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Showing posts with label NMBL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NMBL. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Nimble Storage (NMBL) to be acquired by Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) for $12.50/share

  

  


  • Reports Q4 (Jan) loss of $0.12 per share, $0.02 better than the Capital IQ Consensus of ($0.14); revenues rose 29.9% year/year to $117.03 mln vs the $113.51 mln Capital IQ Consensus.
  • In light of the recently announced pending acquisition by Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), Nimble Storage will not hold a conference call to discuss these financial results and will not provide Q1FY18 guidance.

** charts NMBL after **








Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Nimble Storage (NMBL) reported earnings on Tue 11/22/16 (a/h)

** charts before earnings **



  





** charts after earnings **





Nimble Storage reports EPS in-line, revs in-line; guides Q4 EPS just below consensus, revs in-line  :
  • Reports Q3 (Oct) loss of $0.18 per share, in-line with the Capital IQ Consensus of ($0.18); revenues rose 26.4% year/year to $102 mln vs the $101.95 mln Capital IQ Consensus. 
    • Strong All Flash array momentum; over 24% of total Product Bookings, up from 17% in prior quarter
    • Customer base up 38% in Q3FY17 year-over-year; over 9,450 customers worldwide; year-over-year bookings from Large Enterprises (Global 5000) grew 53% and bookings from Cloud Service Providers grew 65%
    • Large deals drive growth: >$100K deals represent 50% of bookings and >$250K deals represent 24% of bookings
  • Co issues guidance for Q4, sees EPS of ($0.13)-(0.15) vs. ($0.12) Capital IQ Consensus Estimate; sees Q4 revs of $112-115 mln vs. $113.03 mln Capital IQ Consensus Estimate.

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Nimble Storage (NMBL) reported earnings Tue 24 May 2016 (a/h)

** charts before earnings **


  




** charts after earnings **



  



Nimble Storage beats by $0.02, beats on revs; guides Q2 EPS in-line, revs above consensus:
  • Reports Q1 (Apr) loss of $0.24 per share, excluding non-recurring items, $0.02 better thanthe Capital IQ Consensus of ($0.26); revenues rose 21.2% year/year to $86.4 mln vs the $84.6 mln Capital IQ Consensus.
  • Co issues guidance for Q2, sees EPS of ($0.21) - ($0.19) vs. ($0.20) Capital IQ Consensus Estimate; sees Q2 revs of $93-96 mln vs. $92.75 mln Capital IQ Consensus Estimate.  Co sees Q2 Non-GAAP operating loss in the range of $16.0 to $18.0 million.
  • Non-GAAP gross margin for the first quarter of fiscal 2017 was 65.7% compared to 67.6% in the first quarter of fiscal 2016.
  • "We saw steady progress in larger deals greater than $250K, which were up 51% year-over-year, and continued growth in our customer base, which was up 48% year-over-year." 

Long trade : NMBL (2/16, 5/16, 9/16 & 11/16)




  

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Nimble Storage (NMBL) reported earnings on Thur 11/19/15 (a/h)

** charts after earnings **



Friday, August 21, 2015

NMBL — NR

Friday, December 13, 2013

Nimble Storage (NMBL) began trading on the NYSE on 13 December 2013


Shares of Nimble Storage (NMBL) ended the day up $12.93, or 62%, at $33.93, after raising $168 million in an IPO whose price, $21, was above an expected range of $18 to $20, after filing back in late October.

The offering, underwritten by Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Pacific Crest Securities, William Blair, Stifel Nicolaus, Oppenheimer & Co., and Needham & Co., is also a coup for the Exchange as it adds to it’s growing roster of tech deals stolen away from Nasdaq.

At Nimble’s headquarters in San Jose, founder Varun Mehta expressed the view Nimble can be “the next great storage company” because the “incumbents” — EMC (EMC) and NetApp (NTAP) — “can’t move fast enough” to catch up with trends in storage such as the proliferation of flash solid-state drives.

“There’s this recognition that suddenly this staid business with big encumbents has been turned on his head,” said Mehta.

Mehta cited one financial firm that has 30,000 seats of Microsoft Exchange in its data centers around the world and spends $10 million a year on storage equipment. “They invited us to demo with them, and what they found is that a half a rack of Nimble with 100 disks, and some flash alongside it, can replace the incumbent’s offering that would have taken 600 disks,” he told me.

“We were selling a lot less hardware, and it was just the magic of our software,” thus helping to reduce the up-front cost of the gear.

The company argues that its software and service capabilities, on top of the inherent advantages of flash, will further reduce operating expense, as well, which is, after all, the large component of companies’ total cost to build their data centers over time.

Nimble Storage CEO Suresh Vasudevan celebrates their IPO at the New York Stock Exchange on December 12, 2013 in New York City


Being the next great storage company is a tall order, to be sure, given there really hasn't been a next great storage company outside those two in the last two decades, with promising startups such as 3Par getting bought out.

Plus the fact that Nimble is one of dozens of storage startups with similar dreams. Violin Memory (VMEM), which went public in September and plunged on its first day of trading. The stock plunged another 44% last month the day after it missed its first public quarterly report, and there have been rumors of a shake-up in management. Then there’s Fusion-io (FIO) ex-founder David Flynn, and his next big thing, stealth operation Primary Data.

Another startup, Coho Data of Sunnyvale, California, staffed with ex-Citrix Systems (CTXS) talent, argues Nimble is just replicating the current unworkable storage situation. CEO Ramana Jonnala told me in October when I met with him, islands of storage. “When you buy a Nimble array [of disks and flash] you end up with the same problem,” says Jonnala. “You can’t easily upgrade an array,” he argues, to “scale out” one’s storage capacity.

But the business is real, with revenue of $84 million in the nine months ended in October, up 150% from the prior year. (Nimble is not yet profitable, having lost almost $30 million in that time.)

In my conversations with Wall Street types this year, they seem well disposed toward Nimble, counting it as one of the “real” companies, with a product portfolio that’s actually got traction, in a hot market filled with hyperbole.

As ISI Group‘s Brian Marshall, who has met multiple times with the company, wrote in a note to his clients on Tuesday, “We have met with management many times and in our view, Nimble is a terrific company with a great management team and innovative product offering which uniquely combines the key attributes of flash storage (i.e., performance) with that of HDDs (i.e., capacity, low-cost).”