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Thoma Bravo continues to demonstrate an eagerness to invest in B2B SaaS and payments. On December 12, 2022, Thoma Bravo announced the acquisition of Coupa Software for $8 billion with the intention of taking the company private. Earlier last year, Thoma Bravo completed the acquisition of Bottomline Technologies for $2.6 billion.
Both Coupa and Bottomline provide spend management software facilitating Accounts Receivable (“AR”) and Accounts Payable (“AP”) automation, cash management, and other business management capabilities with embedded payments. We expect Thoma Bravo to exploit product and portfolio synergies across the two enterprises and further leverage payments monetization to drive future growth. In this article, we highlight Coupa’s financial performance, examine the growth levers for the business, and highlight the relevance of these levers for the broader B2B SaaS community.
Coupa is a global spend management software for mid-market merchants and enterprises specializing in procurement, supply chain, and treasury management. As illustrated in Figure 1, Coupa experienced strong growth in revenue and spend under management from 2019 to 2022 (we explain “spend under management” more in the following section”). Despite robust growth, like most other publicly-traded SaaS companies, Coupa’s stock performed poorly in 2022, with management citing lower-than-street expected revenues and slowing new business growth across North America and EMEA.
FIGURE 1: Coupa’s Financial Performance Indicators (fiscal years 2019 – 2022 & FY2023 Q3 YTD: financial year ends Jan 31, growth rate 2019-2022)
Upon announcement of the acquisition, Holden Spaht, Managing Partner at Thoma Bravo, stated that they “Look forward to partnering with (…) the (Coupa) management team to keep investing in the company's product strategy while driving growth both organically and through M&A.” We believe Thoma Bravo will look to pull several levers to stimulate growth including payments monetization, which many B2B SaaS companies in the U.S. leverage today.
Payments monetization for software companies means embedding payments functionality (including payment acceptance, card payments, account-to-account payments, and alternative payment methods) into other business management functions like accounting, working capital, and supplier management. We observe AP automation and spend management SaaS companies like Avidxchange and Bill.com effectively monetizing payments, with 67% and 37% of 2022 YTD revenue coming from payments, respectively (Figure 2).
FIGURE 2: Payments Revenue of Select AP Automation & Spend Management SaaS Providers (2023; payments revenue as a share of total revenue, USD mil.)
Coupa Pay, Coupa’s embedded payments service, allows buyers (Coupa’s customers) to efficiently pay suppliers using any payment method, including virtual cards. Virtual cards are especially attractive for SaaS companies and their customers in the U.S., as most of the supplier’s acceptance costs for virtual cards (upwards of 3%) are earned as revenue by the SaaS company and shared with the SaaS company’s customers via rebates. Other embedded payment methods like account-to-account (“A2A”) payments are less lucrative but still offer monetization opportunities for SaaS companies.
Coupa does not report its payments-related revenue. However, in Coupa’s 2021 strategy presentation, management projected that Coupa Pay would achieve 10% penetration of total spend under management (“SUM”) by 2027. SUM (highlighted earlier in Figure 1) is the total payments that Coupa’s solution oversees/manages from buyers to suppliers. The more SaaS companies can penetrate their SUM with embedded payments products, the greater the payments monetization opportunity. For context and comparison purposes, Avidxchange’s SUM in 2021 was $180 billion, of which $52 billion (29%) was monetized as “payments spend.”
By applying some key assumptions and management projections, we illustrate Coupa’s theoretical payments revenue in Figure 3.
FIGURE 3: Theoretical Coupa Payments Revenue as a Share of Total Revenue (2023; theoretical estimation, USD mil.)
Our theoretical payments revenue scenario above highlights Coupa’s runaway for growth via payments monetization. Several factors will impact Coupa’s actual payments revenue growth including:
Breadth and depth of value-added services (#5 above) is arguably the biggest contributing factor to unlocking payments (and software) revenue growth. To that end, we expect Thoma Bravo to exploit synergies across Coupa and Bottomline Technologies (acquired by Thoma Bravo on May 13, 2022) to improve the performance of both companies.
Like Coupa, Bottomline is a global AP automation and cash management software provider. Figure 4 compares key metrics and select capabilities across the two enterprises.
FIGURE 4: Coupa & Bottomline Technologies Select Key Metrics Comparison, 2023
Coupa and Bottomline offer similar, yet complimentary services. Coupa can create a more compelling solution for Treasurers in conjunction with Bottomline, offering a wider, more impactful business process automation solution. We observe potential synergies across four vectors:
Only time will tell if Thoma Bravo’s $10+ billion of M&A activity in B2B SaaS last year can deliver the growth and future exit multiples that such deals strive for. That said, we remain bullish on the power of B2B SaaS and embedded payments, particularly in the U.S., where profit margins on products like virtual cards remain high. Demand for B2B SaaS and embedded payments among customers continues, where early movers with global reach like Coupa are well positioned to profit. Looking forward, we expect continued deal flow in the B2B SaaS market as strategic and financial investors look to capitalize on modest valuations and strong industry tailwinds including the continued adoption of digital payment methods globally.
Please do not hesitate to contact Rom Mascetti at Rom@FlagshipAP.com or Ryan Vincent at Ryan@FlagshipAp.com with comments or questions.