Financial Results
Temenos Shares Slide After Short-Seller's Attack; Firm Hits Back

The Swiss stock market was rocked by drama yesterday when Temenos, a firm that provides technology services for banks, wealth managers and other financial organisations, was targeted by a short-seller, which accused Temenos of wrongdoing in its accounts and conduct. Temenos refutes the claims.
Zurich-listed Temenos
yesterday slammed a report from an activist short-seller claiming
that it has “manipulated earnings.”
Shares in the firm were down as much as 30 per cent from the open
yesterday after Hindenburg
Research, a US-based firm, issued its report. The business
has taken out a short position in Temenos, it said. Today, shares
were down about 7 per cent, fetching SFr59.10 ($67.1) per
share.
Temenos said it “fundamentally refutes” the Hindenburg Research
comments.
“The report contains factual inaccuracies and analytical errors,
together with false and misleading allegations, which are
intended to adversely impact the company’s share price. The
company was not contacted in advance for any comment on the
report,” Temenos, which provides services for private banks,
wealth managers and other financial institutions, said in a
statement.
“The company is confident in the strength of its business,
financial performance and cash position,” it said.
Temenos said that after markets have closed on 19 February, it
will issue its audited results for the year ended 31 December
2023. These results are “in line with the pre-results
announcement made on 19 January 2024,” Temenos said.
The 19 January report contained the following details:
-- Annual recurring revenue exceeding guidance and total software
licensing and earnings before interest and tax “significantly
exceeding minimum guidance”;
-- Strong free cash flow growth ahead of guidance in the 2023
financial year, rising 26 per cent to $242.6 million – the board
expects free cash flow to continue to grow strongly in the coming
years;
-- About 3,000 customers – industry-leading churn of only about 3
per year on a dollar basis; and
-- The company’s transition to a recurring revenue business model
continues at pace – 391 go-lives on its software in 2023.
This news service has contacted Temenos for comment but had not received a reply at the point of going to press. This report may be updated in due course.
Stock turmoil
Trading in the company’s stock was halted in Zurich after the
release of the Hindenburg Research report, Bloomberg
reported yesterday.
Hindenburg Research, run by Nate Anderson, achieved notoriety in
2023 by targeting the businesses of figures such as Gautam Adani,
Jack Dorsey and Carl Icahn.
In its statement – a copy of which was emailed to this news
service – Hindenburg Research said: “Our 4-month investigation
into Temenos, involving interviews with 25 former employees,
including senior leaders at the company, uncovered hallmarks of
manipulated earnings and major accounting irregularities. This
includes evidence of roundtripped revenue, sham partnerships,
rampant pulling forward of contract renewals, backdated
contracts, excessive capitalisation of seemingly non-existent
R&D investments, and other classic accounting red flags.
“These aggressive accounting practices seemed to be an open
secret among many of the former employees we spoke with. Several
indicated that CEO Andreas Andreades encourages the practices,
which help gloss over significant customer product
dissatisfaction and attrition," it said.