SAP sees higher operating profit, cloud revenue growth in 2025


FILE PHOTO: SAP headquarters in Walldorf, Germany, January 24, 2017. REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski/File Photo

(Reuters) - SAP, Europe's largest software maker, said on Tuesday it was more optimistic about its financial results this year due to accelerating growth in revenue from cloud computing.

The group said it expects operating profit in 2025, on a constant currency basis, to be between 10.3 billion euros and 10.6 billion euros ($10.75 billion - $11.06 billion).

SAP previously said its 2025 "ambition" was for operating profit of about 10.2 billion euros, total revenue of more than 37.5 billion euros and more than 21.5 billion euros in cloud revenue.

The company said it now expects cloud revenues to be slightly higher in a range of 21.6 billion euros to 21.9 billion euros for the year.

Fourth-quarter cloud revenue grew 27%, adjusted for currency effects, to 4.71 billion euros, beating an analyst consensus of 4.67 billion euros posted on the company's website.

The cloud and software revenue in the quarter grew 11% adjusted for currency effects, to 8.27 billion euros, beating an analyst consensus of 8 billion euros.

Quarterly operating income, adjusted for special items, gained 24% to 2.44 billion euros in the fourth quarter, above an analyst consensus of 2.25 billion euros.

The software maker has previously said up to 10,000 jobs out of its 100,000 total headcount were under review as it prepares for the era of AI, projecting restructuring costs of around 3 billion euros.

On Monday, SAP shares dropped alongside other European technology stocks after the popularity of a Chinese discount artificial-intelligence model wobbled investors' faith in the profitability of AI and related investments. ($1 = 0.9585 euros)

(Reporting by Ludwig Burger and Harshita Meenaktshi; Editing by Savio D'Souza and Mrigank Dhaniwala)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Democratic senators demand Apple, Google take X and Grok off app stores over sexual images - NBC News
Germany plans measures to combat harmful AI image manipulation
DeepSeek to launch new AI model focused on coding in February, The Information reports
Factbox-Elon Musk's Grok faces global scrutiny for sexualised AI photos
Stablecoin firm Rain valued at $1.95 billion in latest fundraise
Musk's AI bot Grok limits some image generation on X after backlash
EU considers making WhatsApp more responsible for tackling harmful content, spokesperson says
Meta strikes nuclear power agreements with three companies
TSMC fourth-quarter revenue jumps 20%, beats forecasts
From climbing vacuums to cyber pets: Some highlights of CES 2026

Others Also Read