Normally, investors would be happy with a company that
generated more than twice as much operating income growth as revenue
growth and actually reduced operating expenses. But then, software isn't
a normal sector and Check Point Software Technologies (CHKP)
isn't a normal company. In a sector where revenue growth is a major
driver, Check Point's focus on expense discipline and organic/internal
development hasn't been generating much revenue growth and hasn't helped
the share price much next to Fortinet (FTNT), Palo Alto (PANW), or the Nasdaq.
One
of my biggest concerns about Check Point is that the company will keep
itself lashed to the mast of a ship that's not going anywhere
(traditional firewall-type security) instead of taking more aggressive
steps toward growth in the evolving enterprise security world. I don't
doubt that Check Point has the resources to change its trajectory, but
I'm not sure it has the will. With that, although the share price/value
proposition is interesting, I'm nervous about buying into a lower-growth
software story, given how challenging and frustrating they can be.
Follow this link for more:
Without More Revenue Growth, Check Point's Valuation Is Almost Beside The Point
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