Daryl Raiford
Analyst · Northland Capital markets. Your line is now live
Thank you, Fritz. As a reminder, slides detailing our historical financial performance are available on the Investor Relations section of our website. Turning to the second quarter, Ribbon produced solid financial results. In summary, our second quarter 2019 financial results were as follows. Total revenue was $145 million, non-GAAP gross margin was 63%, non-GAAP operating expenses were $71 million, non-GAAP diluted income per share was $0.14, and adjusted EBITDA was $22 million. Verizon was a greater than 10% customer in the second quarter of 2019. Ribbon cloud software and transformation solutions help power many parts of Verizon's major network supporting wireless enterprise and residential offers and carrying high skill session traffic for Verizon's large deployed customer base. In the second quarter we continued our deployments with our cloud software transformation solutions and services associated with Verizon's mobile, fixed, and business offerings. Enterprise sales were 21% of the product revenue in the second quarter up from 11% in the second quarter of last year reflecting our investment in this space. Session Software Solutions accounted for 47% of product revenue in the second quarter, while Network Transformation Solutions represented 29% and applications and security solutions were 9%. Turning to the balance sheet, cash and investments were $51 million at June 30, which was up $5 million from March 31. Borrowings under our revolving line of credit and term loan were $85 million at June 30 compared to $82 million at March 31. During the second quarter we repurchased approximately 976,000 shares of common stock at an average price of $4.65 for an aggregate purchase price of $5 million. We recognized $63 million of other income related to a royalty settlement with a competitor, which we excluded from our non-GAAP financial results and collected approximately $38 million this past quarter. Turning to our outlook, as a reminder, we discontinued the use of non-GAAP revenue as a metric, which means we will no longer increase GAAP revenue to add back the amount of revenue loss from purchase accounting and instead we will solely report the lower amount of GAAP revenue beginning with the second quarter of 2019. As Fritz stated earlier, two dynamics are playing into our view of top line revenue performance. One, the increasing pace of the shift to pure software, and two, soft conditions in the service provider market which we expect to persist at least through the third quarter of 2019. So given these dynamics, we now expect full year 2019 GAAP revenue to be lower than our non-GAAP revenue last year and higher compared with last year's GAAP revenue. However, our growing virtualized software sales and higher software content mix, along with our improved cost structure enabled us to keep our full-year adjusted EBITDA guidance essentially unchanged. For the full year 2019 our adjusted EBITDA guidance now without the revenue purchase accounting add back remained steady at approximately $92 million.