SAP SE (SAP.US) announced its financial results for the fourth quarter and full year of fiscal 2025 on January 29, 2026, Eastern Time. The report revealed that the company's total revenue for Q4 reached €9.68 billion, representing a 9% increase at constant currency rates. Non-IFRS basic earnings per share came in at €1.62, a robust 16% year-over-year growth that surpassed analyst expectations of €1.51. Non-IFRS operating profit also climbed 16% to €2.83 billion, while the non-IFRS operating profit margin expanded by 3.2 percentage points to 29.2%. A particularly noteworthy highlight was the full-year free cash flow, which doubled to €8.24 billion, significantly exceeding the company's target of €8 billion.
In the fourth quarter, SAP achieved total revenue of €9.68 billion, growing 9% at constant currency. The cloud business stood out as the primary growth engine, with revenue surging to €5.61 billion, a 19% increase year-over-year (or a substantial 26% at constant currency), slightly above the market consensus of €5.5 billion. Delving into specifics, revenue from the Cloud ERP Suite soared to €4.86 billion, marking a sharp 30% increase at constant currency. Conversely, traditional software license revenue continued its decline, contracting to €450 million, a significant 34% drop year-over-year. This stark contrast clearly signals an accelerating customer migration from on-premise deployments to the cloud.
Looking at future growth drivers, SAP's order backlog demonstrates strong revenue visibility. By the end of the quarter, the current cloud backlog, representing revenue to be recognized within the next 12 months, grew 16% to €21.05 billion (a 25% increase at constant currency). The total cloud backlog reached a new historic high of €77 billion, expanding 30% at constant currency, which provides a solid and predictable foundation for subsequent revenue growth. In terms of business structure, as the cloud transformation deepens, the quality of the company's revenue continues to improve, with the proportion of predictable revenue to total revenue increasing to 86% from 83% in the same period last year.
Of even greater significance is the deep integration of artificial intelligence into the business. CEO Christian Klein explicitly stated that SAP Business AI has become a core driver, with approximately two-thirds of the cloud orders signed in the fourth quarter involving AI functionalities. This marks a pivotal shift where intelligent transformation is moving decisively from the conceptual stage into the phase of commercial realization. Regarding shareholder returns, the non-IFRS basic earnings per share of €1.62, up 16% year-over-year, significantly outperformed the analyst average estimate of €1.51. Capitalizing on this strong performance, SAP announced the initiation of a new two-year share buyback program totaling up to €10 billion, which is expected to commence in February 2026 and run through the end of 2027.
Looking ahead, SAP has set ambitious growth targets for 2026. The company forecasts full-year cloud revenue to be in the range of €25.8 billion to €26.2 billion, representing a year-over-year growth of 23% to 25%. Concurrently, non-IFRS operating profit is projected to reach between €11.9 billion and €12.3 billion, with a free cash flow target set at approximately €10 billion. However, despite the optimism surrounding these core metrics, some analysts remain cautious about potential risks. They point out that uncertainties in global tariff policies and exchange rate fluctuations could pose hidden challenges to the 2026 performance, requiring SAP to maintain a high degree of sensitivity to the external macroeconomic environment even as it accelerates AI commercialization.
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