Bravura Solutions (ASX:BVS) Soars 29% on Second Guidance Upgrade- Is It a Buy Before Wednesday’s Results?

Ujjwal Maheshwari Ujjwal Maheshwari, February 10, 2026

Bravura Solutions (ASX: BVS) surged 29 per cent on Monday after the wealth management software provider delivered its second guidance upgrade in just four months. Revenue expectations for FY26 have now been lifted to A$280-A$285 million, up from the A$265-A$275 million range set only in October, while cash EBITDA guidance jumped to A$69-A$73 million from A$55-A$65 million. Two upgrades in quick succession suggest something more than a one-off beat. It points to genuine momentum building inside the business.

What makes this particularly striking is the timing. Bravura shares had been hammered in recent months, falling roughly 48 per cent from their October 2025 peak of A$3.51 amid the broader tech selloff. For a company actively upgrading guidance while the market prices are in doom, the disconnect between sentiment and fundamentals is hard to ignore.

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Bravura Builds Momentum With EMEA Project Wins and Cost Discipline

The drivers behind the upgrade are straightforward: Bravura’s existing clients, particularly wealth management firms in the UK and Europe, are spending more on projects, and the company is doing a better job of turning that work into profit. Cost management has been tight even as activity ramps up, and ongoing investment in internal technology is helping the team deliver more efficiently.

This is encouraging, but investors should understand an important nuance. Project revenue, the kind that comes from one-off consulting and implementation work, is inherently lumpy. It can surge one quarter and pull back the next, depending on client budgets and timing. What matters far more for long-term value is whether Bravura can stabilise and grow its recurring revenue base, which sat at roughly A$154 million in FY25 and has been essentially flat. Recurring revenue is the foundation that the market values most because it repeats year after year.

The recent commencement of CEO Colin Greenhill on January 1, based in London, adds a fresh leadership catalyst. His proximity to the EMEA client base, Bravura’s current growth engine, could help deepen key relationships and drive further engagement.

A Clean Balance Sheet Reduces Turnaround Risk

Bravura’s financial position significantly de-risks this turnaround story. The company holds approximately A$58.6 million in cash with zero debt, giving management flexibility to invest in growth without needing to raise capital. For a mid-cap software company in recovery mode, that’s a strong foundation.

The company has also been returning cash to shareholders. In FY25, Bravura returned to shareholder distributions, paying a final and special dividend totalling A$0.0471 per share, following through on its capital management promises. We believe this signals management’s confidence in the sustainability of cash generation, not just a temporary blip.

The Investor’s Takeaway for Bravura Solutions

The bull case is compelling: two consecutive guidance upgrades, a stock price still well below analyst targets of A$2.75-A$2.99, expanding margins, and a debt-free balance sheet. If execution continues, there’s meaningful upside from current levels.

However, the bear case deserves equal attention. Client churn remains a genuine headwind, with attrition costing roughly A$8 million in lost recurring revenue, equivalent to around a 4.5 per cent annual drag. If Bravura keeps losing clients faster than it wins new ones, project revenue alone cannot plug the gap sustainably.

In our view, this turnaround is progressing but not yet proven. The half-year results due on 11 February will be critical. Investors should look for signs that recurring revenue is stabilising, not just project revenue spiking. At the recent price, Bravura suits risk-tolerant investors willing to bet on continued execution. For those wanting more certainty, waiting for confirmation in the 1H26 numbers would be the more cautious path.

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