We Dropped the Ball on Ansys
Back in April we called Ansys (ANSS) a neat little company, a leading provider of simulation software for engineers. It is able to model the physical forces that products will be exposed to. Not very long ago this technology was limited to a few high-level engineers with highly sophisticated computers. It is increasingly becoming usable by every designer with a recent model workstation, which offers a wide new market for Ansys and the ability to streamline workloads for Ansys’ customers.
Then in May we did a complete fundamental workup, concluding:
Ansys is a fast growing software maker with generally strong fundamentals. Although adjustments to normalize EPS would result in a $0.02-$0.03 reduction to Q106 EPS, the company beat estimates in the quarter by $0.07, rendering the normalizations somewhat moot. The strong fundamentals appear well recognized, as consensus estimates for revenue and EPS are higher than management guidance, which may justify a cautious approach toward building positions.
That was a good call, as the chart below illustrates. Unfortunately, we seem to have fallen asleep at the wheel since there were no further posts. Which is too bad, given today’s news:
Ansys Inc., a maker of engineering simulation software and technologies, said Thursday that its third-quarter profit fell 25 percent, but results surpassed Wall Street expectations excluding one-time items.
Shares of Ansys rose $6.50, or 14.4 percent, to $51.75 in morning trading on the Nasdaq.
Where were we in July, anyway? We’ll try to pay more attention next time.
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