TechnologyOne (ASX:TNE) has broken revenue and profit records for 16 straight years, but is it overvalued?
Nick Sundich, May 20, 2025
TechnologyOne (ASX:TNE) claims to have broken its profit and revenue records for 16 straight years. Not many other companies can claim that, even those you could call long-term success stories.
But investors still need to ask whether the growth is enough to justify TNE’s current share price, especially considering there are other opportunities in this space. Let’s look into it.
Who is TechnologyOne?
TechnologyOne is a tech stock specialising in Enterprise resource planning (ERP) software with a focus on the education and government. This company has over 800 large scale enterprise organisations, with millions of users, as clients. Beyond the dozens of councils it has helped, other clients include Queensland Rugby League, the Te Papa Museum in New Zealand and several universities. Its products perform several tasks for customers including reducing costs, improving efficiency and streamlining processes.
TechnologyOne was founded in 1987 and listed in 1999 at just $1 per share. Investors who have held TechnologyOne for the long term have made some hefty gains from this company. Even investors who have only been in for the short-term have done better than most other tech companies during this time.
A very well performing Tech stock
Why has the company done well? Most obviously it has grown its revenues and profit – for sixteen years. But it is also because its key clients are transitioning towards software solutions such as those offered by the company, a trend occurring before the pandemic, accelerated by the pandemic and still ongoing. Goldman Sachs estimated in 2022 that the transition from on-premise systems to Cloud software is just 20% completed.
Did we forget to mention that TechnologyOne is profitable? This can’t be said of all tech stocks. But more impressively, it has remained profitable while transitioning its offerings to cloud software.
Solid growth
In the last five years, its revenue has transitioned from one-off license fees to recurring SaaS fees. It recorded $470.2m in ARR (up 20%) and $515.4m in total revenue (up 17%). The company recorded an $118m profit, representing 15% growth from the year before and an >25% profit margin.
TNE closed FY24, the 12 months to September 30, 2024, with $278.7m in net cash and paid a dividend of 22.45c per share. The payout was 62% of its profit and represents 15% CAGR growth in the last 5 years. The company’s churn is just 1.3% and its Average ARR per customer was over $300,000.
TechnologyOne has claimed that no other ERP company in the world transitioned without impacting its customers and/or its profit growth. During FY24, it bought CourseLoop which has curriculum management software. Management now claims its OneEducation solution is the world’s first SaaS platform to encompass the entire student lifecycle – from course design to graduation – into a single unified ERP solution.
The company’s 1H25 results were good too. The company grew its profit by over 30% (both pre and post tax to $81.9m and $63m respectively). Is ARR was $511.1m, (up 21%) and it paid an interim dividend of 6.6 cents per share. It upped its FY25 profit guidance by 13-17%. But most importantly, it increased its ARR goal to $1bn by FY30.
Future growth prospects
TechnologyOne is not satisfied with this growth. We mentioned it is targeting expansion into the UK, a market 3x larger than Australia. Even in Australia, there is more opportunity to be gained. As we noted above, Goldman Sachs estimates the transition is only ~20% complete. It also estimated that annual revenues are US$235bn compared to enterprise IT revenues of US$1.4tn and the Cloud could easily grab that and even more from non-digital spending.
Turning to consensus estimates, there are 17 analysts covering the company. For FY25, they call for $583m revenue and a $137.5m profit. In FY26, $667m revenue and a $167m profit, followed by $762.2m revenue and a $199.6m profit in FY27.
TNE has become very pricey!
However, the company is trading at P/E multiples of 77.9x and 63.5x for the next 2 years. Its EV/EBITDA multiples are 41.3x and 35.3x, and PEG multiples of 4.4x and 3.7x. Bear in mind that PEG multiples >1 are considered overvalued.
Better opportunities elsewhere
We like the TechnologyOne thematic, but think there are better opportunities in the sector that are more reasonably priced such as Atturra (ASX:ATA) and Objective Corporation (ASX:OCL). Investors should consider these companies ahead of TechnologyOne, in our view.
Yes, TNE is cheaper than Xero (which is 91x P/E for FY26) but it does not quite have the growth opportunity as Xero does, with TNE being a more specialised software provider.
What are the Best ASX stocks to invest in right now?
Check our buy/sell tips
Blog Categories
Get Our Top 5 ASX Stocks for FY25
Recent Posts
Salesforce (NYSE:CRM): The world’s top CRM software, destined to gain from AI
Salesforce (NYSE:CRM) was in the SaaS/cloud space so long ago that back at that time (in the early 2000s) it…
Bapcor (ASX:BAP): Still recovering from 3 profit downgrades in less than a year, but could it be destined for better times?
Last time we wrote about Bapcor (ASX:BAP), in May last year, it had just seen a 3rd profit downgrade in…