The New Zealand Herald

Pushpay tips ‘substantia­l’ net profit

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Digital church collection payment operator Pushpay said a strong December quarter performanc­e should deliver a gross margin of more than 60 per cent for the year ending March.

The company, which had previously expected to beat the 60 per cent measure for the second-half of the period, yesterday reported a 35 per cent increase in December quarter revenue to US$27.7 million ($40.8m).

Total customers at December 31 rose to 7585, 5.5 per cent more than a year earlier. The company was cash flow positive and delivered earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on, amortisati­on and changes in financial instrument­s for the quarter.

Pushpay didn’t detail the earnings in what will be the firm’s final quarterly report.

As well as improved revenue growth, chief executive Chris Heaslip said the company’s margin improvemen­t process was progressin­g “much better than expected”.

The firm will meet its US$97.5m to US$100.5m revenue target for the March year, and in the coming year expected to deliver an increase in subscripti­on fees added from new customers.

Pushpay says it expects to have to recognise some or all of a US$18.5m unrecognis­ed deferred tax asset it has on its books.

“We expect this will result in Pushpay reporting a substantia­l net profit after tax” for the year ended March 2019, Heaslip said in a statement.

Pushpay shares rose 8 cents, or 2.3 per cent, to $3.63, trimming their decline the past year to 6.9 per cent.

The NZX-listed, USheadquar­tered software-as-aservice company provides a donor management system, including donor tools, finance tools and a custom community app for churches. In December, 97 per cent of its customers were in Canada and the US. Pushpay said that medium and large churches now account for almost 55 per cent of its customers, up from 49.4 per cent a year earlier.

Its average revenue per customer, or church group, climbed to US$1548 a month in the December quarter — traditiona­lly the strongest quarter for giving.

That was 25.6 per cent more than a year earlier and 46 per cent higher than in the September quarter.

Pushpay said its annualised processing volume, the annualised four-week average payment transactio­n volume through its platform, increased to US$5.1b in the quarter, from US$3.2b at September 30 and US$3.9b in December 2017.

Excluding the seasonal high period, the last three weeks of December, the annualised processing volume was more than US$4b.

“Pushpay expects total processing volume over the next financial year ending 31 March 2020 to be between US$4.0b and US$5.1b.”

 ?? Photo / Dean Purcell ?? Chief executive Chris Heaslip said Pushpay’s margin improvemen­t process was “better than expected”.
Photo / Dean Purcell Chief executive Chris Heaslip said Pushpay’s margin improvemen­t process was “better than expected”.

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