Box's Q2 2026 Earnings Call: Contradictions Emerge on Enterprise Advanced Deals, Early Renewals, AI Impact, Pricing Dynamics, and Macroeconomic Outlook

Generated by AI AgentEarnings Decrypt
Tuesday, Aug 26, 2025 11:02 pm ET3min read
Aime RobotAime Summary

- Box, Inc. reported Q2 2026 revenue of $294M (+9% YOY), EPS of $0.33 (exceeding guidance by $0.02), and 16% RPO growth driven by AI adoption and workflow tools.

- Enterprise Advanced deals doubled sequentially, with AI-powered metadata extraction and no-code apps driving larger, cross-departmental contracts and 20-40% pricing uplifts.

- FY26 guidance raised to $1.170–$1.175B revenue, citing strong net retention (103%), AI-driven seat expansion, and 9% billings growth despite FX headwinds.

- Management emphasized Box AI's ROI-focused architecture and FedRAMP High certification as key differentiators, with no immediate M&A plans despite AI momentum.

The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call

Date of Call: August 26, 2025

Financials Results

  • Revenue: $294M, up 9% YOY (7% in constant currency)
  • EPS: $0.33 per diluted share, $0.02 above the high end of guidance
  • Gross Margin: 81.4%, up ~40 bps YOY excluding prior-year data center equipment sales benefit
  • Operating Margin: 28.6%, improved YOY and above guidance

Guidance:

- Q3 revenue expected at $298–$299M (~8% YOY); FX tailwind ~80 bps.- Q3 billings growth ~10%; FX tailwind ~200 bps.- Q3 gross margin ~81%; operating margin ~28% (100 bps headwind from BoxWorks; prior-year had 70 bps benefit).- Q3 non-GAAP EPS $0.31–$0.32; diluted shares ~150M.- FY26 revenue raised to $1.170–$1.175B (~8% YOY, ~7% cc); FX tailwind ~90 bps (30 bps lower vs prior).- FY26 billings growth ~9% with ~230 bps FX tailwind (down from ~340 bps prior).- FY26 gross margin ~81%; operating margin ~28% (incl ~10 bps FX tailwind).- FY26 non-GAAP EPS $1.26–$1.28 (incl ~$0.04 FX tailwind); noncash deferred tax expense headwind ~$0.58.

Business Commentary:

Revenue and RPO Growth:* - Box, Inc. reported revenue of $294 million for Q2 Fiscal 2026, up 9% year-over-year and 7% in constant currency. - Remaining performance obligations (RPO) were $1.5 billion, a 16% year-over-year increase. - The growth was driven by increased customer adoption of Box AI and advanced workflow capabilities.

  • Enterprise Advanced Momentum:
  • The company saw strong momentum in customer adoption of Enterprise Advanced, more than doubling the number of deals in Q2 compared to the prior quarter.
  • This was driven by the demand for AI-powered features such as AI-driven metadata extraction and intelligent no-code apps.

  • Billings and Consulting Business:

  • Billings reached $265 million, up 3% year-over-year and 6% in constant currency.
  • The growth was supported by strong bookings, early renewals, and contributions from the Box Consulting business.

  • Net Retention Rate Improvement:

  • Box's net retention rate improved to 103%, an increase from 102% in Q1 and the previous year.
  • This improvement was due to customer upgrades and expansions into Enterprise Plus and Enterprise Advanced plans, driven by AI capabilities and price per seat increases.

    Sentiment Analysis:

    • Management exceeded guidance across metrics; revenue grew 9% YOY; EPS was $0.33, $0.02 above the high end. NRR improved to 103% and suites mix rose to 63% of revenue (from 58%). RPO grew 16% YOY and billings outperformed expectations. They raised FY26 revenue and EPS guidance, citing strong demand for Box AI and Enterprise Advanced and doubling of Enterprise Advanced deals sequentially.

    Q&A:

    • Question from Steven Lester Enders (Citi): How much did Enterprise Advanced drive billings outperformance, and is the deal environment improving?
    • Response: Billings strength came from strong bookings, consulting, and some early renewals, all propelled by AI/Enterprise Advanced momentum; not due to a better macro deal environment.
    • Question from Steven Lester Enders (Citi): How are Enterprise Advanced pipeline use cases and deal sizes evolving?
    • Response: Customers are combining AI agents with workflow automation (notably data extraction and custom agents), producing larger, broader deals that exceed the 20–40% per-seat uplift by adding more users and use cases.
    • Question from Lucky Schreiner (D.A. Davidson): What’s driving the rebound in net seat growth?
    • Response: Enterprise Advanced and Enterprise Plus unlock high-value AI use cases across more departments, boosting net seat additions.
    • Question from Lucky Schreiner (D.A. Davidson): How common are straight upgrades to Enterprise Advanced and what’s the pricing uplift?
    • Response: Direct upgrades from core non-suites to Enterprise Advanced often roughly double spend; from Enterprise Plus to Advanced delivers 20–40% uplift, with stronger-than-expected early momentum.
    • Question from Taylor Anne McGinnis (UBS): How much of Q2 outperformance was early renewals, and how should we view H2 billings given the guide?
    • Response: Outperformance was split across bookings, consulting, and early renewals (each a few million); the back-half guide is prudent given variability and the operating environment.
    • Question from Taylor Anne McGinnis (UBS): What drove the NRR uptick to 103% and what’s the outlook?
    • Response: Improved seat expansion drove the increase; pricing remains solid; expect 103% exiting FY26 with further improvement thereafter.
    • Question from Christopher Quintero (Morgan Stanley): Given reports of failing GenAI pilots, why is Box AI adoption working?
    • Response: Prebuilt, best-of-breed Box AI abstracts the stack (storage, embeddings, permissions, model updates, UX) and targets ROI use cases like summarization and large-scale extraction, avoiding pitfalls of homegrown efforts.
    • Question from Christopher Quintero (Morgan Stanley): What’s the public sector outlook after FedRAMP High and the Federal Summit?
    • Response: Momentum is improving as agencies prioritize IT modernization and AI; Box AI with FedRAMP High and GSA partnership positions Box well for federal deployments.
    • Question from Unidentified Analyst (Bank of America): Beyond metadata extraction, what’s next as Enterprise Advanced users mature?
    • Response: Enterprises will automate full workflows with AI agents orchestrating document reviews and next-best actions; more details to be announced at BoxWorks.
    • Question from Brian Christopher Peterson (Raymond James): You said Enterprise Advanced deals doubled sequentially—what was the mix?
    • Response: The doubling refers specifically to Enterprise Advanced deals across both new logos and upsells, reflecting focused go-to-market execution.
    • Question from Brian Christopher Peterson (Raymond James): Has your appetite for M&A changed with AI momentum?
    • Response: No change; Box remains product-led, with a modern AI architecture; M&A is considered only for time-to-market needs where it complements the roadmap.

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