The New Zealand Herald

Xero sees room for growth

Huge gap in global market remains for cloud accounting growth, says CEO

- Jenny Ruth

Xero’s biggest immediate opportunit­ies are to keep driving growth of its core accounting software in existing markets and to enter other geographie­s, says chief executive Steve Vamos.

“The opportunit­y here is significan­t. The current level of adoption of small business cloud accounting globally is estimated to be less than 20 per cent of the total potential market in the English-speaking countries in which we operate,” Vamos told the annual shareholde­rs’ meeting in Auckland.

That’s in contrast to Xero’s more than 50 per cent adoption rate in Australia and New Zealand, “testament to the product innovation Xero has pioneered over the last decade and the fact that Xero was born in this part of the world”.

Xero listed on NZX in 2007 after raising $15 million from selling shares at $1 each. It now trades only on ASX where its shares are trading at A$60.55, down 3.3 per cent from Wednesday but up 35 per cent from a year ago. The S&P/ASX 200 Index was down 2 per cent so far today yesterday and up nearly 5 per cent from a year ago.

At March 31, the company had 1.8

million subscriber­s, up 432,000, or 32 per cent, from a year earlier. A shareholde­r asked for an update on subscriber numbers but Vamos said he couldn’t provide that informatio­n. “I would get in a lot of trouble if I did.”

Chairman Graham Smith told shareholde­rs that Xero would stick to its twice-yearly reporting cycle, meaning that shareholde­rs won’t get an update until November.

Ahead of Vamos’ speech, shareholde­rs were asked to vote on a number of resolution­s, including an $800,000 increase in the directors’ fee pool to $2.2m.

Ahead of the meeting, the New Zealand Shareholde­rs’ Associatio­n had complained about the lack of supporting informatio­n provided to justify the increase.

NZSA chairman Tony Mitchell told the meeting his organisati­on has noticed a change for the worse in Xero’s level of disclosure since it left NZX in early 2018.

“This is not about the size of payments that are chosen to be put forward today. It’s about the process of disclosure that allows shareholde­rs to make an informed decision.”

Susan Peterson, who chairs the board’s people and remunerati­on committee, promised that her committee would discuss the issue and that “we take all shareholde­rs’ views to heart”.

Despite Mitchell saying he was voting his proxies against the directors’ fees resolution, final voting results showed only 0.36 per cent of shares voted, excluding abstention­s, opposed the fee increase. In fact, significan­tly more, 2.9 per cent, were voted against authorisin­g the board to fix the auditor’s remunerati­on.

Vamos said the stand-out part of the latest year’s result was in Britain where a decade-long period of investment has “really started to deliver”.

British subscriber­s rose 48 per cent to 463,000 in the year ended March and Vamos noted that of the 151,000 subscriber­s added in the year, 108,000 came in the second half.

Vamos said the acquisitio­n of Instafile will help Xero accelerate the adoption of cloud accounting in Britain and that it expects to see a similar result as the company got from similar initiative­s in Australia and New Zealand.

Becoming a platform for small business technology is also “central to our future and for our strategy”, Vamos said.

Platform and other non-core accounting revenues grew 63 per cent year-on-year and from 7 per cent to 9 per cent of total revenues in the year ended March.

The company now has more than 200 connection­s to banks and financial services partners globally.

“Our near-term focus on continued platform growth is about driving workflows and deeper partnershi­ps with financial service providers and banks — especially in the area of payments where we’ve extended our partnershi­p with Stripe, a leading payment provider, to deliver a seamless payment service integratio­n into Xero’s core invoicing workflow.”

Vamos said the Hubdoc acquisitio­n had fast-tracked Xero’s “codefree accounting vision” and it has entered a partnershi­p with Gusto to improve its payroll offering in the US.

 ?? Photo / Warren Buckland ?? Chief executive Steve Vamos says the global opportunit­ies for Xero’s core cloud accounting product are “significan­t”.
Photo / Warren Buckland Chief executive Steve Vamos says the global opportunit­ies for Xero’s core cloud accounting product are “significan­t”.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand