'Compelling' ASX tech share that could grow its user base 1,500%

This stock has lost half its value since November but has a massive growth opportunity ahead of it in Asia.

| More on:
a smiling woman sits at her computer at home with a coffee alongside her, as if pleased with her investments.

Image source: Getty Images

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

With interest rates in the middle of a rising part of the cycle, growth shares are now seen as a "dirty word".

That's according to Montgomery Small Companies Fund portfolio manager Gary Rollo, who says this merely presents a chance to buy quality companies for cheap.

"It creates opportunities to invest in businesses whose share price decline is due to changing sentiment rather than deteriorating fundamentals," he wrote on the Montgomery blog.

"In this climate, one company we think deserves investor attention is Symbio Holdings Ltd (ASX: SYM)."

Symbio is a telecommunications provider that makes cloud- and software-based technology such as communications-platform-as-a-sevice (CPaaS).

The company's stock has lost about half of its value since November.

"To be honest, I don't think it was expensive before the pullback," said Rollo.

"But getting re-classified as a tech company in late 2021 seems to have been a red flag for some investors."

Symbio doesn't just provide vanilla voice and video calling solutions. Rollo expanded on a couple of use-cases that show off its software magic.

"When you are trying to find your ride-share driver, you don't want them to have your number and vice versa, but you do want to place a call to find out where that driver is. Symbio's software helps do that," he said.

"When Zoom needs to offer voice access to a video call conference it needs to be able to seamlessly join that call to its Zoom stream and have the audio terminate on the traditional telecom network. In Australia, Symbio's software helps do that."

A 15-times growth opportunity

As for that dirty word "growth", Rollo remarkably pointed out that even if the business did not expand at all from here, it would still return in excess of 10% per year from the current share price. 

But that's not why the Montgomery team has bought Symbio shares.

Rollo explained that they've bought in because its "medium-term growth strategy looks plausible".

"Symbio is a dominant provider of CPaaS services in Australia, and has an enviable client list of global technology and consumer facing growth businesses," he said.

"In other markets in Asia, it's not so straightforward for these customers to turn up and gain access to the local telecom markets, and those customers want a Symbio-like player in those markets."

The company has explicitly stated Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea and Vietnam as six markets it would enter over the 2022 to 2025 period.

"Management's 2030 vision is for 100 million phone numbers," said Rollo.

"This compares to 6.4 million numbers Symbio hosts in its Australian CPaaS today. That's a giant shift in [the] addressable market."

Rollo pointed out how the unit economics of this is "compelling" as Symbio's offerings are entirely software-based. That software is already built, so scaling will hardly cost anything.

"In more 'normal' markets you would expect to pay for the underlying growth you are getting today and you would put some option value for the Asian growth strategy," said Rollo.

"[If] Symbio's Asian growth strategy succeeds, [it] is worth many many multiples of the current share price if it gets delivered."

Motley Fool contributor Tony Yoo has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Symbio Holdings Limited. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Symbio Holdings Limited. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on Technology Shares

Two happy excited friends in euphoria mood after winning in a bet with a smartphone in hand.
Technology Shares

Brainchip share price rockets 14% on patent news

Investors are happy with today's news. Let's see what patent has been granted.

Read more »

Technology Shares

4 ASX shares exposed to the 'largest technological change ever seen'

It will accelerate revenue growth and cut costs for many companies, says this expert.

Read more »

Concept image of Bitcoin and hand using laptop.
Cryptocurrencies

Buying Bitcoin? Here's why Block's Jack Dorsey says AI will drive global adoption

Moving forward, Block plans to reinvest some of its monthly profits into Bitcoin.

Read more »

Two happy excited friends in euphoria mood after winning in a bet with a smartphone in hand.
Technology Shares

Why is the Block share price rocketing 10% on Friday?

This payments company outperformed expectations during the first quarter.

Read more »

man and woman talking with each other whilst using a MacBook
Technology Shares

Why this could be the best ASX 200 tech stock to buy in May

Goldman Sachs thinks this could be the best tech stock to buy right now.

Read more »

Technology Shares

Up 120% in 2024, is it too late to buy DroneShield shares?

A leading broker has just upgraded this high-flying stock.

Read more »

Man pointing at a blue rising share price graph.
Share Gainers

Guess which little ASX tech share is surging 20% on a huge income rise

A change a contract could hint at future profitability.

Read more »

A silhouette shot of a man holding a control in his hands and watching as a drone hovers overhead with sunrays coming from the sky.
Technology Shares

Why the Droneshield share price is flying higher on Tuesday

ASX investors are bidding up Droneshield shares on Tuesday. But why?

Read more »