect
NGS ARR to be in the range of $3.95 billion to $4 billion, an increase
of 34% to 35%. We expect revenue to be in the range of $8.15 billion to
$8.2 billion, an increase of 18% to 19%. We expect our fiscal year '24
operating margins to be in the range of 26% to 26.5%, up 190 basis
points to 240 basis points versus fiscal year '23.
We expect non-GAAP EPS to be in the range of $5.40 to $5.53, an
increase of 22% to 25%. And we expect adjusted free cash flow margin to
be 37% to 38%. Additionally, please consider the following modeling
points. We expect our non-GAAP tax rate to remain at 22% for the second
quarter and fiscal year 2024, subject to the outcome of future tax
legislation. We also expect cash taxes in the range of $230 million to
$280 million.
For the second quarter, we expect net interest and other income of $55
million to $60 million. We expect second quarter diluted shares
outstanding of 339 million shares to 342 million shares. We expect
fiscal year 2024 diluted shares outstanding of 338 million shares to
343 million shares. And we expect fiscal year 2024 capital expenditures
of $175 million to $185 million and $40 million to $45 million in Q2.
With that, I'll pass it back to Walter for the Q&A portion of the call.
Question-and-Answer Session
A - Walter Pritchard
Thank you, Dipak. To provide as broad participation as possible, please
limit yourself to one question. Our first question will be from Saket
Kalia with Barclays followed up by Hamza Fodderwala from Morgan
Stanley, go ahead, Saket.
Saket Kalia
Okay, great. Hi, guys, thanks for taking my questions here. Dipak,
maybe the question is for you. Appreciate the revised billings guide in
this macro backdrop and to your point the higher cost of money. I'm
curious how you maybe thought about factors like pipeline, like close
rates, and very importantly billing things duration for the rest of the
year as we just try to get comfortable with how much that billings
guide has maybe been derisked?
Nikesh Arora
Saket, thanks for your question. I'm going to take this one because
it's more about demand function. I think repetition doesn't spoil the
prayer, so I will repeat. The billings difference is not a change in
demand for us or not a function of our pipeline. The billings change is
a consequence of negotiations with customers and the customer says, you
want me to pay you for three years upfront, you got to give me a bigger
discount.
You want to pay me, want me to do a three-year deal, you got to go
finance it in benefits. I can do that, but I can say just pay me on an
annual basis, I'm okay. I'll collect my money every year. If I go in
that direction my billings changes. It does not change anything in my
pipeline, in my close rates or in my demand function. Those are my
point.
So we're just giving ourselves flexibility because this quarter we saw
a lot more negotiations around those topics, we just don't want to be
held hostage to those kind of negotiations where we have to go finance
deals to get DCV in there. Billings is a DCV metric. DCV is important
if I am concerned about churn. I have very low churn across many
product categories.
So I'm very happy to collect my money on an annualized basis and that's
what's needed to make sure that I don't get pressure on financing, I
don't get pressure on having to give larger discounts. I retain
flexibility. I do a lot of TCV deals. I do a lot of financing. This
allows me the flexibility. So all I want to make sure is, there is no
change in the demand function in the market. There is no change in our
revenue forecasts.
Saket Kalia
Got it, very helpful. Thank you.
Walter Pritchard
Thanks, Saket. Next up is going to be Hamza Fodderwala from Morgan
Stanley. Followed by Brian Essex from JPMorgan. Hamza go ahead.
Hamza Fodderwala
Hi, good evening. Thank you for taking my question. I just wanted to
start by offering my thoughts and condolences to all your employees in
Israel. You know, it's kind of similar vein to Saket's question, I
mean, 16% billings growth is certainly not bad in the context of many
of your peers growing single-digits, if at all. I'm just curious
because your guidance is still assuming that growth will sustain for
the full year. So what's giving you that confidence given the cost of
money, given the hardware digestion that you can sustain that the
high-teens billings growth given what you're seeing in the market?
Nikesh Arora
So, Hamza, as, you know, Saket mentioned about pipeline, we have
visibility to our pipeline, so we know there is business out there. We
have not seen customers walk away from deals in Q1. It's not like
people don't want to do business. We've been very consistent on
hardware and hardware expectations for the last 12 months. We are
regaining our consistent and expectations on hardware. We don't expect
any lumpy movements up or down. We expect this is going to steadily in
the 0% to 5% range as we've always been talking about.
So I think from that perspective, I think to use Saket's word, we feel
reasonably derisked on what's out there in the future. Q1 is the first
quarter, allows us, you know, we have lots of pipeline, we have
visibility to. I think I want to reiterate again, we are retaining
flexibility. Can I go financing? Of course, I can.
Can I go finance a three-year deal through PANFS or $7 billion of cash?
I can, which will have a cosmetic impact of giving you better billings.
But what I don't want to do is finance bad deals. This allows me the
flexibility of not having to finance them nothing changes, I still get
my revenue for the year. I still get my CRPO. I still get my annual
billings. I just don't get year two and year three billings, but
changes my total billings forecast for the year. It's cosmetic, it's
mathematics, but it's interesting to see how the street interprets it.
Hamza Fodderwala
Thank you.
Walter Pritchard
Thank you, Hamza. Next up we have Brian Essex from JPMorgan, followed
by Gabriela Borges from Goldman Sachs. Brian, go ahead, please. You're
muted, Brian.
Brian Essex
Thanks, Walter. Yes, thank you for taking the question. Nikesh, I was
maybe wondering if I could dig in on M&A a little bit, pretty
meaningful volume of M&A from a dollar spent perspective this quarter
after not having done some for a while, how would you describe the
overall environment and how would you, I guess message to investors the
level of M&A that you might do over the next, I don't know, couple of
years? Is this more of a one-off IP and aqua hire that you saw a great
opportunity to pick up or might there be something meaningful in terms
of longer-term trend or even dollars put through your sales pipeline as
you scale this over your platform or scale both of them over your
platform?
Nikesh Arora
So, Brian, thanks for the question. Look, we have not changed our
point-of-view. We have always maintained that we're going to sustain
M&A at a level close to a billion here. So we haven't done one for a
while or two. And if you see, if you split the two, we did a cloud
security one, and we've been pretty consistent in that rough range in
the $150 million to $250 million range in terms of adding cloud
capability as we see the market evolves, so I think that's kind of
consistent, where we are. We saw a unique opportunity, as I mentioned,
36% of workers are independent workers, they don't get SASE remote
access solution.
We saw more and more discussion in the market, where RBI was not
covering every use-case and managed devices were not, all your mobile
phones don't have management for security. Last few hacks that happened
to mobile devices.
So from that perspective customers asking, what is my solution, and
now, what we didn't want to do is to have to deploy yet another
independent solution, which is just disconnected from our overall SASE
capability. And like we do, we will always pay attention to the market.
We figured Talon had the best tech in the space and they were just
about to go race to go to the go-to-market sort of implosion or
explosion with other companies. So - and from that perspective, we saw
an opportunity and we think it's a great fit. Actually, it makes us the
most comprehensive SASE solution. We are going to integrate them deeply
into our SASE solution.
Our customers will be able to use Enterprise Browser RBI or our Prisma
Access client, so it's - I don't want to call it a one-off, one-off
sounds it will never happen again, but I think it's just happens to be
the time where we did two at the same time, other than to different
platforms, two different teams are integrating them, so it's not
overhead to the organization. But we're going to keep our cautious
approach towards meeting what we can digest. So you shouldn't expect
anything that is off the regular pattern we've sort of shown it last
time.
Brian Essex
Got it, helpful. Thank you.
Walter Pritchard
Great, thank you, Brian. Next question is going to be from Gabriela
Borges of Goldman Sachs, with Roger Boyd at UBS on-deck. Go ahead,
Gabriela.
Gabriela Borges
Good afternoon. Thank you. I want to ask about the two dynamics that
you're talking about in your business, the firewall cycle on the one
hand and cost of money impacting billings duration on the other. How do
you think about the potential that these two dynamics are actually
connected, meaning product mix is also having an impact on billings
duration and how do you think about the risk that cost of money
dynamics get worse before they get better, thereby impacting the
full-year guide of billings, again as we go through the year? Thank
you.
Nikesh Arora
So thank you, Gabriela. Look, the firewall business is actually is a
one-shot business. You sell a piece of hardware and you get paid for
it. It is not a ratable business, right? The ratability comes from our
subscription and services part. It's usually there we have to look at
it from an NGL perspective. Our duration this quarter was on the
lower-end of duration. It reduced, went down, because we took more
annual billing deals or we took shorter-duration contracts with our
customers.
So from that perspective, I think we feel comfortable given the
visibility to our pipeline for the rest of the year that we have
flexibility for ourselves on billing. You know, I think we're going to
keep having this debate, where you keep calling it guiding down on
billings, I'm going to keep calling it flexibility, you want to keep
calling it guideline downward billing, so I'll keep telling it doesn't
change my numbers. So we just agree that we're going to be saying that
because I don't - nothing has changed the prospects of Palo Alto of
three months ago.
Gabriela Borges
Thank you.
Walter Pritchard
All right. Thanks for your question, Gabriela.
Dipak Golechha
May just to build on that, Walter, I'd say like just recognize that
we're also maintaining our cash guidance, which would be the other area
where we may get concerned, we're not concerned on that front.
Walter Pritchard
Great, thanks, Gabriela there. Next question is from Roger Boyd at UBS,
followed by Brad Zelnick at Deutsche Bank. Go ahead, Roger.
Roger Boyd
Great, thanks for taking the question. Just looking at the XSIAM
pipeline, that $1 billion dollars is a pretty impressive mark, just any
color you can provide on the size of the length of those deals as we
think about it from an ARR perspective? I know you've talked about the
3x ARR upsell or expansion potential, but just any color on the size of
those deals and how we should think about that kind of flowing into
opportunities over the course of fiscal '24.
Nikesh Arora
Yes, I'm trying to make sure Lee gets to ask some questions otherwise
he doesn't want to show up next time. Yes, exactly.
Lee Klarich
Yes, look, we've obviously, over the last few quarters we have been
talking about XSIAM, and the interest we're seeing from customers is
very strong and it's been the fastest sort of growth of a new product
that we've ever seen. I think it speaks to a couple of things. One is
just the need in the market from customers to go through the SOC
transformation.
Nikesh, talked about the speed of attacks, increasing relative to
disclosure requirements and things like that, and obviously the number
of attacks going up as well. That's driving the technology needed to
have a different solution, a better solution, one driven by AI and
automation. That's exactly how XSIAM was built. And that is what was
feeling the interest.
The second part of this is, with XSIAM, we're able to replace several
of the customer's legacy point solutions in the SOC. So we are
consolidating multiple independent piece parts with a single XSIAM
deployment. And third, with these deployments of XSIAM, this is a
significant investment the customer is making in us [technical
difficulty] investments are three-year investments and in some cases
even longer because they're standardizing their stock on a new
platform.
They want that long-term runway with us. This is not a short-term
decision they're making. So all of those factors are what are fueling
the strong pipeline that we shared in the early customer success we're
having with the saying.
Walter Pritchard
Great, thank you for the question. Next question from Brad Zelnick at
Deutsche Bank, followed by Fatima Boolani of Citi. Go ahead, Brad.
Brad Zelnick
Great, thanks very much for taking the question. I wanted to ask about
your new hardware lineup and the release of PANOS 11.1. I noticed some
of the newer features like quantum security and advanced wildfire
patient zero prevention. I just wanted to get your take on the extent
to which the new platform can catalyze demand as customers try to look
to take advantage of the innovation and maybe if you could, you know,
help us compare contrast versus prior product cycles. Thanks.
Nikesh Arora
Yes, thank you. I always get excited about the Next-Gen firewall
releases of course. Look, what we announced was a new high-end chassis,
so one that scales beyond a terabit per second. And so there is,
obviously, this is the largest highest performance networks out there,
service provider and in some cases large enterprise environments, at
the same ruggedized platforms, platforms that can go to plus 50 degree
Celsius, minus 40 degrees Celsius, because there are harsh environments
out there that also need to be protected, right? So, this is expanding
the use cases that we can support with our hardware next-gen firewalls.
The other pieces you mentioned are also equally exciting from a
software perspective. You know, Quantum is still likely a ways off, but
there's a lot of companies that are starting to prepare for that,
thinking about what happens in post-Quantum cryptography in the advent
of potential computers and what that will mean, and so this is the
start of a set of Quantum security capabilities that we're launching
for our customers. You mentioned, advanced WildFire, we added proxy
capabilities.
We added ADEM capabilities, so there's a lot of innovation that's in
this release. Generally in what this drives is customers to look to be
on our latest Gen IV or newer hardware architectures, which over time
means hardware refreshes and upgrades. And so all of that is good and
helps our customers get to the most secure state.
Brad Zelnick
Well, thank you.
Walter Pritchard
Great, thank you for that. Next question is Fatima Boolani at Citibank,
followed by Joel Fishbein from Truist Securities. Go ahead, Fatima.
Fatima Boolani
Good afternoon, and thank you for taking my questions. Either for
Nikesh or Dipak, some of your pipeline commentary is what I wanted to
unpack. As you think about the composition of NGS ARR for the remainder
of the year and bearing in mind some of your product pillars are, you
know, I'm not going to say maturity, but certainly they are more
penetrated than others, so I wanted to get a sense of how you're
thinking about contribution by pillars? Your ARR expectations for the
year and to the extent, anything there has changed and I recognize that
you love all your product pillars equally, but any distinguishable -
Nikesh Arora
It's very kind of you to remember prior answers, but I'll try to give -
I tried to give a preview of that in our prepared remarks where I said
we continue to see steady execution and hardware endpoint and cloud, so
they're following expected trajectory. We see the pipeline and I said
the excitement and upside is coming out of SASE and XSIAM. And we see
that there are large SASE network transformation deals out there, which
these things have anywhere from six months to 12-month closing cycles.
So we would have to know what's in the pipe for the rest of the year.
Do you have some sense of comfort? We also said we grew that business
60% in the first quarter on SASE. We already - we cannot gush enough
about XSIAM as you know so far, so the billion-dollar pipeline, we're
hoping will close in that six to nine months. Interestingly, XSIAM
pipeline closes faster than SASE pipeline deals, because SASE is often
very competitive. There are POCs involved. There are future comparisons
between us and one or two other companies. In the case of XSIAM, you're
really competing with the incumbent.
Fatima Boolani
Helpful. Thank you.
Walter Pritchard
Great, thank you, Fatima. Next question is from Joel Fishbein at
Truist, followed by Joe Gallo at Jefferies. Joel, go ahead with your
question.
Joel Fishbein
Thanks for - thanks for taking the question. This is for Nikesh and
Lee. Nikesh, you called out the recent ransomware attacks and also the
SEC new requirements. I'm curious, number one, is there - is that
helping to drive business and what products essentially would that be
driving Palo Alto and why you're sort of in a unique position to sort
of address some of these issues?
Nikesh Arora
Yes, so that's interesting, Joel. Let me connect that to something we
announced yesterday. So first of all, I said, the activity is at an
all-time high. Every day you read about ransomware attacks, now the SEC
regulations are actually not kicked in yet. I think they kick in
December. But you're seeing some companies go out there and start to do
sort of self-report in anticipation because they're all petrified, of
course, when you get attacked.
So I think you're going to see more and more disclosure and we've be
trying to parse, is it more activity or more disclosure? That's a good
question. I think it's more activity. We've seen more and more
activity. Our team does a research. We've had the maximum number of
inbounds to our Incident Response Team in the last month than we had
before. So clearly, anecdotally also, it's sort of come true that this
is what's happening.
Now, typically, the anatomy of an attack for us from our vantage point
is that when we get engaged in incident response, typically, we go and
we deploy a production sort of suite, where we go in and put XDR
everywhere and we'll go run a bunch of analytics to make sure we
understand what happened and where there is sort of the - that access
may be still be resident in a customer's infrastructure. Now, typically
when you do that and we leave, they don't want us to leave with our
stuff, they want us to be one step back in case the guys come back.
So from that perspective, you know. The incident becomes a need
unfortunately because of these act, but it because the lead for us and
that creates a whole bunch of product conversation around whether we're
going to deploy endpoints, whether we need to upgrade their firewalls
or whether they need to go down a cybersecurity transformation. I'll
tell you nine times out of 10, every one of those customers ends up in
the cyber security transformation because they discover that they have
a lot of stuff that they should have upgraded or changed in that
process. So that's kind of what happens. Those are the products, which
typically end-up those customers.
Lee Klarich
Maybe I'll just add one point, Nikesh described the multi-extortion
ransomware attacks being on the rise, 37% increase, the key to that is,
a lot of companies sort of become used to, call it, normal
encryption-only ransomware attacks. So they invested in backups so that
when that happens, they backup from a green backup and they're back and
operational.
These multi-extortion attacks actually steal data and then extort the
target, and so this can't simply be dealt with backups and this is
driving a need for a better and greater investment in prevention of the
attacks and not just the recovery cycle. So that connects the
sophistication to the investment needed as well.
Joel Fishbein
Thank you.
Walter Pritchard
Great. Next question from Joe Gallo at Jefferies, followed by Gray
Powell of BTIG. Joe, go ahead.
Joe Gallo
Hi, guys, thanks for the question. You've made several acquisitions
further bolstering Cloud, congrats on that 12th module. Nikesh, when do
you think the platform message truly cement itself in that market as it
currently feels like the Wild West and then has the pricing environment
stabilized there at all?
Nikesh Arora
Great questions. Yes, the pricing has stabilized, you know, we saw
tremendous pricing pressure in the last fiscal year with the emergence
of few competitors who are willing to do whatever it takes to try and
dislodge our platforms or solutions.
So I think it's fair to say that pricing is beginning to stabilize. I
think what's interesting is, we're seeing customers come the second
time around and start looking the platform. I think the first wave so
far and there's still part of the customers are still in that wave.
First wave is still very module driven. I want to see SPM solution, I
want to see an app solution and I want to look at SCA.
So you'll find that there are different people in the customer's
organization who are responsible for different pieces of the cloud
security pie and end up trying to look for best of breeze, kind of like
replicating what happened in enterprise security. But as soon as they
start putting big deployments of scale of any kind, they have to start
having a platform. I just told you, we had an $18 million deal for a
platform for a large SaaS company.
Now, we don't have every large SaaS company which is deploying a
platform - sorry, every large SaaS company needs a platform because
they have eight different tools that they're not able to stitch
together. So I think it's going to be sort of a --- sort of a recursive
journey where we'll show that we'll land with some customers - and some
customers, other people will land with their modules, but eventually,
each of those customers has to go through a platform conversation.
So we're sort of focused on our platform story. We're focused on making
sure we make our platform more and more robust. I was at a CIO event
before this morning. There are 30 of them there. And the first question
was, it was interesting, you guys bought Dig or did a security posture
management, how is that integrated into the following five things we
have running and like, well, the following five things will talk to
each other for you.
Joel Fishbein
Thanks.
Walter Pritchard
All right. Thanks for the question, Joe. Next question from Gray Powell
at BTIG, followed by Ben Bollin at Cleveland Research. Gray, go ahead.
Gray Powell
Okay, great. Thank you very much. Yes. So maybe a broader question.
It's pretty clear that the firewall space or that there's headwinds
across, you know, the firewall appliance space this year, it's
impacting everyone. But you're still guiding Q2 billings to about 17%
growth. Your closest competitor is guiding to minus 5%. Historically,
you've been fairly correlated with them. So I know you can't speak to
their business, but can you talk about what's different on your side?
Why you're more insulated? Is it more the NGS portfolio? Is it data
center exposure? Is it share gains? Is there just anything you can kind
of help us to think through those dynamics?
Nikesh Arora
Yes. All of the above. Sorry, I'm trying to - I mean I can't process
which competitor he's talking about, but okay. Look, we are in multiple
businesses. In our firewall business, as we said, on the hardware
business, we see that 0% to 5% as being where the market is and some of
that we achieved through refresh, some of that we achieved through our
own customers expanding so that we achieved through the replacement of
other people's firewalls.
We've - in the last, I'd say, 18 months, we've been very diligent about
making sure we normalize for the effects of backlog or supply chain in
that guidance and that thinking and you see that in our numbers. So I
don't think that's going to change much for us. I can't comment on
other people's billing variability. We just saw the impact of billing
variability to our numbers this quarter. So I'm sure they have the
reasons of building variability.
In terms of SASE, as I said, you know, we're - we can compete with a
different set of people not with the hardware people. We saw 60% growth
this quarter and we have visibility on the pipeline for the rest of the
year, which gives us comfort that there is business to be had there. We
told you about XSIAM, which is again a category which is more in the
soft management space, which is a different set of competitors. If
you're talking about XDR, it's a different set of competitors.
And then cloud security, where our competitors want to startup. So I
think the portfolio allows us to look at different growth rates in
different pipelines, across the spectrum. As I said, the demand
function is not going down for cybersecurity across the board. The only
thing that's changing is people saying, I'll do a two-year, one-year
deal or a three-year or a five-year deal, I'll pay you later, you
finance it around year-over-year. That's the only confusion you're
seeing. And I think if you do all that in the market, you can figure
out the underlying growth rates are strong for some people in certain
categories.
Gray Powell
Okay. Thank you.
Walter Pritchard
A follow-up - our next question comes from Ben Bollin at Cleveland
Research, followed by Ittai Kidron from Oppenheimer. Go ahead, Ben.
Ben Bollin
Good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to
piggyback Gray - Gray's question a little bit. When you look at the
underlying product revenue, how much of that is physical appliance
versus the software form factor? And then a follow-on would be
interested in your thoughts on how the trajectory of branch firewall
looks over time as customers adopt, you know, more VMs and SASE to get
that scale. That's it. Thank you.
Dipak Golechha
Yes. So let me take the first part of the question. I mean, our product
revenue when Nikesh talked about zero to five is actually across
hardware, virtual firewalls, another software that's counted in product
revenue. We talked about that last time then. I think it's very
customer-specific in terms of what their actual needs are. So again,
rather than trying to pass through each of them, I think it's looking
at the aggregate. We feel pretty comfortable in that 0% to 5% range. So
software is about 35% or about 30% this quarter, right? And then just
--
Nikesh Arora
You can see that in the gross margins. Our gross margins continue to
improve for product because software is obviously a higher gross margin
product for us.
Dipak Golechha
And then I think your second question was around what is the impact of
this on the branch deployments. The - there's really primarily two
models for the branch. One is a SD-WAN-only branch, that tends to be
for smaller branches where all of the security or just about all the
security moves into SASE is cloud-delivered.
And the second model is a next-gen firewall typically with SD-WAN
built-in branch, which is still often connected back to SASE for global
network connectivity, et cetera. So there - so the shift to software in
SASE doesn't replace the need for the branch to have that local
intelligence and to be an extension of the customer's network and
ultimately, the extension of the network security posture, zero-cost
posture.
Ben Bollin
Thank you.
Walter Pritchard
Next up, Ittai Kidron from Oppenheimer followed by Patrick Colville
from Scotiabank. Go ahead, Ittai.
Ittai Kidron
Thanks, Walter. Dipak, can I just - not sure I got the answer for Ben's
question quite right. On hardware, can you tell us exactly hardware,
what percent of revenue that is? And Cisco in conjunction to you right
now reported also results, and they've talked about - they've
significantly took down their next quarter guidance in the view that
for the last two, three quarters a lot of hardware was sold but not
installed and so there'll be some digestment period in there.
My question to you, when you sell firewalls, how much visibility do you
have into how much of that is actually goes and sit on the shelf which
is actually gets deployed in the field? And so is there a risk or is
there a blind spot here, where you might not know exactly how your
customers are handling hardware - firewall hardware and could that
catch up somehow with our business as well.
Nikesh Arora
Okay. So I don't - I did not listen to the Cisco call because we're
here. And even if I had the time, I wouldn't. So I don't understand,
it's a very large hardware business. Remember, hardware is a small part
of our business, A. B, we only report in revenue what we sell and ship
to the customer. So there's nothing - if it's sitting on the shelf at a
customer then it's still sold from our perspective.
Ittai Kidron
Yes. But I don't have any color to interact, but you have visibility
especially again installing that.
Dipak Golechha
Yes. Every share-based payroll is deployed has to be registered with
us. So we have reasonably good visibility into firewalls that are sold
to deployed. And any - I would say, it's fair to say and there are
specific issues where a customer may have bought extra firewalls
because [indiscernible] but there's no - I say there's no
uncharacteristic or different activity we see in the last three months
that has been away from the normal. So we don't have suddenly the last
quarter, a lot of customers going a lot of firewalls.
I think I'm going to try and guess, but there was this whole backlog
situation and supply chain problem where people may have bought ahead
because we're expecting supply chain prices to continue. And now
they've got a bunch of stuff that is ordered sitting around that they
can deploy, they don't order more, we don't have that situation. We
never went down that path.
We didn't hit a lot of backlog. We shipped - You know, we never went
past 12 things of shipping in our product. So we did - I know that in
the industry, some people are up to 1 year in terms of shipping
backlog, we have 12 weeks or back to four to six weeks.
So it really is not an impact for us from that perspective. So I think
that should give you some better sense of what the spread is. We have
reasonably decent visibility into our pipeline can be up or down the
margin? Yes, but nothing as substantive as what you might have seen
from other people.
Ittai Kidron
Thanks you.
Walter Pritchard
Thanks, Ittai. We'll take our last question from Patrick Colville at
Scotiabank. Patrick, go ahead.
Patrick Colville
All right. Thank you, Walter, for squeezing me in and got a sore
throat, so sound a bit like Jason Statham. So forgive me for maybe
quiet, to me, the standout metric was the non-GAAP operating margin,
which was 28% typically 1Q is like the low watermark for margin, but
based on your guidance is actually can predicted to be the high
watermark. So I guess, you know, I presume Talon and Dig are going to
be dilutive. But Dipak, are there any other puts and takes that you
know we should consider around operating margin?
Dipak Golechha
No. I mean, I think you obviously talked about the talent, which is
part of the rationale for the annual thing. We did have some expects -
expenses that we expected to incur in Q1 that will now come later in
the year, some around the marketing areas as well. But I would say it's
just a normal course of operating business.
And fundamentally, I think Dig and Talen explains the majority of the
rest. I will just say on a year-on-year comparison, we did have, you
know, hiring that had a different, you know, level of hiring activity
this year, it's a lot more normalized in terms of how we're ramping. So
there's just a little bit of base factor calculation in there but
nothing really added.
Walter Pritchard
All right. Thank you, Patrick, for your question. Thanks everybody for
participating. And with that, I'll pass it over to Nikesh for his
closing comments.
Nikesh Arora
Well, thank you very much again, everyone, for taking the time to
attend our earnings call. I would be remiss if I did not use the
opportunity to thank all of our employees across the world and the ones
in Israel, especially given what's happening in that part of the world.
I also wanted to thank all of our partners and customers for trusting
Palo Alto Networks.
