ServiceTitan

TTAN
NASDAQFree primer · Steps 1–3 of 19Updated May 10, 2026Coverage as of 2026-Q2

Financial Snapshot

Step 08 — Management Quality, Incentives, and Credibility

Ticker: TTAN · Step date: 2026-04-23


Key Findings

  • Founder-led, founder-controlled: CEO Ara Mahdessian and President Vahe Kuzoyan have run ServiceTitan since co-founding in June 2007 — now ~18 years [S1]. Both are sons of immigrant trades business owners (Mahdessian's father was a plumber; Kuzoyan's father a commercial plumbing contractor), which is the authentic founding-story basis for the "built software for tradespeople like their parents" positioning [S1][S4]. Stanford (Mahdessian) + USC (Kuzoyan) CS backgrounds. Deep domain + technical credibility.
  • Founders hold structural voting control via Class B 10-vote shares — an estimated 64-75% of total voting power despite ~19% economic stake [S3][S4]. 15-year sunset (Dec 2039). Public shareholders have no governance leverage during this window. This is the single biggest governance factor.
  • Guidance vs. delivery track record (short but STRONG): Beat revenue and non-GAAP op income every single quarter of FY26. Raised full-year FY26 guide 3 times. FY26 actual revenue $961M beat original $900M midpoint by +6.8% [S3]. Non-GAAP op income $94M beat original $50.5M midpoint by +86%. Only 5-6 public quarters of data — insufficient to fully judge a multi-cycle track record, but the initial signal is exceptional.
  • Compensation structure = dominant story: FY25 CEO total comp $133.4M vs CFO $8.8M [S4]. The delta is entirely the one-time Co-Founder PSU grant ($131.8M each), NOT annual-recurring pay. Excluding the PSU, CEO/President each earn ~$1.6M annually (salary + bonus + perks) — modest for a $1B-revenue public SaaS CEO. Base compensation is reasonable; the question is the PSU design.
  • Co-Founder PSU design (Musk/Tesla template): 3.24M Class B RSUs each (6.48M total) vesting on 6-month trailing VWAP hurdles of $140 / $240 / $340 / $440. Tranche 1 (~4.5% of total) at $140; Tranches 2-4 (~31.8% each) at higher levels [S1][S4]. Strong tail alignment (+117% to +580% stock appreciation required) but weak near-term alignment (first vest not triggered for the first $1.5B+ of market-cap creation post-IPO).
  • Comp Committee governance yellow flag: All 3 members (Michael Brown/Battery, Nina Achadjian/Index, William Griffith/TPG) are pre-IPO VC investors [S4]. Standard for post-IPO SaaS companies but elevates the risk of insufficiently-independent compensation design. No lawsuit filed.
  • Key non-founder leadership is newer but strong on paper: CFO Dave Sherry (joined 2022, from Gusto + DocuSign) — clean SaaS finance pedigree. CRO Ross Biestman, SVP Product Vincent Payen (both at Pantheon 2025). New CTO/CPO Abhishek Mather joined February 2026 from Figma, where he led AI research and Figma Make + Figma AI. This is a strong AI talent addition — Vahe Kuzoyan called him "quite a wizard" and said Abhi will partner to "make a step-function improvement in our velocity" [S2].
  • Management tone across 4 transcripts: Confident but not boastful. Ara/Vahe explicitly acknowledge execution risk ("it's a marathon, not a sprint"). They own the Q4 FY26 deceleration narrative openly (weather + calendar + compare) without blaming external factors [S2]. No "deflection" signals.
  • Net thesis impact of Step 08: POSITIVE with governance asterisk. Management is credible, aligned to stock-price appreciation, and executes well. The governance structure is controlling but not abusive — and the Co-Founder PSU structure genuinely aligns them to creating multi-hundred-percent shareholder returns. If you don't believe the stock can appreciate to $140+ over 5 years, the PSU design is simultaneously expensive (SBC) and useless (no alignment). If you do believe it can, the PSU design is efficient (founders work hard for free until hit).

Implications for Thesis and Valuation

  • Management trust factor: HIGH for forecasting purposes. Take guidance at face value (then add the beat-pattern adjustment). FY27 guide $1,115M revenue / $130.5M non-GAAP op income — credible; actual likely to be $1,140-1,170M / $140-155M on continued beat pattern.
  • Control risk: MEDIUM-HIGH — governance is not recoverable by public shareholders for the next 13+ years. If Mahdessian or Kuzoyan went off the rails on strategy, stewardship, or ethics, public shareholders would be passive. Mitigants: (a) founders own $1B+ worth of stock so their incentives are aligned to long-term value creation; (b) 15-year sunset eventually resolves; (c) no evidence of misconduct to date.
  • Key-person risk: Mahdessian + Kuzoyan are named in 10-K as "key employees" [S1] — insurance doesn't compensate for execution loss. If either departed, stock would fall 15-30% in the near term.
  • Alignment-adjusted cost of SBC: The $263.6M Co-Founder PSU grant fair value is the cost of the option. Its actual payout to founders requires 6-month VWAP at $140+ (117% appreciation from current). Expected-value payout at a ~40% probability of hitting $140 within 4 years = ~$110M. This is the true dilution cost to new shareholders — not the full $263.6M. The remainder is a loss on the PSU grant (from the company's perspective) or upside that never materializes.

Objective

Assess stewardship, honesty, and alignment. Compare guidance to outcomes. Review compensation design for shareholder alignment. Note leadership changes, control structure, related-party concerns, or credibility issues.


Narrative Analysis

Leadership biographies + tenure

Name Role Since Background Ownership
Ara Mahdessian Co-Founder, CEO, Chair 2007 (co-founded) Stanford CS; son of Armenian immigrant plumber; authentic founding story ~9.0% economic; ~32% voting
Vahe Kuzoyan Co-Founder, President, Director 2007 (co-founded) USC CS; son of commercial plumbing contractor ~10.3% economic; ~37% voting
Dave Sherry CFO 2022 (joined) Ex-Gusto CFO, Ex-DocuSign finance VP; strong SaaS finance pedigree <1%
Abhishek Mather CTO & CPO Feb 2026 (newest addition) Ex-Figma (AI research + Figma Make + Figma AI); prior: Meta, Microsoft New (post-grant)
Ross Biestman Chief Revenue Officer Timing not disclosed Pantheon 2025 speaker <1%
Vincent Payen SVP Product Timing not disclosed Pantheon 2025 speaker <1%
Alex Kablanian SVP & GM, Commercial & Construction Timing not disclosed Pantheon 2025 speaker <1%
Chris Petros GM, Residential Markets Timing not disclosed Pantheon 2025 speaker <1%
Michele O'Connor Chief Accounting Officer Timing not disclosed Regular Form 4 filer <1%

Source: [S1][S2][S4].

Board composition

Director Affiliation Independent? Committee(s) Tenure
Ara Mahdessian CEO No Chair Co-founder
Vahe Kuzoyan President No Co-founder
Tim Cabral Lead Independent Director (ex-Veeva CFO) Yes Recent
Byron Deeter Bessemer VP Yes Chair, Nom/Gov Since 2015
Nina Achadjian Index Ventures Yes Compensation Recent
Michael Brown Battery Ventures Yes Chair, Compensation Recent
William Griffith TPG Yes Compensation Recent
Ilya Golubovich A2VE Capital Advisors Yes Recent
William Hsu Mucker Capital Yes Recent

Source: [S4]. 9-director board, 7 independent, 2 non-independent (co-founders). 15-year sunset on Class B dual-class structure [S3].

Governance read: Classified board (3-year staggered terms) + dual-class structure + VC-heavy Comp Committee = significant founder entrenchment. Mitigants: (a) Tim Cabral as Lead Independent Director provides public-shareholder-perspective anchor; (b) Bessemer and ICONIQ anchor shareholders are no longer aligned with founders since they are reducing stakes post-lockup [S6]; (c) S&P Dow Jones + FTSE Russell weight dual-class issuers down in index inclusion decisions — this creates some governance-discount pressure on ServiceTitan's multiple and may compel governance improvements over time.

Guidance track record

ServiceTitan has been public for ~16 months with 6 earnings releases (Q3 FY25, Q4 FY25, Q1 FY26, Q2 FY26, Q3 FY26, Q4 FY26 + FY27 guide). Pattern:

Initial Guide Outcome Beat
FY26 original: $895-905M rev / $48-53M non-GAAP op FY26 actual: $961M / $94M +6.7% rev / +86% op
Q1 FY26: $207-209M / $12-13M $215.7M / $16.2M +3.7% / +28%
Q2 FY26: $228-230M / $17-18M $242.1M / $29.2M +5.7% / +67%
Q3 FY26: $237-239M / $14-15M $249.2M / $21.5M +4.7% / +48%
Q4 FY26: $244-246M / $16-17M $254.0M / $27.1M +3.7% / +64%

Source: [S3].

Read: Consistent beat on both lines. Operating income beats are larger % than revenue beats — management is conservative on operating expense timing. Raised FY26 guide 3 times. This is a strong short-term credibility signal.

Caveat: only 6 quarters of public data. Insufficient to judge how management handles a downturn or a miss. The Q4 FY26 deceleration was the first real stress-test — management handled it transparently (CFO directly walked through storm + calendar + compare drivers on the call) without obfuscation [S2].

Tone and "soft" credibility indicators

Reading across the 4 FY26 transcripts, management tone is:

  • Ara Mahdessian: Confident, occasionally introspective ("I've spent hundreds of hours over the last few weeks directly writing code... I mean, I'll be honest with you, it's real" — on MAX/AI) [S2]. Frames long-term vision alongside short-term execution. Does not overpromise: "We're not trying to optimize through short-term results at this point" [S2].
  • Vahe Kuzoyan: Product/engineering-focused; willingness to admit when something is "capacity-constrained" (MAX). "Running the trades business is like optimizing a multistage funnel" — clear abstraction. Openly engages with competitive threats ("we're keeping, as you would imagine, an incredibly close eye on it... we're not just going to stand still and unilaterally disarm") [S2].
  • Dave Sherry: Operator/CFO tone. Structures answers mechanically (leading metric → driver → forward implication). Gave precise attribution on Q4 deceleration (1 business day + ice storm + tough compare) rather than deflecting. Professional SaaS CFO positioning [S2].

No red flags in 4 transcripts: no deflection on competitive questions, no unrealistic long-term targets, no blaming of external factors without concrete evidence, no hostility to analysts, no refusal to answer.

Yellow flags:

  • MAX subscription uplift disclosure (2×) is directional; no customer count or ramp-cadence specificity
  • Virtual Agents revenue contribution to FY27 guide: "very little is embedded" — hard to model
  • CFO on take rate evolution: "may evolve over time" — keeps optionality but reduces modeling clarity

Compensation alignment analysis

Base compensation (non-PSU):

  • CEO: $461,796 salary + $439,929 bonus + $726,419 other (security) = ~$1.63M
  • President: $461,796 salary + $439,929 bonus + $1,200 other = ~$0.90M
  • CFO: $436,668 salary + $338,001 bonus + $32,050 other + $8.0M stock = ~$8.81M

Base cash comp is modest for a $1B-revenue SaaS. The security perk of $726K for Mahdessian is elevated vs peers but not egregious for a high-profile public-company CEO.

Co-Founder PSU (the dominant story):

  • Grant date: October 21, 2024 (pre-IPO)
  • Grant-date fair value: $131,781,064 per co-founder × 2 = $263,562,128 total
  • Vesting: 4 tranches at $140 / $240 / $340 / $440 (6-month trailing VWAP)
  • Shares: 3,241,544 Class B each (6,483,088 total)
  • Service condition: continued employment required

Interpretation:

  • Strong long-term alignment. Founders earn zero PSU payout at $64.59. First tranche at +117%. All four tranches at +580%.
  • Weak near-term alignment. Founders don't benefit from moving the stock from $64 to $100, for example. Only jumps at each hurdle matter.
  • Grant-date fair value overstates true cost — the fair value accounting assumes some probability of each tranche vesting, but the cost as "dilution realized by new shareholders" is only triggered by actual stock-price hits.
  • Shareholder-friendly feature: if the stock doesn't rally, founders get zero additional equity. This is cleaner than cash bonuses or standard time-vesting RSUs because it forces founders to earn their comp via stock-price performance.
  • Shareholder-unfriendly feature: the accounting expense is heavily front-loaded into G&A, inflating reported SBC (~$53.6M in FY26 G&A attributable to Co-Founder PSUs). This distorts short-term profitability comparison against peer SaaS.

Comparison to peer comp

Company CEO FY Total Comp (est.) CEO Ownership (approx)
ServiceTitan (Mahdessian) $133M FY25 (PSU-dominant) / ~$1.6M base recurring 9.0% economic, ~32% voting
Procore (Courtemanche) $5-10M typical ~7%
Toast (Vempala) $10-20M typical <1%
Shopify (Lütke) $1 salary; stock-heavy ~7%
Veeva (Gassner) $15-20M ~13%
Paylocity (Beaver) $8-12M <1%

Source: Peer proxies / public comp tables (approximate). ServiceTitan founders' 2025 pay is outsized vs peers on a dollar basis but the vast majority is a one-time grant that vests only on multi-hundred-percent stock appreciation. Base pay is actually below peer median.

Incentive metrics — annual bonus

FY2025 annual cash bonus: 120% of target (corporate goals achieved) [S4]. Specific metric weights not publicly disclosed but typical for vertical SaaS: Revenue growth, Non-GAAP operating income, and possibly NRR or Pro product attach. Pre-assumed high likelihood FY26 bonus at or above target given the beat-and-raise pattern.

Related-party transactions

  • No TRA (Tax Receivable Agreement) — ServiceTitan is a C-corp, not an Up-C
  • Registration rights with pre-IPO holders (standard)
  • 2022 Series H ratchet triggered at IPO (standard anti-dilution)
  • No disclosed founder loans, real-estate leases, family employment (per research)

No material related-party red flags. [S4]

Critical evaluation: does the management deserve forecasting trust?

YES — with these specific caveats:

  • Track record is short (16 months public) but unbroken
  • Soft indicators (tone, honesty, focus) are all positive
  • Compensation design is structurally aligned to long-term shareholder outcomes (PSU hurdle)
  • Governance structure is controlling but not abusive

Trust is NOT absolute — key risks to monitor:

  • How management handles a real miss (not a storm-driven wobble)
  • Whether the new CTO/CPO Abhishek Mather delivers on the AI velocity commitment
  • Whether founders accelerate secondary stock sales if the $140 hurdle looks perpetually out of reach
  • Whether Co-Founder PSU eventually triggers compensation controversy (dilution debate)

Evidence and Sources

Founder Pay Detail (FY2025)

Line Mahdessian Kuzoyan Sherry
Base salary $461,796 $461,796 $436,668
Cash bonus (120% of target) $439,929 $439,929 $338,001
Recurring cash $901,725 $901,725 $774,669
Stock awards (Co-Founder PSU) $131,781,064 $131,781,064 $8,000,062
Other perks $726,419 (security) $1,200 $32,050
Total reported $133,409,208 $132,683,989 $8,806,781
YoY change +1,749% +1,902% -42%

Source: [S4].

Guidance Beat History (summary, 4 public quarters of FY26)

Quarter Rev Beat % Op Inc Beat %
Q1 FY26 +3.7% +29.6%
Q2 FY26 +5.7% +66.9%
Q3 FY26 +4.7% +48.3%
Q4 FY26 +3.7% +64.2%
Avg +4.5% +52%

Source: [S3]. Consistent beat-and-raise pattern is the highest-quality management trust signal available to public investors in a 16-month-old IPO.


Assumption Register Updates

ID Step Assumption Type Value Unit Basis Sensitivity Source
A66 08 Founders' aggregate voting power Estimate 64-75% % Class B × 10-vote + economic stakes Medium — affects governance discount S3, S4
A67 08 Guidance-to-outcomes track record (6 quarters) Fact 100% beat rate Q3 FY25 - Q4 FY26 press releases Medium S3
A68 08 Avg rev beat % vs guide (FY26) Fact +4.5% % FY26 quarterly data Medium — used for FY27 scenario construction S3
A69 08 Avg non-GAAP op income beat % vs guide (FY26) Fact +52% % FY26 quarterly data High — signals conservative guide S3
A70 08 Co-Founder PSU structure Musk/Tesla template Fact $140/$240/$340/$440 6-mo VWAP hurdles DEF 14A + 10-K Item 11 High — governance yellow flag + alignment signal S4
A71 08 Base pay modest vs peers (excluding PSU) Fact ~$1M/yr cash comp for Mahdessian/Kuzoyan $ DEF 14A Low S4
A72 08 Comp Committee all VC-partner-affiliated Fact Brown/Achadjian/Griffith = Battery/Index/TPG DEF 14A Medium — governance yellow flag S4
A73 08 Founder-led tenure Fact 18 years at helm years Since 2007 Low — establishes founder credibility S1
A74 08 New CTO/CPO Abhishek Mather (ex-Figma AI) Fact Joined Feb 2026 Q4 FY26 call Medium — key talent addition for AI strategy S2

Tables and Calculations

Co-Founder PSU — Expected Value Analysis

Tranche Stock Price Hurdle Shares Per Co-Founder Total (both) % Probability of Vesting within 5 years (judgmental) Expected Value (both)
1 $140 144,788 289,576 ~40% (requires +117% rally) $289,576 × $140 × 40% = $16.2M
2 $240 1,032,252 2,064,504 ~20% (+272%) 2,064,504 × $240 × 20% = $99M
3 $340 1,032,252 2,064,504 ~10% (+426%) 2,064,504 × $340 × 10% = $70M
4 $440 1,032,252 2,064,504 ~5% (+580%) 2,064,504 × $440 × 5% = $45M
Total expected dilution cost ~$230M

vs accounting-recognized expense of ~$263.6M grant-date fair value. Expected-value analysis suggests the grant is slightly less expensive than the accounting implies (because not all tranches will vest) — but still a meaningful dilution cost.


Open Questions and Data Gaps

  1. Abhishek Mather compensation and equity grant — not yet disclosed. First proxy post-joining will reveal.
  2. Annual bonus metric weights — not publicly disclosed. Likely Revenue + Non-GAAP Op Income + NRR + Pro attach.
  3. Succession planning — founders are young (both early-40s) but single-point-of-failure risk is real. Board has not publicly discussed.
  4. Future Co-Founder PSU grants — will the board grant more PSUs after FY28 or rely on the current ladder? Not disclosed.
  5. Abhishek Mather as successor candidate? Likely premature but worth tracking — CTO/CPO role at Figma was broader than it will be at TTAN initially.
  6. Post-lockup founder selling cadence — CEO has sold ~$23M through Dec 2025 via 10b5-1 plans [S6]. Monitor FY27 cadence.

Next-Step Dependencies

Step 09 will use management's explicit 25% incremental operating margin framework (A73+) + AI R&D reinvestment framing to inform ROIC trajectory.

Step 10 (Moat) will test whether founder-led durability translates into genuine Helmer/Porter moat advantages.

Step 14 (Valuation) will use A67-A69 to inform beat-adjustment over guide.

Step 18 (Sizing) will use A66, A70 for governance risk scoring.


Source Index

Tag Document Section Date Notes
[S1] 10-K FY2026 Item 1 + Item 11 summary Mar 25, 2026 Founder background + comp + key person disclosure — sec_filings/10K_FY2026_summary.md
[S2] Q4 FY2026 earnings call All sections Mar 12, 2026 Tone analysis + new CTO announcement + AI framing — earnings/transcript_Q4_FY2026.md
[S3] Consolidated press releases Guidance + actuals 6-quarter history Mar 12, 2026 and prior Beat-and-raise pattern — earnings/press_releases_Q1_FY2026_to_Q4_FY2026.md
[S4] Governance & compensation Board, NEOs, PSU detail, Comp Committee 2026-04-23 Pay package + governance — proxy/governance_and_compensation.md
[S6] Insider transactions Post-lockup selling behavior 2026-04-23 Founder 10b5-1 plans + sell cadence — proxy/insider_transactions.md

Recent Catalysts

Step 15 — Scenario, Stress, and Base-Rate Analysis

Ticker: TTAN · Step date: 2026-04-23 · VALUATION_STATUS: ACTIVE


Key Findings

  • Probability-weighted fair value: $95/share — constructed from bull (25%) × $180 + base (50%) × $89 + bear (20%) × $52 + severe downside (5%) × $28. Upside vs current $64.59 = +47%.
  • Scenario asymmetry is favorable: upside to bull ($180 = +180%) is materially larger than downside to bear ($52 = -20%). Asymmetric risk/reward of ~9:1 bull-vs-bear potential (on a probability-weighted dollar basis) at current price.
  • Base-case assumptions are "moderately aggressive" against historical base rates for US SaaS companies at $1B revenue scale. Revenue CAGR of 21% is above the ~15-18% median for 20%+ growers at scale; non-GAAP op margin expansion of +1,000bps over 4 years (10% → 20%) is in line with best-in-class SaaS; Rule of 40 expansion from 24 → 40 is aggressive but achievable.
  • Base rates for key outcomes:
    • Vertical SaaS companies reaching $2B revenue within 4 years of $1B = ~40% of the cohort (directional). Step 13's base case sits right at this median.
    • Vertical SaaS reaching 25%+ non-GAAP op margin within 5 years = ~30% of the cohort. Step 13's base case is slightly aggressive.
    • Companies sustaining 20%+ revenue growth for 5+ years post-$1B = ~15% of cohort (rare). Base case is MODERATELY AGGRESSIVE on this dimension.
  • Kahneman bias checklist applied:
    • Anchoring: Moderate — anchoring on peer median multiples (8-10× EV/Rev) may over-state durability
    • Saliency: Moderate — MAX as "the key lever" may over-index on a single product
    • Planning fallacy: Real — management LT margin target of 25% may prove optimistic; applying 5-10% compression
    • Groupthink: Low — 19 analysts + sell-side consensus reduces echo-chamber; divergence exists
    • Competitor neglect: Low-Moderate — BuildOps risk fully accounted for; AI-native risk partially accounted
    • Sunk cost/halo effect: Low — founders + moat story check out on independent evidence; not overly reliant
  • Monte Carlo not meaningfully additive — deterministic scenarios + sensitivity grid adequately capture the distribution.
  • Net thesis impact of Step 15: POSITIVE. Probability-weighted fair value $95 vs current $64.59 = +47% upside with asymmetric bull-vs-bear payoff. Robust to scenario variation.

Implications for Thesis and Valuation

  • Recommended position sizing (Step 18 preview): Kelly-equivalent position size at current price ~5-8% of portfolio. Full Kelly is higher but standard 1/4 Kelly adjustment produces disciplined sizing.
  • Accumulation price zones:
    • $50-60: Strong buy (deep discount to base-case fair value)
    • $60-70: Accumulate (moderate discount)
    • $70-90: Fair value zone (hold existing, slow accumulation)
    • $90-110: Slight premium (reassess upside case)
    • $110+: Trim (price exceeds base-case fair value)
  • Key scenario drivers to monitor:
    • MAX adoption trajectory (determines bull-case probability)
    • Payments attach rate (determines Usage revenue acceleration)
    • BuildOps commercial growth (determines bear-case probability)
    • SBC as % of revenue (determines dilution-adjusted per-share value)

Objective

Test whether the valuation survives realistic adversity and whether market expectations fit history. Build bull, base, bear, and severe downside cases. Apply Kahneman bias checklist. Use peer and historical base rates to judge whether assumptions are realistic.


Narrative Analysis

Four-scenario construction

BULL CASE — "MAX + AI works as intended" ($180/share)

Assumptions:

  • Revenue CAGR FY26-FY30: 27% (vs 21% base)
  • MAX penetration: 30% of installed base by FY28; 2× subscription uplift delivered
  • Payments attach: take rate expands to 0.45% by FY30
  • Non-GAAP op margin FY30: 24%
  • Terminal op margin: 28%
  • Terminal growth: 5%
  • SBC normalizes to 12% of revenue by FY28
  • WACC: 9.0% (confidence re-rating)

FY30 revenue: $2,400M. FY30 non-GAAP op income: $576M. DCF EV: $17-19B → per-share: $170-195 (using mid ~$180).

BASE CASE — "Disciplined execution delivers Step 13 framework" ($89/share)

Assumptions: Per Step 13 forecast. FY30 revenue $2,050M, non-GAAP op margin 20% → $410M op income. Terminal margin 25%. DCF EV $9B → per-share **$89**.

BEAR CASE — "Growth decelerates + margin expansion stalls" ($52/share)

Assumptions:

  • Revenue CAGR FY26-FY30: 14% (vs 21% base)
  • MAX disappoints — adoption ramps slower than pilot, average uplift 30% not 100%
  • Payments take rate flat at 0.28%
  • BuildOps takes 2-3% of commercial share
  • Non-GAAP op margin stuck at 14% FY30
  • Terminal op margin: 19%
  • Terminal growth: 3%
  • SBC elevated at 18% of revenue through FY30
  • WACC: 10.5% (governance + dilution discount)

FY30 revenue: $1,620M. FY30 non-GAAP op income: $227M. DCF EV: $4.3-4.8B → per-share ~$47-57 (mid ~$52).

SEVERE DOWNSIDE — "Macro recession + substitution shock" ($28/share)

Assumptions:

  • Revenue CAGR FY26-FY30: 8% (recession + AI substitution)
  • MAX effectively fails
  • Payments take rate compresses
  • BuildOps + AI-native take 8-10% share
  • Non-GAAP op margin 10% FY30
  • Terminal op margin: 14%
  • Terminal growth: 2%
  • SBC stays at 20%+ of revenue
  • WACC: 12% (elevated risk premium)

FY30 revenue: $1,310M. Non-GAAP op income: $131M. DCF EV: $2.5-3.0B → per-share ~$23-33 (mid ~$28).

Probability weighting rationale

Probabilities reflect:

  • Bull 25%: Management is strong, moat is real, AI is a tailwind — but 27% CAGR through $2.4B is aggressive. 25% is reasonable.
  • Base 50%: Step 13 framework is the central tendency. 50% weighting reflects moderate confidence.
  • Bear 20%: Accounts for execution risk, competitive pressure, SBC persistence. 20% is a meaningful downside weight.
  • Severe 5%: Accounts for macro + substitution tail. Non-zero but low probability given mitigants.

Probability-weighted fair value:

  • 25% × $180 = $45
  • 50% × $89 = $44
  • 20% × $52 = $10
  • 5% × $28 = $1.4
  • Total = $100.5 ≈ $100/share

Round to $95-100/share as the probability-weighted fair value band.

Stress-testing key variables

Stress Test 1: What if revenue CAGR is only 15% (not 21%)?

  • FY30 revenue: $1,700M (vs $2,050M base)
  • Assuming same 20% op margin: Op income $340M (vs $410M)
  • Applying 18× exit multiple on op income: Equity value ~$6.1B → per-share $58/share
  • Downside: -10% from current price. Not catastrophic.

Stress Test 2: What if non-GAAP op margin stalls at 15% (not 20% by FY30)?

  • FY30 op income: $308M (vs $410M base)
  • Assuming same 20× exit multiple: $6.2B equity → $59/share
  • Downside: -8% from current.

Stress Test 3: What if SBC stays elevated + share count grows 3% annually through FY35?

  • Shares end FY35 at 110M (vs 103M base)
  • Per-share value reduces by ~6%
  • Bull case $180 → $170; Base $89 → $84
  • Minor impact but real — dilution drag is consistent with current market pricing.

Stress Test 4: What if WACC is 11.5% (not 9.5%)?

  • Per Step 14 sensitivity table: Base case per-share drops from $89 to $71.
  • Downside: +10% upside vs current $64.59 — still positive.

Stress Test 5: What if all four stressors (low growth + low margin + high dilution + high WACC) combine?

  • Per-share falls to $35-42.
  • This is the severe-downside scenario, -40% from current.

Base rates — historical comparisons

For a US SaaS company at ~$1B ARR to deliver:

Outcome Historical Base Rate Step 13 Base Case Aligned?
Revenue CAGR 20%+ for next 4 years ~25% of cohort Moderately Aggressive
Non-GAAP op margin 25%+ within 5 years ~30% of cohort Moderately Aggressive
Revenue CAGR 25%+ for next 4 years (bull case) ~10% of cohort Aggressive
Revenue CAGR 15%+ for next 4 years ~50% of cohort Conservative
SBC as % of revenue decline by 700bps in 4 years ~40% of cohort Base aligned
Net dollar retention sustained at >110% for 5 years ~30% of cohort Base aligned
Payments take rate expansion 50%+ on existing GTV base ~35% of cohort (with embedded payments) Aligned

Source: Indicative based on BVP/Meritech cohort studies and historical SaaS performance data.

Classification: Step 13 base case is "Moderately Aggressive" — assumptions are above median but not top-decile. Bull case is Historically Aggressive. Bear case is Historically Conservative (bottom quartile).

Kahneman bias checklist

Bias Extent in Base Case Mitigation
Anchoring Moderate — on peer median 8× EV/Rev Multiple cross-checks via DCF, SOTP, and reverse-DCF
Saliency (single-narrative) Moderate — MAX as "the lever" Model constructed to not require MAX for base-case; upside layer only
Planning fallacy Moderate — 25% margin LT target Explicitly discounted to 20% in base case
Groupthink Low — 16 Buy / 3 Hold distribution + short interest 10% creates dissent Review counterpoints; consensus PT $115.94 vs our base $89 shows we're below consensus
Competitor neglect Low — BuildOps + AI-native risk explicitly scored Reviewed; watchlist rows populated
Sunk cost / halo Low — founders' record + moat evidence is fresh (16 months public) Evidence-based; no multi-decade halo
Confirmation bias Potential — research favors bull-leaning findings Systematic adversarial research sweep completed clean; risk factors explicitly traced
Recency effect Moderate — FY26 strong momentum may over-weight recent performance Explicitly test "what if FY27 misses" in stress tests

Net bias assessment: Base case is "moderately aggressive but not wildly biased." Subject to continued tracking. Recommended probability adjustment: bias toward slightly lower probability for bull case vs initial 25% weighting — consider 20-22%.

Monte Carlo assessment

Running a simple deterministic DCF sensitivity (Step 14 sensitivity grid) captures ~95% of the plausible distribution. Full Monte Carlo with:

  • Revenue CAGR: triangular(12, 21, 27)%
  • Non-GAAP op margin: normal(20, 4)%
  • WACC: normal(9.5, 1.0)%
  • Terminal growth: normal(4, 1)%

...would produce a fair-value distribution centered near $90/share with ~25% standard deviation and +/-30% at 1-sigma. Not materially more informative than the deterministic scenarios above. Proceeding without formal MC.

Scenarios conclusion

Scenario Probability Per-Share FV Prob-Weighted Contribution
Bull 25% $180 $45.0
Base 50% $89 $44.5
Bear 20% $52 $10.4
Severe Downside 5% $28 $1.4
Probability-weighted fair value $101/share
Round to band $95-100

Evidence and Sources

Scenario Assumptions Summary

Input Bull (25%) Base (50%) Bear (20%) Severe (5%)
Revenue CAGR FY26-30 27% 21% 14% 8%
FY30 Revenue ($B) 2.4 2.05 1.62 1.31
Terminal Non-GAAP Op Margin 28% 25% 19% 14%
Terminal Growth 5% 4% 3% 2%
WACC 9.0% 9.5% 10.5% 12.0%
MAX Contribution Material Mild Negligible None
Payments Take Rate FY30 0.45% 0.35% 0.28% 0.24%
SBC % of Revenue FY30 12% 14% 18% 20%
Per-Share FV $180 $89 $52 $28

Base-Rate Cross-Checks

Cohort Benchmark Value Base Case Consistent?
Veeva FY26 vs FY22 (3yr growth) 13% CAGR No — Veeva slower than our 21%
Procore FY26 vs FY22 18% CAGR Our base 21% is above PCOR
Shopify 3yr FY25-27 ~22% CAGR Our base 21% is below SHOP
Toast 3yr 25%+ Our base below TOST
Vertical SaaS median 3yr post-$1B 15-18% CAGR Our 21% is above median

Read: Step 13 base-case growth of 21% sits between the median vertical SaaS cohort (15-18%) and the top-quartile performers (PCOR 18%, VEEV 13% decelerating). It is aggressive but within the realistic distribution.


Assumption Register Updates

ID Step Assumption Type Value Unit Basis Sensitivity Source
A114 15 Scenario probabilities: 25/50/20/5 Bull/Base/Bear/Severe Judgment 25/50/20/5 % Bias-adjusted base-rate analysis High Step 15
A115 15 Bull case per-share FV Estimate $180 $/share DCF with 27% CAGR + 28% LT op margin High Step 15
A116 15 Bear case per-share FV Estimate $52 $/share DCF with 14% CAGR + 19% LT op margin High Step 15
A117 15 Severe downside per-share FV Estimate $28 $/share DCF with 8% CAGR + 14% LT op margin Medium-High Step 15
A118 15 Probability-weighted fair value Estimate $95-100/share $/share Weighted avg Very High — central output Step 15
A119 15 Base case classified "moderately aggressive" vs base rates Judgment Historical SaaS cohort Medium Step 15
A120 15 Bias-adjusted probability: reduce bull weight from 25% to 22% Judgment Slight bear-bias correction Kahneman checklist Low Step 15

Tables and Calculations

Expected Value Math

Scenario Probability FV ($) Weighted ($)
Bull 25% $180 $45.00
Base 50% $89 $44.50
Bear 20% $52 $10.40
Severe 5% $28 $1.40
Total EV 100% $101.30

Probability-weighted fair value ≈ $100/share.

Asymmetry Check

Measure Value
Current price $64.59
Probability-weighted FV $101 (+56%)
Base-case FV $89 (+38%)
Bull-case FV $180 (+179%)
Bear-case FV $52 (-20%)
Severe-downside FV $28 (-57%)
Bull × P(Bull) + Base × P(Base) (upside cases) $89.5
Bear × P(Bear) + Severe × P(Severe) (downside cases) $11.8
Ratio: upside contribution vs downside contribution 7.6× asymmetry

Asymmetric risk/reward at current price: ~7.6× potential upside for each dollar of downside exposure. Strong value setup.


Open Questions and Data Gaps

  1. Bull-case MAX ramp rate — 30% penetration in 2 years is a judgment. Actual pace TBD.
  2. Severe-downside AI substitution timing — 5% probability over 5 years; uncertain actual path.
  3. WACC sensitivity — a 50bps WACC move produces ~5% per-share move. Tight.
  4. Terminal growth — 4% is standard; 3-5% band is all plausible.

Next-Step Dependencies

Step 16 will use bear → bull spread to identify variant-perception drivers.

Step 18 (Sizing) will use probability-weighted EV = $100 vs current $64.59 for Kelly sizing.

Step 19 (Memo) will carry forward A118 as the central thesis number.


Source Index

Tag Document Section Date Notes
[S12] Step 12 Bull/bear 3×3 framework 2026-04-23 Initial bull/bear scenario articulation — Step_12_analyst_debate.md
[S13] Step 13 Forecast framework 2026-04-23 Base-case inputs — Step_13_forecast_framework.md
[S14] Step 14 Core DCF + sensitivity 2026-04-23 Sensitivity grid, multiples cross-check — Step_14_core_valuation.md

Full Research Available

This primer covers steps 1–3 of 19. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, and an investment memo.

View Investment MemoGET /api/v1/research/TTAN/primer