Today: 1 July 2026
Progress Software shares dip after Q2 beat, license sales top ARR
1 July 2026
2 mins read

Progress Software shares dip after Q2 beat, license sales top ARR

NEW YORK, June 30, 2026, 18:10 (EDT)

  • Progress Software Corporation finished the day at $33.58, slipping $0.26. Google Finance later posted an after-hours price of $32.51.
  • Progress Software said fiscal Q2 revenue was up 7% at $253 million. Annualized recurring revenue increased 2% to $868 million.
  • License revenue drove all of the revenue increase, while maintenance, SaaS and services were flat or lower, according to company filings.
  • CFO Anthony Folger told analysts that ARR gives the “clearest read” on top-line momentum, rather than the 7% revenue growth. Benzinga

Progress Software Corporation stock fell in after-hours Tuesday. The company topped its Q2 targets and lifted full-year profit outlook, but revenue showed more weight from one-time license sales versus recurring revenue growth.

Progress (a Russell 2000 name) finished the regular session at $33.58, down 0.8%, before the company posted earnings right after the bell at 4:01 p.m. ET. Later, Google Finance quoted the shares at $32.51 in after-hours.

Progress Software beat estimates as revenue climbed 7% to $253.5 million. Annualized recurring revenue gained 2% to $868 million. The company posted an 18% GAAP operating margin and a 40% non-GAAP operating margin. Non-GAAP diluted EPS rose 16% to $1.62. CEO Yogesh Gupta credited “continued momentum” in AI-powered products for the quarter’s results. Progress Software Corporation

Q2 metricResultPrior company outlookGap to high end
Revenue$253.5 million$240 million-$246 million+$7.5 million
GAAP diluted EPS$0.50$0.35-$0.41+$0.09
Non-GAAP diluted EPS$1.62$1.47-$1.53+$0.09
Non-GAAP operating margin40%Not guided

This table shows company Q2 numbers against earlier guidance, with dollar gaps calculated from those.

The top-line number got a boost from software license revenue, which climbed $18.2 million from last year. That’s higher than the company’s total revenue gain of $16.1 million. Maintenance dropped, SaaS ticked up, and professional services also fell.

Revenue typeQ2 2026Q2 2025ChangeShare of Q2 2026 revenue
Software licenses$69.0 million$50.8 millionup 35.8%27.2%
Maintenance$101.2 million$103.5 milliondown 2.2%39.9%
SaaS$73.0 million$72.1 millionup 1.2%28.8%
Professional services$10.3 million$11.0 milliondown 6.4%4.0%
Total revenue$253.5 million$237.4 millionup 6.8%100%

Filings show that software license revenue is booked at a point in time. Maintenance, SaaS, and services are recognized over time. Percentages below are from the company filing.

This is key for the stock since recurring software revenue usually gives a clearer view of demand. Folger told analysts growth in the first half was “partially influenced by deal timing,” adding that annual recurring revenue, up 2%, was the best metric for the top line. He also mentioned that subscription renewal timing had a “meaningful one time impact” on Q2 revenue. Benzinga

Market screenPriceMove
Progress Software closed at the end of regular trading$33.58-0.8%
Progress Software was last at $32.51 after hours, per Google Finance$32.51-3.2%
iShares Russell 2000 ETF (NYSEARCA:IWM) finished at $300.45$300.45+0.5%
Invesco QQQ Trust added 1.6% to $736.40$736.40+1.6%
SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:SPY) was up 0.7% to $746.77$746.77+0.7%

Progress price pulled from the standard close feed and a Google Finance after-hours print. ETF numbers came off finance feeds.

Cash flow played into the bull case. Progress posted $78.8 million in operating cash flow for the quarter, up from $30.0 million a year ago. The company bought back 1.2 million shares for $34.7 million and had $147.5 million left on its buyback authorization as of May 31. With a market value of $1.43 billion at last report, that remaining authorization covers about 10% of Progress’s equity.

Debt remains a big factor here. Progress wrapped the quarter with around $1.29 billion in total debt. That number includes $850 million in long-term debt and $442.1 million in non-current convertible senior notes on a net carrying basis. The company said it paid back $110 million on its revolving credit facility during the first half. As of May 31, the rate on the revolver was 5.37%.

Right before its earnings, Progress rolled out Chef Enterprise Management for NVIDIA DGX Spark. The price is $189 a year per system. Sundar Subramanian, an EVP and GM at Progress, said Chef supports customers who want to “move quickly without losing operational control.” Progress Software Corporation

Guggenheim’s John DeFucci asked on the call if third-quarter revenue guidance was “a touch below the street.” Folger pointed to ShareFile’s SaaS numbers starting to look more normalized, while Gupta said the full-year revenue growth outlook of around 1% to 2.5% lines up with recent ARR growth. Benzinga

Progress bumped up its full-year revenue target to $990 million to $1.002 billion, compared to a prior range of $988 million to $1.000 billion. The company also raised its non-GAAP EPS outlook to $6.09 to $6.21, from $5.91 to $6.03. For its fiscal third quarter, Progress guided for revenue between $244 million and $250 million, and non-GAAP EPS of $1.53 to $1.59.

Shan Ahmed Khan is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key developments influencing global financial markets and emerging industries.

Stock Market Today

  • Asia-Pacific IPO Market Sets the Pace as Regional Drivers Split
    June 30, 2026, 6:28 PM EDT. The Asia-Pacific region is out front in IPOs globally, with key markets each pulling in their own way. Hong Kong is getting a lift from offshore liquidity, while Mainland China has policy-guided capital supporting deals. India's strength is domestic retail demand. Billions have come in this year through offerings, but some in the market say staying power is the tough part. The bigger test is whether demand holds up beyond the debut trading day, as initial capital hits are just the first hurdle for investor interest in the months ahead.
AT&T shares slide as trading jumps, spectrum move puts income appeal to test
Previous Story

AT&T shares slide as trading jumps, spectrum move puts income appeal to test

Go toTop