Earnings Call Transcript
Everpure, Inc. (P)
Earnings Call Transcript - PSTG Q1 2023
Operator, Operator
Good day, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Pure Storage First Quarter Fiscal Year 2023 Earnings Release Conference Call. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. I would now like to introduce your host for today’s conference call, Mr. Sanjot Khurana. Please go ahead.
Sanjot Khurana, Vice President of Investor Relations and Treasurer
Thank you, and good afternoon. Welcome to the Pure Storage First Quarter Fiscal 2023 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Sanjot Khurana, Vice President of Investor Relations and Treasurer at Pure Storage. Joining me today are our CEO, Charlie Giancarlo; our CFO, Kevan Krysler; and our CTO, Rob Lee. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that during this call, management will make forward-looking statements, which are subject to various risks and uncertainties. These include statements regarding the COVID-19 pandemic and related disruptions, inflation and macro environment, our growth in sales prospects, competitive industry and technology trends, our strategy and its advantages, our current and future product offerings, our sustainability goals and benefits and our business and operations. Any forward-looking statements that we make are based on facts and assumptions as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update them. Our actual results may differ materially from the results forecasted, and reported results should not be considered as an indication of future performance. A discussion of some of the risks and uncertainties relating to our business is contained in our filings with the SEC, and we refer you to these public filings. During this call, we will discuss non-GAAP measures in talking about the company’s performance and reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are provided in our earnings press release and slides. Additionally, when we refer to sales in our prepared remarks, we mean total bookings, excluding castable orders. This call is being broadcast live on the Pure Storage Investor Relations website and is being recorded for playback purposes. An archive of the webcast will be available on the IR website and is the property of Pure Storage. With that, I’ll turn the call over to our CEO, Charlie Giancarlo.
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Pure once again delivered very strong results this quarter in the midst of a highly dynamic environment. We drove 50% year-over-year revenue growth with exceptional performance in both U.S. and international markets. Enterprise expansion continues, experiencing strong growth year-over-year. The Pure brand is now both highly recognized and highly respected among enterprise customers worldwide and is considered a must-have in any storage consideration. We were especially delighted this quarter that a large telecom customer expanded their relationship with Pure, selecting our FlashArray product line for their 5G deployments. Our industry-leading subscription services business grew 35% over the same quarter last year. Pure’s unique Evergreen and Pure as-a-Service models continue to resonate strongly with customers and differentiate us from the rest of the industry. Next week at our Annual Accelerate conference in Los Angeles, we will announce further expansions of our Evergreen portfolio. Customers such as Knight Systems, which provides predictive behavioral analytics, will share stories of how multigenerational Evergreen upgrades have provided huge benefits, including lowered operational costs and complexity, increased uptime, and lower energy consumption, yielding greater environmental sustainability. On this very topic, we released our first-ever environmental, social, and governance ESG report this past quarter. On a particular note, we were proud to show that our products make a significant and immediate reduction of data center energy usage. Pure positively improves our customers’ environmental footprint by requiring substantially less power, space, and cooling and by producing less waste than both legacy solutions and current competitive systems. Customers that deploy Pure are able to reduce direct energy usage in their data storage systems by up to 80%. They are also able to reduce their data center’s contribution to e-waste. More than 97% of Pure Arrays purchased six years ago are still in service benefiting from our industry-leading Evergreen program, which actively reduces e-waste while also saving customers’ time, money, and effort. In our ESG report, we commit to extend our leadership by further reducing our Scope 3 emissions by 66% per petabyte by 2030. Operating profit was very strong this quarter, continuing the trend of past quarters and benefiting from the combination of increased scale and prudent expense management. Our investment in research and development remains strong, demonstrating our commitment to innovation and belief that data storage and management is high technology and requires the same level of investment as other critical technologies. Too many competitors in our industry actively promote and invest in storage as a commodity. For both enterprise customers and developing modern private and hybrid cloud solutions, as well as cloud service providers, Pure delivers the flexibility, simplicity, and agility required by today’s operations and applications environments. A key milestone we achieved last month was releasing both Pure Fusion and Portworx data services for general availability. Pure Fusion provides an end-to-end storage code platform for organizations that want to create a cloud operating model to automate and deliver data services to their organizations. Portworx data services deliver single-click deployments of multiple data services for search, event streaming, NoSQL databases, and more. Together, these two products allow customers to create a cloud operating model, automating data management tasks and delivering customized data services to developers and applications through a simple unified control plane. With these products, customers will be able to modernize their data center operations, avoiding existing highly manual and costly operations for both traditional and cloud-native workloads. FlashArray, FlashArray//C, and FlashBlade all saw strong growth during the quarter, setting multiple individual records. Unstructured file and object data makes up the majority of data worldwide, and FlashBlade has taken the lead in penetrating the file and object workloads that require high performance, such as EDA, advanced analytics, AI, and rapid recovery. However, the vast majority of unstructured data continues to exist primarily on lower-cost disk-based storage systems. Please join us next week at our Accelerate conference for a game-changing announcement on FlashBlade. We continue our progress towards creating the all-flash data center, expanding into higher performance Tier 0 workloads with FlashArray//XL while also expanding our leadership in QLC. With our unique DirectFlash technology, we’re using QLC to close the price gap with magnetic storage. Using the latest developments in solid-state storage to overtake the lower-cost magnetic market requires sophisticated software and years of experience. We believe we have a multi-year advantage in delivering this price-performing QLC technology, and we’ll showcase this next week. This past quarter, I had the opportunity to meet with many of our customers, partners, and team members in Europe and the Middle East for the first time in over two years. It was wonderful to strengthen existing relationships and build new ones. And it’s impossible to overstate the pleasure and effectiveness of resuming face-to-face meetings. These meetings made clear that our customers’ confidence in Pure is high, that our brand is strong and getting stronger, and that we are clearly differentiating ourselves in the market. Simply put, our messages are being embraced: that data storage is high technology, not a commodity as our competitors promote, that customers can build the cloud operating model for themselves, and that Evergreen is a better way to buy and operate their infrastructure. We are also aware of current industry and customer concerns. Of course, one of these concerns is supply chain. This remains a challenge across industries and around the world. Pure’s focus on a simplified, consistent, and efficient architecture across our product line has served us and our customers well as fewer components means lower cost, lower waste, and less supplier risk. Our architecture and world-class hardware design team also means that we can quickly address component supply disruptions with design modifications. And as we’ve stated before, we have invested for years in strong relationships with our supply partners and flexible, multi-sourced global operations. I’m very proud of the way our extended team has worked together to continue meeting customer demand with minimal disruption. Another area of concern is inflation and its effect on the economy and on demand. We believe inflation will be present for some time and will also cause both stock market rebalancing as well as monetary and fiscal responses, which will certainly have economic effects in our market. However, we believe its influence on IT customer behavior will be muted in aggregate and even less for Pure. First, enterprises have now made digital transformation the top priority for the success of their organizations. Next, we believe Pure has entered a second phase of growth, enabled by an expanding portfolio of highly differentiated and leading products as well as sales and business models spanning commercial, enterprise, and cloud customers. Another area of concern is cost inflation, coupled with the so-called great resignation. We have seen higher-than-average levels of attrition over the last year, but lower than what has been reported for the industry as a whole. While we do expect somewhat higher labor costs this year, we expect labor cost increases to moderate going forward. Recently reported slowdowns in hiring in the tech space will soften the demand for technology professionals, which will, in turn, reduce attrition and wage inflation. We believe that this marks the beginning of a return to the old normal. Pure is a great place to work, as validated by both external recognition and our own internal surveys, which has enabled us to recruit and retain top talent. Our brand and our strong talent acquisition team are attracting top performance across industries, and we are hiring to our planned targets. The final item I’d like to touch upon is the European economy given the effects of general inflation and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Inflation, especially in energy, is projected to dampen European economies in the near term. While this may somewhat reduce the overall investment capacity of European-based businesses, European customers have indicated that investment in IT is required to make up for the loss of other business modalities. Furthermore, higher energy costs are already increasing demand for IT equipment that is energy-efficient, something that Pure excels in. We believe that this represents another opportunity for Pure to pick up more market share. The bottom line is that technology is now the Number 1 driving force of enterprise strategy and business transformation. And Pure is the innovation and customer experience leader in one of the largest segments of technology investment. We believe that we are now positioned to see secular growth, less affected by this economic cycle than our competitors. Our full views of the impact of all these events are taken into consideration in our guidance. Overall, we have never been more optimistic about Pure’s opportunities and growth prospects. Despite the pandemic, war, and market turmoil, Pure has thrived and grown. We have only gotten stronger over these last several years, and we expect to delight even more customers in the years ahead. I’ll now turn the call over to our CFO, Kevan Krysler, for a deeper look at the numbers.
Kevan Krysler, CFO
Thank you, Charlie, and good afternoon. Robust demand across our portfolio, outstanding execution, and high resilience continue to be the constants contributing to our sustaining momentum and our very strong performance this quarter. We again saw solid demand across our portfolio of solutions, services, and geographies. We saw impressive growth in our key international geographies as well as in the U.S. We continue to minimize delays and deliver for our customers as the backdrop of a challenging supply chain environment has not improved. We also achieved increased profitability in cash flows during the quarter, resulting from our revenue growth and continued operational discipline despite broad-based inflationary pressures. The strength of our subscription business continues as subscription annual recurring revenue, or ARR, grew 29% to $900 million, while remaining performance obligations or RPO grew to $1.43 billion. Our RPO balance when compared to Q1 of last year reflects a reduction of approximately $32 million relating to product shipments for an outstanding commitment with one of our global system integrators. Excluding these product shipments, our RPO also grew 29% year-over-year. We continue to be very focused on the growth of our new customer business, which has improved as we increase our travel. Our total customer count reflects the acquisition of approximately 360 new customers this quarter and includes approximately 54% of the U.S. Fortune 500 customers. Total revenue for the quarter was exceptional, growing over 50% to over $620 million. Approximately $60 million of our product revenue upside this quarter was with several of our larger enterprise customers in the U.S. that we had originally forecasted to close in the second half of our fiscal year. Our customers were pleased we were able to deliver our solutions ahead of schedule, which is a testament to the agility and resilience of our technology and supply chain. Revenue growth, when excluding these transactions was still a very strong 36%. Revenue in the U.S. grew 57% and international revenue grew 33% year-over-year. Subscription services revenue grew approximately 35% year-over-year and represented about 35% of total revenue. Non-GAAP total gross margins were solid at 70.6% this quarter. As we have continued to highlight, we believe our integrated software and hardware designs continue to be a key differentiator that our customers appreciate and value. High performance, simplicity, sustainability, and resilience of our solutions are key factors contributing to our product gross margins of 70% this quarter. Non-GAAP subscription services gross margins also continue to be strong at 71.5% this quarter. We were very pleased with achieving non-GAAP operating profit of over $85 million and non-GAAP operating margins of 13.8% this quarter. The strength of our operating profit and margin during the quarter was further improved by transactions that occurred during the quarter but were forecasted to close later in the year that I mentioned earlier. Now let’s turn to the balance sheet and cash flows. We ended the quarter with over $1.29 billion in cash and approximately 4,400 employees. Cash flow from operations was over $220 million this quarter. High collections benefited both from robust sales in both Q4 and Q1. Higher profitability was also a contributing factor. Capital expenditures were approximately $33 million during the quarter. As mentioned last quarter, our outstanding credit revolver balance of $250 million was paid at the beginning of this fiscal quarter. We returned approximately $66 million of capital to repurchase slightly over 2.1 million shares during the quarter. We have approximately $184 million remaining from our $250 million share repurchase program. Now turning to guidance. Clearly, we are executing well against our strategy of driving strong revenue growth and continued improvement in profitability. We expect continued demand strength in Q2 with estimated revenue to be approximately $635 million, growing approximately 28%. We expect non-GAAP operating profit to be approximately $75 million in Q2, representing approximately 11.8% non-GAAP operating margin. Given our Q1 performance and outlook for Q2, as well as consideration of the current macro environment, we are raising our annual guidance for the full fiscal year. We now expect that revenue for FY ‘23 will be $2.66 billion, growing approximately 22%. Non-GAAP operating profit is estimated to be approximately $320 million, representing approximately 12% non-GAAP operating margin. Revenue and estimated profits from transactions that were projected to close later in the year, but closed during Q1 were included in our original annual guidance. In closing, our team and partners continue to deliver as the results this quarter were exceptional. Our sustained commitment to innovation provides our customers with solutions that are highly performing and reliable. On integrated software and hardware that require fewer components, consume substantially less energy and space, and produce less waste than other flash storage alternatives in the market. Strong demand for our market-leading solutions and excellent execution, in particular to our supply chain, providing our leading storage and data management solutions to our customers when and where they need it, will help us deliver 22% annual revenue growth, along with 12% non-GAAP operating margins. With that, I will turn it over to the operator so we can get to your questions.
Operator, Operator
The first question is from Simon Leopold with Raymond James.
Simon Leopold, Analyst
I wanted to first get a little help with Charlie, your comments around the macro. It sounds like you’re acknowledging the environment is more difficult, yet you sound quite upbeat. I’d like a better understanding of what’s really informing your view of how Pure should be more resilient than its peers? And essentially, what are your customers telling you that give you the kind of confidence that you’re essentially giving us yet acknowledgment that the macro is more challenging? How do we put these things together? And just as a very quick follow-up, if you guys could give us a little bit of insight regarding the recent announcement you made with a partnership with Snowflake. I’d like to hear about that as well.
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
Very good. Thank you, Simon. I hope you’re well. So Simon, what we’re seeing is strong momentum in the market overall. All of our products, customers are buying more, the fact that we have a stronger and broader portfolio now being brought into a much greater set of opportunities in large existing customers and a stronger brand that’s allowing us to penetrate net new logos and larger opportunities in larger companies as a net new logo. So we’re actually seeing strength. And just to address your question, I would say that our way of looking at the macro is a little bit different. I would say we have not yet seen the macro affecting us or the customers that we speak to, but we are not blind to the fact that the macro and the possibility of economic slowdown can affect us going forward. So I would say what we’re currently seeing in the market through last quarter continues to be strong demand by IT customers, and then a greater acceptance for Pure overall; just the strengthening, if you will, of our brand and our value proposition, and the breadth of our value proposition to our customers. And I’m going to let Rob answer the question on Snowflake.
Rob Lee, CTO
Yes, Simon, this is Rob. So to answer your question on Snowflake, look, we’re super excited about the joint hybrid cloud analytics solution that we announced earlier this month. This is the first step in a strategic partnership that we’re forging with Snowflake. We think that this joint solution is going to be a great fit for customers who would benefit from the power of cloud-based data warehousing but who also want to hold tighter control over their data or want to manage and operate that data in their on-premise environment. We see early customer demand for these types of solutions for security reasons, customers that need to hold and manage the data more tightly for security compliance, as well as customers who are generating a lot of data in the on-premise environment that may want to share that data across multiple tool sets. And so, like I said, early days, but we’re seeing good signs of early interest, and we think this is just a great joint solution to bring the two technologies together for customers.
Operator, Operator
The next question is from the line of Pinjalim Bora with JP Morgan.
Pinjalim Bora, Analyst
Charlie, Kevan, and everyone else, it seems like a really solid quarter. I had to look at the number twice for the second quarter in a row. But Charlie, I wanted to ask you on supply chain. Pure obviously has done an incredible job in managing the supply chain until now, and it seems like you’re not getting affected at all. However, we do see casualties all over in the field. So are you seeing any streams developing that investors should be aware of that might impact Pure over the 6 to 12 months if this kind of environment prolongs on the supply chain side?
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
Thank you, Pinjalim. It's a great question. Let me characterize the supply chain environment now. We generally believe that the situation has not improved. While it has changed slightly, we still encounter unexpected challenges. Events like the shutdown in Shanghai necessitate significant effort to rebalance and locate new sources of supply for various components. Thus, we are consistently facing challenges from a supply chain perspective. I would say we have managed to minimize the impact on our customers to almost nonexistent levels, but it is certainly affecting us quite a bit. Our teams are very busy, and I want to commend them for their hard work. However, as Kevan mentioned in our prepared remarks, we have fewer parts to manage, which provides us with more options. Because we design our own hardware, unlike most competitors who use standard parts, we have greater flexibility. Our goal is to ensure there is minimal impact on our customers. We were fortunate to even accelerate some shipments this quarter, as Kevan noted. However, I remain cautious as we discuss these issues because the supply chain continues to be challenging.
Kevan Krysler, CFO
Two other things I’d add to that is high confidence with the risk that Charlie alluded to. I’d say the other thing I’d add to it is our supply partners are doing a terrific job as well. And the three factors combined really drive the sustainability confidence that we have around the supply chain, even acknowledging the risks that we’ve alluded to. The other thing I’d point out is NAND is not subject to the same types of challenges and constraints that we see across really around the IC side and semiconductor side. And so obviously, that’s the biggest part of our BOM and materials, and that’s an important call-out as well.
Pinjalim Bora, Analyst
Understood. And a quick follow-up for Kevan. I had to really squint to find the press release. But I want to ask you on the subscription revenue side; it seems it was in line with consensus. When I look at the sequential growth, it seems like it’s not that much. And then when I look at subscription ARR, net new growth seems like it’s decelerated a bit. Was this mainly kind of a CapEx-led quarter versus unified subscription-led?
Kevan Krysler, CFO
I think that’s right. That’s a good way to be thinking about it. I mean we had a lot of volume coming through on the CapEx side. But look, the subscription business continues to be strong. ARR growing 29%. I would be expecting variability quarter to quarter. We’re very focused on accelerating growth with our partner ecosystem; a lot of great energy out there, and looking forward to accelerate and talk to our partners around Pure as-a-Service. We’ve got some key milestones that we’ve identified around general availability for Pure Fusion and Portworx data services. And really, this takes us on a roadmap that we’ve talked about that Charlie has laid out around really establishing a cloud operating model for every customer no matter where their workloads are being run. I’d say stay tuned, too. We’re very excited about some new announcements of Evergreen at Accelerate as well.
Operator, Operator
The next question is from the line of Aaron Rakers with Wells Fargo.
Aaron Rakers, Analyst
And congrats on the great results. I guess the first question I wanted to ask is that when I look at your gross margin at 70% on the product line, it would really imply that you’ve not seen any incremental deployments with one of your large hyperscale cloud customers. So I guess the first question is, is that a fair assessment? And I guess, on the heels of that, how are you thinking about that hyperscale customer, Meta, fully deploying their AI project through the course of this year? How does that factor into your expectations?
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
Yes, thank you, Aaron. You are correct that we did not see substantial revenues from the hyperscaler this quarter. However, we have been making good progress on the discounting front as the market has stabilized from a pricing standpoint, and we are also able to extract more value from our products overall. I would say we have managed the gross margin effectively. Regarding the Meta situation, as we mentioned earlier, sales can be somewhat sporadic as they expand their data centers in certain quarters. This quarter is lighter, but we are continuing our collaboration with them. We are optimistic about future orders, but it will depend on their timelines.
Kevan Krysler, CFO
Yes. And I think to be clear, that was expected, right?
Aaron Rakers, Analyst
Yes, that’s very helpful. And I guess I’m just curious, given the momentum that you have not only seen this last quarter but you’ve seen these last couple of quarters, how has the competitive landscape reacted? What have you seen? I know that Dell EMC saw a little bit of growth, 9% growth this last quarter in your storage business. I’m just curious, have you seen any changes on the competitive landscape at all?
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
It's relatively minor, to be honest. We tend to compete against the same products in similar environments with the same customers. As we expand our sales force, we're reaching a larger customer base, which is positive. We have more opportunities to compete, and our win rates are very good. Our brand is definitely helping; customers now believe we must be part of any competitive consideration they are conducting. I haven't observed anything significantly substantial from our competitors in this space.
Rob Lee, CTO
Yes, Aaron, I’ll just add. I think the biggest takeaway is that, from my view, we really remain standouts as we look at the competitive set in terms of having really differentiated technology, as well as, as Charlie talked about in his prepared remarks, our thesis in investing in innovation to further expand those differentiated technologies. If you look at what we’re doing with QLC to go after disk and hybrid, if you look at what we’re doing with FlashArray and extending that family into XL to go after higher performance, with Pure Fusion now GA and Portworx data services, and not to mention significantly more to come next week. I think this is just an area where we see a great opportunity set out there for us, with a lot of runway ahead of us to grab more market share. And I think the biggest standout is that we don’t see any of the competitive announcements materially changing that landscape.
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
Actually, Aaron, let me also answer it with one additional comment, which is we’re just playing a different game than our competitors. Our competitors play a commodity game. They’ve been marketing their products. They’ve been marketing storage as a commodity. The customers should only care about price and nothing else. And we’re playing a high technology game. We invest in it like it’s high technology. It’s an entirely different business strategy, and it’s going to be very difficult, I think, for them to respond.
Operator, Operator
The next question is from the line of Amit Daryanani with Evercore.
Amit Daryanani, Analyst
Congrats on a great quarter. I guess my first one is really, Charlie, you sort of talked in your prepared comments about Pure has entered a second phase of growth in its journey. I’m hoping you could talk a little bit about what this means for Pure? Because when looking at the new customer additions, for example, that definitely inflected higher pretty materially. But what does the second phase of growth mean for the company? Are you seeing engagements with bigger enterprises? Or are you seeing a quicker land and expand? Just maybe help frame what this means? And does that potentially inflect growth higher as you go forward?
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
Yes. What we mean by second phase is if we look back, our first phase of growth was building an award-winning product in a unique environment where really for many years, it was the only product of its type, and therefore, allowed us very, very rapid early growth. And as our competitors started to respond, they were able to use their larger sales forces and their greater portfolio to compete with us more effectively, and so our growth slowed a bit. We’ve responded over the last several years as our long-time investors know, with continued investment in R&D and, in particular, an investment in broadening out our sales focus and capabilities, sales and support such that we could support enterprise customers with a larger portfolio. And now we’re seeing the fruits of that bear out. The second phase of growth is the fact that we can penetrate more into larger customers with an expanded and superior portfolio, and that’s going to give us a runway, a pretty long runway to continue what I believe is going to be a second phase of growth. We now have the scale, if you will, to compete with any of our competitors and deploy our unfair advantage of leadership products. So that’s how I phrased the second phase of growth.
Amit Daryanani, Analyst
Got it. If I could just follow up quickly, the increase in revenues we observed this quarter, right? It sounds like $60 million of that was drawn from the latter half of the year, and $40 million was more organic growth. I'm interested to know if Pure's growth is primarily due to better customer engagement, as you mentioned, or if it's largely because you have improved supply capabilities, which allows you to gain additional market share compared to your competitors. Is the better supply a factor in this growth, or is it more fundamentally driven?
Kevan Krysler, CFO
Well, this is Kevan. I’ll begin and let Charlie add to it. I don't think it makes sense to separate supply from the strengths of our portfolio and technology. When you examine the architecture of our technology and how we’re utilizing software, we require fewer components and a simpler design. This is clearly benefiting us on the supply side, but it also resonates with customers. It’s about performance, resilience, and ease of use. Our ESG report shows impressive statistics regarding our sustainability efforts and energy reduction linked to our architecture and portfolio. Therefore, I believe these two aspects are interconnected from my viewpoint. Charlie, do you have any additional thoughts?
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
That says it all, Kevan. Really do. Mic drop.
Operator, Operator
The next question is from the line of Rod Hall with Goldman Sachs.
Rod Hall, Analyst
I wanted to go back to the $60 million and just try to understand how we should be thinking about that? In other words, should we be thinking about it as backlog that you had good execution against supply, so you were able to kind of go ahead and deliver it? Or more a customer coming back to you and going, "Hey, we were thinking about doing this in H2. We really want to accelerate that." I’m just kind of trying to figure out how we should think about the $60 million? And then I have a quick follow-up.
Kevan Krysler, CFO
Rod, that’s a great question. It was definitely more about the latter. We have clear visibility with our large enterprise customers regarding our plans. In our discussions, they reached out asking for earlier delivery. I understand those requests given the current environment, but it’s really more about what you mentioned, Rod.
Rod Hall, Analyst
Okay, great, Charlie. I noticed the Portworx GA announcements mid-month, and I find that to be an exciting part of the Services portfolio. I'm curious about the funnel there. What kind of interest have you seen expressed? How does this impact ARR as we move through the next few quarters?
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
Portworx remains a relatively new product, as we previously discussed, and it contributes to our annual recurring revenue. We are experiencing strong growth in this product line overall. In my opening remarks, I mentioned that I have spent considerable time in Europe and the Middle East over the past quarter and the current one, where there is significant excitement from customers, our sales teams, and partners regarding the product. We believe it has a strong future ahead. However, it will take some time before we see a noticeable impact in our annual recurring revenue.
Operator, Operator
The next question comes from the line of Jason Ader with William Blair.
Jason Ader, Analyst
Yes. I guess I want to understand, Kevan, on the comment on macro and how when you thought about the guidance for the year, you baked in macro? Does that mean that you changed any of your assumptions on close rates or deal sizes or geographies or customer behavior?
Kevan Krysler, CFO
Yes, it’s a great question, Jason. The simple answer is no. There were no significant changes to our assumptions. Look, the first thing we evaluated pretty carefully was demand signals. As Charlie mentioned, demand continues to be quite strong. Obviously, a lot of noise out there from a macro perspective that we’re digesting and understanding what, if any, impact that will have for us in the second half. But when I really break it down and look and compare against our initial guide for the year, we’re outperforming. We saw that from a demand standpoint in Q1. We see that in terms of our guidance for Q2, and then obviously increasing our annual guidance for the year. So I think it’s business as usual with the outperformance that we’re seeing in Q1 and Q2.
Jason Ader, Analyst
Okay, great. And then, Charlie, for you, just in the last couple of quarters have been off the charts. I understand that there’s been some kind of, let’s call it, near-term spikiness to the business, and you’re going to have some deceleration as you move through the year here. But is the storage market just that much better right now than it’s been in a while? Or is it just that you guys are taking just gobs of share?
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
It’s an interesting question, Jason. Obviously, the numbers speak for themselves. We’re clearly taking share. The market is very benign at the moment. It’s a strong market despite everything that’s going on. Prices at ASPs have stayed strong. That’s always helpful. So I think it’s been a benign market, and we’re taking share. It’s probably the best way to put it.
Jason Ader, Analyst
Is there still significant pent-up demand from the pandemic that is benefiting us? Should we be adjusting our expectations for fiscal 2024 since that tailwind from pent-up demand may no longer be present?
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
Honestly, we haven’t really noticed pent-up demand having an impact over the last year. It’s mostly about new developments, new infrastructure, and fundamental expansions, rather than pent-up demand. For us, pent-up demand hasn’t been significant. We don’t refresh equipment; our Evergreen model ensures that equipment stays updated regularly. When customers require additional capacity, they pay for it, but they don’t pay to replace existing capacity. Therefore, we don't benefit from pent-up demand like some competitors might because we don’t have replacements; we have Evergreen. So again, I would emphasize that pent-up demand has not been a factor for us. This is primarily new demand or the expansion of existing environments.
Kevan Krysler, CFO
Yes. It is interesting too, Jason, when you look at seasonality, pre-COVID for us and growth rates, and you normalize for the $60 million that we alluded to. I’ll tell you that the seasonality is matching kind of the pre-COVID days in terms of first half, second half growth rates. So that’s another data point for thought as well.
Operator, Operator
The next question is from the line of Meta Marshall with Morgan Stanley.
Meta Marshall, Analyst
Great. Moving away from macro trends and focusing more on specifics, you have about 30% exposure to cloud customers. I would like to understand if the recent changes in the technology hiring landscape have affected this customer group in any way. Additionally, can you provide insights on the $40 million in extra revenue you experienced this quarter? Are there any signs indicating whether this came from your commercial or enterprise customers?
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
So overall, I would say we’ve seen just strong demand and growth across the entire set of customer segments, that commercial enterprise, what we characterized as cloud in the past. These were all strong segments for us. I don’t think, other than the continuing exceptional growth of enterprise, I wouldn’t say there’s been a dramatic change in the overall character of the revenues coming in. And I’ll let Kevan answer the question on the accelerated shipments.
Kevan Krysler, CFO
Yes. And I would call out actually that international had a fantastic quarter along with U.S. And so to Charlie’s point on broad-based performance, we saw that from a geography standpoint. I was really pleased with what we saw on the international side, which really when you normalize for the $60 million in the U.S., it’s really tracking with the U.S. growth rates. And as Charlie talked about, commercial, we saw some good strength there. The public sector was a highlight for us as well in terms of how we look at it. So again, when we look at the $40 million of outperformance, I would, again, talk about the power of the portfolio we have. Enterprise is absolutely a workhorse for us, but we’re seeing it across the board.
Operator, Operator
The next question is from the line of Sidney Ho with Deutsche Bank.
Sidney Ho, Analyst
I want to go back to the full year guidance. Obviously, you raised it by a little bit, but that would imply second half will be up about 10% year-over-year, but maybe 15% of your account for the revenue pulling you talked about. Can you walk us through your thought process there? Are you just being prudent in your guidance? Or are there more revenue being pulled in from the second half into the second quarter? And the follow-up to that is if I look at the operating profit, you also raised it. But you’re seeing high revenue in the second half, but the operating profit dollar is roughly flat in the first half of the year. Just can you walk us through maybe that dynamic as well?
Kevan Krysler, CFO
Yes, that sounds great, Sidney. Let me start with revenue growth. And look, we’re very pleased with the raise of our annual guide to 22%. I think that’s very strong. Obviously, an outlier in terms of what we’re seeing, especially in this environment. So not backing away from that annual growth rate, which I think is very strong. You’re seeing strong growth in the first half, and you’re seeing some moderation in the second half. Some of that is seasonality. The $60 million that we alluded to was really contemplated and forecasted for the second half. But when normalizing for this seasonality, the expected growth rate in the back half is still in the high teens, which is quite strong. And then again, as I talked with Jason about when you look at our growth rates, first half, second half from a seasonality standpoint, we’re getting back to what we saw in the pre-COVID days, which is great. A couple of other thoughts. As we progress through the year, we’re also working with strong comps. I mean, we had a fantastic year last year, and that’s only growing. We also had an extra week in the fourth quarter, so that’s a consideration as well. And we are being thoughtful about the macro environment as well. But without a doubt, we’re pleased with our revenue growth outlook for the year. Now if I move to operating profits, which was really the second piece of your question, we feel really good about the current view and increasing profitability. This is our execution against our strategy that Charlie laid out, which is absolutely prioritizing innovation and growth while at the same time improving profitability, and that’s what you’re seeing here. So we’re quite pleased with the operating profits in the quarter. Expect 12% operating margin for the year. And obviously, our profit overachievement this quarter was helped by the transactions that were moved into Q1. We’re also doing very well on hiring in Q1. We’ve made great progress in hiring talent, and we continue to invest thoughtfully, and we’ll continue to be focused on operating discipline and operating leverage as we monitor the effects of inflation at times that is on. So hopefully, that answers your question.
Sidney Ho, Analyst
Yes. That’s helpful. Maybe one quick follow-up. If I look at the product gross margin for Q1, it’s definitely improved more than we expected. But was NAND pricing a headwind in the quarter as you expected that may be able to raise prices to offset that? But the real question is, how are you thinking about gross margin for both products and subscription services for Q2 and the rest of the year?
Kevan Krysler, CFO
Yes, we might be a broken record on the product gross margins. Look, I still think longer term, I’m very happy with product gross margins being in the high 60s. I think once again, we’ve overachieved, and I’m very pleased. I think the sales team is doing a tremendous job selling the value of our solution, and we’re seeing that in the average selling prices as we navigated Q1. So I think that’s a large driver on it. In terms of subscription gross margins, what we’ve been tracking is pretty consistent in the low 70s, which is a good kind of corridor that I like in terms of subscription gross margins.
Operator, Operator
The next question is from the line of Nehal Chokshi with Northland Capital Markets.
Nehal Chokshi, Analyst
Yes. And a fantastic quarter of execution. I take a tick on this. But subscription year-over-year growth did decelerate to 35% year-over-year growth from 42% in the prior quarter. Why did that happen? And then also why subscription ARR growing slower than the revenue line? I think you did mention that there is some lumpiness. And so if you go into why there’s that lumpiness that would be helpful as well.
Kevan Krysler, CFO
When examining the growth of our subscription revenue, it's important to recognize that it's a lagging indicator, reflecting revenue that accumulates over time. To assess the health of our subscription business, I focus on our subscription ARR balance and our RPO, which experienced a 29% growth. I'm very encouraged by that strong performance. We are well-positioned with positive developments, particularly related to our accelerated announcements on Evergreen. However, it’s normal to see some variability in both subscription ARR and RPO growth. It’s essential to understand that just because revenue is coming off the balance sheet doesn't necessarily indicate the health of our subscription business. Additionally, Nehal, when comparing quarterly figures, keep in mind that the extra week in Q4 will impact those comparisons.
Nehal Chokshi, Analyst
Yes. Okay. All right. Understood on that. That’s a good point. And then Charlie, in an earlier question, you had made a point of saying Pure Storage is doing a technology sale versus competitors doing a commodity sale. Can you expand on what do you actually really mean by that?
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
We invest heavily in R&D, which allows us to consistently develop a market-leading product. Our largest competitors typically allocate less than 5% of their budget to R&D. Having managed a large R&D operation myself, I know that sustaining even basic operations on just 5% R&D is challenging. This limits their ability to compete with us technologically. If we are right in stating that data storage and management are areas of advanced technology that require ongoing development, it will be difficult for them to adapt their business models to increase R&D investments. This challenge goes beyond financial constraints; it also involves attracting and retaining a top-tier R&D team. Reputation plays a significant role in this industry. We approach the market differently, and customers accustomed to viewing storage as a commodity, with poor support and similar capabilities, are quickly realizing that Pure offers a distinct alternative. We require significantly less labor, are highly automated, and demand less space, power, and cooling, resulting in a superior overall experience with our product, which is increasingly recognized.
Rob Lee, CTO
I think the results of that are pretty apparent if you look across the portfolio, but if you look at FlashArray//C., we’ve been shipping that product for 2.5 years now, going after hybrid and disk completely unmatched out in the market. You look at FlashBlade. What we’re doing for some of the high-value use cases out there, whether it’s analytics and AI, whether it’s technical computing, chip design, simulation, modernizing data protection, rapid recovery. And if you look at Portworx and the entire suite of products that we have, that just gives you some small hints of the results that this focus on R&D and innovation is driving, much less what we have to discuss next week at Accelerate.
Operator, Operator
The next question is from the line of Wamsi Mohan with Bank of America.
Wamsi Mohan, Analyst
I apologize if this has already been answered, but can you discuss the guidance for the second half? You're attributing about $60 million to pull forward, while also lowering the second half implied guidance by the same amount. Are you indicating that the demand environment has not changed? Many companies are stating that demand remains robust despite supply chain issues. I want to clarify if you believe the macro environment has not significantly impacted demand thus far. Additionally, how did you determine the $60 million pull forward? I know you have visibility into your pipeline deals, but could you explain how widespread this pull forward was? Was it limited to just a few customers or was it more extensive? Also, could you address profit seasonality in the second half compared to the first half?
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
Yes, we can only report on what we are actually experiencing, and what we’re seeing is that demand remains strong. We are aware of rising inflation, the public discourse about a potential economic slowdown, and even some talk about a possible recession. Our outlook needs to reflect these considerations, and we aim to be cautious. Our forecast takes this into account. Throughout the last quarter, demand continued to be robust, and even at the end of April, despite some warning signs regarding the economy and energy prices in Europe, we were receiving feedback from our IT customers that their budgets and focus on IT investments remained solid.
Kevan Krysler, CFO
Yes. And then just to answer your question in terms of the $60 million, that would have been a couple of large customers, so it was limited. Obviously, for these large enterprise customers, we’re working with them very closely with their demand planning, so I would put it in more of the isolated bucket; very easy for us to quantify, very binary in terms of understanding in our demand planning with the customer that, that was second half. So that’s a shift in seasonality. And that’s how I view it. It’s simply a shift in seasonality. It has nothing to do in my mind with demand drop-off as one might have alluded to in the second half. Demand looks strong. Revenue, as I mentioned, I went through a fair amount of detail, Wamsi, in terms of revenue first half, second half as well as operating profit first half and second half, and we can take you through that in more detail as well.
Operator, Operator
The next question is from the line of Tim Long with Barclays.
Tim Long, Analyst
Yes, I'd like to ask two questions. First, Charlie, you mentioned a significant partnership with a large telecommunications company for FlashArray in relation to 5G. Can you elaborate on the application and its significance as a potential new market segment? How critical do you think this is as the wireless industry transitions to a more data-focused structure? Secondly, regarding operating margin, we see a 22% revenue growth, yet the overall operating margin has only increased by a little over 100 basis points for the year. Can you explain what is hindering that? Is it simply due to the return to office and travel expenses, or are there other factors contributing to the lack of leverage despite strong revenue growth?
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
Thanks, Tim. I’ll let Kevan address the second part. Regarding 5G, it's an exciting opportunity and a significant highlight for this quarter. It involves one of the leading telecommunications companies globally. While they are not the only ones we are engaging with about 5G, it was wonderful to secure one of the first large orders linked to 5G deployments. Our smaller, denser, and more power-efficient products, which generally outperform others in the market, have certainly benefited us in this context. We are in discussions with several other telecommunications companies about 5G deployments, and I remain optimistic in this area. I’d like to invite Rob, who has been involved in this opportunity, to share more details about this specific deployment.
Rob Lee, CTO
Yes. I think this is a testament really to the quality of our products and the reliability and performance, all the attributes that Charlie just mentioned, and really the suitability of those attributes to 5G deployments. In many ways, it’s a great validation that just like the hyperscale environments, which we’ve spoken to you previously about, these large telecom environments really share a lot of the same requirements. They’re highly available, highly performance demanding, very mission-critical environments, highly automated as well. I think those are all attributes where Pure’s products and services are uniquely well positioned to serve. I think we’re super pleased with the win. I think I’d also mention that in this particular environment, we were chosen to replace what was initially a custom design built around open-source software as a customer had really tried to build out part of the environment themselves and then turned back to us when they couldn’t achieve the reliability, performance, and really the ease of management and automation required of these very demanding environments.
Kevan Krysler, CFO
And I’ll just hit the operating profit question again. And really, this just comes back down to our strategy around prioritizing innovation and growth that’s paying off. We’re seeing it. We’ve been seeing it for several quarters. And at the same time, we’re increasing our profitability. Now we’re balancing that. We had some great hiring, as I mentioned. I think we hired over 170 folks and new talent worldwide quarter-over-quarter, which we’re really pleased with. We are navigating some higher wage costs as to be expected, and all that’s being balanced and incorporated while we’re increasing profitability for the year. So hopefully, that’s a helpful context.
Operator, Operator
This concludes the question-and-answer session. At this time, I will turn the call back over to Charlie Giancarlo for closing remarks.
Charlie Giancarlo, CEO
Thank you, operator. Our strategy to provide a simple and continuous data platform empowers our customers and companies globally to utilize their data and drive innovation. This approach continues to yield outstanding results across our business. We’re gaining market share as clients increasingly rely on our expertise in digital transformation, which is crucial for their future. This momentum should support us for several quarters, and ideally, for years to come. I want to express my gratitude to our customers and partners for their trust, to our suppliers for their collaboration, and to all of our employees for their innovation and hard work. I appreciate all of our listeners today and look forward to seeing you next week at Accelerate. Thank you.
Operator, Operator
This concludes today’s conference call. You may now disconnect.