SaaS valuations higher than ever
Despite the current tumult, SaaS comps are showing unbelievable strength: of the 83 SaaS companies we follow, the average public SaaS business is trading at 17.9x revenue while the median is 12.2x. Interestingly, the gap between the average and median is still large (5.7x), meaning more attractive SaaS companies are being rewarded with big premiums. Also of note, 57% of companies are trading at 10x revenue or greater (all time high). The data is below.
Negative EBITDA, positive cash flow. The median SaaS business had trailing twelve month revenue of $491mm, EBITDA of -$11mm, but positive operating cash flow of $51mm thanks to up-front collections on annual contracts. So long as you’re growing (the median annual growth rate is 31%), investors will overlook negative EBITDA especially if the business is cash flow positive after working capital changes.
The trend is still on. The chart in the picture shows median revenue multiples we’ve collected since Q4 2014. During that period, the median SaaS multiple has ranged from 4.6x to 12.2x with an average of 7.4x.
SaaS margins are still terrible. Investors and founders love saying “SaaS margins are great.” They’re not. They’re horrible. The median EBITDA margin for the companies above was -1%. Fixed costs for SaaS are terribly high and worse yet those fixed costs are mostly people, meaning the only way to materially cut costs is layoffs. If you’ve ever fired someone, you know cutting costs by cutting people is not easy and hurts the culture and morale of remaining members.
Premium gets a premium. Premium SaaS businesses trade at premium multiples. In the data set, 47 companies trade at greater than 10x revenue, 33 trade at greater than 15x, and 24 trade at greater than 20x.
Growth is strong. The median of 31% is strong given the size of these companies ($491mm of median revenue).
SaaS businesses are healthy. There is almost no debt on these businesses as banks don’t like ‘asset-lite’ businesses like software. Additionally, these companies have $515mm of cash on the balance sheet on median, plenty relative to annual burn (recall EBITDA is -$11mm). The number of years of cash on the balance sheet is less important given that these businesses are generally cash flow positive (median of $51mm; only 21 out of the 83 companies have negative cash flow. Note that 45 out of the 83 have negative EBITDA, but again that’s acceptable so long as the growth is present and cash flow overall is positive.
Recent IPO’s are killing it. Some of the latest IPO’s are trading at unreal multiples: Bill.com is at 43x, Cloudflare is at 32x, Datadog is 54x, Crowdstrike is 43x, Zoom Video is at 96x, and Snowflake is at 154x (not a typo). It shows that now is a great time to come to market whether you’re raising money or selling the business. Some recent IPO’s are trading at more reasonable multiples (HealthCatalyst is at 7x and Ping is at 10x), so the disparity in valuation for premium SaaS versus just good SaaS is very wide.
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