By Paul Sandle
LONDON (Reuters) -Cyber-security company Darktrace cut its revenue forecast on Wednesday after prospective customers turned more reluctant to run product trials due to the worsening economic environment, sending its shares below their 2021 listing price.
The British company, which was worth 7.2 billion pounds ($8.71 billion) in September 2021, said it expected its constant currency annual recurring revenue (ARR) to increase by between 29.0% and 31.5% in the year to end-June, down from its previous forecast of 31% to 34%.
Shares in Darktrace, which uses artificial intelligence to detect cyber attacks inside customers’ networks, fell below their listing price of 250 pence for the first time since its April 2021 debut after the revenue warning.
They were trading down 14% at 251 pence at 1407 GMT, valuing the company at 1.8 billion pounds.
It said ARR in the six months to end-December had increased by at least 36.5% to at least $556.3 million, but there had been a noticeable slowdown in new customer additions recently.
Chief Financial Officer Cathy Graham said profitability had been preserved, helped by operating efficiencies that it would maintain in its second half, resulting in an improvement to its full-year core earnings margin forecast.
“Clearly, however, the current macro-economic environment is creating challenges to winning new customers, with prospects more reluctant to run product trials,” she said in a statement.
“In regions with historically higher conversion rates, those rates are starting to decline.”
Graham said the slowdown was “very pronounced” in December, one of the strongest months in Darktrace’s annual sales cycle.
“This is largely a new customer win issue and it is more pronounced at the smaller end,” she told Reuters.
Analysts at Jefferies, who rate the shares a “buy”, said the lower revenue outlook was “not materially different” from the modest slowdown seen across the rest of the security sector.
($1 = 0.8262 pounds)
(Editing by Kate Holton, Jason Neely and Tomasz Janowski)