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Open Text

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FY2022 Annual Report · Open Text
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Annual Report 2022

Dear Shareholders,

I	have	never	felt	better	about	the	future	of	OpenText,	the	relevancy	of	our	
technology	and	expertise,	the	intrepidness	of	our	people	and	roadmap,	the	
transformative	nature	of	our	mission	to	elevate	all	organizations	of	all	sizes	to	gain	
the	information	advantage,	and	the	value	we	are	creating	through	the	OpenText	
Business	System	of	Total	Growth,	Cash	Flow	Expansion,	and	Capital	Efficiency.	

Fiscal	2022	was	a	year	of	resilience	and	growth.	Each	one	of	us	has	been	affected	by	the	pandemic,	and	we’ve	

emerged	more	focused,	stronger,	and	more	connected—more	connected	as	humans,	more	connected	as	

machines.	As	The	Information	Company,	we	power	and	protect	information	and	our	purpose	is	to	elevate	every	

person	and	every	organization	to	gain	the	information	advantage	in	the	OpenText	Cloud.	

Fiscal	2022	was	also	a	year	of	significant	strategic	progress	for	OpenText.	We	delivered	another	banner	year	

based	on	the	bedrock	of	our	4Cs:	Customer	Success,	Cloud,	Cash	Flow	and	Capital	Efficiency	Strength.		

FISCAL 2022 HIGHLIGHTS

• Delivered	record	results

•

•

Acquired	Zix	for	$894.5	million

Strengthened	our	relationships	with	Google	and	Microsoft

• Named	SAP	Pinnacle	Partner	of	the	Year,	our	17th	Pinnacle	Award	in	14	years

•

Extended	our	debt	maturity	profile	and	raised	$650	million	in	new	debt.

Approximately	75%	of	our	debt	is	now	fixed	at	a	4%	weighted	average

interest	rate	and	a	weighted	average	maturity	of	more	than	7	years

RECORD FINANCIAL RESULTS

•

Revenue	was	a	record	$3.5	billion,	up	3.2%	as	reported	and	4.3%

in	constant	currency

• Cloud	revenue	was	a	record	of	$1.5	billion,	an	increase	of	9.1%	as	reported	
and 9.8%	in	constant	currency,	this	is	the	6th	consecutive	quarter	of	y/y	
cloud organic	growth	in	constant	currency

•

•

Enterprise	cloud	bookings(1)	were	$466	million

ARR	was	a	record	$2.9	billion,	up	4.5%	as	reported	and	5.5%	in	constant 
currency	or	82%	of	total	revenue,	it	was	the	sixth	consecutive	quarter	of 

positive	organic	ARR	growth	in	constant	currency

• Cloud	and	off-cloud	renewal	rates	of	94%	and	94%	respectively

• GAAP-based	net	income	of	$397	million,	up	27.8%	y/y,	GAAP-based	net	income	margin	of	11.4%

•

A-EBITDA(2)	of	$1.3	billion	for	an	upper	quartile	margin(2)	of	36.2%

• Operating	cash	flows	of	$982	million,	up	12.1%

•

Free	cash	flows(2)	of	$889	million	or	25%	of	total	revenue,	up	9.4%	y/y;	Return	on	Invested	Capital	of	18.1%(2)

• We	returned	over	$415	million	to	shareholders	via	dividends	and	buybacks	including	the	purchase	and

cancellation	of	more	than	3.8	million	shares	during	the	year

• We	ended	the	year	with	$1.7	billion	of	cash,	$2.4	billion	of	available	liquidity	and	a	net	leverage	ratio	of	2x

INFORMATION MANAGEMENT: THE CLOUD OPPORTUNITY

The	need	for	Information	Management	is	strategic	and	essential	and	has	never	been	more	urgent.		This	is	a	$92	

billion	market	that	is	growing	and	accelerating	into	the	cloud	which	affords	us	the	opportunity	to	grow	even	

faster.		There	is	an	immediate	need	for	OpenText	to	help	our	customers	navigate	through	these	turbulent	times.		

For	our	customers,	the	move	to	digital	technology	is	paramount,	and	our	demand	drivers	are	very	clear:

• Converting	our	off-cloud	install	base	to	the	OpenText	Cloud

•

•

•

•

•

The	continued	value	realization	of	digitizing	all	transactions	and	repeatable	work

The	overhaul	of	supply	chains	for	regionalization,	insight,	and	mitigating	ongoing	disruptions

The	exploding	growth	in	security,	data	trust	and	compliance	regulations

The	need	for	information	and	process	insights	to	remove	cost	and	do	more	with	less

The	transition	to	the	green	agenda:	new	ESG	audits,	new	trading	partners,	new	manufacturing,	de-

carbonization,	and	2030	pledges	to	be	Climate	Innovators

It	is	time	to	standardize	on	the	companies	built	for	the	long-term,	like	OpenText.		We	remain	focused	on	the	

acceleration	of	our	large	off-cloud	customer	base	moving	to	the	OpenText	Cloud.		Scaling	of	our	private	cloud	

business	while	expanding	options	and	opportunities	for	customers	to	deploy	in	public	clouds.	

HELPING CUSTOMERS WIN

Like	other	premier	technology	companies,	we	are	managing	through	the	macro	issues:	the	pandemic	continues,	

high	inflation,	the	strength	of	the	USD,	Russia’s	war	on	Ukraine,	the	energy	crisis	in	Europe,	and	recessionary	

indicators.	This	is	a	very	real	context,	a	context	that	requires	every	company	to	think	uniquely	about	their	

business,	and	to	act	pre-emptively	and	boldly.	

OpenText	has	a	long	history	of	standing	tall	with	our	customers	regardless	of	economic,	geopolitical,	health	

or	other	crises	and	we	see	a	real	opportunity	to	help	organizations	of	all	sizes	to	use	digital	technology	to	

overcome	today’s	challenges,	emerge	stronger,	and	outcompete	their	rivals.		We	are	very	proud	at	OpenText	

to	have	helped	our	customers	be	agile,	responsive,	and	resilient	during	these	times	of	uncertainty.	OpenText	is	

fantastically	positioned	to	help	organizations	deliver	on	their	digital	imperatives	–	to	innovate,	to	grow,		

to	connect	people	/	organizations	/	systems,	to	be	well	run,	and	to	do	more	with	less.

With	disruption	accelerating,	now	more	than	ever,	the	world’s	largest	companies	are	relying	on	OpenText	to	

solve	their	largest	challenges.	From	climate	innovation,	security,	and	compliance	to	the	green	bottom	line,		

we	are	here	to	help	equip	organizations	of	all	sizes	gain	the	Information	Advantage.		I	want	to	highlight	some	of	

our	customers’	successes	this	year:

Bayer,	a	life	science	company	with	core	competencies	in	the	areas	of	health	care	and	agriculture,	is	contributing	

to	finding	solutions	to	some	of	the	major	challenges	of	our	time.		The	company	has	selected	OpenText	to	

consolidate	integration	activities	onto	one	single	platform.	This	will	enable	Bayer	to	release	several	global	

integration	providers	and,	therefore,	harmonize	and	simplify	their	system	landscape	and	increase	agility	within	

their	IT	environment.

The Bank of New York Mellon’s Pershing LLC	provides	clearing,	brokerage	custody	and	other	related	services.	

Pershing	selected	OpenText	Exstream	Cloud	Native	to	modernize	their	Customer	Communications	Management	

(CCM)	process.	The	solution	will	enhance	user	functionality,	improve	creation	&	delivery	of	mission-critical	

client	communications,	and	drive	cost	savings	by	migrating	applications	off	the	mainframe.

BDO,	the	5th	largest	accounting	firm	in	the	world	by	revenue,	provides	a	range	of	services	within	the	areas	of	

audit,	accounting,	consultancy,	and	taxation	and	duties.	BDO	wanted	to	improve	their	information	governance	by	

centralizing	their	various	content	management	systems	into	one	single	platform	on	Extended	ECM	for	Microsoft	

Office	365	to	share,	collaborate,	approve,	and	process	documents	via	workflows.	

Novartis Pharmaceuticals	brings	innovative	medicines	to	market	to	enhance	health	outcomes	for	patients	and	

offer	solutions	to	the	healthcare	providers	who	treat	them.	The	company	selected	OpenText	Intelligent	Capture	

to	capture,	digitize	and	analyze	content	using	AI,	content	analytics	and	auto-classification	in	their	business	

processes.

Hydro-Québec has	been	generating,	transmitting	and	distributing	electricity	for	over	75	years.	They	do	their	

utmost	to	provide	a	reliable	supply	of	electricity	services	at	competitive	prices	while	making	use	of	clean,	

renewable	energy	sources.		Over	the	past	ten	years,	they’ve	stored	an	impressive	number	of	HR-related	

documents	for	easy	retrieval	and	review	using	Document	Access	for	SAP.	Moving	to	Extended	ECM	for	

SuccessFactors	will	keep	this	functionality	and	enable	more	self-service	transactions,	allowing	HR	to	focus		

on	people	instead	of	technology.	

PRODUCT UPDATE 

Cloud	has	grown	from	$0	in	Fiscal	2012	to	$1.5	billion	in	revenue	in	Fiscal	2022	and	now	is	our	biggest	business.	

OpenText’s	five	Cloud	offerings	empower	customers	to	be	more	intelligent,	connected,	and	responsible.	

Our	products	are	consistently	recognized	by	industry	analysts	for	our	category	leadership.	OpenText	Cloud	

offerings	can	be	deployed	in	the	infrastructure	framework	of	the	customer’s	choice	including	off-cloud,	

private	cloud,	or	public	cloud	including	our	partners’	clouds.	OpenText	Cloud	Editions	allows	customers	to	

leverage	our	full	cloud	suites,	with	less	friction	and	less	professional	services,	and	seamlessly	going	from	

one	module	to	all	modules.

Cloud	Editions	is	the	largest,	most	comprehensive	suite	in	our	history	–	including	more	features	and	deeper	

integrations	with	leading	business	applications.	The	innovations	in	Cloud	Editions	provide	customers	with	a	

complete	set	of	tools	to	harness	the	power	of	information	and	manage	it	collectively,	securely,	and	intelligently.	

•  Content Cloud:	We	released	deeper	integrations	with	Salesforce	and	Microsoft	Teams	for	our	

Core	Content	offering.	The	deeper	integrations	enable	us	to	deliver	more	content	capabilities	to	two	

fast-growing	software	platforms.

•  Business Network Cloud:	We	released	our	BN	Cloud	Foundations	offering	-	a	SaaS-based,	self-service	

product	offering	that	meaningfully	expands	the	reach	of	our	trading	network.	Many	of	the	same	

market-leading	services	used	and	trusted	by	40	of	the	50	largest	supply	chains	in	the	world	are	now	

available	to	businesses	of	all	sizes.	BN	Foundations	is	off	to	a	fast	start	with	several	major	customer	

wins	already	secured.

• 

Experience Cloud:	We	released	integration	between	the	Google	Marketing	Platform	and	OpenText™	

Experience	CDP	(Customer	Data	Platform),	OpenText™	Exstream,	and	OpenText™	TeamSite.

•  Security Cloud:	We	announced	the	release	of	OpenText’s	Digital	Evidence	Center,	a	cloud-based	solution	

that	helps	law	enforcement	agencies	close	cases	faster	by	centralizing	the	collection,	analysis	and	storage	

of	rich	media	and	digital	evidence.

•  Developer Cloud:	We	expanded	access	to	our	API	Services	beyond	North	America	so	developers	can	

commercialize	their	applications	and	extend	OpenText	Core	Content	subscriptions	within	Europe	and	the	

EU	Data	Protection	Zone.

PROJECT TITANIUM

Over	80%	of	our	investments	will	be	in	cloud	technologies	through	a	framework	we	call	Project	Titanium	

that	will	evolve	our	already	robust	capabilities	and	accelerate	customer	adoption	of	the	cloud.	We	chose	the	

name	Titanium	because	it	reflects	our	cloud	fundamentals:	strong,	light	weight,	industrial	strength,	corrosion	

resistant.	Titanium	is	both	new	products	and	new	routes	to	market.	Through	these	key	investments,	we	expect		

to	deliver:

•	 A	common	platform	for	all	OpenText	software

•	 An	open	and	integrated	data	and	processing	platform

•	 A	growing	library	of	APIs,	open	to	customers	and	3rd	parties	for	increased	agility	and	flexibility	

•	 A	new	digital	resource	center	for	customers	to	try,	buy,	renew,	and	be	supported,	digitally	through	

automation	and	self-service.		We	call	this	service	the	OpenText	ZONE

We’re	planning	to	deliver	new	capabilities	every	90	days,	with	a	compelling	private	cloud	experience	as	well	

as	new	features	in	public	cloud,	including	releasing	many	new	innovations	into	our	product	line	over	the	

next	4	product	releases.	Project	Titanium	is	expected	to	enhance	all	our	clouds	with	end-to-end	Information	

Management	solutions	including:

•	 Content	Cloud	–	to	modernize	work	and	automate	processes	with	a	next	generation	digital	fabric

•	 Business	Network	Cloud	–	to	digitize	supply	chain	and	connect	ecosystems	with	global	scale

•	 Experience	Cloud	–	to	create	unified	communication-centric	customer	experiences

•	 Security	Cloud	–	to	build	a	resilient	and	safer	world	with	prevention,	compliance,	governance,		

and	remediation

•	 Developer	Cloud	–	to	win	the	next	generation	platform	and	future	workloads	from	customers,		

partners,	and	embedded	IP	partners	through	our	APIs.		Eco-systems	will	be	built	around	our	API-	

based	Developer	Cloud

ZIX AND SMB&C

The	acquisition	of	Zix	in	December	2021	significantly	enhanced	our	Small	to	Medium	Businesses	&	Consumer	

(SMB&C)	portfolio	in	data	protection,	threat	management	and	e-mail	security.		In	a	little	over	2	years,	our	

SMB&C	business	has	grown	to	nearly	$700	million	in	annualized	revenue.		With	the	acquisition	of	Carbonite	

in	2019	and	Zix	in	2021,	OpenText	offers	one	of	the	market’s	most	comprehensive	cyber	resilience	offerings	

for	SMB&C	partners	and	customers.	Zix	has	brought	best-in-class	cloud	innovation,	an	opportunity	for	

cross-selling	within	our	combined	MSP	channel,	a	20-year	Microsoft	partnership	that	enhances	and	expands	

OpenText’s	existing	relationship,	geographic	expansion	opportunities	and	the	opportunity	to	build	strategic	

partnerships	that	leverage	our	SMB&C	cloud	platform.	

PARTNERS: A FORCE MULTIPLIER

OpenText	is	committed	culturally	and	strategically	to	be	a	partner	embracing	company.	Our	partnerships	with	

companies	such	as	SAP	SE,	Google	Cloud,	AWS,	Microsoft	Corporation,	Oracle	Corporation,	Salesforce.com	

Corporation,	and	others	serve	as	examples	of	how	we	are	working	together	with	our	partners	to	create	next-

generation	Information	Management	solutions	and	deliver	them	to	market.	

Global Partner Program

Our	Global	Partner	Program	enables	us	to	extend	market	coverage,	build	stronger	relationships	and	provide	

enterprise	customers	with	a	more	complete	local	ecosystem	of	partners	to	meet	their	needs.	The	Program	is	

expected	to	lead	to	greater	distribution	and	cross-selling	opportunities	which	further	help	us	to	achieve	

organic	growth.

Global System Integrators (GSIs)

GSIs	provide	customers	with	digital	transformational	services	around	OpenText	technologies.	Our	GSIs	include	

Accenture	plc,	ATOS	International	S.A.S.,	Capgemini	Technology	Services	SAS,	Cognizant	Technology	Solutions	

U.S.	Corp.,	Deloitte	Consulting	LLP,	and	Tata	Consultancy	Services	(TCS).

Managed Service Providers (MSPs)

Our	network	of	22,000	MSPs	is	a	key	go-to-market	channel	for	SMB&C.		Our	partner	program	enables	MSPs	

to	deploy	OpenText	solutions	at	scale,	helping	us	grow	cloud-based	cybersecurity,	threat	intelligence	as	

well	as	backup	and	recovery	solutions	aimed	at	the	SMB&C	markets.	We	are	a	top	Cloud	Solution	Partner	

with	Microsoft.	

Hyperscaler Partners

Our	solutions	can	be	deployed	off-cloud,	in	the	OpenText	Cloud,	in	hybrid	scenarios	or	other	clouds,	including	

through	our	hyperscaler	partners:	Google	Cloud	Platform	(GCP),	AWS	and	Microsoft	Azure.	The	combination	of	

OpenText	cloud-native	applications	and	managed	services,	together	with	the	scalability	and	performance	of	

our	partner	public	cloud	providers,	offer	more	secure,	reliable,	and	compliant	solutions	to	customers	wanting	to	

deploy	cloud-based	Information	Management	applications.

TOTAL GROWTH STRATEGY

Our	unique	“Grow,	Retain	and	Acquire”	framework	

is	at	the	heart	of	our	Total	Growth	strategy.	With	

our	sales	coverage	goals,	we	are	deeply	focused	on	

cross-selling	and	upselling	Cloud	Editions	into	our	

existing	customer	base,	focusing	on	our	account	

knowledge	and	the	opportunity	to	introduce	new	

applications	that	manage	new	information	workloads.	

Our	global	renewals	organization	continues	to	deliver	

greater	than	90%	renewal	rates	while	driving	growth	

through	consumption	and	expansion.

Future Acquisitions

We	have	$2.4	billion	in	cash	and	committed	liquidity.		

We	have	the	management	bandwidth	and	financial	

strength	to	execute	our	M&A	strategy.	Acquisition	

valuations	are	coming	more	in	line	with	our	playbook	

of	growth	at	a	reasonable	price.		We	believe	that	our	

M&A	pipeline	is	stronger	than	it	has	been	in	previous	years.

THE OPENTEXT BUSINESS SYSTEM: OUR VALUE CREATION FRAMEWORK

OpenText	believes	in	creating	near	and	long-term	shareholder	value	through	a	balanced	combination	of	Total	

Growth,	Capital	Efficiency,	and	Profitability.	We	will	control	what	we	can	control	–	and	we	aspire	to	perform	well	

in	every	scenario.	We	make	long-term	decisions;	we	are	purposeful	in	balancing	profits	and	growth.

Leveraging	the	OpenText	Business	System,	our	vision	of	the	future	of	operations	at	OpenText	includes:	

•	 How	we	invest	in	innovation

•	 How	we	engage	with	customers

•	 How	we	operate	our	business

•	 How	we	attract	and	retain	talent,	and	

•	 How	we	create	value	

From	a	business	model	perspective,	what	this	means	

is	that	we	are	accelerating	into	the	cloud	led	by	

bookings	to	cash	while	expecting	to	deliver	upper	

quartile	A-EBITDA	results	in	any	economic	scenario.

CORPORATE CITIZENSHIP

Over	the	past	year,	we	have	embraced	new	expectations,	new	rules,	and	new	investments	as	we	imagine	how	

people	and	organizations	can	build	a	better	future.	What	has	become	abundantly	clear	is	that	the	future	of	

growth	must	be	both	inclusive	and	sustainable,	and	in	our	third	Corporate	Citizenship	Report,	we	share	the	

strides	we	have	made	over	the	last	year	as	part	of	our	commitment	to	advancing	our	Environmental,	Social	and	

Governance	(ESG)	goals.

Companies	have	a	tremendous	opportunity	and	responsibility	to	create	long-term	value	and	impact	for	

customers,	employees,	and	society.	That	is	why	we	are	introducing	the	OpenText	Zero-In	Initiative,	a	new	

framework	that	encompasses	all	our	ESG	commitments	and	programs.	Our	framework	is	based	on	three	pillars	

that	focus	on	measurable,	values-driven	goals	under	the	pillars	of	Zero	Footprint,	Zero	Barriers	and	Zero	

Compromise.

Zero Footprint: 	OpenText	embraces	the	opportunity	to	reduce	our	footprint	in	every	possible	way,	and	help	our	

customers	do	the	same.	We	are	committing	to	a	science-based	emissions	target	of	50%	reduction	by	2030,	and	

net-zero	by	2040,	and	zero	operational	waste	by	2030.	The	goal	is	to	eliminate	emissions	to	the	greatest	extent	

possible,	send	no	waste	to	landfills,	incinerators,	or	oceans,	and	promote	a	circular	economy,	where	resources	

are	put	back	into	the	system	to	be	used	over	again.

Zero Barriers:  Our	goal	is	to	have	a	majority	ethnically	diverse	workforce	by	2030.	We	have	committed	to	

a	50/50	gender	parity	within	key	roles	by	2030,	and	40%	women	in	leadership	positions	at	all	management	

levels,	because	for	consistent	equity,	we	must	create	a	culture	that	values	differences	starting	with	a	top-down	

approach.

Zero Compromise: 	We	intend	to	reach	our	Zero	Footprint	and	Zero	Barriers	goals	with	the	same	values-based	

approach	that	we	bring	to	work	every	day	–	with	zero	compromise.	It	is	about	elevating	our	people	and	our	

organization,	and	zeroing-in	on	what	matters	most.	We	are	committed	to	transparency	and	holding	ourselves	

accountable	to	our	ESG	goals	and	continuing	to	foster	our	culture	of	Technology	for	the	Good.

IN SUMMARY

As	I	reflect	on	our	Fiscal	2022	accomplishments,	I	am	very	proud	of	what	we,	as	a	team,	have	accomplished:

•	 We	took	pre-emptive	actions	to	address	the	global	macro	environment

•	 We	continued	to	invest	in	talent	and	innovation

•	 We	have	incredible	products	that	customers	use	to	create	an	Information	Advantage

•	 We	have	a	fantastic	install	base	of	customers	that	we	will	accelerate	into	the	cloud

•	 We	delivered	upper	quartile	profitability	and	an	incredibly	strong	balance	sheet	

OpenText	is	an	all-weather	company	ready	for	what	is	ahead.	We	recognize	the	many	macro	issues	facing	

all	businesses,	and	OpenText	is	ready.		We	are	built	to	navigate	times	like	these.	Our	target	capital	allocation	

strategy	delivers	shareholder	returns	via	dividends	and	share	buybacks.	We	are	investing	in	systems	to	achieve	

non-linear	scaling	of	costs,	while	positioning	ourselves	to	capture	future	growth	and	market	share.	OpenText	

remains	committed	to	our	Total	Growth	Strategy	and	expect	to	create	value	through	growth,	profitability,	and	

capital	efficiency.	

We	have	a	seasoned	proven	management	team	and	our	employees	delivered	record	results	throughout	the	

pandemic.		We	are	hiring	smartly,	we	are	investing	in	Project	Titanium	and	helping	our	customers	accelerate	

their	transition	to	the	OpenText	Cloud.	As	we	begin	Fiscal	Year	2023,	we	remain	committed	to	balancing	our	

operational	discipline	with	continued	investments	in	key	strategic	areas	to	drive	future	total	growth,	expansion	

of	free	cash	flows	and	capital	efficiency.	

Our	products	are	strategic	and	vital	to	our	customers.		The	need	for	OpenText	to	help	our	customers	navigate	

through	these	turbulent	times	has	never	been	higher.		Information	Management	is	strategic	and	essential.			

We	will	stand	tall	with	our	customers.	We	intend	to	grow,	and	we	intend	to	take	share	while	also	continuing		

to	generate	upper	quartile	profitability	and	significant	value	creation	for	our	shareholders.

Customers	fortified	their	commitment	to	the	OpenText	Cloud	with	$466	million	of	new	value	in	enterprise		

cloud	bookings,	and	we	expect	this	to	grow	15%+	in	Fiscal	2023.	Increased	cloud	bookings	are	key	to	driving	

organic	cloud	revenue	growth	and	we	believe	one	of	the	best	ways	for	investors	to	measure	the	future	

performance	of	OpenText’s	growth	going	forward	is	to	focus	on	both	our	enterprise	bookings	and	total		

revenue	growth	performance.	

LOOKING AHEAD TO OUR LONG-TERM ASPIRATIONS

•	 We	intend	on	doubling	the	company	through	organic	growth	and	acquisitions

•	 We	intend	on	being	#1	in	every	cloud

•	 We	look	to	generate	over	$6	billion	in	cumulative	free	cash	flows

OpenText’s	employees	have	delivered	on	another	strong	year	of	results,	and	I	want	to	thank	them	for	all	their	

contributions.		In	this	dynamic	environment,	we	saw	strong	demand,	took	share	and	fortified	an	increased	

customer	commitment	to	our	cloud	platform.	OpenText’s	best	days	are	in	front	of	us.	I	am	an	optimist,	and	

deeply	believe	the	future	is	brighter	than	today.	The	leadership	at	OpenText	is	committed	to	ensuring	that		

our	growth	is	based	on	inclusivity	and	sustainability.	What	an	amazing	time	to	be	The	Information	Company,		

to	be	the	company	providing	both	a	process	advantage	and	an	Information	Advantage,	to	our	customers.

I	would	like	to	thank	our	employees,	our	customers,	our	partners	and	our	shareholders	for	their	continued	trust	

and	confidence	in	OpenText.		We	are	humbled	and	proud	to	help	advance	your	mission	and	goals	and	work	–	

and	-	to	make	OpenText	and	the	world	better	for	everyone.

May	the	one	that	brings	peace,	bring	peace	for	all.	

Sincerely,

Mark	J.	Barrenechea

OpenText	CEO	and	CTO

(1)	 Enterprise	cloud	bookings	is	defined	as	the	total	value	from	cloud	services	and	subscription	contracts,	entered	into	in	the	fiscal	year	that	

are	new,	committed	and	incremental	to	our	existing	contracts,	excluding	the	impact	of	Carbonite	and	Zix.

(2)	 Please	refer	to	“Use	of	Non-GAAP	Financial	Measures”	at	the	end	of	this	presentation	and	“Reconciliation	of	selected	GAAP-based	mea-

sures	to	Non-GAAP-based	measures”	included	within	our	current	and	historical	filings	on	Forms	10-Q,	10-K	and	8-K.

(3)	 Upper	quartile	is	based	on	comparing	OpenText	against	170+	selected	technology	and	software	peers.	A-EBITDA	margin	data	sourced	

from	Bloomberg	(July	2022).

	
CAUTIONARY STATEMENT REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

Certain	statements	in	this	document,	including	statements	about	the	focus	of	Open	Text	Corporation	(“OpenText”	or	“the	
Company”)	in	our	fiscal	year	ending	June	30,	2023	(Fiscal	2023)	on	growth,	future	cloud	growth	and	market	share	gains,	
future	organic	growth	initiatives	and	deployment	of	capital,	intention	to	maintain	a	dividend	program,	potential	share	
repurchases	pursuant	to	its	share	repurchase	plans,	future	tax	rates,	new	platform	and	product	offerings	and	associated	
benefits	to	customers,	scaling	OpenText,	and	other	matters,	which	may	contain	words	such	as	“anticipates”,	“expects”,	
“intends”,	“plans”,	“believes”,	“seeks”,	“estimates”,	“may”,	“could”,	“would”,	“might”,	“will”	and	variations	of	these	words	
or	similar	expressions	are	considered	forward-looking	statements	or	information	under	applicable	securities	laws.	In	
addition,	any	information	or	statements	that	refer	to	expectations,	beliefs,	plans,	projections,	objectives,	performance	or	
other	characterizations	of	future	events	or	circumstances,	including	any	underlying	assumptions,	are	forward-looking,	and	
based	on	our	current	expectations,	forecasts	and	projections	about	the	operating	environment,	economies	and	markets	
in	which	we	operate.	Forward-looking	statements	reflect	our	current	estimates,	beliefs	and	assumptions,	which	are	based	
on	management’s	perception	of	historic	trends,	current	conditions	and	expected	future	developments,	as	well	as	other	
factors	it	believes	are	appropriate	in	the	circumstances,	such	as	certain	assumptions	about	the	economy,	as	well	as	market,	
financial	and	operational	assumptions.	Management’s	estimates,	beliefs	and	assumptions	are	inherently	subject	to	significant	
business,	economic,	competitive	and	other	uncertainties	and	contingencies	regarding	future	events	and,	as	such,	are	subject	
to	change.	We	can	give	no	assurance	that	such	estimates,	beliefs	and	assumptions	will	prove	to	be	correct.	Such	forward-
looking	statements	involve	known	and	unknown	risks	and	uncertainties	such	as	those	relating	to	the	duration	and	severity	
of	the	COVID-19	pandemic,	including	any	new	strains	or	resurgences,	as	well	as	our	ability	to	develop,	protect	and	maintain	
our	intellectual	property	and	proprietary	technology	and	to	operate	without	infringing	on	the	proprietary	rights	of	others.	For	
additional	information	with	respect	to	risks	and	other	factors	which	could	occur,	see	the	Company’s	Annual	Report	on	Form	
10-K,	Quarterly	Reports	on	Form	10-Q	and	other	securities	filings	with	the	Securities	and	Exchange	Commission	(SEC)	and	
other	securities	regulators.	Readers	are	cautioned	not	to	place	undue	reliance	upon	any	such	forward-looking	statements,	
which	speak	only	as	of	the	date	made.	Unless	otherwise	required	by	applicable	securities	laws,	the	Company	disclaims	any	
intention	or	obligation	to	update	or	revise	any	forward-looking	statements,	whether	as	a	result	of	new	information,	future	
events	or	otherwise.

NOTES

(1)	

All	dollar	amounts	in	this	document	are	in	U.S.	Dollars	unless	otherwise	indicated.	

(2)	
Use	of	Non-GAAP	Financial	Measures:	In	addition	to	reporting	financial	results	in	accordance	with	U.S.	GAAP,	
the	Company	provides	certain	financial	measures	that	are	not	in	accordance	with	U.S.	GAAP	(Non-GAAP).	These	Non-
GAAP	financial	measures	have	certain	limitations	in	that	they	do	not	have	a	standardized	meaning	and	thus	the	Company’s	
definition	may	be	different	from	similar	Non-GAAP	financial	measures	used	by	other	companies	and/or	analysts	and	may	
differ	from	period	to	period.	Thus	it	may	be	more	difficult	to	compare	the	Company’s	financial	performance	to	that	of	other	
companies.	However,	the	Company’s	management	compensates	for	these	limitations	by	providing	the	relevant	disclosure	
of	the	items	excluded	in	the	calculation	of	these	Non-GAAP	financial	measures	both	in	its	reconciliation	to	the	U.S.	GAAP	
financial	measures	and	its	consolidated	financial	statements,	all	of	which	should	be	considered	when	evaluating	the	
Company’s	results.	

The	Company	uses	these	Non-GAAP	financial	measures	to	supplement	the	information	provided	in	its	consolidated	financial	
statements,	which	are	presented	in	accordance	with	U.S.	GAAP.	The	presentation	of	Non-GAAP	financial	measures	is	not	
meant	to	be	a	substitute	for	financial	measures	presented	in	accordance	with	U.S.	GAAP,	but	rather	should	be	evaluated	in	
conjunction	with	and	as	a	supplement	to	such	U.S.	GAAP	measures.	OpenText	strongly	encourages	investors	to	review	its	
financial	information	in	its	entirety	and	not	to	rely	on	a	single	financial	measure.	The	Company	therefore	believes	that	despite	
these	limitations,	it	is	appropriate	to	supplement	the	disclosure	of	the	U.S.	GAAP	measures	with	certain	Non-GAAP	measures	
defined	below.

Non-GAAP-based	net	income	and	Non-GAAP-based	EPS,	attributable	to	OpenText,	are	consistently	calculated	as	
GAAP-based	net	income	or	earnings	per	share,	attributable	to	OpenText,	on	a	diluted	basis,	excluding	the	effects	of	the	
amortization	of	acquired	intangible	assets,	other	income	(expense),	share-based	compensation,	and	special	charges	
(recoveries),	all	net	of	tax	and	any	tax	benefits/expense	items	unrelated	to	current	period	income,	as	further	described	in	
the	tables	below.	Non-GAAP-based	gross	profit	is	the	arithmetical	sum	of	GAAP-based	gross	profit	and	the	amortization	of	
acquired	technology-based	intangible	assets	and	share-based	compensation	within	cost	of	sales.	Non-GAAP-based	gross	
margin	is	calculated	as	Non-GAAP-based	gross	profit	expressed	as	a	percentage	of	total	revenue.	Non-GAAP-based	income	
from	operations	is	calculated	as	GAAP-based	income	from	operations,	excluding	the	amortization	of	acquired	intangible	
assets,	special	charges	(recoveries),	and	share-based	compensation	expense.	

Adjusted	earnings	before	interest,	taxes,	depreciation	and	amortization	(Adjusted	EBITDA)	is	consistently	calculated	
as	GAAP-based	net	income,	attributable	to	OpenText,	excluding	interest	income	(expense),	provision	for	income	taxes,	
depreciation	and	amortization	of	acquired	intangible	assets,	other	income	(expense),	share-based	compensation	and	special	
charges	(recoveries).	Adjusted	EBITDA	margin	is	calculated	as	adjusted	EBITDA	expressed	as	a	percentage	of	total	revenue.	

The	Company’s	management	believes	that	the	presentation	of	the	above	defined	Non-GAAP	financial	measures	provides	
useful	information	to	investors	because	they	portray	the	financial	results	of	the	Company	before	the	impact	of	certain	non-
operational	charges.	The	use	of	the	term	“non-operational	charge”	is	defined	for	this	purpose	as	an	expense	that	does	not	
impact	the	ongoing	operating	decisions	taken	by	the	Company’s	management.	These	items	are	excluded	based	upon	the	way	
the	Company’s	management	evaluates	the	performance	of	the	Company’s	business	for	use	in	the	Company’s	internal	reports	
and	are	not	excluded	in	the	sense	that	they	may	be	used	under	U.S.	GAAP.	

The	Company	does	not	acquire	businesses	on	a	predictable	cycle,	and	therefore	believes	that	the	presentation	of	Non-
GAAP	measures,	which	in	certain	cases	adjust	for	the	impact	of	amortization	of	intangible	assets	and	the	related	tax	effects	
that	are	primarily	related	to	acquisitions,	will	provide	readers	of	financial	statements	with	a	more	consistent	basis	for	
comparison	across	accounting	periods	and	be	more	useful	in	helping	readers	understand	the	Company’s	operating	results	
and	underlying	operational	trends.	Additionally,	the	Company	has	engaged	in	various	restructuring	activities	over	the	past	
several	years,	primarily	due	to	acquisitions	and	most	recently	in	response	to	our	return	to	office	planning,	that	have	resulted	
in	costs	associated	with	reductions	in	headcount,	consolidation	of	leased	facilities	and	related	costs,	all	which	are	recorded	
under	the	Company’s	“Special	charges	(recoveries)”	caption	on	the	Consolidated	Statements	of	Income.	Each	restructuring	
activity	is	a	discrete	event	based	on	a	unique	set	of	business	objectives	or	circumstances,	and	each	differs	in	terms	of	its	
operational	implementation,	business	impact	and	scope,	and	the	size	of	each	restructuring	plan	can	vary	significantly	from	
period	to	period.	Therefore,	the	Company	believes	that	the	exclusion	of	these	special	charges	(recoveries)	will	also	better	aid	
readers	of	financial	statements	in	the	understanding	and	comparability	of	the	Company’s	operating	results	and	underlying	
operational	trends.	

In	summary,	the	Company	believes	the	provision	of	supplemental	Non-GAAP	measures	allow	investors	to	evaluate	
the	operational	and	financial	performance	of	the	Company’s	core	business	using	the	same	evaluation	measures	that	
management	uses,	and	is	therefore	a	useful	indication	of	OpenText’s	performance	or	expected	performance	of	future	
operations	and	facilitates	period-to-period	comparison	of	operating	performance	(although	prior	performance	is	not	
necessarily	indicative	of	future	performance).	As	a	result,	the	Company	considers	it	appropriate	and	reasonable	to	provide,	
in	addition	to	U.S.	GAAP	measures,	supplementary	Non-GAAP	financial	measures	that	exclude	certain	items	from	the	
presentation	of	its	financial	results.

The	following	charts	provide	unaudited	reconciliations	of	U.S.	GAAP-based	financial	measures	to	Non-GAAP-based	financial	
measures	for	the	following	periods	presented.	

UNITED STATES 
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, DC 20549
______________________
FORM 10-K 
______________________

☒

☐

ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES 
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the fiscal year ended June 30, 2022.

OR

TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES 
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from                      to                     

Commission file number: 0-27544 
______________________________________

OPEN TEXT CORPORATION 

(Exact name of Registrant as specified in its charter)
______________________

Canada

98-0154400

(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)

(IRS Employer Identification No.)

275 Frank Tompa Drive,

Waterloo,  Ontario

Canada
(Address of principal executive offices)

N2L 0A1
(Zip code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (519) 888-7111 
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

Title of each class 
Common stock without par value

Trading Symbol(s)
OTEX

Name of each exchange on which registered
NASDAQ Global Select Market

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: 
None 
(Title of Class) 
______________________________________

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.    Yes  ☒    No  ☐
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act.   Yes  ☐   No  ☒
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 

during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing 
requirements for the past 90 days.    Yes  ☒    No  ☐ 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of 

Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such 
files).    Yes  ☒    No  ☐ 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an 
emerging growth company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company,” and “emerging growth company” 
in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. 

Large accelerated filer  ☒       Accelerated filer  ☐  Non-accelerated filer  ☐  Smaller reporting company ☐  Emerging growth company ☐ 
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new 

or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.      ☐   

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and attestation to its management’s assessment of the effectiveness of its internal 
control over financial reporting under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting firm that prepared or 
issued its audit report.     ☒

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).    Yes  ☐   No  ☒ 
Aggregate market value of the Registrant's Common Shares held by non-affiliates, based on the closing price of the Common Shares as reported by the 

NASDAQ Global Select Market (“NASDAQ”) on December 31, 2021, the end of the registrant's most recently completed second fiscal quarter, was 
approximately $12.6 billion. As of August 1, 2022, there were 269,819,679 outstanding Common Shares of the registrant.

None.

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

1

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181

Business

Item 1.
Item 1A. Risk Factors
Item 1B. Unresolved Staff Comments
Item 2.
Item 3.
Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures

Properties
Legal Proceedings

OPEN TEXT CORPORATION

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Part I

Part II

Item 5.

Market for Registrant's Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity 
Securities
Reserved

Item 6.
Item 7. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk
Item 8.
Item 9.
Item 9A. Controls and Procedures
Item 9B. Other Information

Financial Statements and Supplementary Data
Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure

Item 9C. Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdictions that Prevent Inspections

Item 10. Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance

Item 11. Executive Compensation

Part III

Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters

Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence

Item 14. Principal Accounting Fees and Services

Item 15. Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules
Item 16. Form 10-K Summary
Signatures

Part IV

2

Part I

Forward-Looking Statements

This Annual Report on Form 10-K contains forward-looking statements or information (forward-looking statements) 
within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 21E of the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 
1934, as amended (the Exchange Act), Section 27A of the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the Securities Act), and 
other applicable securities laws of the United States and Canada, and is subject to the safe harbors created by those provisions. 
Words such as “anticipates”, “expects”, “intends”, “plans”, “believes”, “seeks”, “estimates”, “may”, “could”, “would”, “might”, 
“will” and variations of these words or similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. In addition, any 
statements or information that refer to expectations, beliefs, plans, projections, objectives, performance or other 
characterizations of future events or circumstances, including any underlying assumptions, are forward-looking statements, and 
are based on our current expectations, forecasts and projections about the operating environment, economies and markets in 
which we operate. Forward-looking statements reflect our current estimates, beliefs and assumptions, which are based on 
management’s perception of historic trends, current conditions and expected future developments, as well as other factors it 
believes are appropriate in the circumstances. These forward-looking statements are based on certain assumptions including the 
following: (i) countries continuing to implement and enforce existing and additional customs and security regulations relating to 
the provision of electronic information for imports and exports; (ii) our continued operation of a secure and reliable business 
network; (iii) the stability of general political, economic and market conditions, (iv) our ability to manage inflation, including 
increased labour costs associated with attracting and retaining employees, and rising interest rates; (v) our continued ability to 
manage certain foreign currency risk, including through hedging from time to time; (vi) equity and debt markets continuing to 
provide us with access to capital; (vii) our continued ability to identify, source and finance attractive and executable business 
combination opportunities, as well as our ability to continue to successfully integrate any such opportunities, including in 
accordance with the expected timeframe and/or cost budget for such integration; (viii) our continued ability to avoid infringing 
third party intellectual property rights; and (ix) our ability to successfully implement our restructuring plans. Our estimates, 
beliefs and assumptions are inherently subject to significant business, economic, competitive and other uncertainties and 
contingencies regarding future events and, as such, are subject to change. We can give no assurance that such estimates, beliefs 
and assumptions will prove to be correct. These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks as well as 
uncertainties, which include (i) actual and potential risks and uncertainties relating to the ultimate geographic spread of 
COVID-19, the severity and duration of the COVID-19 pandemic and issues relating to the resurgence of COVID-19 and/or 
new strains or variants of COVID-19, including actions that have been and may be taken by governmental authorities to contain 
COVID-19 or to treat its impact, including the availability, effectiveness and use of treatments and vaccines, and the effect on 
the global economy and financial markets as well as the potential adverse effect on our business, operations, and financial 
performance; (ii) the impact of the Russia-Ukraine conflict on our business, including our decision to cease all direct business 
in Russia and Belarus and with known Russian-owned companies; and (iii) those discussed herein and in the Notes to 
Consolidated Financial Statements for the year ended June 30, 2022, which are set forth in Part II, Item 8 of this Annual Report 
on Form 10-K. The actual results that we achieve may differ materially from any forward-looking statements, which reflect 
management's current expectations and projections about future results only as of the date hereof. We undertake no obligation 
to revise or publicly release the results of any revisions to these forward-looking statements. A number of factors may 
materially affect our business, financial condition, operating results and prospects. These factors include, but are not limited to, 
those set forth in Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors”, and forward-looking statements set forth in Part II, Item 7 “Management's 
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” and elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K 
as well as other documents we file from time to time with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) 
and Canadian securities regulators. Any one of these factors may cause our actual results to differ materially from recent results 
or from our anticipated future results. You should not rely too heavily on the forward-looking statements contained in this 
Annual Report on Form 10-K because these forward-looking statements are relevant only as of the date they were made. 

Throughout this Annual Report on Form 10-K: (i) the term “Fiscal 2023” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2022 
and ending June 30, 2023; (ii) the term “Fiscal 2022” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2021 and ended June 30, 2022; 
(iii) the term “Fiscal 2021” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2020 and ended June 30, 2021; (iv) the term “Fiscal 
2020” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2019 and ended June 30, 2020; (v) the term “Fiscal 2019” means our fiscal 
year beginning on July 1, 2018 and ended June 30, 2019; (vi) the term “Fiscal 2018” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 
2017 and ended June 30, 2018; (vii) the term “Fiscal 2017” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2016 and ended June 30, 
2017; (viii) the term “Fiscal 2016” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2015 and ended June 30, 2016; (ix) the term 
“Fiscal 2015” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2014 and ended June 30, 2015; (x) the term “Fiscal 2014” means our 
fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2013 and ended June 30, 2014; (xi) the term “Fiscal 2013” means our fiscal year beginning on 
July 1, 2012 and ended June 30, 2013; and (xii) the term “Fiscal 2012” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2011 and 
ended June 30, 2012. Our Consolidated Financial Statements are presented in U.S. dollars and, unless otherwise indicated, all 
amounts included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K are expressed in thousands of U.S. dollars. References herein to the 
“Company”, “OpenText”, “we” or “us” refer to Open Text Corporation and, unless context requires otherwise, its subsidiaries.

3

Summary of Risk Factors

The following is a summary of material risks described below in Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors” in this Annual Report on 

Form 10-K. The following summary should not be considered an exhaustive summary of the material risks facing us, is not 
necessarily presented in order of importance, and it should be read in conjunction with the “Risk Factors” section and other 
information contained in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Risks Related to our Business and Industry

•

•

•
•
•
•

•

•

•

•

•
•

•

•
•

•

•

If we do not continue to develop technologically advanced products that successfully integrate with the software 
products and enhancements used by our customers, future revenues and our operating results may be negatively affected
Product development is a long, expensive and uncertain process, and we may terminate one or more of our development 
programs
Our investment in our current research and development efforts may not provide a sufficient or timely return
If our software products and services do not gain market acceptance, our operating results may be negatively affected
Failure to protect our intellectual property could harm our ability to compete effectively
Other companies may claim that we infringe their intellectual property, which could materially increase costs and 
materially harm our ability to generate future revenues and profits
Our software products and services may contain defects that could harm our reputation, be costly to correct, delay 
revenues and expose us to litigation
Our software products rely on the stability of infrastructure software that, if not stable, could negatively impact the 
effectiveness of our products, resulting in harm to our reputation and business
Risks associated with the evolving use of the Internet, including changing standards, competition and regulation and 
associated compliance efforts, may adversely impact our business
Business disruptions, including those arising from disasters or other catastrophic events, may adversely affect our 
operations
Unauthorized disclosures, cyber-attacks and breaches of data security may adversely affect our operations
Our success depends on our relationships with strategic partners, distributors and third-party service providers and any 
reduction in the sales efforts by distributors, cooperative efforts from our partners or service from third party providers 
could materially impact our revenues
The loss of licenses to resell or use third-party software or the lack of support or enhancement of such software could 
adversely affect our business
Current and future competitors could have a significant impact on our ability to generate future revenues and profits
The length of our sales cycle can fluctuate significantly which could result in significant fluctuations in revenues being 
recognized from quarter to quarter
Our existing customers might cancel contracts with us, fail to renew contracts on their renewal dates and/or fail to 
purchase additional services and products, and we may be unable to attract new customers
Consolidation in the industry, particularly by large, well-capitalized companies, could place pressure on our operating 
margins which could, in turn, have a material adverse effect on our business

• We may be unable to maintain or expand our base of small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) and consumer 

•

•

•

•

•

customers, which could adversely affect our anticipated future growth and operating results
Our sales to government clients expose us to business volatility and risks, including government budgeting cycles and 
appropriations, early termination, audits, investigations, sanctions and penalties
Geopolitical instability, political unrest, war and other global conflicts, including the Russia-Ukraine conflict, has 
affected and may continue to affect our business
The COVID-19 pandemic has and may continue to further negatively affect our business, operations and financial 
performance
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic continues to create significant uncertainty in the global economy and for our 
business, operations and financial performance
The restructuring of our operations, including steps taken to mitigate the anticipated negative impact of the COVID-19 
pandemic, may be ineffective and may adversely affect our business and our finances, and we may incur additional 
restructuring charges in connection with such actions 

• We have implemented a Flex-Office program, which will subject us to certain operational challenges and risks
• We must continue to manage our internal resources during periods of company growth, or our operating results could be 

adversely affected

4

•

•
•

If we lose the services of our executive officers or other key employees or if we are not able to attract or retain top 
employees, our business could be significantly harmed
Our compensation structure may hinder our efforts to attract and retain vital employees
Increased attention from shareholders, customers and other key relationships regarding our environmental, social and 
corporate governance (ESG) practices could impact our business activities, financial performance and reputation

Risks Related to Acquisitions

Acquisitions, investments, joint ventures and other business initiatives may negatively affect our operating results
•
• We may be unable to successfully integrate acquired businesses or do so within the intended timeframes, which could 

•

have an adverse effect on our financial condition, results of operations and business prospects
Loss of key personnel could impair the integration of acquired businesses, lead to loss of customers and a decline in 
revenues, or otherwise could have an adverse effect on our operations

• We may fail to realize all of the anticipated benefits of any acquisitions, including our acquisition of Zix, or those 

•

benefits may take longer to realize than expected
Businesses we acquire may have disclosure controls and procedures and internal controls over financial reporting, 
cybersecurity and compliance with data privacy laws that are weaker than or otherwise not in conformity with ours

Risks Related to Laws and Regulatory Compliance

•

•

•

•

Our provision for income taxes and effective income tax rate may vary significantly and may adversely affect our results 
of operations and cash resources 
As part of the ongoing audit of our Canadian tax returns by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA), we have received 
notices of, and are appealing, reassessments for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016, and 
the CRA is auditing Fiscal 2017. An adverse outcome of these ongoing audits could have a material adverse effect on our 
financial position and results of operations
Risks associated with data privacy issues, including evolving laws and regulations and associated compliance efforts, 
may adversely impact our business
Certain of our products may be perceived as, or determined by the courts to be, a violation of privacy rights and related 
laws. Any such perception or determination could adversely affect our revenues and results of operations

Risks Related to our Financial Condition

• We may not generate sufficient cash flow to satisfy our unfunded pension obligations
•
•

Fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates could materially affect our financial results
Our indebtedness could limit our operations and opportunities

Risks Related to Ownership of our Common Stock

•

•

Our revenues and operating results are likely to fluctuate, which could materially impact the market price of our 
Common Shares
Changes in the market price of our Common Shares and credit ratings of our outstanding debt securities could lead to 
losses for shareholders and debt holders

General Risks

Unexpected events may materially harm our ability to align when we incur expenses with when we recognize revenues

•
• We may fail to achieve our financial forecasts due to inaccurate sales forecasts or other factors
•

Our international operations expose us to business, political and economic risks that could cause our operating results to 
suffer

• We may become involved in litigation that may materially adversely affect us
•

The declaration, payment and amount of dividends will be made at the discretion of our Board of Directors and will 
depend on a number of factors
Our operating results could be adversely affected by any weakening of economic conditions
Stress in the global financial system may adversely affect our finances and operations in ways that may be hard to predict 
or to defend against

•

•

5

Item 1.  Business

Incorporated in 1991, OpenText has grown to be a leader in Information Management offering a comprehensive line 
of Information Management products and services that power and protect businesses of all sizes. OpenText’s Information 
Management solutions manage the creation, capture, use, analysis and lifecycle of structured and unstructured data. Our 
Information Management solutions are designed to help organizations extract value from their information, secure that 
information and meet the growing list of privacy and compliance requirements. OpenText helps customers improve 
efficiencies, redefine business models and transform industries.

Our products are available in cloud, off-cloud, private cloud, public cloud and application programming interface 

(API) cloud, or any combination thereof,  and we are ready to support the customer’s preferred delivery channel. In 
providing choice and flexibility, we strive to maximize the lifetime value of the relationship with our customers and 
support their information-led transformation journey. 

Business Overview and Strategy 

About OpenText 

At OpenText, we believe information and knowledge make business and people better. We are an Information 
Management company that provides software and services that empower digital businesses of all sizes to become more 
intelligent, secure and connected. Our innovations maximize the strategic benefits of data and content for our customers, 
strengthening their productivity, growth, profitability, compliance and competitive information advantage.

The comprehensive OpenText Information Management platform and services provide secure and scalable solutions 

for global enterprises, SMBs, governments and consumers around the world. We also accelerate information-led digital 
transformations with intelligent tools and services for moving off paper, automating classification and building clean data 
lakes for artificial intelligence (AI), analytics and automation.

OpenText is fundamentally integrated into the parts of our customers' businesses that matter, so they can securely 
manage the complexity of information flow end-to-end. Through automation and AI, we connect, synthesize and deliver 
information when and where needed to drive new efficiencies, experiences and insights. We make information more 
valuable by connecting it to digital business processes, enriching it with insights, protecting and securing it throughout its 
entire lifecycle and leveraging it to create engaging digital experiences. Our solutions connect large digital supply chains 
in many industries including manufacturing, retail and financial services. With the growing compliance standards for data 
management, security, e-invoicing, environmental, sustainability and inclusion factors, OpenText empowers customers 
with foresight and trust. 

Our solutions also enable organizations and consumers to secure their information so that they can collaborate with 
confidence, stay ahead of the regulatory technology curve and identify threats on any endpoint or across their networks. 
With a multi-layered security approach, we have a wide range of OpenText Security Solutions that power and protect at 
the data management layer, at the infrastructure and application layers, and at the edge, offering insights and threat 
intelligence across it all.

Our Products and Services 

We have a complete and integrated portfolio of Information Management solutions delivered at scale to meet the 
demands and needs of a global market. With the rise of operational and experience data as a force accelerating the need 
for information management, OpenText helps businesses master modern work with our Content Cloud, digitize supply 
chains with the Business Network Cloud, create communication-centric experiences with the Experience Cloud and build 
a resilient and safer world with the Security Cloud. In addition to our four business clouds, we have the Developer Cloud 
to help unleash developer creativity. Our solutions are delivered on the OpenText Cloud Platform, which supports 
customers in four different ways to use our services from private cloud to public cloud to off-cloud to API. Our 
architectural approach is one that puts at the forefront the ability for customers to have the flexibility and customization 
they need in a hybrid multi-cloud world.

Our innovation roadmap is focused on investing a significant amount of our research and development (R&D) in 

cloud capabilities. This includes maturing our public cloud and API offerings, driving deep integrations through co-
innovations with partners and investing to meet new compliance standards. Security is fundamentally built into all 
OpenText Information Management software. Our platform offers multi-level, multi-role and multi-context security. 
Information is secured at the database level, by user-enrolled security, context rights and time-based security. We also 
provide encryption at rest for document-level security.

6

With embedded AI and analytics, our solutions improve business insight, employee productivity, customer 
experiences, asset utilization, collaboration, supply chain efficiency and risk management. Our software capabilities 
connect information across people, systems and devices to automate end-to-end processes and provide customers with 
increased business visibility and foresight. Below is a listing of our Information Management solutions.

Content Cloud

Our Content Cloud empowers customers to master modern work through robust content management, improved 

integrations and intelligent automation. It connects content to the digital business eliminating silos and providing 
convenient, secure and compliant remote access to both structured and unstructured data - boosting productivity and 
reducing risk. Our solutions manage the lifecycle, distribution, use and analysis of information across the organization, 
from capture through to archiving and disposition.

Our Content Services solutions range from content collaboration and intelligent capture to records management, 

collaboration, e-signatures and archiving, and are available off-cloud, on a cloud provider of the customer’s choice, as a 
subscription in the OpenText Cloud, in a hybrid environment or as a managed service. Our Content Services solutions 
enable customers to capture data from paper, electronic files and other sources and transform it into digital content 
delivered directly into content management solutions and business processes. Our customers can protect critical historical 
information within a secure, centralized archiving solution. OpenText Content Services adhere to the Content 
Management Interoperability Services (CMIS) standard and support a broad range of operating systems, databases, 
application servers and applications.

Our Content Services integrate with the applications that manage critical business processes, such as SAP® 
S/4HANA, SAP® SuccessFactors®, Salesforce®, Microsoft® Office 365® and other software systems and applications, 
establishing the foundation for intelligent business process and content workflow automation. By connecting unstructured 
content with structured data workflows, our Content Services allow users to have the content they need, when they need 
it, reducing errors, driving greater business insight and increasing efficiency.

Our AI and analytics capabilities within Content Services leverages structured or unstructured data to help 
organizations improve decision-making, gain operational efficiencies and increase visibility through interactive 
dashboards, reports and data visualizations. It leverages a comprehensive set of data analytics software - such as text 
mining, natural language processing, interactive visualizations and machine learning - to identify patterns, relationships, 
risks and trends that are used for predictive process automation and accelerated decision-making. Our solutions support 
composite AI for improved accuracy, and we help customers turn repositories of information into clean and integrated 
“data lakes” that can be mined by AI to extract useful knowledge and insight for our customers.

Our automation solutions enable organizations to transform into intelligent, secure and connected digital, data-
driven businesses. We help customers re-engineer processes and quickly adapt to complex needs to deliver seamless 
customer and employee experiences. We speed up the development of case- and process-driven applications with low-
code, drag-and-drop components, reusable building blocks and pre-built accelerators to build and deploy solutions more 
easily. Moreover, our professional services team works with customers to simplify complex interactions among people, 
content, transactions and workflows across multiple systems of record to support a diverse range of use cases.

Business Network Cloud

Our Business Network Cloud provides a foundation for digital supply chains and secure e-commerce ecosystems. 

Our Business Network manages data within the organization and outside the firewall, connecting people, systems and 
Internet of Things (IoT) devices at a global scale for those seeking to digitize and automate their procure-to-pay and 
order-to-cash processes. For our customers, this delivers streamlined connectivity, secure collaboration and real-time 
business intelligence in a single, unified platform. Organizations of all sizes can build global and sustainable supply 
chains, rapidly onboard new trading partners, comply with regional mandates, assess their credit quality and ethics scores, 
provide electronic invoicing and remove information silos across ecosystems and the extended enterprise.

The foundation of our Business Network Cloud is our Trading Grid, which connects businesses, trading partners, 
transportation and logistics companies, financial institutions and government organizations globally. OpenText offers a 
range of application-to-application, IoT, identity and access management, active applications and industry specific 
applications.

 We enable supply chain optimization, digital business integration, data management, messaging, security, 
communications and secure data exchange across an increasingly complex network of off-cloud and cloud applications, 
connected devices, systems and people. The Business Network Cloud can be accessed through our new multi-tenant, self-
service Foundation offering or as a managed service to simplify the inherent complexities of business-to-business (B2B) 
data exchange. OpenText’s Business Network Cloud offers insights that help drive operational efficiencies, accelerate 
time to transaction and improve customer satisfaction.

7

Experience Cloud 

Our Experience Cloud powers modern experiences that drive revenue growth and customer loyalty. Our Digital 
Experience solutions create, manage, track and optimize omnichannel interactions throughout the customer journey, from 
acquisition to retention, and integrate with systems of record including Salesforce® and SAP®. The OpenText Digital 
Experience platform enables businesses to gain insights into their customer interactions and optimize them to improve 
customer lifetime value. The platform includes solutions and extensions that deliver highly personalized content and 
engagements along a continuous customer journey. With AI-powered analytics, the Experience Cloud can evaluate and 
deliver optimized user experiences at scale to ensure every point of interaction, whether physical or digital, on any device, 
is engaging and personalized.

The Experience Cloud platform includes a range of solutions from Customer Experience Management (CXM), Web 

Content Management (WCM), Digital Asset Management (DAM), Customer Analytics, AI & Insights, Digital Fax, 
Omnichannel Communications, Secure Messaging, Voice of Customer (VoC), as well as customer journey, testing and 
segmentation.

Security Cloud

Our security solutions provide organizations with capabilities to protect, prevent, detect, respond and quickly 

recover from threats across endpoints, network, applications, IT infrastructure and data – all with AI-led threat 
intelligence. 

At the data layer, OpenText Security Solutions help customers be cyber-resilient with uninterrupted access and 
protection of business data against cyber threats. With Carbonite Endpoint, Carbonite Server, Carbonite Cloud-to-Cloud 
Backup and Information Archiving, we help ensure customers have visibility across all endpoints, devices and networks, 
for proactive discovery of sensitive data, identification of threats and sound data collection for investigation. 

At the infrastructure and application layer, OpenText Security Solutions help detect issues and respond and 
remediate threats. Our full suite of capabilities includes Endpoint Detection Response (EDR), Network Detection 
Response (NDR), Managed Detection and Response (MDR), Digital Forensics & Incident Response and eDiscovery. 
OpenText Security Solutions deliver services, combining front-line experience with automation, AI technology and 
OpenText software to help organizations detect threats in real time. Moreover, our eDiscovery capabilities provide 
forensics and unstructured data analytics for searching and investigating organizational data to manage legal obligations 
and risks. For highly regulated organizations, these machine learning capabilities help drive compliance and timely 
response in complex situations.

At the edge, we help customers protect endpoints, virtual machine platforms and browsers from rising cyber-attacks. 

With Webroot Endpoint Protection, Webroot Domain Name System (DNS) protection, Email Security by Zix, Security 
Awareness Training and MDR/Threat Hunting, our security solutions are directed to the SMB and consumers segments. 
We serve SMB together with our network of Managed Service Providers (MSPs) who help deploy OpenText solutions at 
scale.

Lastly, OpenText Security solutions help secure operations using solutions with threat intelligence. Threat 
monitoring with BrightCloud, remote endpoint protection and automated cloud backup and recovery work together to 
protect employees and customer data while allowing organizations to prepare for, respond to and recover quickly from 
cyber-attacks.

Developer Cloud

Our Developer Cloud makes it faster and easier to build, extend and customize Information Management 
applications using a collection of cloud services, APIs and software development kits (SDK). Our solutions help R&D 
teams engage with our community of developers to innovate and build custom applications. Our API solutions help 
developers accelerate new product development, utilize fewer resources and reduce time to delivery for their projects. 
With our Developer Cloud's language-neutral protocols and cloud API services, our customers can reduce infrastructure 
spend, improve time-to-market and minimize the time and effort required to add new capabilities.

The OpenText Developer Cloud delivers a broad and deep set of Information Management capability for 
organizations to extend their existing OpenText implementations or include our capabilities into their own custom 
solutions, such as for customer, supplier and partner collaboration. The Developer Cloud also includes IoT and threat 
intelligence capabilities for organizations to dynamically integrate multi-tiered supply chain communities and build 
solutions for greater efficiency, agility and new value-added services. Data security is embedded throughout our offerings 
so the developer can focus on building differentiated user experiences. 

Organizations can gain an information advantage and quickly turn ideas into solutions with OpenText APIs to build, 

integrate and customize Information Management applications. Developers choose from a rich set of Information 

8

Management services to manage information from any source, for any use case, including capture, archive, digital 
signature, workflow and case management. OpenText APIs empower developers to focus on code-based innovation with a 
single, secure, infrastructure agnostic platform, freely available technical documentation and an open and engaged 
developer community to share knowledge and best practices to solve problems and create new solutions.

Services

OpenText provides a range of customer solutions through professional and managed services, whether off-cloud, in 

the OpenText Cloud, in hybrid scenarios or other clouds, including our partners: Google Cloud Platform, Amazon Web 
Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure. Our team provides full advisory, implementation, migration, operation and support 
services for our Information Management solutions to meet the needs of our customers. Cloud Managed Services aims to 
help keep customers current on the latest technology and to meet complex requirements, all with reduced burden on 
information technology staff and ensure optimal application management by trusted experts.

With OpenText Managed Services, organizations can focus resources on their core business priorities with the 
knowledge that their infrastructure, applications, integrations and upgrades are all managed, monitored and optimized for 
security, performance and compliance. Our Cloud Managed Services offering provides customers with a single point of 
contact and a single service level agreement for OpenText solutions managed in our partner’s clouds.

Our Strategy

Growth

As an organization, we are committed to “Total Growth”, meaning we strive towards delivering value through 

organic initiatives, innovations and acquisitions, as well as financial performance. With an emphasis on increasing 
recurring revenues and expanding our margins, we believe our Total Growth strategy will ultimately drive overall cash 
flow generation, thus helping to fuel our disciplined capital allocation approach and further our ability to deepen our 
account coverage and identify and execute strategic acquisitions. With strategic acquisitions, we are well positioned to 
expand our product portfolio and improve our ability to innovate and grow organically, which helps us to meet our long-
term growth targets. We believe our Total Growth strategy is a durable model, that we believe will create both near and 
long-term shareholder value through organic and acquired growth, capital efficiency and profitability.

We are committed to continuous innovation. Our investments in R&D push product innovation, increasing the value 

of our offerings to our installed customer base, which includes Global 10,000 companies (G10K), SMB and consumers. 
The G10K are the world's largest companies, ranked by estimated total revenues, as well as the world's largest 
governments and organizations. More valuable products, coupled with our established global partner program, lead to 
greater distribution and cross-selling opportunities which further help us to achieve organic growth. Over the last three 
fiscal years, we have invested a cumulative total of $1.2 billion in R&D or 12.3% of cumulative revenue for that three-
year period. On an annual basis, we target to spend 12% to 14% of revenues for R&D expense.

As a global leader in Information Management, we know customers need an integrated set of cloud products, 
solutions and services as a foundation for efficiency and growth. The cloud is a strategic business imperative that drives 
customers’ investment in product innovation, business agility, operational efficiency and cost management. OpenText 
expects the cloud to be our largest driver of growth. We are committed to continuing our investment in the OpenText 
Cloud to best suit the evolving needs of our customers. Supported by a global, scalable and secure infrastructure, 
OpenText Cloud Editions includes a foundational platform of technology services, and packaged business applications for 
industry and business processes. OpenText Cloud Editions enables organizations to protect and manage information in 
public, private or hybrid deployments at scale.

We remain a value oriented and disciplined acquirer, having efficiently deployed $6.5 billion on acquisitions over 
the last 10 fiscal years. Mergers and acquisitions are one of our leading growth drivers. We look for companies that are 
situated within our total addressable markets.

We have developed a philosophy, the OpenText Business System, that is designed to create value by leveraging a 

clear set of operational mandates for integrating newly acquired companies and assets. We see our ability to successfully 
integrate acquired companies and assets into our business as a strength and pursuing strategic acquisitions is an important 
aspect to our Total Growth strategy. We expect to continue to acquire strategically, to integrate and innovate, and to 
deepen and strengthen our intelligent information platform for customers.

We regularly evaluate acquisition opportunities and at any time may be at various stages of discussion with respect 

to such opportunities. For additional details on our acquisitions, please see “Acquisitions During the Last Five Fiscal 
Years”, elsewhere in Item 1 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

9

In March 2020, COVID-19 was characterized as a pandemic by the World Health Organization. The spread of 

COVID-19 has significantly impacted the global economy and has adversely impacted and may continue to adversely 
impact our operational and financial performance. The extent of the adverse impact of the pandemic on the global 
economy and markets will continue to depend, in part, on the length and severity of the measures taken to limit the spread 
of the virus, the availability, effectiveness and use of treatments and vaccines and on actual and potential resurgences. We 
are closely monitoring the potential effects and impact on our operations, businesses and financial performance, including 
liquidity and capital usage, though the extent is difficult to fully predict due to the evolution of this uncertain situation. 

We continue to conduct business with modifications to employee travel and work locations and also virtualization of 

certain events, along with modified interactions with customers and suppliers, among other modifications. In addition, as 
many local governments and officials have started lifting pandemic restrictions in accordance with the guidance of public 
health experts, in July 2022, we implemented a Flex-Office program in which a majority of our employees work a portion 
of their time in the office and a portion remotely. See “We have implemented a Flex-Office program, which will subject 
us to certain operational challenges and risks” in Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors” included elsewhere within this Annual 
Report on Form 10-K. We will continue to actively monitor the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on all aspects of our 
business and geographies, including customer purchasing decisions, and may take further actions that alter our business 
operations, including our Flex-Office program, as may be required by governments, or that we determine are in the best 
interest of our employees, customers, partners, suppliers and shareholders. It is uncertain and difficult to predict what the 
potential effects any such alterations or modifications may have on our business including the effects on our customers 
and prospects, or our financial results and our ability to successfully execute our business strategies and initiatives. 

The ongoing and ultimate impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our operations and financial performance depends 
on many factors that are not within our control. For more information, please see Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors” included 
elsewhere within this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

OpenText Revenues

Our business consists of four revenue streams: cloud services and subscriptions, customer support, license and 

professional service and other. For information regarding our revenues by significant geographic area for Fiscal 2022, 
Fiscal 2021 and Fiscal 2020, please see Note 20 “Segment Information” to the Consolidated Financial Statements 
included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Cloud Services and Subscriptions

Cloud services and subscriptions revenues consist of (i) SaaS offerings, (ii) APIs and data services, (iii) hosted 
services and (iv) managed service arrangements. These offerings allow customers to transmit a variety of content between 
various mediums and to securely manage enterprise information without the commitment of investing in related hardware 
infrastructure.

We offer B2B integration solutions such as messaging and managed services. Messaging services allow for the 
automated and reliable exchange of electronic transaction information, such as purchase orders, invoices, shipment notices 
and other business documents, amongst businesses worldwide. Managed services provide an end-to-end fully outsourced 
B2B integration solution to our customers, including program implementation, operational management and customer 
support. Our cloud-based Business Network enables customers to effectively manage the flow of electronic transaction 
information with their trading partners and reduces the complexity of disparate standards and communication protocols.

Customer Support

The first year of our customer support offering is usually purchased by customers together with the license of our 
Information Management software products. Customer support is typically renewed on an annual basis and historically 
customer support revenues have been a significant portion of our total revenue. Through our OpenText customer support 
programs, customers receive access to software and security upgrades, a knowledge base, discussion boards, product 
information and an online mechanism to post and review “trouble tickets.” Additionally, our customer support teams 
handle questions on the use, configuration and functionality of OpenText products and help identify software issues, 
develop solutions and document enhancement requests for consideration in future product releases.

10

License

License revenues consist of fees earned from the licensing of software products to our customers. Our license 
revenues are impacted by the strength of general economic and industry conditions, the competitive strength of our 
software products and our acquisitions. The decision by a customer to license our software products often involves a 
comprehensive implementation process across the customer’s network or networks and the licensing and implementation 
of our software products may entail a significant commitment of resources by prospective customers.

Professional Service and Other

We provide consulting and learning services to customers. Generally, these services relate to the implementation, 

training and integration of our licensed product offerings into the customer's systems.

Our consulting services help customers build solutions that enable them to leverage their investments in our 
technology and in existing enterprise systems. The implementation of these services can range from simple modifications 
to meet specific departmental needs to enterprise applications that integrate with multiple existing systems.

Our learning services consultants analyze our customers' education and training needs, focusing on key learning 

outcomes and timelines, with a view to creating an appropriate education plan for the employees of our customers who 
work with our products. Education plans are designed to be flexible and can be applied to any phase of implementation: 
pilot, roll-out, upgrade or refresher. OpenText learning services employ a blended approach by combining mentoring, 
instructor-led courses, webinars, eLearning and focused workshops.

Marketing and Sales

Customers

Our customer base consists of G10K organizations, enterprise companies, public sector agencies, mid-market 

companies, SMB and direct consumers. 

Partners and Alliances 

We are committed to establishing relationships with the best resellers and technology and service providers to ensure 

customer success. Together as partners, we fulfill key market objectives to drive new business, establish a competitive 
advantage and create demonstrable business value.

We have a number of strategic partnerships that contribute to our success. These include the most prominent 
organizations in enterprise software, hardware and public cloud, with whom we work to enhance the value of customer 
investments. They include:

•

•

•

•

•

SAP SE (SAP): We are SAP’s partner for content services. The OpenText Suite for SAP solutions provides key 
business content within the context of SAP business processes providing enhanced efficiencies, reduced risk 
and better experiences for customers, employees and partners - accessible anywhere and anytime and available 
on and off-cloud.

Google Cloud: We work together with Google Cloud to deploy our Information Management solutions on the 
Google Cloud Platform. This includes a containerized application architecture for flexible cloud or hybrid 
deployment models. Deploying our solutions on the Google Cloud Platform allows our customers to scale their 
deployments as their businesses demand. We offer our solutions as a managed service and selected products as 
a SaaS offering. 

Amazon Web Services (AWS): Our collaboration offers businesses the opportunity to consume our Information 
Management solutions as fully managed services on AWS for cost savings, increased performance, scalability 
and security.

Microsoft Corporation (Microsoft): Together with Microsoft, we enable customers to connect all aspects of 
their content infrastructure, integrating these into business processes and enable collaboration, management 
and governance on the most valuable asset - information. With the acquisition of Zix Corporation (Zix) in 
2021, we extended our partnership with Microsoft by becoming one of their nine authorized Cloud Solutions 
Providers in the North American market.

Oracle Corporation (Oracle): We develop innovative solutions for Oracle applications that enhance the 
experience and productivity of users working with these tools.

11

•

Salesforce.com Corporation (Salesforce): The company-to-company partnership between OpenText and 
Salesforce is focused on growing a full portfolio of Information Management solutions to complement the 
Salesforce ecosystem by uniting the structured and unstructured information experience.

Our Global Partner Program offers five distinct programs: Referral, Reseller, Services, Technology and Support. 
This creates an extended organization to develop technologies, repeatable service offerings and solutions that enhance the 
way our customers maximize their investment in our products and services. Through the Global Partner Program, we are 
extending market coverage, building stronger relationships and providing customers with a more complete local 
ecosystem of partners to meet their needs. Each distinct program is focused to provide valuable business benefits to the 
joint relationship.

Global Systems Integrators (GSIs) provide customers with digital transformational services around OpenText 
technologies. They are trained and certified on OpenText solutions and enhance the value of our offerings by providing 
technical credibility and complementary services to customers. Our GSIs include Accenture plc, ATOS International 
S.A.S., Capgemini Technology Services SAS, Cognizant Technology Solutions U.S. Corp., Deloitte Consulting LLP and 
Tata Consultancy Services (TCS).

Our partner program also enables MSPs, resellers, distributors and network and security vendors to grow through 

cloud-based cybersecurity, threat intelligence and backup and recovery solutions aimed at the SMB and consumer 
markets. We provide the industry-specific tools, services, training, integrations, certifications and platforms our partners 
need to ensure trust and reliability with their customer base.

We currently have over 22,000 MSPs in our network and it is expected to grow. This is a key go-to-market channel 

for us as MSPs act as an intermediary between the solutions vendors like OpenText and the SMB market. An MSP 
specializes in their local market and provides managed services to their clients.

International Markets

We provide our product offerings worldwide. Our geographic coverage allows us to draw on business and technical 

expertise from a geographically diverse workforce, providing greater stability to our operations and revenue streams by 
diversifying our portfolio to better mitigate against the risks of a single geographically focused business.

There are inherent risks to conducting operations internationally. For more information about these risks, see “Risk 

Factors” included in Item 1A of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Competition

The market for our products and services is highly competitive, subject to rapid technological change and shifting 

customer needs and economic pressures. We compete with multiple companies, some that have single or narrow solutions 
and some that have a range of information management solutions, like us. Our primary competitor is International 
Business Machines Corporation (IBM), with numerous other software vendors competing with us in the Information 
Management sector, such as Hyland Software Inc., Datto Holding Corp., Quadient SA, Veeva Systems Inc., SPS 
Commerce Inc., Box Inc., CrowdStrike Holdings Inc. and Adobe Inc. In certain markets, OpenText competes with Oracle 
and Microsoft, who are also our partners. In addition, we also face competition from systems integrators that configure 
hardware and software into customized systems. Additionally, new competitors or alliances among existing competitors 
may emerge and could rapidly acquire additional market share. We expect that competition will increase because of 
ongoing software industry consolidation.

We believe that certain competitive factors affect the market for our software products and services, which may 
include: (i) vendor and product reputation; (ii) product quality, performance and price; (iii) the availability of software 
products on multiple platforms; (iv) product scalability; (v) product integration with other enterprise applications; 
(vi) software functionality and features; (vii) software ease of use; (viii) the quality of professional services, customer 
support services and training; and (ix) the ability to address specific customer business problems. We believe the relative 
importance of each of these factors depends upon the concerns and needs of each specific customer.

Research and Development

The industry in which we compete is subject to rapid technological developments, evolving industry standards, 
changes in customer requirements and competitive new products and features. As a result, our success, in part, depends on 
our ability to continually enhance our existing products in a timely and efficient manner and to develop and introduce new 
products that meet customer needs while reducing total cost of ownership. 

To achieve these objectives, we have made and expect to continue to make investments in research and 

development, through internal and third-party development activities, third-party licensing agreements and potentially 

12

through technology acquisitions. We expect a significant amount of our future R&D investment will be in cloud-based 
technologies.

Our R&D expenses were $440.4 million for Fiscal 2022, $421.4 million for Fiscal 2021 and $370.4 million for 
Fiscal 2020. We believe our spending on research and development is an appropriate balance between managing our 
organic growth and results of operations. We expect to continue to invest in R&D to maintain and improve our products 
and services offerings.

Acquisitions During the Last Five Fiscal Years

We regularly evaluate acquisition opportunities within the Information Management market and at any time may be 

in various stages of discussions with respect to such opportunities.

Below is a summary of certain significant acquisitions we have made over the last five fiscal years.
•

On December 23, 2021, we acquired Zix, a leader in SaaS based email encryption, threat protection and 
compliance cloud solutions for SMBs, for $894.5 million. 

•
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

On November 24, 2021, we acquired all of the equity interest in Bricata Inc. (Bricata) for $17.8 million.
On March 9, 2020, we acquired XMedius, a provider of secure information exchange and unified 
communication solutions, for $73.5 million.
On December 24, 2019, we acquired Carbonite Inc. (Carbonite), a leading provider of cloud-based 
subscription backup, disaster recovery and endpoint security to SMB, consumers and a wide variety of 
partners, for $1.4 billion.
On December 2, 2019, we acquired certain assets and certain liabilities of Dynamic Solutions Group (The Fax 
Guys) for $5.1 million.
On January 31, 2019, we acquired Catalyst, a leading provider of eDiscovery that designs, develops and 
supports market-leading cloud eDiscovery software, for $71.4 million.

On December 17, 2018, we acquired Liaison, a leading provider of cloud-based business to business 
integration, for $310.6 million.
On February 14, 2018, we acquired Hightail, a leading cloud service for file sharing and creative collaboration, 
for $20.5 million.

On September 14, 2017, we acquired Guidance, a leading provider of forensic security solutions, for $240.5 
million.

On July 26, 2017, we acquired Covisint, a leading cloud platform for building Identity Access Management, 
Automotive and IoT applications, for $102.8 million.

We believe our acquisitions support our long-term strategy for growth, strengthen our competitive position, expand 
our customer base and provide greater scale to accelerate innovation, grow our earnings and provide superior shareholder 
value. We expect to continue to strategically acquire companies, products, services and technologies to augment our 
existing business.

Intellectual Property Rights

Our success and ability to compete depends in part on our ability to develop, protect and maintain our intellectual 
property and proprietary technology and to operate without infringing on the proprietary rights of others. Our software 
products are generally licensed to our customers on a non-exclusive basis for internal use in a customer's organization. We 
also grant rights to our intellectual property to third parties that allow them to market certain of our products on a non-
exclusive or limited-scope exclusive basis for a particular application of the product(s) or to a particular geographic area.

We rely on a combination of copyright, patent, trademark and trade secret laws, non-disclosure agreements and 

other contractual provisions to establish and maintain our proprietary rights. We have obtained or applied for trademark 
registration for corporate and strategic product names in selected major markets. We have a number of U.S. and foreign 
patents and pending applications, including patents and rights to patent applications acquired through strategic 
transactions, which relate to various aspects of our products and technology. The duration of our patents is determined by 
the laws of the country of issuance and is typically 20 years from the date of filing of the patent application resulting in 
the patent. From time to time, we may enforce our intellectual property rights through litigation in line with our strategic 
and business objectives. While we believe our intellectual property is valuable and our ability to maintain and protect our 
intellectual property rights is important to our success, we also believe that our business as a whole is not materially 
dependent on any particular patent, trademark, license, or other intellectual property right.

13

For more information on the risks related to our intellectual property rights, see “Risk Factors” included in Item 1A 

of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Looking Towards the Future 

In Fiscal 2023 we intend to continue to implement strategies that are designed to: 

Broaden Our Information Management Reach into the G10K. As technologies and customers become more 
sophisticated, we intend to be a leader in expanding the definition of traditional market sectors. We continue to expand 
our direct sales coverage of the G10K as we focus on connecting this marquee customer base to our information platform.

Invest in the Cloud. Today, the destination for innovation is indisputably the cloud. Businesses of all sizes rely on a 
combination of APIs, public and private clouds, managed services and off-cloud solutions. As a result, we are committed 
to continue to modernize our technology infrastructure and leverage existing investments in the OpenText Cloud. The 
combination of OpenText cloud-native applications and managed services, together with the scalability and performance 
of our partner public cloud providers, offer more secure, reliable and compliant solutions to customers wanting to deploy 
cloud-based Information Management applications. OpenText Cloud Editions is designed to build additional flexibility 
and scalability for our customers: becoming cloud-native, connecting anything and extending capabilities quickly with 
multi-tenant SaaS applications and services.

Deepen Existing Customer Footprint. We believe one of our greatest opportunities is to sell newly developed or 

acquired technologies to our existing customer base, and cross-sell historical OpenText products to newly acquired 
customers. We have significant expertise in a number of industry sectors and aim to increase our customer penetration 
based on our strong credentials. We are particularly focused on circumstances where the customer is looking to 
consolidate multiple vendors with solutions from a single source while addressing a broader spectrum of business 
problems or equally new or existing customers looking to take a more holistic approach to digital transformation.

Invest in Technology Leadership. We believe we are well-positioned to develop additional innovative solutions to 
address the evolving market. We plan to continue investing in technology innovation by funding internal development, 
acquiring complementary technologies and collaborating with third-parties.

Deepen Strategic Partnerships. OpenText is committed culturally, programmatically and strategically to be a 

partner-embracing company. Our partnerships with companies such as SAP SE, Google Cloud, AWS, Microsoft 
Corporation, Oracle Corporation, Salesforce.com Corporation and others serve as examples of how we are working 
together with our partners to create next-generation Information Management solutions and deliver them to market. We 
will continue to look for ways to create more customer value from our strategic partnerships.

Broaden Global Presence. As customers become increasingly multi-national and as international markets continue 
to adopt Information Management solutions, we plan to further grow our brand, presence and partner networks in these 
new markets. We are focused on using our direct sales for targeting existing G10K customers and plan to address new 
geographies and SMB customers, jointly with our partners.

Deliver Organic Growth. We are focused on investing and delivering on future organic growth. The Information 
Management market is large and is expected to continue to grow and we expect cloud to be our leading growth driver. We 
have multiple initiatives that are designed to deliver organic growth. We are guiding our customers along their cloud 
journey, investing in our mid-market channel and deepening our relationships with our partners and hyperscalers. As 
customers move more into the cloud, it will facilitate cross-sell and upsell opportunities across the product portfolio and 
geographies.

Selectively Pursue Acquisitions. We expect to continue to pursue strategic acquisitions to strengthen our service 
offerings in the Information Management market. Considering the continually evolving marketplace in which we operate, 
we regularly evaluate acquisition opportunities within the Information Management market and at any time may be in 
various stages of discussions with respect to such opportunities. We plan to continue to pursue acquisitions that 
complement our existing business, represent a strong strategic fit and are consistent with our overall growth strategy and 
disciplined financial management. We may also target future acquisitions to expand or add functionality and capabilities 
to our existing portfolio of solutions, as well as add new solutions to our portfolio.

Human Capital

Our Global Footprint

Our ability to attract, retain and engage a diverse workforce committed to innovation, operational excellence and the 

OpenText mission and values across our global footprint is a cornerstone to our success.

14

As of June 30, 2022, we employed a total of approximately 14,800 individuals, of which 7,150 or 49% are in the 

Americas, 2,720 or 18% are in EMEA and 4,930 or 33% are in Asia Pacific. Currently, we have employees in 35 
countries enabling strong access to multiple talent pools while ensuring reach and proximity to our customers. Please see 
“Results of Operations” included in Item 7 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K for our definitions of geographic regions.

The approximate composition of our employee base is as follows: (i) 2,700 employees in sales and marketing, 

(ii) 4,300 employees in product development, (iii) 3,300 employees in cloud services, (iv) 1,500 employees in 
professional services, (v) 1,000 employees in customer support and (vi) 2,000 employees in general and administrative 
roles. 

We believe that relations with our employees are strong. None of our employees are represented by a labour union, 

nor do we have collective bargaining arrangements with any of our employees. However, in certain European jurisdictions 
in which we operate, a “Workers' Council” represents our employees.

Employee Safety / COVID-19 Response

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we implemented Project Shield as a business continuity plan to address 
employee, customer, facility and technology-related challenges associated with the pandemic. Project Shield maintains the 
overarching principle of providing safe environments for our employees, customers, partners, as well as the communities 
where we work.

Project Shield takes a strong human capital focus, including enabling well-researched global awareness, post-
pandemic support for our employees and managing a safe return to our workplace. We focus on analyzing key COVID-19 
related data and public health protocols to support executive decisions, ensuring regular executive and employee 
communications and making strong connections with leaders around the world to respond swiftly to local changes.

Over the course of the pandemic, we have ensured our benefit programs support employees, and we established the 

OpenText Employee Relief Fund to provide financial assistance for employees requiring additional support for medical 
costs related to contracting COVID-19.

Project Shield extended our work from home approach at the beginning of Fiscal 2022 providing employees with 
continued flexibility and safety globally. In July 2022, we implemented our Flex-Office program in which a majority of 
our employees work a portion of their time in the office and a portion remotely.

We continue to invest in software and hardware along with office redesign to support a flexible workforce where 

teams can collaborate and be productive. Using our offices in a purposeful way drives innovation, creativity and 
teamwork. Our past experiences continue to inform our future workplace standards and practices.

We remain committed to maintaining a healthy workplace where all employees and office visitors feel safe and 

respected by implementing new health and safety protocols aligned with regional guidelines.

Employee Engagement

We regularly conduct employee research to understand perceptions in the areas of engagement, company strategy, 

personal impact, manager effectiveness, recognition, career development and equity, diversity and inclusion. Participation 
level and engagement have remained high. Throughout the phases of the pandemic, employee communication and 
listening strategies increased, including supplemental surveys ranging from topics of well-being, feedback from new hires 
on the quality of their onboarding and office re-opening plans.

Environmental, Social and Corporate Governance

The OpenText Zero-In Initiative is our commitment to our global impact goals and initiatives related to ESG. We 

believe the future of growth is sustainable and inclusive, and we commit to zero footprint, zero barriers and achieving our 
commitments with zero compromise through our purposeful goals to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions 
by 2040, zero waste from operations by 2030 and to be majority ethnically diverse among employees by 2030 with equal 
gender representation in key roles and 40% women in leadership positions at all management levels.

Our charitable giving program supports activities at the local and global level, focused on education, innovation, 

disaster relief and the health and welfare of children and families. We also provide employees three paid days off to 
volunteer and make an impact to the causes that matter most to them. In addition, the OpenText Navigator Fund identifies 
and addresses key needs in our communities. We launched the Navigator Internship Program to create pathways to digital 
jobs for Indigenous and under-represented minority students.

Recognizing that many millions of families are still recovering from the economic impact of the pandemic, we 

dedicated the holiday season to supporting food banks globally.

15

To operate long-term, we need to ensure that our local communities and the natural environment are thriving. We 
are committed to mitigating any adverse environmental impacts of our business activities, which at a minimum means 
abiding by all environmental laws, regulations and standards that apply to us. Our Environmental Policy articulates our 
commitment to measuring and managing our environmental impact. We integrate the consideration of environmental 
concerns and impacts into our everyday decision making and business activities. Externally, we promote sustainable 
consumption by developing and promoting environmentally sound technologies to support our customers’ digital 
transformations, including transitioning to the cloud environment. Internally, we continue to develop, implement and 
manage company-wide environmental initiatives.

Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (ED&I)

We are passionate about creating an inclusive environment where skilled and diverse employees thrive, deliver 

compelling innovations to our customers and provide shareholder value. We are committed to increasing equity in 
opportunity for all employees regardless of race, gender, sexual orientation, religion or other differences. 

At OpenText, we have established a global Equity, Diversity and Inclusion steering committee to guide ED&I 

programs. We bring our ambition to life through impact teams made of employees who come together to recommend 
policies, programs and initiatives across a range of topics.

Our impact teams are leading global initiatives with local impact which include: 

•

•

•

•

•

Awareness and Training: For employees and managers on matters such as inclusive leadership practices and 
diversity awareness;

Recruiting: Platforms that are inclusive, diverse slates for key leadership roles and an increased focus on 
virtual work opportunities to widen recruiting talent and diversity;

Advancement: Internal career building opportunities, mentoring and networks;

Advocacy: Employee affinity groups, including “Black Employee Empowerment” and “Women in 
Technology”, fostering sponsorship, community and career conversations; and

Civic Action: Focusing an ED&I lens on community outreach and engagement.

Compensation and Benefits

Our compensation philosophy is based on a set of principles that align with business strategy, reflect business and 

individual performance levels, consider market conditions to ensure competitiveness, demonstrate internal pay equity for 
similar roles and reflect the impact that economic conditions have on pay programs.

Our compensation and benefit programs are regularly reviewed through an executive-sponsored governance process. 

Across the Company, we offer a wide variety of retirement and group benefits including medical, life and disability, 
which are designed to protect employees and their dependents against financial hardship due to illness or injury. Programs 
are designed to recognize the diversity of our work force and a range of well-being needs. We also have regional 
Employee Assistance Programs in many countries that provide 24/7 confidential counselling, support and access to 
resources for employees and their families. The OpenText Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP) is a global benefit 
program that allows all eligible employees to purchase OpenText shares at a 15% discount and provides the opportunity 
for employees to strengthen their ownership in the Company while enjoying the benefits of potential share price 
appreciation. 

Internal equity is a cornerstone of our goals. Our pay programs are carefully designed and governed, from hiring 
practices to consistency in progression rates for common roles. In designing variable pay for performance awards, we 
focus only on measurable outcomes rather than subjective measures. This ensures true equity in opportunity and awards 
tied to business results.

Employee Education, Training and Compliance

We know that employees join OpenText for continuous learning, experience and credentials to shape their careers. 
Our strategies focus on ensuring strong technical credentials, building capabilities, new skills sets and a high duty of care 
in ensuring ethical, secure and compliant practices. All employees have internal access to certification on OpenText and 
partner products.

Leaders and managers play a key role in the engagement of employees. From a focus on high quality interviewing 

and onboarding of new hires to the importance of career development planning, we foster a culture and value proposition 
of career development. Internal applications to job postings are highly encouraged. Our annual Career Week event focuses 
on career development planning and honing manager skills in developing teams. 

16

We offer an annual education reimbursement program to all employees globally. This program aligns with our 
commitment to support internal development, equal opportunity and mobility across all of our geographies, regardless of 
an employee’s role, function or location. We have designed the education reimbursement program to meet the needs of all 
personalized development goals through programs that range from technical to business skills. 

As part of our commitment to the highest standards of conduct, all employees and contractors participate in an 
annual formal Compliance and Data Security Training, including Code of Business Conduct and Ethics, Responsible 
Business Practices, Data Protection, Global Data Privacy Practices, Protecting Information and Preventing Sexual 
Harassment Training. These compliance programs ensure that we operate our business with integrity, following standard 
business ethics across the globe.

Corporate Mission

Overall, our people programs and actions are driven by our mission.

• Our Mission: We power and protect information
• Our Purpose: To elevate every person and every organization to gain the information advantage

Available Information

OpenText Corporation was incorporated on June 26, 1991. Our principal office is located at 275 Frank Tompa 

Drive, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 0A1, and our telephone number at that location is (519) 888-7111. Our internet 
address is www.opentext.com. Our website is included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K as an inactive textual 
reference only. Except for the documents specifically incorporated by reference into this Annual Report, information 
contained on our website is not incorporated by reference in this Annual Report on Form 10-K and should not be 
considered to be a part of this Annual Report. 

Access to our Annual Reports on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, Current Reports on Form 8-K and 

amendments to these reports filed with or furnished to the SEC may be obtained free of charge through the Investors 
section of our website at investors.opentext.com as soon as is reasonably practical after we electronically file or furnish 
these reports. In addition, our filings with the SEC may be accessed through the SEC's website at www.sec.gov and our 
filings with the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) may be accessed through the CSA's System for Electronic 
Document Analysis and Retrieval (SEDAR) at www.sedar.com. The SEC and SEDAR websites are included in this 
Annual Report on Form 10-K as inactive textual references only. Except for the documents specifically incorporated by 
reference into this Annual Report, information contained on the SEC or SEDAR websites is not incorporated by reference 
in this Annual Report on Form 10-K and should not be considered to be a part of this Annual Report. All statements made 
in any of our securities filings, including all forward-looking statements or information, are made as of the date of the 
document in which the statement is included, and we do not assume or undertake any obligation to update any of those 
statements or documents unless we are required to do so by applicable law.

17

Item 1A.  Risk Factors 

The following important factors could cause our actual business and financial results to differ materially from our current 

expectations, estimates, forecasts and projections. These forward-looking statements contained in this Annual Report on Form 
10-K or made elsewhere by management from time to time are subject to important risks, uncertainties and assumptions which 
are difficult to predict. The risks and uncertainties described below are not the only risks and uncertainties facing us. 
Additional risks not currently known to us or that we currently believe are immaterial may also impair our operating results, 
financial condition and liquidity. Our business is also subject to general risks and uncertainties that affect many other 
companies. The risks discussed below are not necessarily presented in order of importance or probability of occurrence. 

Risks Related to our Business and Industry

If we do not continue to develop technologically advanced products that successfully integrate with the software products 
and enhancements used by our customers, future revenues and our operating results may be negatively affected

Our success depends upon our ability to design, develop, test, market, license, sell and support new software products and 

services and enhancements of current products and services on a timely basis in response to both competitive threats and 
marketplace demands. The software industry is increasingly focused on cloud computing, mobility, social media and SaaS 
among other continually evolving shifts. In addition, our software products, services and enhancements must remain compatible 
with standard platforms and file formats. Often, we must integrate software licensed or acquired from third parties with our 
proprietary software to create new products or improve our existing products. If we are unable to achieve a successful 
integration with third party software, we may not be successful in developing and marketing our new software products, 
services and enhancements. If we are unable to successfully integrate third party software to develop new software products, 
services and enhancements to existing software products and services, or to complete the development of new software 
products and services which we license or acquire from third parties, our operating results will be materially adversely affected. 
In addition, if the integrated or new products or enhancements do not achieve acceptance by the marketplace, our operating 
results will be materially adversely affected. Moreover, if new industry standards emerge that we do not anticipate or adapt to, 
or, if alternatives to our services and solutions are developed by our competitors in times of rapid technological change, our 
software products and services could be rendered less competitive or obsolete, causing us to lose market share and, as a result, 
harm our business and operating results and our ability to compete in the marketplace.

Product development is a long, expensive and uncertain process, and we may terminate one or more of our development 
programs

We may determine that certain software product candidates or programs do not have sufficient potential to warrant the 

continued allocation of resources. Accordingly, we may elect to terminate one or more of our programs for such product 
candidates. If we terminate a software product in development in which we have invested significant resources, our prospects 
may suffer, as we will have expended resources on a project that does not provide a return on our investment, and may have 
missed the opportunity to have allocated those resources to potentially more productive uses, which may negatively impact our 
business, operating results and financial condition.

Our investment in our current research and development efforts may not provide a sufficient or timely return

The development of Information Management software products is a costly, complex and time-consuming process, and 

the investment in Information Management software product development often involves a long wait until a return is achieved 
on such an investment. We are making, and will continue to make, significant investments in software research and 
development and related product and service opportunities. Investments in new technology and processes are inherently 
speculative. Commercial success depends on many factors, including the degree of innovation of the software products and 
services developed through our research and development efforts, sufficient support from our strategic partners and effective 
distribution and marketing. Accelerated software product introductions and short product life cycles require high levels of 
expenditures for research and development. These expenditures may adversely affect our operating results if they are not offset 
by corresponding revenue increases. We believe that we must continue to dedicate a significant amount of resources to our 
research and development efforts in order to maintain our competitive position. However, significant revenues from new 
software product and service investments may not be achieved for a number of years, if at all. Moreover, new software products 
and services may not be profitable, and even if they are profitable, operating margins for new software products and services 
may not be as high as the margins we have experienced for our current or historical software products and services.

18

If our software products and services do not gain market acceptance, our operating results may be negatively affected

We intend to pursue our strategy of being a market leading consolidator for cloud-based Information Management 
solutions. We intend to grow the capabilities of our Information Management software offerings through our proprietary 
research and the development of new software product and service offerings, as well as through acquisitions. It is important to 
our success that we continue to enhance our software products and services in response to customer demand and to seek to set 
the standard for Information Management capabilities. The primary market for our software products and services is rapidly 
evolving, and the level of acceptance of products and services that have been released recently, or that are planned for future 
release to the marketplace, is not certain. If the markets for our software products and services fail to develop, develop more 
slowly than expected or become subject to increased competition, our business may suffer. As a result, we may be unable to: (i) 
successfully market our current products and services; (ii) develop new software products and services and enhancements to 
current software products and services; (iii) complete customer implementations on a timely basis; or (iv) complete software 
products and services currently under development. In addition, increased competition and our transition from perpetual license 
sales to subscription-based business model could put significant pricing pressures on our products, which could negatively 
impact our margins and profitability. If our software products and services are not accepted by our customers or by other 
businesses in the marketplace, our business, operating results and financial condition will be materially adversely affected.

Failure to protect our intellectual property could harm our ability to compete effectively

We are highly dependent on our ability to protect our proprietary technology. We rely on a combination of copyright, 
patent, trademark and trade secret laws, as well as non-disclosure agreements and other contractual provisions, to establish and 
maintain our proprietary rights. We intend to protect our intellectual property rights vigorously; however, there can be no 
assurance that these measures will, in all cases, be successful, and these measures can be costly and/or subject us to 
counterclaims, including challenges to the validity and enforceability of our intellectual property rights. Enforcement of our 
intellectual property rights may be difficult, particularly in some countries outside of North America in which we seek to 
market our software products and services. While Canadian and U.S. copyright laws, international conventions and 
international treaties may provide meaningful protection against unauthorized duplication of software, the laws of some foreign 
jurisdictions may not protect proprietary rights to the same extent as the laws of Canada or the United States. The absence of 
internationally harmonized intellectual property laws makes it more difficult to ensure consistent protection of our proprietary 
rights. Software piracy has been, and is expected to be, a persistent problem for the software industry, and piracy of our 
software products represents a loss of revenue to us. Where applicable, certain of our license arrangements have required us to 
make a limited confidential disclosure of portions of the source code for our software products, or to place such source code 
into escrow for the protection of another party. Despite the precautions we have taken, unauthorized third parties, including our 
competitors, may be able to copy certain portions of our software products or reverse engineer or obtain and use information 
that we regard as proprietary. Our competitive position may be adversely affected by our possible inability to effectively protect 
our intellectual property. In addition, certain of our products contain open-source software. Licensees of open-source software 
may be required to make public certain source code, to license proprietary software for free or to permit others to create 
derivative works of proprietary software. While we monitor and control the use of open source software in our products and in 
any third party software that is incorporated into our products, and try to ensure that no open source software is used in such a 
way that negatively affects our proprietary software, there can be no guarantee that such use does not occur inadvertently, 
which in turn, could harm our intellectual property position and have a material adverse effect on our business, results of 
operations and financial condition. Further, any undetected errors or defects in open source software could prevent the 
deployment or impair the functionality of our software products, delay the introduction of new solutions, or render our software 
more vulnerable to breaches or security attacks.

Other companies may claim that we infringe their intellectual property, which could materially increase costs and materially 
harm our ability to generate future revenues and profits

Claims of infringement (including misappropriation and/or other intellectual property violation) are common in the 
software industry and increasing as related legal protections, including copyrights and patents, are applied to software products. 
Although most of our technology is proprietary in nature, we do include certain third party and open-source software in our 
software products. In the case of third-party software, we believe this software is licensed from the entity holding the 
intellectual property rights. While we believe that we have secured proper licenses for all material third-party intellectual 
property that is integrated into our products in a manner that requires a license, third parties have and may continue to assert 
infringement claims against us in the future. In particular, our efforts to protect our intellectual property through patent 
litigation may result in counterclaims of patent infringement by counterparties in such suits. Any such assertion, regardless of 
merit, may result in litigation or require us to obtain a license for the intellectual property rights of third parties. Such licenses 
may not be available, or they may not be available on commercially reasonable terms. In addition, as we continue to develop 
software products and expand our portfolio using new technology and innovation, our exposure to threats of infringement may 
increase. Any infringement claims and related litigation could be time-consuming and disruptive to our ability to generate 

19

revenues or enter into new market opportunities and may result in significantly increased costs as a result of our defense against 
those claims or our attempt to license the intellectual property rights or rework our products to avoid infringement of third-party 
rights. Typically, our agreements with our partners and customers contain provisions that require us to indemnify them for 
damages sustained by them as a result of any infringement claims involving our products. Any of the foregoing infringement 
claims and related litigation could have a material adverse impact on our business and operating results as well as on our ability 
to generate future revenues and profits.

Our software products and services may contain defects that could harm our reputation, be costly to correct, delay revenues 
and expose us to litigation

Our software products and services are highly complex and sophisticated and, from time to time, may contain design 
defects, software errors, hardware failures or other computer system failures that are difficult to detect and correct. Errors, 
defects and/or other failures may be found in new software products or services or improvements to existing products or 
services after delivery to our customers. If these defects, errors and/or other failures are discovered, we may not be able to 
successfully correct them in a timely manner. In addition, despite the extensive tests we conduct on all our software products or 
services, we may not be able to fully simulate the environment in which our products or services will operate and, as a result, 
we may be unable to adequately detect the design defects or software or hardware errors that may become apparent only after 
the products are installed in an end-user's network, and only after users have transitioned to our services. The occurrence of 
errors, defects and/or other failures in our software products or services could result in the delay or the denial of market 
acceptance of our products and alleviating such errors, defects and/or other failures may require us to make significant 
expenditure of our resources. Customers often use our services and solutions for critical business processes and, as a result, any 
defect or disruption in our solutions, any data breaches or misappropriation of proprietary information or any error in execution, 
including human error or intentional third-party activity such as denial of service attacks or hacking, may cause customers to 
reconsider renewing their contracts with us. The errors in or failure of our software products and services could also result in us 
losing customer transaction documents and other customer files, causing significant customer dissatisfaction and possibly 
giving rise to claims for monetary damages. The harm to our reputation resulting from product and service errors, defects and/
or other failures may be material. Since we regularly provide a warranty with our software products, the financial impact of 
fulfilling warranty obligations may be significant in the future. Our agreements with our strategic partners and end-users 
typically contain provisions designed to limit our exposure to claims. These agreements regularly contain terms such as the 
exclusion of all implied warranties and the limitation of the availability of consequential or incidental damages. However, such 
provisions may not effectively protect us against claims and the attendant liabilities and costs associated with such claims. Any 
claims for actual or alleged losses to our customers’ businesses may require us to spend significant time and money in litigation 
or arbitration or to pay significant sums in settlements or damages. Defending a lawsuit, regardless of merit, can be costly and 
would divert management’s attention and resources. Although we maintain errors and omissions insurance coverage and 
comprehensive liability insurance coverage, such coverage may not be adequate to cover all such claims. Accordingly, any such 
claim could negatively affect our business, operating results or financial condition.

Our software products rely on the stability of infrastructure software that, if not stable, could negatively impact the 
effectiveness of our products, resulting in harm to our reputation and business

Our development of Internet and intranet applications depends on the stability, functionality and scalability of the 
infrastructure software of the underlying intranet, such as the infrastructure software produced by Hewlett-Packard, Oracle, 
Microsoft and others. If weaknesses in such infrastructure software exist, we may not be able to correct or compensate for such 
weaknesses. If we are unable to address weaknesses resulting from problems in the infrastructure software such that our 
software products do not meet customer needs or expectations, our reputation, and consequently, our business, may be 
significantly harmed.

Risks associated with the evolving use of the Internet, including changing standards, competition and regulation and 
associated compliance efforts, may adversely impact our business

The use of the Internet as a vehicle for electronic data interchange (EDI) and related services currently raises numerous 

issues, including those relating to reliability, data security, data integrity and rapidly evolving standards. New competitors, 
including media, software vendors and telecommunications companies, offer products and services that utilize the Internet in 
competition with our products and services, which may be less expensive or process transactions and data faster and more 
efficiently. Internet-based commerce is subject to increasing regulation by Canadian, U.S. federal and state and foreign 
governments, including in the areas of data privacy and breaches and taxation. Laws and regulations relating to the solicitation, 
collection, processing or use of personal or consumer information could affect our customers’ ability to use and share data, 
potentially reducing demand for Internet-based solutions and restricting our ability to store, process, analyze and share data 
through the Internet. Although we believe that the Internet will continue to provide opportunities to expand the use of our 
products and services, we cannot guarantee that our efforts to capitalize on these opportunities will be successful or that 

20

increased usage of the Internet for business integration products and services, increased competition or heightened regulation 
will not adversely affect our business, results of operations and financial condition.

Business disruptions, including those arising from disasters or other catastrophic events, may adversely affect our 
operations

Our business and operations are highly automated, and a disruption or failure of our systems may delay our ability to 
complete sales and to provide services. Business disruptions can be caused by several factors, including climate change, natural 
disasters, terrorist attacks, power loss, telecommunications and system failures, computer viruses, physical attacks and cyber-
attacks. A major disaster or other catastrophic event that results in the destruction or disruption of any of our critical business or 
information technology systems, including our cloud services, could severely affect our ability to conduct normal business 
operations. We operate data centers in various locations around the world and although we have redundancy capability built 
into our disaster recovery plan, we cannot ensure that our systems and data centers will remain fully operational during and 
immediately after a disaster or disruption. We also rely on third parties that provide critical services in our operations and 
despite our diligence around their disaster recovery processes, we cannot provide assurances as to whether these third-party 
service providers can maintain operations during a disaster or disruption. Furthermore, global climate change may aggravate 
natural disasters and increase severe weather events that affect our business operations, thereby compelling us to build 
additional resiliency in order to mitigate their impact. Any business disruption could negatively affect our business, operating 
results or financial condition.

Unauthorized disclosures, cyber-attacks and breaches of data security may adversely affect our operations

Most of the jurisdictions in which we operate have laws and regulations relating to data privacy, security and protection of 

information. We have certain measures to protect our information systems against unauthorized access and disclosure of 
personal information and of our confidential information and confidential information belonging to our customers. We have 
policies and procedures in place dealing with data security and records retention. However, there is no assurance that the 
security measures we have put in place will be effective in every case. Breaches in security could result in a negative impact for 
us and for our customers, adversely affecting our and our customers' businesses, assets, revenues, brands and reputations and 
resulting in penalties, fines, litigation, regulatory proceedings, regulatory investigations, increase insurance premiums, 
remediation efforts, indemnification expenditures, lost revenues and/or other potential liabilities, in each case depending on the 
nature of the information disclosed. Security breaches could also affect our relations with our customers, damage our reputation 
and harm our ability to keep existing customers and to attract new customers. Some jurisdictions, including all U.S. states and 
the European Union (EU), have enacted laws requiring companies to notify individuals of data security breaches involving 
certain types of personal data, and in some cases our agreements with certain customers require us to notify them in the event of 
a data security incident. Such mandatory disclosures could lead to negative publicity and may cause our current and prospective 
customers to lose confidence in the effectiveness of our data security measures. These circumstances could also result in 
adverse impact on the market price of our Common Shares. These risks to our business may increase as we expand the number 
of web-based and cloud-based products and services we offer and as we increase the number of countries in which we operate.

In particular, in connection with COVID-19, there has been a spike in cybers-attacks as shelter in place orders and work 

from home measures have led businesses to increase reliance on virtual environments and communications systems, which have 
been subjected to increasing third-party vulnerabilities and security risks. Malicious hackers may attempt to gain access to our 
network or data centers; steal proprietary information related to our business, products, employees and customers; or interrupt 
our systems and services or those of our customers or others. Although we monitor our networks and continue to enhance our 
security protections, hackers are increasingly more sophisticated and aggressive, and our efforts may be inadequate to prevent 
all incidents of data breach or theft. Furthermore, it is possible that the risk of cyber-attacks and other data security breaches or 
thefts to us or our customers may increase due to global geo-political uncertainty.

In addition, if data security is compromised, this could materially and adversely affect our operating results given that we 

have customers that use our systems to store and exchange large volumes of proprietary and confidential information and the 
security and reliability of our services are of significant importance to these customers. We have experienced attempts by third 
parties to identify and exploit product and services vulnerabilities, penetrate or bypass our security measures and gain 
unauthorized access to our or our customers’ or service providers’ cloud offerings and other products and systems. If our 
products or systems, or the products or systems of third-party service providers on whom we rely, are attacked or accessed by 
unauthorized parties, it could lead to major disruption or denial of service and access to or loss, modification or theft of our and 
our customers' data, which may require us to spend material resources on correcting the breach and indemnifying the relevant 
parties and/or on litigation, regulatory investigations, regulatory proceedings, increased insurance premiums, lost revenues, 
penalties, fines and/or other potential liabilities. Our efforts to protect against cyber-attacks and data breaches, including 
increased risks associated with work from home measures, may not be sufficient to prevent such incidents, which could have 
material adverse effects on our reputation, business, operating results and financial condition.

21

Our success depends on our relationships with strategic partners, distributors and third-party service providers and any 
reduction in the sales efforts by distributors, cooperative efforts from our partners or service from third party providers 
could materially impact our revenues

We rely on close cooperation with strategic partners for sales and software product development as well as for the 
optimization of opportunities that arise in our competitive environment. A portion of our license revenues is derived from the 
licensing of our software products through third parties. Also, a portion of our service revenues may be impacted by the level of 
service provided by third party service providers relating to Internet, telecommunications and power services. Our success will 
depend, in part, upon our ability to maintain access to and grow existing channels of distribution and to gain access to new 
channels if and when they develop. We may not be able to retain a sufficient number of our existing distributors or develop a 
sufficient number of future distributors. Distributors may also give higher priority to the licensing or sale of software products 
and services other than ours (which could include competitors' products and services) or may not devote sufficient resources to 
marketing our software products and services. The performance of third party distributors and third party service providers is 
largely outside of our control, and we are unable to predict the extent to which these distributors and service providers will be 
successful in either marketing and licensing or selling our software products and services or providing adequate Internet, 
telecommunication and power services so that disruptions and outages are not experienced by our customers. A reduction in 
strategic partner cooperation or sales efforts, a decline in the number of distributors, a decision by our distributors to 
discontinue the licensing of our software products or a decline or disruption in third party services could cause users and the 
general public to perceive our software products and services as inferior and could materially reduce our revenues. In addition, 
our financial results could be materially adversely affected if the financial condition of our distributors or third-party service 
providers were to weaken. Some of our distributors and third-party service providers may have insufficient financial resources 
and may not be able to withstand changes in business conditions, including economic weakness, industry consolidation and 
market trends.

The loss of licenses to resell or use third-party software or the lack of support or enhancement of such software could 
adversely affect our business

We currently depend upon a limited number of third-party software products. If such software products were not 

available, we might experience delays or increased costs in the development of our own software products. For a limited 
number of our product modules, we rely on software products that we license from third parties, including software that is 
integrated with internally developed software and which is used in our products to perform key functions. These third-party 
software licenses may not continue to be available to us on commercially reasonable terms and the related software may not 
continue to be appropriately supported, maintained or enhanced by the licensors. The loss by us of the license to use, or the 
inability by licensors to support, maintain or enhance any such software, could result in increased costs, lost revenues or delays 
until equivalent software is internally developed or licensed from another third party and integrated with our software. Such 
increased costs, lost revenues or delays could adversely affect our business. For example, with the recent acquisition of Zix, we 
extended our partnership with Microsoft by becoming one of their nine authorized Cloud Solutions Providers in North America. 
If our key partners were to terminate our relationship, make an adverse change in their reseller program, change their product 
offerings or experience a major cyber-attack or similar event, it could reduce our revenues and adversely affect our business.

Current and future competitors could have a significant impact on our ability to generate future revenues and profits

The markets for our software products and services are intensely competitive and are subject to rapid technological 

change and other pressures created by changes in our industry. The convergence of many technologies has resulted in 
unforeseen competitors arising from companies that were traditionally not viewed as threats to our market position. We expect 
competition to increase and intensify in the future as the pace of technological change and adaptation quickens and as additional 
companies enter our markets, including those competitors who offer solutions similar to ours, but offer it through a different 
form of delivery. Numerous releases of competitive products have occurred in recent history and are expected to continue in the 
future. We may not be able to compete effectively with current competitors and potential entrants into our marketplace. We 
could lose market share if our current or prospective competitors: (i) develop technologies that are perceived to be substantially 
equivalent or superior to our technologies; (ii) introduce new competitive products or services; (iii) add new functionality to 
existing products and services; (iv) acquire competitive products and services; (v) reduce prices; or (vi) form strategic alliances 
or cooperative relationships with other companies. If other businesses were to engage in aggressive pricing policies with respect 
to competing products, or if the dynamics in our marketplace resulted in increasing bargaining power by the consumers of our 
software products and services, we would need to lower the prices we charge for the products and services we offer. This could 
result in lower revenues or reduced margins, either of which may materially adversely affect our business and operating results. 
Moreover, our competitors may affect our business by entering into exclusive arrangements with our existing or potential 
customers, distributors or third-party service providers. Additionally, if prospective consumers choose methods of Information 
Management delivery different from that which we offer, our business and operating results could also be materially adversely 
affected.

22

The length of our sales cycle can fluctuate significantly which could result in significant fluctuations in revenues being 
recognized from quarter to quarter

The decision by a customer to license our software products or purchase our services often involves a comprehensive 

implementation process across the customer's network or networks. As a result, the licensing and implementation of our 
software products and any related services may entail a significant commitment of resources by prospective customers, 
accompanied by the attendant risks and delays frequently associated with significant technology implementation projects. Given 
the significant investment and commitment of resources required by an organization to implement our software products, our 
sales cycle may be longer compared to other companies within our own industry, as well as companies in other industries. Also, 
because of changes in customer spending habits, it may be difficult for us to budget, forecast and allocate our resources 
properly. In weak economic environments, it is not uncommon to see reduced information technology spending. It may take 
several months, or even several quarters, for marketing opportunities to materialize. If a customer's decision to license our 
software or purchase our services is delayed or if the implementation of these software products takes longer than originally 
anticipated, the date on which we may recognize revenues from these licenses or sales would be delayed. Such delays and 
fluctuations could cause our revenues to be lower than expected in a particular period and we may not be able to adjust our 
costs quickly enough to offset such lower revenues, potentially negatively impacting our business, operating results and 
financial condition.

Our existing customers might cancel contracts with us, fail to renew contracts on their renewal dates and/or fail to purchase 
additional services and products, and we may be unable to attract new customers, which could materially adversely affect 
our operating results

We depend on our installed customer base for a significant portion of our revenues. We have significant contracts with 

our license customers for ongoing support and maintenance, as well as significant service contracts that provide recurring 
services revenues to us. In addition, our installed customer base has historically generated additional new license and services 
revenues for us. Service contracts are generally renewable at a customer’s option and/or subject to cancellation rights, and there 
are generally no mandatory payment obligations or obligations to license additional software or subscribe for additional 
services.

If our customers cancel or fail to renew their service contracts or fail to purchase additional services or products, then our 

revenues could decrease, and our operating results could be materially adversely affected. Factors influencing such contract 
terminations and failure to purchase additional services or products could include changes in the financial circumstances of our 
customers, including as a result of any potential recession, dissatisfaction with our products or services, our retirement or lack 
of support for our legacy products and services, our customers selecting or building alternate technologies to replace our 
products or services, the cost of our products and services as compared to the cost of products and services offered by our 
competitors, acceptance of future price increases by us, including due to inflationary pressures, our ability to attract, hire and 
maintain qualified personnel to meet customer needs, consolidating activities in the market, changes in our customers’ business 
or in regulation impacting our customers’ business that may no longer necessitate the use of our products or services, general 
economic or market conditions, or other reasons. Further, our customers could delay or terminate implementations or use of our 
services and products or be reluctant to migrate to new products. Such customers will not generate the revenues we may have 
expected within the anticipated timelines, or at all, and may be less likely to invest in additional services or products from us in 
the future. We may not be able to adjust our expense levels quickly enough to account for any such revenue losses.

Consolidation in the industry, particularly by large, well-capitalized companies, could place pressure on our operating 
margins which could, in turn, have a material adverse effect on our business

Acquisitions by large, well-capitalized technology companies have changed the marketplace for our software products and 
services by replacing competitors that are comparable in size to our Company with companies that have more resources at their 
disposal to compete with us in the marketplace. In addition, other large corporations with considerable financial resources either 
have products and/or services that compete with our software products and services or have the ability to encroach on our 
competitive position within our marketplace. These companies have considerable financial resources, channel influence and 
broad geographic reach; thus, they can engage in competition with our software products and services on the basis of price, 
marketing, services or support. They also have the ability to introduce items that compete with our maturing software products 
and services. The threat posed by larger competitors and their ability to use their better economies of scale to sell competing 
products and/or services at a lower cost may materially reduce the profit margins we earn on the software products and services 
we provide to the marketplace. Any material reduction in our profit margin may have a material adverse effect on the operations 
or finances of our business, which could hinder our ability to raise capital in the public markets at opportune times for strategic 
acquisitions or for general operational purposes, which may then, in turn, prevent effective strategic growth or improved 
economies of scale or put us at a disadvantage to our better capitalized competitors.

23

We may be unable to maintain or expand our base of SMB and consumer customers, which could adversely affect our 
anticipated future growth and operating results

With the acquisitions of Carbonite and Zix, we have expanded our presence in the SMB market as well as the consumer 
market. Expanding in this market may require substantial resources and increased marketing efforts, different to what we are 
accustomed to historically. If we are unable to market and sell our solutions to the SMB market and consumers with 
competitive pricing and in a cost-effective manner, it may harm our ability to grow our revenues and adversely affect our results 
of operations. In addition, SMBs frequently have limited budgets and are more likely to be significantly affected by economic 
downturns than larger, more established companies. As such, SMBs may choose to spend funds on items other than our 
solutions, particularly during difficult economic times, which may hurt our projected revenues, business financial condition and 
results of operations.

Our sales to government clients expose us to business volatility and risks, including government budgeting cycles and 
appropriations, early termination, audits, investigations, sanctions and penalties

We derive revenues from contracts with U.S. and Canadian federal, state, provincial and local governments and other 
foreign governments and their respective agencies, which may terminate most of these contracts at any time, without cause. 
There is increased pressure on governments and their agencies, both domestically and internationally, to reduce spending. 
Further, our U.S. federal government contracts are subject to the approval of appropriations made by the U.S. Congress to fund 
the expenditures under these contracts. Similarly, our contracts with U.S. state and local governments, Canadian federal, 
provincial and local governments and other foreign governments and their agencies are generally subject to government funding 
authorizations. Additionally, government contracts are generally subject to audits and investigations that could result in various 
civil and criminal penalties and administrative sanctions, including termination of contracts, refund of a portion of fees 
received, forfeiture of profits, suspension of payments, fines and suspensions or debarment from future government business.

Geopolitical instability, political unrest, war and other global conflicts, including the Russia-Ukraine conflict, has affected 
and may continue to affect our business

Geopolitical instability, political unrest, war and other global conflicts may result in adverse effects on macroeconomic 

conditions, including volatility in financial markets, adverse changes in trade policies, inflation, higher interest rates, direct and 
indirect supply chain disruptions, increased cybersecurity threats and fluctuations in foreign currency. These events may also 
impact our decision or limit our ability to conduct business in certain areas or with certain entities. For example, in response to 
the Russia-Ukraine conflict, we have ceased all direct business in Russia and Belarus and with known Russian-owned 
companies. Sanctions and export controls have also been imposed by the United States, Canada and other countries in 
connection with Russia's military actions in Ukraine, including restrictions on selling or exporting goods, services or technology 
to certain regions, and travel bans and asset freezes impacting political, military, business and financial organizations and 
individuals in or connected with Russia. To support certain of our cloud customers headquartered in the United States or allied 
countries that rely on our network to manage their global business (including their business in Russia), we have allowed 
nonetheless these customers to continue to use our services to the extent that it can be done in strict compliance with all 
applicable sanctions and export controls. However, as the situation develops and the regulatory environment continues to 
evolve, we may adjust our business practices as required by applicable rules and regulations. Our compliance with sanctions 
and export controls could impact the fulfillment of certain contracts with customers and partners doing business in these 
affected areas and future revenue streams from impacted parties and certain countries. While we do not expect our decision to 
cease all direct business in Russia and Belarus and with known Russian-owned companies to have a material adverse effect on 
our overall business, results of operations or financial condition, it is not possible to predict the broader consequences of this 
conflict or other conflicts, which could include sanctions, embargoes, regional instability, changes to regional trade ecosystems, 
geopolitical shifts and adverse effects on the global economy, on our business and operations as well as those of our customers, 
partners and third party service providers.

The COVID-19 pandemic has and may continue to further negatively affect our business, operations and financial 
performance

In March 2020, COVID-19 was characterized as a pandemic by the World Health Organization. Since December 2019, 

COVID-19 has spread globally, with a high concentration of cases in certain regions in which we sell our products and services 
and conduct our business operations, including the United States, Canada, Europe and Asia.

The spread of COVID-19 and resulting tight government controls and travel bans implemented around the world, such as 
declarations of states of emergency, business closures, manufacturing restrictions and a prolonged period of travel, commercial 
and/or other similar restrictions and limitations, have caused disruption to global supply chains and economic activity. The 
spread of COVID-19 has had and is continuing to have an adverse impact on the global economy, the severity and duration of 
which is difficult to predict and has adversely affected and may continue to further adversely affect our financial performance, 

24

as well as our ability to successfully execute our business strategies and initiatives, including by negatively impacting the 
demand for our products and services, restricting our sales operations and marketing efforts, disrupting the supply chain of 
hardware needed to operate our SaaS offerings or run our business and disrupting our ability to conduct product development 
and other important business activities. While the restrictions and limitations noted above have and may continue to be relaxed 
or rolled back if COVID-19 abates and vaccination rates increase, COVID-19 cases (including the emergence and spread of 
more transmissible variants) continue to surge in certain parts of the world, including the U.S., and such restrictions and 
limitations may be reinstated as the pandemic continues to evolve, including as a result of the impact of variants, and in 
response to actual or potential resurgences. The scope and timing of any such reinstatement are difficult to predict and may 
materially affect our operations in the future. We are continuing to focus on the safety and protection of our employees and our 
customers by conducting business with modifications to employee travel, employee work locations and virtualization or 
cancellation of certain sales and marketing events, among other modifications. To mitigate anticipated negative financial and 
operational impacts of COVID-19, we made a strategic decision to move towards a significant work from home model and we 
implemented certain restructuring activities to streamline our operations and significantly reduce our real estate footprint around 
the world.

In addition, as many local governments and officials have started lifting pandemic restrictions in accordance with the 

guidance of public health experts, in July 2022 we implemented a Flex-Office program in which a majority of our employees 
work a portion of their time in the office and a portion remotely. The transition to a flexible workforce may subject us to further 
operational challenges and risks, which may adversely affect our business, operations or financial performance. For more 
information regarding the impact of the Flex-Office program, see “We have implemented a Flex-Office program, which will 
subject us to certain operational challenges and risks.”

We will continue to actively monitor the situation and may take further actions that alter our business operations as may 
be required by governments, or that we determine are in the best interest of our employees, customers, partners, suppliers and 
shareholders. The extent of the adverse impact of the pandemic on the global economy and markets will depend, in part, on the 
length and severity of the measures taken to limit the spread of the virus, including the distribution and effectiveness of 
vaccines and treatments, and, in part, on the size, effectiveness and duration of the compensating measures taken by 
governments and monetary authorities. To the extent the COVID-19 pandemic continues to adversely affect the global 
economy, and/or adversely affects our business, operations or financial performance, it may also have the effect of increasing 
the likelihood and/or magnitude of other risks described herein, including those risks related to market, credit, geopolitical and 
business operations and cybersecurity, or risks described in our other filings with the SEC and the applicable Canadian 
securities regulatory authorities. In addition, the COVID-19 pandemic may also affect our business, operations or financial 
performance in a manner that is not presently known to us. We are closely monitoring the potential adverse effects and impact 
on our operations, businesses and financial performance, including liquidity and capital usage, though the extent of the impact 
is difficult to fully predict at this time due to the rapid and continuing evolution of this uncertain situation.

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic continues to create significant uncertainty in the global economy and for our 
business, operations and financial performance

The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly impacted health and economic conditions throughout the United States and 

globally. The global spread of COVID-19 has been, and continues to be, complex and rapidly evolving, with governments, 
public institutions and other organizations imposing or recommending, and businesses and individuals implementing, 
restrictions on various activities or other actions to combat its spread, such as travel restrictions and bans, social distancing, 
quarantine or shelter-in-place directives, limitations on the size of gatherings and closures of non-essential businesses. These 
restrictions have disrupted and may continue to disrupt economic activity, resulting in reduced commercial and consumer 
confidence and spending, increased unemployment, closure or restricted operating conditions for businesses, inflation, volatility 
in the global economy, instability in the credit and financial markets, labour shortages, regulatory recommendations to provide 
relief for impacted consumers and disruption in supply chains.

The extent to which the COVID-19 pandemic impacts our business, operations and financial performance is highly 
uncertain and will depend on numerous evolving factors that we may not be able to accurately predict or assess, including, but 
not limited to, the severity, extent and duration of the pandemic or any resurgences in the future, any economic recession, the 
distribution and effectiveness of vaccines and treatments, and the continued governmental, business and individual actions 
taken in response to the pandemic. Impacts related to the COVID-19 pandemic are expected to continue to pose risks to our 
business for the foreseeable future, may heighten many of the risks and uncertainties identified herein, and could have a 
material adverse impact on our business, operations or financial performance in a manner that is difficult to predict.

25

The restructuring of our operations, including steps taken to mitigate the anticipated negative impact of the COVID-19 
pandemic, may be ineffective and may adversely affect our business and our finances, and we may incur additional 
restructuring charges in connection with such actions 

We often undertake initiatives to restructure or streamline our operations, particularly during the period post-acquisition, 
as well as in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and as part of our return to office planning. We may incur costs associated 
with implementing a restructuring initiative beyond the amount contemplated when we first developed the initiative, and these 
increased costs may be substantial. Additionally, such costs would adversely impact our results of operations for the periods in 
which those adjustments are made. We will continue to evaluate our operations and may propose future restructuring actions as 
a result of changes in the marketplace, including the exit from less profitable operations, the decision to terminate products or 
services that are not valued by our customers or adjusting our workforce. Any failure to successfully execute these initiatives on 
a timely basis may have a material adverse effect on our business, operating results and financial condition.

In particular, in order to mitigate anticipated negative financial and operational impacts of COVID-19, we implemented 
certain cost cutting measures. This included our COVID-19 Restructuring Plan, which involved a move towards a significant 
work from home model and a reduction in our real estate footprint around the world. Further, as part of our return to office 
planning, during the third quarter of Fiscal 2022, we made a strategic decision to implement restructuring activities to 
streamline our operations and further reduce our real estate footprint around the world (Fiscal 2022 Restructuring Plan). Such 
steps to reduce costs, and further changes we may make in the future, may negatively impact our business, operations and 
financial performance in a manner that is difficult to predict. 

For more information on our COVID-19 Restructuring Plan and our Fiscal 2022 Restructuring Plan, see Note 18 “Special 

Charges (Recoveries)” to our Consolidated Financial Statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

We have implemented a Flex-Office program, which will subject us to certain operational challenges and risks

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, our employees shifted from in-person to remote work. As many local 

governments and officials have started lifting pandemic restrictions in accordance with the guidance of public health experts, in 
July 2022 we implemented a Flex-Office program in which a majority of our employees work a portion of their time in the 
office and a portion remotely. As a result, we expect to continue to be subject to the challenges and risks of having a remote 
work environment, as well as new operational challenges and risks from having a flexible workforce. 

For example, employing a remote work environment could affect employee productivity, including due to a lower level of 
employee oversight, distractions caused by the pandemic and its impact on daily life, health conditions or illnesses, disruptions 
due to caregiving or childcare obligations or slower or unreliable Internet access. OpenText systems, client, vendor and/or 
borrower data may be subject to additional risks presented by increased cyber-attacks and phishing activities targeting 
employees, vendors, third party service providers and counterparties in transactions, the possibility of attacks on OpenText 
systems or systems of employees working remotely as well as by decreased physical supervision. In addition, we may rely, in 
part, on third-party service providers to assist us in managing monitoring and otherwise carrying out aspects of our business and 
operations, and COVID-19 may affect their ability to devote sufficient time and resources to perform work for the Company. 
Such events may result in a period of business disruption or reduced operations, which could materially affect our business, 
financial condition and results of operations. While our controls prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic were not 
specifically designed to operate in a home environment, we believe that established internal controls over financial reporting 
continue to address all identified risk areas. 

The transition to a flexible workforce may also subject us to other operational challenges and risks. For example, our shift 

to a Flex-Office program may adversely affect our ability to recruit and retain personnel who prefer a fully remote or fully in-
person work environment. Operating our business with both remote and in-person workers, or workers who work on flexible 
schedules, could have a negative impact on our corporate culture, decrease the ability of our employees to collaborate and 
communicate effectively, decrease innovation and productivity, or negatively affect employee morale. In addition, we have 
incurred costs related to our return to office planning and the transition to a flexible workforce, including due to reducing our 
real estate footprint around the world. If we are unable to effectively transition to a flexible workforce, including due to 
potential future surges of COVID-19 causing reinstatements of governmental restrictions and/or other similar limitations, 
manage the cybersecurity and other risks of remote work, and maintain our corporate culture and employee morale, our 
financial condition and operating results may be adversely impacted.

For more information regarding the impact of COVID-19 on our cybersecurity, see “Business disruptions, including those 

arising from disasters or other catastrophic events, may adversely affect our operations.”

26

We must continue to manage our internal resources during periods of company growth, or our operating results could be 
adversely affected

The Information Management market in which we compete continues to evolve at a rapid pace. However, there is 

significant uncertainty on growth from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Moreover, we have grown significantly through 
acquisitions in the past and expect to continue to review acquisition opportunities as a means of increasing the size and scope of 
our business. Our growth, coupled with the rapid evolution of our markets, has placed, and will continue to place, significant 
strains on our administrative and operational resources and increased demands on our internal systems, procedures and controls. 
Our administrative infrastructure, systems, procedures and controls may not adequately support our operations. In addition, our 
management may not be able to achieve the rapid, effective execution of the product and business initiatives necessary to 
successfully implement our operational and competitive strategy. If we are unable to manage growth effectively, our operating 
results will likely suffer, which may, in turn, adversely affect our business.

If we lose the services of our executive officers or other key employees or if we are not able to attract or retain top 
employees, our business could be significantly harmed

Our performance is substantially dependent on the performance of our executive officers and key employees and there is a 
risk that we could lose their services, including due to the illness of executive officers and key employees from COVID-19. We 
do not maintain “key person” life insurance policies on any of our employees. Our success is also highly dependent on our 
continuing ability to identify, hire, train, retain and motivate highly qualified management, technical, sales and marketing 
personnel. In particular, the recruitment and retention of top research developers and experienced salespeople, particularly those 
with specialized knowledge, remains critical to our success, including providing consistent and uninterrupted service to our 
customers. Competition for such people is intense, substantial and continuous, and we may not be able to attract, integrate or 
retain highly qualified technical, sales or managerial personnel in the future. In our effort to attract and retain critical personnel, 
and in responding to inflationary wage pressure, we may experience increased compensation costs that are not offset by either 
improved productivity or higher prices for our software products or services. In addition, the loss of the services of any of our 
executive officers or other key employees could significantly harm our business, operating results and financial condition.

Our compensation structure may hinder our efforts to attract and retain vital employees

A portion of our total compensation program for our executive officers and key personnel includes the award of options to 

buy our Common Shares. If the market price of our Common Shares performs poorly, such performance may adversely affect 
our ability to retain or attract critical personnel. In addition, any changes made to our stock option policies, or to any other of 
our compensation practices, which are made necessary by governmental regulations or competitive pressures, could adversely 
affect our ability to retain and motivate existing personnel and recruit new personnel. For example, any limit to total 
compensation that may be prescribed by the government or applicable regulatory authorities or any significant increases in 
personal income tax levels levied in countries where we have a significant operational presence may hurt our ability to attract or 
retain our executive officers or other employees whose efforts are vital to our success. Additionally, payments under our long-
term incentive plans (the details of which are described in Item 11 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K) are dependent to a 
significant extent upon the future performance of our Company both in absolute terms and in comparison to similarly situated 
companies. Any failure to achieve the targets set under our long-term incentive plan could significantly reduce or eliminate 
payments made under this plan, which may, in turn, materially and adversely affect our ability to retain the key personnel paid 
under this plan.

Increased attention from shareholders, customers and other key relationships regarding our ESG practices could impact our 
business activities, financial performance and reputation

Shareholders, customers and other key relationships are placing a greater emphasis on ESG factors when evaluating 

companies for business and investment opportunities. We actively manage a broad range of ESG matters and annually publish a 
Corporate Citizenship Report regarding our policies and practices on a variety of ESG matters, including our: governance 
framework; community involvement; ED&I initiatives; employee health and safety; targets regarding greenhouse gas 
emissions, waste diversion and energy consumption; and practices relating to data privacy and information security. Our 
approach to and disclosure of ESG matters may result in increased attention from our shareholders, customers, employees, 
partners and suppliers, and such key relationships may not be satisfied with our approach to ESG as compared to their 
expectations and standards, which continue to evolve. Additionally, third-party organizations evaluate our approach to ESG, 
and an unfavorable rating from such organizations could lead to negative investor sentiment and reduced demand for our 
securities. See “Changes in the market price of our Common Shares and credit ratings of our outstanding debt securities could 
lead to losses for shareholders and debt holders.” 

The Company has disclosed the OpenText Zero-In Initiative, where we have committed to: (1) science-based GHG 

emissions target of 50% reduction by 2030, and net zero GHG emissions by 2040; (2) zero waste from operations by 2030; and 

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(3) by 2030, a majority ethnically diverse staff, with 50/50 representation in key roles and 40% women in leadership positions 
at all management levels. Achieving our targets and ongoing compliance with evolving laws and regulatory requirements may 
cause us to reconfigure facilities and operations or adjust our existing processes. This could result in significant unexpected 
expenses, changes in our relationships with certain strategic partners, distributors and third-party service providers, loss of 
revenue and business disruption. We may not meet our goals which would have adverse effects on our reputation, business, 
operating results and financial condition.

Further, we may incur additional costs and require additional resources to be able to collect reliable emissions and 

waste data (in part, due to unavailable third-party data or inconsistent industry standards on the measurement of certain data), 
measure our performance against our targets and adjust our disclosure in line with market expectations. We may also incur 
additional compliance costs under evolving ESG-related regulations across the world, including in the EU, the U.S. and 
Canada. If we fail to meet our ESG targets or other ESG criteria set by third parties on a timely basis, or at all, or fail to respond 
to any perceived ESG concerns, our business activities, financial performance and reputation may be adversely affected. 

Risks Related to Acquisitions

Acquisitions, investments, joint ventures and other business initiatives may negatively affect our operating results

The growth of our Company through the successful acquisition and integration of complementary businesses is a critical 

component of our corporate strategy. As a result of the continually evolving marketplace in which we operate, we regularly 
evaluate acquisition opportunities and at any time may be in various stages of discussions with respect to such opportunities. 
We plan to continue to pursue acquisitions that complement our existing business, represent a strong strategic fit and are 
consistent with our overall growth strategy and disciplined financial management. We may also target future acquisitions to 
expand or add functionality and capabilities to our existing portfolio of solutions, as well as to add new solutions to our 
portfolio. We may also consider, from time to time, opportunities to engage in joint ventures or other business collaborations 
with third parties to address particular market segments. These activities create risks such as: (i) the need to integrate and 
manage the businesses and products acquired with our own business and products; (ii) additional demands on our resources, 
systems, procedures and controls; (iii) disruption of our ongoing business; and (iv) diversion of management's attention from 
other business concerns. Moreover, these transactions could involve: (i) substantial investment of funds or financings by 
issuance of debt or equity or equity-related securities; (ii) substantial investment with respect to technology transfers and 
operational integration; and (iii) the acquisition or disposition of product lines or businesses. Also, such activities could result in 
charges and expenses and have the potential to either dilute the interests of existing shareholders or result in the issuance or 
assumption of debt, which could have a negative impact on the credit ratings of our outstanding debt securities or the market 
price of our Common Shares. Such acquisitions, investments, joint ventures or other business collaborations may involve 
significant commitments of financial and other resources of our Company. Any such activity may not be successful in 
generating revenues, income or other returns to us, and the resources committed to such activities will not be available to us for 
other purposes. In addition, while we conduct due diligence prior to consummating an acquisition, joint venture or business 
collaboration, such diligence may not identify all material issues associated with such activities. We may also experience 
unanticipated difficulties identifying suitable or attractive acquisition candidates that are available for purchase at reasonable 
prices. Even if we are able to identify such candidates, we may be unable to consummate an acquisition on suitable terms or in 
the face of competition from other bidders. Moreover, if we are unable to access capital markets on acceptable terms or at all, 
we may not be able to consummate acquisitions, or may have to do so on the basis of a less than optimal capital structure. Our 
inability: (i) to take advantage of growth opportunities for our business or for our products and services, or (ii) to address risks 
associated with acquisitions or investments in businesses, may negatively affect our operating results and financial condition. 
Additionally, any impairment of goodwill or other intangible assets acquired in an acquisition or in an investment, or charges 
associated with any acquisition or investment activity, may materially adversely impact our results of operations and financial 
condition which, in turn, may have a material adverse effect on the market price of our Common Shares or credit ratings of our 
outstanding debt securities.

We may be unable to successfully integrate acquired businesses or do so within the intended timeframes, which could have 
an adverse effect on our financial condition, results of operations and business prospects

Our ability to realize the anticipated benefits of acquired businesses will depend, in part, on our ability to successfully and 
efficiently integrate acquired businesses and operations with our own. The integration of acquired businesses with our existing 
business will be complex, costly and time-consuming, and may result in additional demands on our resources, systems, 
procedures and controls, disruption of our ongoing business and diversion of management’s attention from other business 
concerns. Although we cannot be certain of the degree and scope of operational and integration problems that may arise, the 
difficulties and risks associated with the integration of acquired businesses may include, among others:

•

the increased scope and complexity of our operations;

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•
•

•
•
•

•

coordinating geographically separate organizations, operations, relationships and facilities;
integrating (i) personnel with diverse business backgrounds, corporate cultures and management philosophies, and (ii) 
the standards, policies and compensation structures, as well as the complex systems, technology, networks and other 
assets, of the businesses;
preserving important strategic and customer relationships;
retention of key employees;
the possibility that we may have failed to discover obligations of acquired businesses or risks associated with those 
businesses during our due diligence investigations as part of the acquisition, which we, as a successor owner, may be 
responsible for or subject to; and
provisions in contracts with third parties that may limit flexibility to take certain actions.

As a result of these difficulties and risks, we may not accomplish the integration of acquired businesses smoothly, 

successfully or within our budgetary expectations and anticipated timetables, which may result in a failure to realize some or all 
of the anticipated benefits of our acquisitions.

Loss of key personnel could impair the integration of acquired businesses, lead to loss of customers and a decline in 
revenues, or otherwise could have an adverse effect on our operations

Our success as a combined business with any prior or future acquired businesses will depend, in part, upon our ability to 
retain key employees, especially during the integration phase of the businesses. It is possible that the integration process could 
result in current and prospective employees of ours and the acquired business to experience uncertainty about their future roles 
with us, which could have an adverse effect on our ability to retain or recruit key managers and other employees. If, despite our 
retention and recruiting efforts, key employees depart, the loss of their services and their experience and knowledge regarding 
our business or an acquired business could have an adverse effect on our future operating results and the successful ongoing 
operation of our businesses.

We may fail to realize all of the anticipated benefits of any acquisitions, including our acquisition of Zix, or those benefits 
may take longer to realize than expected

We may be required to devote significant management attention and resources to integrating the business practices and 
operations of our acquisitions, including the acquisition of Zix. As we integrate our acquisitions, we may experience disruptions 
to our business and, if implemented ineffectively, it could restrict the realization of the full expected benefits. The failure to 
meet the challenges involved in the integration process and to realize the anticipated benefits of any acquisition could cause an 
interruption of, or loss of momentum in, our operations and could adversely affect our business, financial condition and results 
of operations.

Furthermore, as we integrate our acquisitions, including Zix, it may result in material unanticipated problems, expenses, 
charges, liabilities, competitive responses, loss of customers and other business relationships, and diversion of management’s 
attention. Additional integration challenges may include:

• Difficulties in achieving anticipated cost savings, synergies, business opportunities and growth prospects from the 

acquisition;

• Difficulties in the integration of operations and systems, including pricing and marketing strategies; and

• Difficulties in conforming standards, controls, procedures and accounting and other policies, business cultures and 

compensation structures.

Many of these factors will be outside of our control and any one of them could result in increased costs, including 
restructuring charges, decreases in the amount of expected revenues and diversion of management’s time and energy, which 
could adversely affect our business, financial condition and results of operations.

Businesses we acquire may have disclosure controls and procedures and internal controls over financial reporting, 
cybersecurity and compliance with data privacy laws that are weaker than or otherwise not in conformity with ours

We have a history of acquiring complementary businesses of varying size and organizational complexity and we may 
continue to engage in such acquisitions. Upon consummating an acquisition, we seek to implement our disclosure controls and 
procedures, our internal controls over financial reporting as well as procedures relating to cybersecurity and compliance with 
data privacy laws and regulations at the acquired company as promptly as possible. Depending upon the nature and scale of the 
business acquired, the implementation of our disclosure controls and procedures as well as the implementation of our internal 
controls over financial reporting at an acquired company may be a lengthy process and may divert our attention from other 

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business operations. Our integration efforts may periodically expose deficiencies in the disclosure controls and procedures and 
internal controls over financial reporting as well as procedures relating to cybersecurity and compliance with data privacy laws 
and regulations of an acquired company that were not identified in our due diligence undertaken prior to consummating the 
acquisition; contractual protections intended to protect against any such deficiencies may not fully eliminate all related risks. If 
such deficiencies exist, we may not be in a position to comply with our periodic reporting requirements and, as a result, our 
business and financial condition may be materially harmed. Refer to Item 9A “Controls and Procedures”, included elsewhere in 
this Annual Report on Form 10-K, for details on our internal controls over financial reporting for recent acquisitions.

Risks Related to Laws and Regulatory Compliance

Our provision for income taxes and effective income tax rate may vary significantly and may adversely affect our results of 
operations and cash resources

Significant judgment is required in determining our provision for income taxes. Various internal and external factors may 

have favorable or unfavorable effects on our future provision for income taxes, income taxes receivable and our effective 
income tax rate. These factors include, but are not limited to, changes in tax laws, regulations and/or rates, results of audits by 
tax authorities, changing interpretations of existing tax laws or regulations, changes in estimates of prior years' items, the 
impact of transactions we complete, future levels of research and development spending, changes in the valuation of our 
deferred tax assets and liabilities, transfer pricing adjustments, changes in the overall mix of income among the different 
jurisdictions in which we operate and changes in overall levels of income before taxes. Furthermore, new accounting 
pronouncements or new interpretations of existing accounting pronouncements, and/or any internal restructuring initiatives we 
may implement from time to time to streamline our operations, can have a material impact on our effective income tax rate.

Tax examinations are often complex as tax authorities may disagree with the treatment of items reported by us and our 
transfer pricing methodology based upon our limited risk distributor model, the result of which could have a material adverse 
effect on our financial condition and results of operations. Although we believe our estimates are reasonable, the ultimate 
outcome with respect to the taxes we owe may differ from the amounts recorded in our financial statements, and this difference 
may materially affect our financial position and financial results in the period or periods for which such determination is made.

For more information on tax audits to which we are subject, see Note 14 “Guarantees and Contingencies” and Note 15 

“Income Taxes” to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

As part of the ongoing audit of our Canadian tax returns by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA), we have received notices 
of, and are appealing, reassessments for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016, and the CRA is 
auditing Fiscal 2017. An adverse outcome of these ongoing audits could have a material adverse effect on our financial 
position and results of operations

As part of its ongoing audit of our Canadian tax returns, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has disputed our transfer 
pricing methodology used for certain intercompany transactions with our international subsidiaries and has issued notices of 
reassessment for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016. Assuming the utilization of available tax 
attributes (further described below), we estimate our potential aggregate liability, as of June 30, 2022, in connection with the 
CRA's reassessments for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016, to be limited to penalties, interest 
and provincial taxes that may be due of approximately $75 million. As of June 30, 2022, we have provisionally paid 
approximately $34 million in order to fully preserve our rights to object to the CRA's audit positions, being the minimum 
payment required under Canadian legislation while the matter is in dispute. This amount is recorded within “Long-term income 
taxes recoverable” on the Consolidated Balance Sheets as of June 30, 2022.

The notices of reassessment for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016 would, as drafted, 
increase our taxable income by approximately $90 million to $100 million for each of those years, as well as impose a 10% 
penalty on the proposed adjustment to income. Audits by the CRA of our tax returns for fiscal years prior to Fiscal 2012 have 
been completed with no reassessment of our income tax liability.

We strongly disagree with the CRA's positions and believe the reassessments of Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, 

Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016 (including any penalties) are without merit, and we are continuing to contest these reassessments. 
On June 30, 2022, we filed a notice of appeal with the Tax Court of Canada seeking to reverse all such reassessments (including 
any penalties) in full.

Even if we are unsuccessful in challenging the CRA's reassessments to increase our taxable income for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 

2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016, we have elective deductions available for those years (including carry-backs 
from later years) that would offset such increased amounts so that no additional cash tax would be payable, exclusive of any 
assessed penalties and interest, as described above.

The CRA has also audited Fiscal 2017 on a basis that we strongly disagree with and are contesting. The focus of the CRA 

audit has been the valuation of certain intellectual property and goodwill when one of our subsidiaries continued into Canada 

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from Luxembourg in July 2016. In accordance with applicable rules, these assets were recognized for tax purposes at fair 
market value as of that time, which value was supported by an expert valuation prepared by an independent leading accounting 
and advisory firm. In conjunction with the Fiscal 2017 audit, the CRA issued a proposal letter dated April 7, 2021 (Proposal 
Letter) indicating to us that it proposes to reassess our Fiscal 2017 tax year to reduce the depreciable basis of these assets. We 
have made extensive submissions in support of our position. CRA’s position for Fiscal 2017 relies in significant part on the 
application of its positions regarding our transfer pricing methodology that are the basis for its reassessment of our fiscal years 
2012 to 2016 described above, and that we believe are without merit. Other aspects of CRA’s position for Fiscal 2017 conflict 
with the expert valuation prepared by the independent leading accounting and advisory firm that was used to support our 
original filing position. On January 27, 2022, the CRA issued a notice of reassessment in respect of Fiscal 2017 on the basis of 
its position set forth in the Proposal Letter. On April 19, 2022, we filed our notice of objection regarding the reassessment in 
respect of Fiscal 2017. If we are ultimately unsuccessful in defending our position, the estimated impact of the proposed 
adjustment could result in us recording an income tax expense, with no immediate cash payment, to reduce the stated value of 
our deferred tax assets of up to approximately $470 million. Any such income tax expense could also have a corresponding 
cash tax impact that would primarily occur over a period of several future years based upon annual income realization in 
Canada. We strongly disagree with the CRA’s position for Fiscal 2017 and intend to vigorously defend our original filing 
position, We are not required to provisionally pay any cash amounts to the CRA as a result of the reassessment in respect of 
Fiscal 2017 due to the utilization of available tax attributes; however, to the extent the CRA reassesses subsequent fiscal years 
on a similar basis, we expect to make certain minimum payments required under Canadian legislation, which may need to be 
provisionally made starting in Fiscal 2024 while the matter is in dispute. 

We will continue to vigorously contest the adjustments to our taxable income and any penalty and interest assessments, as 

well as any reduction to the basis of our depreciable property. We are confident that our original tax filing positions were 
appropriate. Accordingly, as of the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K, we have not recorded any accruals in respect of 
these reassessments or proposed reassessment in our Consolidated Financial Statements. The CRA is currently in preliminary 
stages of auditing Fiscal 2018 and Fiscal 2019.

For further details on these and other tax audits to which we are subject, see Note 14 “Guarantees and Contingencies” and 

Note 15 “Income Taxes” to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Risks associated with data privacy issues, including evolving laws and regulations and associated compliance efforts, may 
adversely impact our business

Our business depends on the processing of personal data, including data transfer between our affiliated entities, to and 
from our business partners and customers, and with third-party service providers. The laws and regulations relating to personal 
data are constantly evolving, as federal, state and foreign governments continue to adopt new measures addressing data privacy 
and processing (including collection, storage, transfer, disposal and use) of personal data. Moreover, the interpretation and 
application of many existing or recently enacted privacy and data protection laws and regulations in the EU, United Kingdom, 
the U.S. and elsewhere are uncertain and fluid, and it is possible that such laws and regulations may be interpreted or applied in 
a manner that is inconsistent with our existing data management practices or the features of our products and services. Any such 
new laws or regulations, any changes to existing laws and regulations and any such interpretation or application may affect 
demand for our products and services, impact our ability to effectively transfer data across borders in support of our business 
operations or increase the cost of providing our products and services. Additionally, any actual or perceived breach of such laws 
or regulations may subject us to claims and may lead to administrative, civil or criminal liability, as well as reputational harm to 
our Company and our employees. We could also be required to fundamentally change our business activities and practices, or 
modify our products and services, which could have an adverse effect on our business.

In the U.S., various laws and regulations apply to the collection, processing, transfer, disposal, unauthorized disclosure 

and security of personal data. For example, data protection laws passed by all states within the U.S. require notification to users 
when there is a security breach for personal data. Additionally, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and many state attorneys 
general are interpreting federal and state consumer protection laws as imposing standards for the online collection, use, transfer 
and security of data. The U.S. Congress and state legislatures, along with federal regulatory authorities, have recently increased 
their attention to matters concerning personal data, and this has and may continue to result in new legislation which could 
increase the cost of compliance. For example, the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 (CCPA) came into effect on 
January 1, 2020. The CCPA requires companies that process information of California residents to make new disclosures to 
consumers about their data collection, use and sharing practices, allows consumers to access and request deletion of their data 
and opt out of certain data sharing with third parties and provides a new private right of action for data breaches. Violations of 
the CCPA are enforced by the California Attorney General with sizeable civil penalties, particularly for violations that impact 
large numbers of consumers. Further, in November 2020, California voters passed the California Privacy Rights and 
Enforcement Act of 2020 (CPRA), which significantly modifies the CCPA with additional data privacy compliance 
requirements, expands consumers' rights with respect to certain sensitive personal information and establishes a regulatory 
agency dedicated to enforcing the requirements of the CCPA and CPRA. It remains unclear how various provisions of the 

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CCPA and CPRA will be interpreted and enforced when CPRA comes into effect in most material respects on January 1, 2023. 
Virginia, Colorado, Utah and Connecticut have similarly passed broad laws relating to privacy, data protection and information 
security, further complicating our privacy compliance obligations through the introduction of increasingly disparate 
requirements across the various U.S. jurisdictions in which we operate. In addition to government regulation, privacy advocacy 
and industry groups may propose new and different self-regulatory standards that either legally or contractually apply to us or 
our clients.

Some of our operations are subject to the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (the EU GDPR), which took effect 

from May 25, 2018, the General Data Protection Regulation as it forms part of retained EU law in the United Kingdom by 
virtue of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 and as amended by the Data Protection, Privacy and Electronic 
Communications (Amendments etc) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019 (SI 2019/419) (the UK GDPR, and together with the EU 
GDPR, the GDPR), and the UK Data Protection Act 2018. The GDPR imposes a number of obligations for subject companies, 
and we will need to continue dedicating financial resources and management time to GDPR compliance. The GDPR enhances 
the obligations placed on companies that control or process personal data including, for example, expanded disclosures about 
how personal data is to be used, mechanisms for obtaining consent from data subjects, controls for data subjects with respect to 
their personal data (including by enabling them to exercise rights to erasure and data portability), limitations on retention of 
personal data and mandatory data breach notifications. Additionally, the GDPR places companies under obligations relating to 
data transfers and the security of the personal data they process. The GDPR provides that supervisory authorities in the EU and 
the United Kingdom may impose administrative fines for certain infringements of the GDPR of up to EUR 20,000,000 under 
the EU GDPR (or GBP 17,500,000 under the UK GDPR), or 4% of an undertaking’s total, worldwide, annual turnover of the 
preceding financial year, whichever is higher. Individuals who have suffered damage as a result of a subject company’s non-
compliance with the GDPR also have the right to seek compensation from such company. Given the breadth of the GDPR, 
compliance with its requirements is likely to continue to require significant expenditure of resources on an ongoing basis, and 
there can be no assurance that the measures we have taken for the purposes of compliance will be successful in preventing 
violation of the GDPR. Given the potential fines, liabilities and damage to our reputation in the event of an actual or perceived 
violation of the GDPR, such a violation may have a material adverse effect on our business and operations. 

In addition, the GDPR restricts transfers of personal data outside of the European Economical Area (EEA) and the United 

Kingdom to third countries deemed to lack adequate privacy protections unless an appropriate safeguard is implemented. In 
light of the July 2020 decision of the Court of Justice of the European Union in Data Protection Commissioner vs Facebook 
Ireland Limited and Maximillian Schrems (C-311/118) (Schrems II) invalidating the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield Framework, there 
is potential uncertainty with respect to the legality of certain transfers of personal data from the European Economic Area 
(EEA) and the United Kingdom to so-called “third countries” outside the EEA, including the U.S. and Canada. In addition to 
the increased legal risk in the event of any such transfers, additional costs might also need to be incurred in order to implement 
necessary safeguards to comply with GDPR. While the Court of Justice of the European Union upheld the adequacy of the old 
standard contractual clauses (SCCs), a standard form of contract approved by the European Commission as an adequate 
personal data transfer mechanism, it made clear that reliance on them alone may not necessarily be sufficient in all 
circumstances. In June 2021, the European Commission issued new SCCs that must be used for relevant new data transfers, and 
existing SCCs must be migrated to the new SCCs by December 27, 2022. At the same time, the United Kingdom’s Information 
Commissioner’s Office released two new agreements governing international data transfers out of the United Kingdom that can 
be used from March 21, 2022: the International Data Transfer Agreement (IDTA) and the Data Transfer Addendum 
(Addendum). All existing contracts and any new contracts signed before September 21, 2022 can continue to use the old SCCs 
until March 21, 2024, after which the old SCCs must be replaced by either the IDTA or the Addendum in conjunction with the 
new SCCs.  All contracts signed after September 21, 2022 must use either the IDTA or the Addendum in conjunction with the 
new SCCs. Additionally, on March 25, 2022, the U.S. and European Commission announced that they had agreed in principle 
to a new “Trans-Atlantic Data Privacy Framework” to enable trans-Atlantic data flows and address the concerns raised in the 
Schrems II decision.

Outside of the U.S., the EU and the United Kingdom, many jurisdictions have adopted or are adopting new data privacy 

laws that may impose further onerous compliance requirements, such as data localization, which prohibits companies from 
storing and/or processing outside the jurisdiction data relating to resident individuals. The proliferation of such laws within the 
jurisdictions in which we operate may result in conflicting and contradictory requirements, particularly in relation to evolving 
technologies such as cloud computing. Any failure to successfully navigate the changing regulatory landscape could result in 
legal liability or impairment to our reputation in the marketplace, which could have a material adverse effect on our business, 
results of operations and financial condition.

Privacy-related claims or lawsuits initiated by governmental bodies, customers or other third parties, whether meritorious 
or not, could be time consuming, result in costly regulatory proceedings, litigation, penalties, fines, or other potential liabilities, 
or require us to change our business practices, sometimes in expensive ways. Unfavorable publicity regarding our privacy 
practices could damage our reputation, harm our ability to keep existing customers or attract new customers or otherwise 
adversely affect our business, assets, revenue and brands.

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Certain of our products may be perceived as, or determined by the courts to be, a violation of privacy rights and related laws. 
Any such perception or determination could adversely affect our revenues and results of operations

Because of the nature of certain of our products, including those relating to digital investigations, potential customers and 

purchasers of our products or the general public may perceive that the use of these products results in violations of individual 
privacy rights. In addition, certain courts or regulatory authorities could determine that the use of our software solutions or 
other products is a violation of privacy laws, particularly in jurisdictions outside of the United States. Any such determination 
or perception by potential customers and purchasers, the general public, government entities or the judicial system could harm 
our reputation and adversely affect our revenues and results of operations.

Risks Related to our Financial Condition

We may not generate sufficient cash flow to satisfy our unfunded pension obligations

Through our acquisitions, we have assumed certain unfunded pension plan liabilities. We will be required to use the 
operating cash flow that we generate in the future to meet these obligations. As a result, our future net pension liability and cost 
may be materially affected by the discount rate used to measure these pension obligations and by the longevity and actuarial 
profile of the relevant workforce. A change in the discount rate may result in a significant increase or decrease in the valuation 
of these pension obligations, and these changes may affect the net periodic pension cost in the year the change is made and in 
subsequent years. We cannot assure that we will generate sufficient cash flow to satisfy these obligations. Any inability to 
satisfy these pension obligations may have a material adverse effect on the operational and financial health of our business.

For more information on our pension obligations, see Note 12 “Pension Plans and Other Post Retirement Benefits” to the 

Consolidated Financial Statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates could materially affect our financial results

Our Consolidated Financial Statements are presented in U.S. dollars. In general, the functional currency of our 

subsidiaries is the local currency. For each subsidiary, assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated into 
U.S dollars at the exchange rates in effect at the balance sheet dates and revenues and expenses are translated at the average 
exchange rates prevailing during the month of the transaction. Therefore, increases or decreases in the value of the U.S. dollar 
against other major currencies affect our net operating revenues, operating income and the value of balance sheet items 
denominated in foreign currencies. In addition, unexpected and dramatic devaluations of currencies in developing, as well as 
developed, markets could negatively affect our revenues from, and the value of the assets located in, those markets.

Transactional foreign currency gains (losses) are included in the Consolidated Statements of Income under the line item 
“Other income (expense) net.” See Item 8.  Financial Statements and Supplementary Data. While we use derivative financial 
instruments to attempt to reduce our net exposure to currency exchange rate fluctuations, fluctuations in foreign currency 
exchange rates, particularly the strengthening of the U.S. dollar against major currencies or the currencies of large developing 
countries, could materially affect our financial results. These risks and their potential impacts may be exacerbated by the 
ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the Russia-Ukraine conflict and any policy changes, including those resulting from trade and 
tariff disputes. See “The COVID-19 pandemic has and may continue to further negatively affect our business, operations and 
financial performance” and “Geopolitical instability, political unrest, war and other global conflicts, including the Russia-
Ukraine conflict, has affected and may continue to affect our business.”

Our indebtedness could limit our operations and opportunities

Our debt service obligations could have an adverse effect on our earnings and cash flows for as long as the indebtedness is 
outstanding, which could reduce the availability of our cash flow to fund working capital, capital expenditures, acquisitions and 
other general corporate purposes.

As of June 30, 2022, our credit facilities consisted of a $1.0 billion term loan facility (Term Loan B) and a $750 million 

committed revolving credit facility (the Revolver). Borrowings under Term Loan B and the Revolver, if any, are or will be 
secured by a first charge over substantially all of our assets, which security interests may limit our financial flexibility.

Repayments made under Term Loan B are equal to 0.25% of the original principal amount in equal quarterly installments 
for the life of Term Loan B, with the remainder due at maturity. As of June 30, 2022, we had no outstanding balance under the 
Revolver. The terms of Term Loan B and the Revolver include customary restrictive covenants that impose operating and 
financial restrictions on us, including restrictions on our ability to take actions that could be in our best interests. These 
restrictive covenants include certain limitations on our ability to make investments, loans and acquisitions, incur additional 
debt, incur liens and encumbrances, consolidate, amalgamate or merge with any other person, dispose of assets, make certain 
restricted payments, including a limit on dividends on equity securities or payments to redeem, repurchase or retire equity 
securities or other indebtedness, engage in transactions with affiliates, materially alter the business we conduct, and enter into 

33

certain restrictive agreements. Term Loan B and the Revolver includes a financial covenant relating to a maximum consolidated 
net leverage ratio, which could restrict our operations, particularly our ability to respond to changes in our business or to take 
specified actions. Our failure to comply with any of the covenants that are included in Term Loan B and the Revolver could 
result in a default under the terms thereof, which could permit the lenders thereunder to declare all or part of any outstanding 
borrowings to be immediately due and payable.

As of June 30, 2022, we also have $900 million in aggregate principal amount of 3.875% Senior Notes due 2028 (Senior 
Notes 2028), $850 million in aggregate principal amount of 3.875% Senior Notes due 2029 (Senior Notes 2029), $900 million 
in aggregate principal amount of 4.125% Senior Notes due 2030 (Senior Notes 2030) and $650 million in aggregate principal 
amount of our 4.125% senior unsecured notes due 2031 (Senior Notes 2031 and, together with the Senior Notes 2028, Senior 
Notes 2029 and Senior Notes 2030, the Senior Notes) outstanding, respectively issued in private placements to qualified 
institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act and to certain persons in offshore transactions pursuant to 
Regulation S under the Securities Act. Our failure to comply with any of the covenants that are included in the indentures 
governing the Senior Notes could result in a default under the terms thereof, which could result in all or a portion of the Senior 
Notes to be immediately due and payable.

Our Term Loan B and Revolver have variable rates of interest, which will increase our cost of borrowing during times of 
rising interest rates. Also, some of our variable rates of interest use London Inter-Bank Offered Rate (LIBOR) as a benchmark. 
After December 31, 2021, all CHF and EUR LIBOR settings, the one-week and two-month USD LIBOR settings and the 
overnight/spot next, one-week, two-month and twelve-month GBP and JPY LIBOR settings have ceased to be published and 
the remaining USD LIBOR settings will either cease to be provided by any administrator or no longer continue to be 
representative after June 30, 2023. As a result, any financial instruments or agreements using LIBOR as a benchmark interest 
rate may be adversely affected. This discontinuance of LIBOR may exacerbate the risk to us of increased interest rates, and our 
business, prospects, financial condition and results of operations could be materially adversely affected. Although our Term 
Loan B and Revolver include mechanics to facilitate the adoption by us and our lenders of an alternative benchmark rate in 
place of LIBOR, no assurance can be made that such alternative rate will perform in a manner similar to LIBOR and may result 
in interest rates that are higher or lower than those that would have resulted had LIBOR remained in effect.

The risks discussed above would be increased to the extent that we engage in acquisitions that involve the incurrence of 

material additional debt, or the acquisition of businesses with material debt, and such incurrences or acquisitions could 
potentially negatively impact the ratings or outlook of the rating agencies on our outstanding debt securities and the market 
price of our common shares.

For more information on our indebtedness, see Note 11 “Long-Term Debt” to the Consolidated Financial Statements 

included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Risks Related to Ownership of our Common Stock

Our revenues and operating results are likely to fluctuate, which could materially impact the market price of our Common 
Shares

We experience significant fluctuations in revenues and operating results caused by many factors, including:

•

Impact of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and actual or potential resurgences on our business and on general 
economic and business conditions, including any potential recession;
Changes in the demand for our software products and services and for the products and services of our competitors; 
The introduction or enhancement of software products and services by us and by our competitors; 

•
•
• Market acceptance of our software products, enhancements and/or services; 
• Delays in the introduction of software products, enhancements and/or services by us or by our competitors; 
•
Customer order deferrals in anticipation of upgrades and new software products; 
•
Changes in the lengths of sales cycles; 
•
Changes in our pricing policies or those of our competitors; 
• Delays in software product implementation with customers; 
•
•
•
•

Change in the mix of distribution channels through which our software products are licensed; 
Change in the mix of software products and services sold; 
Change in the mix of international and North American revenues; 
Changes in foreign currency exchange rates, LIBOR and other applicable interest rates (including the expected 
replacement of LIBOR as a benchmark rate); 
Fluctuations in the value of our investments related to certain investment funds in which we are a limited partner:

•

34

Restructuring charges taken in connection with any completed acquisition or otherwise; 

• Acquisitions and the integration of acquired businesses; 
•
• Outcome and impact of tax audits and other contingencies;
•
•
•
•

Investor perception of our Company;
Changes in earnings estimates by securities analysts and our ability to meet those estimates;
Changes in laws and regulations affecting our business, including data privacy and cybersecurity laws and regulations;
Changes in general economic and business conditions, including the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and the 
resulting direct and indirect supply chain disruptions and global micro-chip shortages; and 
Changes in general political developments, international trade policies and policies taken to stimulate or to preserve 
national economies. 

•

A general weakening of the global economy or a continued weakening of the economy in a particular region or economic 

or business uncertainty could result in the cancellation of or delay in customer purchases. A cancellation or deferral of even a 
small number of license sales or services or delays in the implementation of our software products could have a material 
adverse effect on our business, operating results and financial condition. As a result of the timing of software product and 
service introductions and the rapid evolution of our business as well as of the markets we serve, we cannot predict whether 
patterns or trends experienced in the past will continue. For these reasons, you should not rely upon period-to-period 
comparisons of our financial results to forecast future performance. Our revenues and operating results may vary significantly, 
and this possible variance could materially reduce the market price of our Common Shares.

Changes in the market price of our Common Shares and credit ratings of our outstanding debt securities could lead to losses 
for shareholders and debt holders

The market price of our Common Shares and credit ratings of our outstanding debt securities are subject to fluctuations. 
Such fluctuations in market price or credit ratings may continue in response to: (i) quarterly and annual variations in operating 
results; (ii) announcements of technological innovations or new products or services that are relevant to our industry; (iii) 
changes in financial estimates by securities analysts; (iv) changes to the ratings or outlook of our outstanding debt securities by 
rating agencies; (v) impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and related economic conditions or (vi) other events or factors. In 
addition, financial markets experience significant price and volume fluctuations that particularly affect the market prices of 
equity securities of many technology companies in particular due to concerns about increasing interest rates, rising inflation or 
any potential recession. These fluctuations have often resulted from the failure of such companies to meet market expectations 
in a particular quarter, and thus such fluctuations may or may not be related to the underlying operating performance of such 
companies. Broad market fluctuations or any failure of our operating results in a particular quarter to meet market expectations 
may adversely affect the market price of our Common Shares or the credit ratings of our outstanding debt securities. 
Additionally, short sales, hedging and other derivative transactions in our Common Shares and technical factors in the public 
trading market for our Common Shares may produce price movements that may or may not comport with macro, industry or 
company-specific fundamentals, including, without limitation, the sentiment of retail investors (including as may be expressed 
on financial trading and other social media sites), the amount and status of short interest in our Common Shares, access to 
margin debt, trading in options and other derivatives on our Common Shares and other technical trading factors. Occasionally, 
periods of volatility in the market price of a company's securities may lead to the institution of securities class action litigation 
against a company. If we are subject to such volatility in our market price, we may be the target of such securities litigation in 
the future. Such legal action could result in substantial costs to defend our interests and a diversion of management's attention 
and resources, each of which would have a material adverse effect on our business and operating results.

General Risks

Unexpected events may materially harm our ability to align when we incur expenses with when we recognize revenues

We incur operating expenses based upon anticipated revenue trends. Since a high percentage of these expenses are 
relatively fixed, a delay in recognizing revenues from transactions related to these expenses (such a delay may be due to the 
factors described herein or it may be due to other factors) could cause significant variations in operating results from quarter to 
quarter and could materially reduce operating income. If these expenses are not subsequently matched by revenues, our 
business, financial condition, or results of operations could be materially and adversely affected.

We may fail to achieve our financial forecasts due to inaccurate sales forecasts or other factors

Our revenues and particularly our new software license revenues are difficult to forecast, and, as a result, our quarterly 

operating results can fluctuate substantially. Sales forecasts may be particularly inaccurate or unpredictable given the 

35

extraordinary nature of the COVID-19 pandemic. We use a “pipeline” system, a common industry practice, to forecast sales and 
trends in our business. By reviewing the status of outstanding sales proposals to our customers and potential customers, we 
make an estimate as to when a customer will make a purchasing decision involving our software products. These estimates are 
aggregated periodically to make an estimate of our sales pipeline, which we use as a guide to plan our activities and make 
internal financial forecasts. Our sales pipeline is only an estimate and may be an unreliable predictor of actual sales activity, 
both in a particular quarter and over a longer period of time. Many factors may affect actual sales activity, such as weakened 
economic conditions, including as a result of any potential recession, which may cause our customers and potential customers 
to delay, reduce or cancel information technology-related purchasing decisions, our decision to increase prices in response to 
rising inflation, and the tendency of some of our customers to wait until the end of a fiscal period in the hope of obtaining more 
favorable terms from us. If actual sales activity differs from our pipeline estimate, then we may have planned our activities and 
budgeted incorrectly, and this may adversely affect our business, operating results and financial condition. In addition, for 
newly acquired companies, we have limited ability to immediately predict how their pipelines will convert into sales or 
revenues following the acquisition and their conversion rate post-acquisition may be quite different from their historical 
conversion rate.

Our international operations expose us to business, political and economic risks that could cause our operating results to 
suffer

We intend to continue to make efforts to increase our international operations and anticipate that international sales will 

continue to account for a significant portion of our revenues. These international operations are subject to certain risks and 
costs, including the difficulty and expense of administering business and compliance abroad, differences in business practices, 
compliance with domestic and foreign laws (including without limitation domestic and international import and export laws and 
regulations and the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, including potential violations by acts of agents or other intermediaries), costs 
related to localizing products for foreign markets, costs related to translating and distributing software products in a timely 
manner, costs related to increased financial accounting and reporting burdens and complexities, longer sales and collection 
cycles for accounts receivables, failure of laws or courts to protect our intellectual property rights adequately, local competition, 
and economic or political instability and uncertainties, including inflation, recession, interest rate fluctuations and actual or 
anticipated military or geopolitical conflicts. International operations also tend to be subject to a longer sales and collection 
cycle. In addition, regulatory limitations regarding the repatriation of earnings may adversely affect the transfer of cash earned 
from international operations. Significant international sales may also expose us to greater risk from political and economic 
instability, unexpected changes in Canadian, United States or other governmental policies concerning import and export of 
goods and technology, regulatory requirements, tariffs and other trade barriers. Additionally, international earnings may be 
subject to taxation by more than one jurisdiction, which may materially adversely affect our effective tax rate. Also, 
international expansion may be difficult, time consuming and costly. These risks and their potential impacts may be exacerbated 
by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine conflict. See “The COVID-19 pandemic has and may continue to 
further negatively affect our business, operations and financial performance” and “Geopolitical instability, political unrest, war 
and other global conflicts, including the Russia-Ukraine conflict, has affected and may continue to affect our business” As a 
result, if revenues from international operations do not offset the expenses of establishing and maintaining international 
operations, our business, operating results and financial condition will suffer.

We may become involved in litigation that may materially adversely affect us

From time to time in the ordinary course of our business, we may become involved in various legal proceedings, including 

commercial, product liability, employment, class action and other litigation and claims, as well as governmental and other 
regulatory investigations and proceedings. Such matters can be time-consuming, divert management's attention and resources 
and cause us to incur significant expenses. Furthermore, because litigation is inherently unpredictable, the results of any such 
actions may have a material adverse effect on our business, operating results or financial condition.

The declaration, payment and amount of dividends will be made at the discretion of our Board of Directors and will depend 
on a number of factors

We have adopted a policy to declare non-cumulative quarterly dividends on our Common Shares. The declaration, 
payment and amount of any dividends will be made pursuant to our dividend policy and is subject to final determination each 
quarter by our Board of Directors in its discretion based on a number of factors that it deems relevant, including our financial 
position, results of operations, available cash resources, cash requirements and alternative uses of cash that our Board of 
Directors may conclude would be in the best interest of our shareholders. Our dividend payments are subject to relevant 
contractual limitations, including those in our existing credit agreements and to solvency conditions established by the Canada 
Business Corporations Act (CBCA), the statute under which we are incorporated. Accordingly, there can be no assurance that 
any future dividends will be equal or similar in amount to any dividends previously paid or that our Board of Directors will not 
decide to reduce, suspend or discontinue the payment of dividends at any time in the future.

36

Our operating results could be adversely affected by any weakening of economic conditions

Our overall performance depends in part on worldwide economic conditions. Certain economies have experienced periods 

of downturn as a result of a multitude of factors, including, but not limited to, turmoil in the credit and financial markets, 
concerns regarding the stability and viability of major financial institutions, declines in gross domestic product, increases in 
unemployment, volatility in commodity prices and worldwide stock markets, excessive government debt, disruptions to global 
trade or tariffs, inflation, higher interest rates and risks of recession. The severity and length of time that a downturn in 
economic and financial market conditions may persist, as well as the timing, strength and sustainability of any recovery from 
such downturn, are unknown and are beyond our control. Recently, the COVID-19 pandemic, the Russia-Ukraine conflict, the 
inflationary environment, as well as any policy changes resulting from trade and tariff disputes, have raised additional concerns 
regarding economic uncertainties. Moreover, any instability in the global economy affects countries in different ways, at 
different times and with varying severity, which makes the impact to our business complex and unpredictable. During such 
downturns, many customers may delay or reduce technology purchases. Contract negotiations may become more protracted, or 
conditions could result in reductions in the licensing of our software products and the sale of cloud and other services, longer 
sales cycles, pressure on our margins, difficulties in collection of accounts receivable or delayed payments, increased default 
risks associated with our accounts receivables, slower adoption of new technologies and increased price competition. In 
addition, deterioration of the global credit markets could adversely impact our ability to complete licensing transactions and 
services transactions, including maintenance and support renewals. Any of these events, as well as a general weakening of, or 
declining corporate confidence in, the global economy, or a curtailment in government or corporate spending, could delay or 
decrease our revenues and therefore have a material adverse effect on our business, operating results and financial condition. 
For more information regarding the impact of COVID-19 on our business and global economic conditions, see “The COVID-19 
pandemic has and may continue to further negatively affect our business, operations and financial performance” and “The 
impact of the COVID-19 pandemic continues to create significant uncertainty in the global economy and for our business, 
operations and financial performance.”

Stress in the global financial system may adversely affect our finances and operations in ways that may be hard to predict or 
to defend against

Financial developments seemingly unrelated to us or to our industry may adversely affect us over the course of time. For 

example, material increases in LIBOR or other applicable interest rate benchmarks may increase the interest expense for our 
credit facilities such as our Term Loan B and the Revolver that have variable rates of interest, some of which use LIBOR as a 
benchmark. After December 31, 2021, all CHF and EUR LIBOR settings, the one-week and two-month USD LIBOR settings 
and the overnight/spot next, one-week, two-month and twelve-month GBP and JPY LIBOR settings have ceased to be 
published and the remaining USD LIBOR settings will either cease to be provided by any administrator or no longer continue to 
be representative after June 30, 2023. As a result, any financial instruments or agreements using LIBOR as a benchmark interest 
rate may be adversely affected. Furthermore, we may need to amend our variable rate debt agreements to replace LIBOR with a 
new reference rate. The U.S. Federal Reserve, in conjunction with the Alternative Reference Rates Committee (ARRC), a 
steering committee comprised of large U.S. financial institutions has settled on the establishment of Secured Overnight 
Financing Rate (SOFR), a new index calculated by short term repurchase agreements backed by Treasury securities, as its 
recommended alternative to U.S. dollar LIBOR. Although our Term Loan B and Revolver include mechanics to facilitate the 
adoption by us and our lenders of an alternative benchmark rate in place of LIBOR, no assurance can be made that such 
alternative rate will perform in a manner similar to LIBOR and may result in interest rates that are higher or lower than those 
that would have resulted had LIBOR remained in effect. Credit contraction in financial markets may hurt our ability to access 
credit in the event that we identify an acquisition opportunity or require significant access to credit for other reasons. Similarly, 
volatility in the market price of our Common Shares due to seemingly unrelated financial developments, such as a recession, 
inflation or an economic slowdown in the United States or internationally, could hurt our ability to raise capital for the 
financing of acquisitions or other reasons. Potential price inflation caused by an excess of liquidity in countries where we 
conduct business may increase the cost we incur to provide our solutions and may reduce profit margins on agreements that 
govern the licensing of our software products and/or the sale of our services to customers over a multi-year period. A reduction 
in credit, combined with reduced economic activity, may adversely affect businesses and industries that collectively constitute a 
significant portion of our customer base such as the public sector. As a result, these customers may need to reduce their 
licensing of our software products or their purchases of our services, or we may experience greater difficulty in receiving 
payment for the licenses and services that these customers purchase from us. In addition, inflation is often accompanied by 
higher interest rates, which may cause additional economic fluctuation. Any of these events, or any other events caused by 
turmoil in world financial markets, may have a material adverse effect on our business, operating results and financial 
condition.

37

Item 1B.  Unresolved Staff Comments

None.

Item 2.  Properties

Our properties consist of owned and leased office facilities for sales, support, research and development, consulting and 

administrative personnel, totaling approximately 0.3 million square feet of owned facilities and approximately 2.4 million 
square feet of leased facilities.

Owned Facilities 

Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

Our headquarters is located in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, and it consists of approximately 232,000 square feet. The land 
upon which the buildings stand is leased from the University of Waterloo for a period of 49 years beginning in December 2005, 
with an option to renew for an additional term of 49 years. The option to renew is exercisable by us upon providing written 
notice to the University of Waterloo not earlier than the 40th anniversary and not later than the 45th anniversary of the lease 
commencement date. 

Brook Park, Ohio, United States

We also own a building, along with its land, located in Brook Park, Ohio, that consists of approximately 104,000 square 

feet. This building is used primarily as a data center.

Leased Facilities 

The following table sets forth the location and approximate square footage of our leased facilities as of June 30, 2022: 

Americas (1)
EMEA (2)
Asia Pacific (3)
Total

_____________________

Square Footage

1,278,000 

464,000 

694,000 

2,436,000 

(1) Americas consists of countries in North, Central and South America.
(2) EMEA consists of countries in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
(3) Asia Pacific primarily consists of Japan, Australia, China, Korea, Philippines, Thailand, Singapore and India.

Included in the total approximate square footage of leased facilities is approximately 1.9 million square feet of operational 
space and approximately 0.5 million square feet of vacated space which has either been sublet or is being actively marketed for 
sublease or disposition. 

Item 3.  Legal Proceedings

In the normal course of business, we are subject to various legal claims, as well as potential legal claims. While the results 

of litigation and claims cannot be predicted with certainty, we believe that the final outcome of these matters will not have a 
materially adverse effect on our consolidated results of operations or financial conditions.

For more information regarding litigation and the status of certain regulatory and tax proceedings, please refer to Part I, 
Item 1A “Risk Factors” and to Note 14 “Guarantees and Contingencies” to our Consolidated Financial Statements included in 
this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Item 4.  Mine Safety Disclosures

Not applicable.

38

 
 
 
 
Part II

Item 5.  Market for Registrant's Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity 

Securities

Our Common Shares have traded on the NASDAQ stock market since 1996 under the symbol “OTEX” and our Common 

Shares have traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX) since 1998, first under the symbol “OTC”, and since 2017, trades 
under the symbol “OTEX”.

On June 30, 2022, the closing price of our Common Shares on the NASDAQ was $37.84 per share, and on the TSX was 

Canadian $48.69 per share. 

As at June 30, 2022, we had 346 shareholders of record holding our Common Shares of which 295 were U.S. 

shareholders. 

Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities

None.

Dividend Policy

We currently expect to continue paying cash dividends on a quarterly basis. However, future declarations of dividends are 

subject to the final determination of our Board of Directors, in its discretion, based on a number of factors that it deems 
relevant, including our financial position, results of operations, available cash resources, cash requirements and alternative uses 
of cash that our Board of Directors may conclude would be in the best interest of our shareholders. Our dividend payments are 
subject to relevant contractual limitations, including those in our existing credit agreements and to solvency conditions 
established under the CBCA, the statute under which we are incorporated. We have historically declared dividends in U.S. 
dollars, but registered shareholders can elect to receive dividends in U.S. dollars or Canadian dollars by contacting the 
Company's transfer agent.

Share Repurchase Plan / Normal Course Issuer Bid

On November 5, 2020, the Board authorized a share repurchase plan, pursuant to which we were authorized to purchase in 

open market transactions, from time to time over the 12 month period commencing November 12, 2020, up to an aggregate of 
$350 million of our Common Shares on the NASDAQ Global Select Market, the TSX and/or other exchanges and alternative 
trading systems in Canada and/or the United States, if eligible, subject to applicable law and stock exchange rules (the “Fiscal 
2021 Repurchase Plan”). The price that we will pay for Common Shares in open market transactions was the market price at the 
time of purchase or such other price as was permitted by applicable law or stock exchange rules.

The Fiscal 2021 Repurchase Plan was effected in accordance with Rule 10b-18 under the Exchange Act. Purchases made 
under the Fiscal 2021 Repurchase Plan were subject to a limit of 13,618,774 shares (representing 5% of the Company’s issued 
and outstanding Common Shares as of November 4, 2020). All Common Shares purchased by us pursuant to the Fiscal 2021 
Repurchase Plan were cancelled.

On November 4, 2021, the Board authorized a share repurchase plan, pursuant to which we may purchase in open market 
transactions, from time to time over the 12 month period commencing November 12, 2021, up to an aggregate of $350 million 
of our Common Shares on the NASDAQ Global Select Market, the TSX (as part of a NCIB as defined below) and/or other 
exchanges and alternative trading systems in Canada and/or the United States, if eligible, subject to applicable law and stock 
exchange rules (the “Fiscal 2022 Repurchase Plan”). The price that we have paid and will pay for Common Shares in open 
market transactions has been and will be the market price at the time of purchase or such other price as may be permitted by 
applicable law or stock exchange rules. 

The Fiscal 2022 Repurchase Plan has been and will be effected in accordance with Rule 10b-18 under the Exchange Act. 

Purchases made under the Fiscal 2022 Repurchase Plan are subject to a limit of 13,638,008 shares (representing 5% of the 
Company’s issued and outstanding Common Shares as of October 31, 2021). All Common Shares purchased by us pursuant to 
the Repurchase Plan have been and will be cancelled.

During the year ended June 30, 2022, we repurchased and cancelled 3,809,559 Common Shares for $177.0 million under 

the Fiscal 2021 Repurchase Plan and Fiscal 2022 Repurchase Plan. 

39

Normal Course Issuer Bid

The Company established its Normal Course Issuer Bid (the Fiscal 2021 NCIB) in order to provide it with a means to 

execute purchases over the TSX as part of the Fiscal 2021 Repurchase Plan.

The TSX approved the Company's notice of intention to commence the Fiscal 2021 NCIB pursuant to which the Company 

was authorized to purchase Common Shares over the TSX for the period commencing November 12, 2020 until November 11, 
2021 in accordance with the TSX's normal course issuer bid rules, including that such purchases were to be made at prevailing 
market prices or as otherwise permitted. Under the rules of the TSX, the maximum number of Common Shares that may be 
purchased in this period was 13,618,774 (representing 5% of the Company’s issued and outstanding Common Shares as of 
November 4, 2020), and the maximum number of Common Shares that may be purchased on a single day was 143,424 
Common Shares, which was 25% of 573,699 (the average daily trading volume for the Common Shares on the TSX for the six 
months ended October 31, 2020), subject to certain exceptions for block purchases, subject in any case to the volume and other 
limitations under Rule 10b-18.

The Company renewed its Normal Course Issuer Bid (the Fiscal 2022 NCIB) in order to provide it with a means to 

execute purchases over the TSX as part of the Fiscal 2022 Repurchase Plan.

The TSX approved the Company's notice of intention to commence the Fiscal 2022 NCIB pursuant to which the Company 

may purchase Common Shares over the TSX for the period commencing November 12, 2021 until November 11, 2022 in 
accordance with the TSX's normal course issuer bid rules, including that such purchases are to be made at prevailing market 
prices or as otherwise permitted. Under the rules of the TSX, the maximum number of Common Shares that may be purchased 
in this period is 13,638,008 (representing 5% of the Company’s issued and outstanding Common Shares as of October 31, 
2021), and the maximum number of Common Shares that may be purchased on a single day is 112,590 Common Shares, which 
is 25% of 450,361 (the average daily trading volume for the Common Shares on the TSX for the six months ended October 31, 
2021), subject to certain exceptions for block purchases, subject in any case to the volume and other limitations under Rule 
10b-18.

Stock Purchases

During the three months ended June 30, 2022, we made the following repurchases under the Fiscal 2022 Repurchase Plan.

Period

04/01/22 to 04/30/22

05/01/22 to 05/31/22

06/01/22 to 06/30/22

Total

(a) Total Number of 
Shares (or Units) 
Purchased

(b) Average Price Paid 
per Share (or Unit)

(c) Total Number of Shares 
(or Units) Purchased as Part 
of Publicly Announced Plans 
or Programs

(d) Maximum Number of 
Shares (or Units) that May 
Yet Be Purchased Under 
the Plans or Programs

— 

— 

1,000,000  $ 

1,000,000  $ 

— 

— 

40.87 

40.87 

— 

— 

1,000,000 

1,000,000 

— 

— 

9,950,924 

9,950,924 

Stock Performance Graph and Cumulative Total Return

The following graph compares the five-year period ending June 30, 2022, the yearly percentage change in the cumulative 

total shareholder return on our Common Shares with the cumulative total return on:

•

•

•

an index of companies in the software application industry (S&P North American Technology-Software Index);

the NASDAQ Composite Index; and

the S&P/TSX Composite Index.

The graph illustrates the cumulative return on a $100 investment in our Common Shares made on June 30, 2017, as 
compared with the cumulative return on a $100 investment in the S&P North American Technology-Software Index, the 
NASDAQ Composite Index and the S&P/TSX Composite Index (the Indices) made on the same day. Dividends declared on 
securities comprising the respective Indices and declared on our Common Shares are assumed to be reinvested. The 
performance of our Common Shares as set out in the graph is based upon historical data and is not indicative of, nor intended to 
forecast, future performance of our Common Shares. The graph lines merely connect measurement dates and do not reflect 
fluctuations between those dates. 

40

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The chart below provides information with respect to the value of $100 invested on June 30, 2017 in our Common Shares 

as well as in the other Indices, assuming dividend reinvestment when applicable:

June 30,
2017

June 30,
2018

June 30,
2019

June 30,
2020

June 30,
2021

June 30,
2022

Open Text Corporation
S&P North American Technology-Software Index
NASDAQ Composite

$  100.00  $  113.40  $  135.00  $  141.56  $  172.20  $  130.75 
$  100.00  $  134.09  $  161.76  $  210.05  $  287.99  $  201.88 
$  100.00  $  123.60  $  133.22  $  169.11  $  245.60  $  188.07 

S&P/TSX Composite

$  100.00  $  109.10  $  113.78  $  107.05  $  157.25  $  145.81 

To the extent that this Annual Report on Form 10-K has been or will be specifically incorporated by reference into any 

filing by us under the Securities Act or the Exchange Act, the foregoing “Stock Performance Graph and Cumulative Total 
Return” shall not be deemed to be “soliciting materials” or to be so incorporated, unless specifically otherwise provided in any 
such filing.

For information relating to our various stock compensation plans, see Item 12 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Canadian Tax Matters

Dividends 

Since June 21, 2013 and unless stated otherwise, dividends paid by the Company to Canadian residents are eligible 

dividends as per the Income Tax Act (Canada).

Non-residents of Canada

Dividends paid or credited to non-residents of Canada are subject to a 25% withholding tax unless reduced by treaty. 

Under the Canada-United States Tax Convention (1980) (the Treaty), U.S. residents who are entitled to all the benefits of the 
Treaty are generally subject to a 15% withholding tax.

Beginning in calendar year 2012, the Canada Revenue Agency has introduced new rules requiring residents of any 

country with which Canada has a tax treaty to certify that they reside in that country and are eligible to have Canadian non-
resident tax withheld on the payment of dividends at the tax treaty rate. Registered shareholders should have completed the 
Declaration of Eligibility for Benefits (Reduced Tax) under a Tax Treaty for a Non-Resident Person and returned it to our 
transfer agent, ComputerShare Investor Services Inc.

41

 
United States Tax Matters

U.S. residents

The following discussion summarizes certain U.S. federal income tax considerations relevant to an investment in the 
Common Shares by a U.S. holder. For purposes of this summary, a “U.S. holder” is a beneficial owner of Common Shares that 
holds such shares as capital assets under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code), and is a citizen or 
resident of the United States and not of Canada, a corporation organized under the laws of the United States or any political 
subdivision thereof, or a person that is otherwise subject to U.S. federal income tax on a net income basis in respect of Common 
Shares. It does not address any aspect of U.S. federal gift or estate tax, or of state, local or non-U.S. tax laws and does not 
address aspects of U.S. federal income taxation applicable to U.S. holders holding options, warrants or other rights to acquire 
Common Shares. Further, this discussion does not address the U.S. federal income tax consequences to U.S. holders that are 
subject to special treatment under U.S. federal income tax laws, including, but not limited to U.S. holders owning directly, 
indirectly or by attribution 10% or more of the voting power or value of the Company's stock; broker-dealers; banks or 
insurance companies; financial institutions; regulated investment companies; taxpayers who have elected mark-to-market 
accounting; tax-exempt organizations; taxpayers who hold Common Shares as part of a “straddle,” “hedge,” or “conversion 
transaction” with other investments; individual retirement or other tax-deferred accounts; taxpayers whose functional currency 
is not the U.S. dollar; partnerships or the partners therein; S corporations; or U.S. expatriates. 

The discussion is based upon the provisions of the Code, the Treasury regulations promulgated thereunder, the 

Convention Between the United States and Canada with Respect to Taxes on Income and Capital, together with related 
Protocols and Competent Authority Agreements (the Convention), the administrative practices published by the U.S. Internal 
Revenue Service (IRS) and U.S. judicial decisions, all of which are subject to change. This discussion does not consider the 
potential effects, both adverse and beneficial, of any recently proposed legislation which, if enacted, could be applied, possibly 
on a retroactive basis, at any time.

Distributions on the Common Shares

Subject to the discussion below under “Passive Foreign Investment Company Rules,” U.S. holders generally will treat the 

gross amount of distributions paid by the Company equal to the U.S. dollar value of such dividends on the date the dividends 
are received or treated as received (based on the exchange rate on such date), without reduction for Canadian withholding tax 
(see “Canadian Tax Matters - Dividends - Non-residents of Canada”), as dividend income for U.S. federal income tax purposes 
to the extent of the Company’s current and accumulated earnings and profits. Because the Company does not expect to maintain 
calculations of its earnings and profits under U.S. federal income tax principles, it is expected that distributions paid to U.S. 
holders generally will be reported as dividends. 

Individual U.S. holders will generally be eligible to treat dividends as “qualified dividend income” taxable at preferential 
rates with certain exceptions for short-term and hedged positions, and provided that the Company is not during the taxable year 
in which the dividends are paid (and was not in the preceding taxable year) classified as a “passive foreign investment 
company” (PFIC) as described below under “Passive Foreign Investment Company Rules.” Dividends paid on the Common 
Shares generally will not be eligible for the “dividends received” deduction allowed to corporate U.S. holders in respect of 
dividends from U.S. corporations. 

If a U.S. holder receives foreign currency on a distribution that is not converted into U.S. dollars on the date of receipt, the 

U.S. holder will have a tax basis in the foreign currency equal to its U.S. dollar value on the date the dividends are received or 
treated as received. Any gain or loss recognized upon a subsequent sale or other disposition of the foreign currency, including 
an exchange for U.S. dollars, will generally be U.S. source ordinary income or loss. 

Subject to limitations and conditions under the Code and applicable U.S. Treasury Regulations, a U.S. holder may be able 

to claim a foreign tax credit in respect of the amount of Canadian income tax withheld at the appropriate rate from dividends 
paid to such U.S. holder. These limitations and conditions include new requirements recently adopted by the IRS that the 
Canadian tax would need to satisfy in order to be eligible to be a creditable tax for a U.S. holder. In the case of a U.S. Holder 
that is eligible for, and properly elects, the benefits of the Treaty, the Canadian tax on dividends will be treated as meeting the 
new requirements and therefore as a creditable tax. In the case of all other U.S. holders, the application of these requirements to 
the Canadian tax on dividends is uncertain and we have not determined whether these requirements have been met.  If the 
Canadian dividend tax is not a creditable tax for a U.S. holder or the U.S. holder does not elect to claim a foreign tax credit for 
any foreign income taxes, the U.S. Holder may be able to deduct the Canadian tax in computing its taxable income for U.S. 
federal income tax purposes. Alternatively, the U.S. holder may deduct such Canadian income taxes from its U.S. federal 
taxable income, provided that the U.S. holder elects to deduct rather than credit all foreign income taxes for the relevant taxable 
year. 

42

For purposes of determining a U.S. holder’s U.S. foreign tax credit limitation, dividends paid by the Company generally 

will be treated as “passive category” income from sources outside the United States. However, if the Company were to be 
treated as a United States-owned foreign corporation for any year, the portion of the dividends paid in that year that is 
attributable to the Company’s United States-source earnings and profits may be re-characterized as United States-source income 
for foreign tax credit purposes. A United States-owned foreign corporation is any foreign corporation when 50% or more of the 
value or voting power of its stock is owned by United States persons (directly, indirectly or by attribution). The Company does 
not expect to calculate its earnings and profits under U.S. federal income tax principles. Therefore, the effect of this rule may 
cause dividends paid by the Company to be treated as entirely from sources within the United States. This could limit a U.S. 
holder’s ability to claim a foreign tax credit for any Canadian taxes withheld from the dividends. A U.S. holder entitled to 
benefits under the Convention may, however, elect to treat dividends paid by the Company as foreign source income for foreign 
tax credit purposes, subject to certain requirements. The foreign tax credit rules are complex. U.S. holders should consult their 
own tax advisors with respect to the implications of those rules for their investments in the Common Shares.

Sale, Exchange, Redemption or Other Disposition of Common Shares

Subject to the discussion below under “Passive Foreign Investment Company Rules,” the sale of Common Shares 
generally will result in the recognition of gain or loss to a U.S. holder in an amount equal to the difference between the amount 
realized and the U.S. holder’s adjusted basis in the Common Shares. A U.S. holder’s tax basis in a Common Share will 
generally equal the price it paid for the Common Share. Any capital gain or loss will be long-term if the Common Shares have 
been held for more than one year. The deductibility of capital losses is subject to limitations.

Passive Foreign Investment Company Rules

Special U.S. federal income tax rules apply to U.S. persons owning shares of a PFIC. The Company will be classified as a 
PFIC in a particular taxable year if either: (i) 75 percent or more of the Company’s gross income for the taxable year is passive 
income, or (ii) the average percentage of the value of the Company’s assets that produce or are held for the production of 
passive income is at least 50 percent. If the Company is treated as a PFIC for any year, U.S. holders may be subject to adverse 
tax consequences upon a sale, exchange, or other disposition of the Common Shares, or upon the receipt of certain “excess 
distributions” in respect of the Common Shares. Dividends paid by a PFIC are not qualified dividends eligible for taxation at 
preferential rates. Based on audited consolidated financial statements, we believe that the Company was not treated as a PFIC 
for U.S. federal income tax purposes with respect to its 2021 or 2022 taxable years. In addition, based on a review of the 
Company’s audited consolidated financial statements and its current expectations regarding the value and nature of its assets 
and the sources and nature of its income, the Company does not anticipate being treated as a PFIC for the 2023 taxable year.

Information Reporting and Backup Withholding

Except in the case of corporations or other exempt holders, dividends paid to a U.S. holder may be subject to U.S. 

information reporting requirements and may be subject to backup withholding unless the U.S. holder provides an accurate 
taxpayer identification number on a properly completed IRS Form W-9 and certifies that no loss of exemption from backup 
withholding has occurred. The amount of any backup withholding will be allowed as a credit against the U.S. holder’s U.S. 
federal income tax liability and may entitle the U.S. holder to a refund, provided that certain required information is timely 
furnished to the IRS.

Item 6.  [Reserved]

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Item 7.  Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations

This  Annual  Report  on  Form  10-K,  including  this  Management's  Discussion  and  Analysis  of  Financial  Condition  and 
Results  of  Operations  (MD&A),  contains  forward-looking  statements  within  the  meaning  of  the  Private  Securities  Litigation 
Reform Act of 1995, Section 21E of the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the Exchange Act), and Section 27A 
of the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the Securities Act), and is subject to the safe harbors created by those sections. 
All statements other than statements of historical facts are statements that could be deemed forward-looking statements.

When used in this report, the words “anticipates”, “expects”, “intends”, “plans”, “believes”, “seeks”, “estimates”, 
“may”, “could”, “would”, “might”, “will” and other similar language, as they relate to Open Text Corporation (OpenText or 
the Company), are intended to identify forward-looking statements under applicable securities laws. Specific forward-looking 
statements in this report include, but are not limited to, statements regarding: (i) our focus in the fiscal year beginning July 1, 
2022 and ending June 30, 2023 (Fiscal 2023) and July 1, 2023 and ending June 30, 2024 (Fiscal 2024) on growth in earnings 
and cash flows; (ii) creating value through investments in broader Information Management capabilities; (iii) our future 
business plans and business planning process; (iv) business trends; (v) distribution; (vi) the Company’s presence in the cloud 
and in growth markets; (vii) our expectation to grow MSPs; (viii) product and solution developments, enhancements and 
releases, the timing thereof and the customers targeted; (ix) the Company’s financial condition, results of operations and 
earnings; (x) the basis for any future growth and for our financial performance; (xi) declaration of quarterly dividends; (xii) 
future tax rates; (xiii) the changing regulatory environment; (xiv) annual recurring revenues; (xv) research and development 
and related expenditures; (xvi) our building, development and consolidation of our network infrastructure; (xvii) competition 
and changes in the competitive landscape; (xviii) our management and protection of intellectual property and other proprietary 
rights; (xix) existing and foreign sales and exchange rate fluctuations; (xx) cyclical or seasonal aspects of our business; (xxi) 
capital expenditures; (xxii) potential legal and/or regulatory proceedings; (xxiii) acquisitions and their expected impact, 
including our ability to successfully integrate the assets we acquire or utilize such assets to their full capacity, including those 
acquired in connection with the acquisition of Zix Corporation (see Note 19 “Acquisitions” to our Consolidated Financial 
Statements for more details); (xxiv) tax audits; (xxv) the expected impact of our decision to cease all direct business in Russia 
and Belarus and with known Russian-owned companies;(xxvi) expected costs of the restructuring plans; (xxvii) targets 
regarding greenhouse gas emissions, waste diversion, energy consumption and ED&I initiatives; and (xxviii) other matters.

In addition, any statements or information that refer to expectations, beliefs, plans, projections, objectives, performance 
or other characterizations of future events or circumstances, including any underlying assumptions, are forward-looking, and 
based on our current expectations, forecasts and projections about the operating environment, economies and markets in which 
we operate. Forward-looking statements reflect our current estimates, beliefs and assumptions, which are based on 
management’s perception of historic trends, current conditions and expected future developments, as well as other factors it 
believes are appropriate in the circumstances. The forward-looking statements contained in this report are based on certain 
assumptions including the following: (i) countries continuing to implement and enforce existing and additional customs and 
security regulations relating to the provision of electronic information for imports and exports; (ii) our continued operation of 
a secure and reliable business network; (iii) the stability of general political, economic and market conditions, including any 
potential recession; (iv) our ability to manage inflation, including increased labour costs associated with attracting and 
retaining employees, and rising interest rates; (v) our continued ability to manage certain foreign currency risk through 
hedging; (vi) equity and debt markets continuing to provide us with access to capital; (vii) our continued ability to identify, 
source and finance attractive and executable business combination opportunities; (viii) our continued ability to avoid 
infringing third party intellectual property rights; and (ix) our ability to successfully implement our restructuring plans. 
Management’s estimates, beliefs and assumptions are inherently subject to significant business, economic, competitive and 
other uncertainties and contingencies regarding future events and, as such, are subject to change. We can give no assurance 
that such estimates, beliefs and assumptions will prove to be correct. 

Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause our actual 
results, performance or achievements to differ materially from the anticipated results, performance or achievements expressed 
or implied by such forward-looking statements. The risks and uncertainties that may affect forward-looking statements include, 
but are not limited to: (i) actual and potential risks and uncertainties relating to the ultimate geographic spread of COVID-19, 
the severity of the disease and the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic and issues relating to the resurgence of COVID-19 and/
or new strains of COVID-19, including potential material adverse effects on our business, operations and financial 
performance; (ii) actions that have been and may be taken by governmental authorities to contain the COVID-19 pandemic or 
to treat its impact on our business (or failure to implement additional stimulus programs) and the availability, effectiveness and 
use of treatments and vaccines (including the effectiveness of boosters); (iii) the actual and potential negative impacts of 
COVID-19 on the global economy and financial markets; (iv) integration of acquisitions and related restructuring efforts, 
including the quantum of restructuring charges and the timing thereof; (v) the possibility that we may be unable to successfully 
integrate the assets we acquire or fail to utilize such assets to their full capacity and not realize the benefits we expect from our 
acquired portfolios and businesses, including the acquisition of Zix Corporation, (vi) the potential for the incurrence of or 
assumption of debt in connection with acquisitions and the impact on the ratings or outlooks of rating agencies on our 

44

outstanding debt securities; (vii) the possibility that the Company may be unable to meet its future reporting requirements 
under the Exchange Act, and the rules promulgated thereunder, or applicable Canadian securities regulation; (viii) the risks 
associated with bringing new products and services to market; (ix) fluctuations in currency exchange rates (including as a 
result of the impact of any policy changes resulting from trade and tariff disputes); (x) delays in the purchasing decisions of the 
Company’s customers; (xi) competition the Company faces in its industry and/or marketplace; (xii) the final determination of 
litigation, tax audits (including tax examinations in Canada, the United States or elsewhere) and other legal proceedings; (xiii) 
potential exposure to greater than anticipated tax liabilities or expenses, including with respect to changes in Canadian, United 
States or international tax regimes; (xiv) the possibility of technical, logistical or planning issues in connection with the 
deployment of the Company’s products or services; (xv) the continuous commitment of the Company’s customers; (xvi) demand 
for the Company’s products and services; (xvii) increase in exposure to international business risks (including the impact of 
geopolitical instability, political unrest, war and other global conflicts) as we continue to increase our international 
operations; (xviii) adverse macroeconomic conditions, including inflation, disruptions in global supply chains and increased 
labour costs; (xix) inability to raise capital at all or on not unfavorable terms in the future; (xx) downward pressure on our 
share price and dilutive effect of future sales or issuances of equity securities (including in connection with future acquisitions); 
and (xxi) potential changes in ratings or outlooks of rating agencies on our outstanding debt securities. Other factors that may 
affect forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to: (i) the future performance, financial and otherwise, of the 
Company; (ii) the ability of the Company to bring new products and services to market and to increase sales; (iii) the strength 
of the Company’s product development pipeline; (iv) failure to secure and protect patents, trademarks and other proprietary 
rights; (v) infringement of third-party proprietary rights triggering indemnification obligations and resulting in significant 
expenses or restrictions on our ability to provide our products or services; (vi) failure to comply with privacy laws and 
regulations that are extensive, open to various interpretations and complex to implement including GDPR, California 
Consumer Privacy Act, California Privacy Rights Act, Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act, Colorado Privacy Act, 
Connecticut Data Privacy Act, Utah Consumer Privacy Act, and Country by Country Reporting (including with respect to 
transferring personal data outside of the EEA and the United Kingdom, as a result of the ruling of the Court of Justice of the 
European Union (CJEU) that the EU-US Privacy Shield is an invalid data transfer mechanism and that Standard Contractual 
Clauses (SCCs) are a valid transfer mechanism unless the country to which personal data is exported restricts the ability to 
comply with such Clauses (Schrems II), and with respect to the new SCCs published by the European Commission and the 
IDTA and Addendum published by the United Kingdom's Information Commissioner's Office to meet the requirements of GDPR 
and Schrems II); (vii) the Company’s growth and other profitability prospects; (viii) the estimated size and growth prospects of 
the Information Management market; (ix) the Company’s competitive position in the Information Management market and its 
ability to take advantage of future opportunities in this market; (x) the benefits of the Company’s products and services to be 
realized by customers; (xi) the demand for the Company’s products and services and the extent of deployment of the Company’s 
products and services in the Information Management marketplace; (xii) the Company’s financial condition and capital 
requirements; (xiii) system or network failures or information security, cybersecurity or other data breaches in connection with 
the Company's offerings or the information technology systems used by the Company generally, the risk of which may be 
increased during times of natural disaster or pandemic (including COVID-19) due to remote working arrangements; (xiv) 
failure to achieve our environmental goals on energy consumption, waste diversion and greenhouse gas emissions or our 
targets relating to ED&I initiatives; and (xv) failure to attract and retain key personnel to develop and effectively manage the 
Company's business.

Readers should carefully review Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors” and other documents we file from time to time with the 

Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and other securities regulators. A number of factors may materially affect our 
business, financial condition, operating results and prospects. These factors include but are not limited to those set forth in Part 
I, Item 1A “Risk Factors” and elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Any one of these factors, and other factors that 
we are unaware of, or currently deem immaterial, may cause our actual results to differ materially from recent results or from 
our anticipated future results. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance upon any such forward-looking statements, 
which speak only as of the date made. Unless otherwise required by applicable securities laws, the Company disclaims any 
intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future 
events or otherwise.

The following MD&A is intended to help readers understand our results of operations and financial condition, and is 

provided as a supplement to, and should be read in conjunction with, our Consolidated Financial Statements and the 
accompanying Notes to our Consolidated Financial Statements under Part II, Item 8 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

All dollar and percentage comparisons made herein refer to the year ended June 30, 2022 compared with the year ended 
June 30, 2021, unless otherwise noted. Please refer to Part II, Item 7 of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for Fiscal 2021 for a 
comparative discussion of our Fiscal 2021 financial results as compared to Fiscal 2020.

Where we say “we”, “us”, “our”, “OpenText” or “the Company”, we mean Open Text Corporation or Open Text 

Corporation and its subsidiaries, as applicable.

45

EXECUTIVE OVERVIEW

At OpenText, we believe information and knowledge make business and people better. We are an Information 
Management company that provides software and services that empower digital businesses of all sizes to become more 
intelligent, secure and connected. Our innovations maximize the strategic benefits of data and content for our customers, 
strengthening their productivity, growth and competitive advantage.

Our comprehensive Information Management platform and services provide secure and scalable solutions for global 
companies, SMBs, governments and consumers around the world. We have a complete and integrated portfolio of Information 
Management solutions delivered at scale in the OpenText Cloud, helping organizations master modern work, power modern 
experiences and optimize their digital supply chains. To do this, we bring together our Content Cloud, Business Network Cloud, 
Experience Cloud, Security Cloud and Developer Cloud. We also accelerate information modernization with intelligent tools 
and services for moving off paper, automating classification and building clean data lakes for artificial intelligence (AI), 
analytics and automation.

We are fundamentally integrated into the parts of our customers' businesses that matter, so they can securely manage the 
complexity of information flow end to end. Through automation and AI, we connect, synthesize and deliver information where 
it is needed to drive new efficiencies, experiences and insights. We make information more valuable by connecting it to digital 
business processes, enriching it with capture and analytics, protecting and securing it throughout its entire lifecycle, and 
leveraging it to create engaging digital experiences. Our solutions also connect large digital supply chains in manufacturing, 
retail and financial services. 

Our solutions also enable organizations and consumers to secure their information so that they can collaborate with 

confidence, stay ahead of the regulatory technology curve, identify threats on any endpoint or across their networks, enable 
privacy, leverage eDiscovery and digital forensics to defensibly investigate and collect evidence, and ensure business continuity 
in the event of a security incident.

Our initial public offering was on the NASDAQ in 1996 and we were subsequently listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange 

(TSX) in 1998. Our ticker symbol on both the NASDAQ and the TSX is “OTEX”.

As of June 30, 2022, we employed a total of approximately 14,800 individuals, of which 7,150 or 49% are in the 
Americas, 2,720 or 18% are in EMEA and 4,930 or 33% are in Asia Pacific. Currently, we have employees in 35 countries 
enabling strong access to multiple talent pools while ensuring reach and proximity to our customers. Please see “Results of 
Operations” below for our definitions of geographic regions.

Fiscal 2022 Summary:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

Total revenue was $3,493.8 million, up 3.2% compared to the prior fiscal year; up 4.3% after factoring in the 
unfavorable impact of $39.5 million of foreign exchange rate changes. 

Total annual recurring revenue, which we define as the sum of cloud services and subscriptions revenue and 
customer support revenue, was $2,866.0 million, up 4.5% compared to the prior fiscal year; up 5.5% after factoring 
in the unfavorable impact of $26.0 million of foreign exchange rate changes.

Cloud services and subscriptions revenue was $1,535.0 million, up 9.1% compared to the prior fiscal year; up 9.8% 
after factoring in the unfavorable impact of $9.7 million of foreign exchange rate changes.

GAAP-based gross margin was 69.6% compared to 69.4% in the prior fiscal year.

Non-GAAP-based gross margin was 75.6% compared to 76.1% in the prior fiscal year.

GAAP-based net income attributable to OpenText was $397.1 million compared to $310.7 million in the prior fiscal 
year. 

Non-GAAP-based net income attributable to OpenText was $876.2 million compared to $927.2 million in the prior 
fiscal year.

GAAP-based earnings per share (EPS), diluted, was $1.46 compared to $1.14 in the prior fiscal year.

Non-GAAP-based EPS, diluted, was $3.22 compared to $3.39 in the prior fiscal year.

Adjusted EBITDA, a non-GAAP measure, was $1,265.0 million compared to $1,315.0 million in the prior fiscal 
year.

Operating cash flow was $981.8 million for the year ended June 30, 2022 compared to $876.1 million in the prior 
fiscal year, up 12.1%.

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•

•

Cash and cash equivalents were $1,693.7 million as of June 30, 2022, compared to $1,607.3 million as of June 30, 
2021. 

Enterprise cloud bookings was $465.8 million for the year ended June 30, 2022. We define Enterprise cloud 
bookings as the total value from cloud services and subscription contracts entered into in the fiscal year that are new, 
committed and incremental to our existing contracts, excluding the impact of Carbonite and Zix.

See “Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” below for definitions and reconciliations of GAAP-based measures to Non-

GAAP-based measures. See “Acquisitions” below for the impact of acquisitions on the period-to-period comparability of 
results.

Acquisitions

As a result of the continually changing marketplace in which we operate, we regularly evaluate acquisition opportunities 

within our market and at any time may be in various stages of discussions with respect to such opportunities. 

Acquisition of Zix Corporation

On December 23, 2021, we acquired all of the equity interest in Zix Corporation (Zix), a leader in software as a service 

(SaaS) based email encryption, threat protection and compliance cloud solutions for SMBs. Total consideration for Zix was 
$894.5 million paid in cash, inclusive of $38.3 million of cash acquired and $18.6 million relating to the cash settlement of pre-
acquisition vested share-based compensation. We believe the acquisition increases our position in the data protection, threat 
management, email security and compliance solutions spaces. The results of operations of Zix have been consolidated with 
those of OpenText beginning December 23, 2021.

Acquisition of Bricata Inc.

On November 24, 2021, we acquired all of the equity interest in Bricata Inc. (Bricata) for $17.8 million. We believe the 

acquisition strengthens our OpenText Security Cloud with Network Detection and Response technologies. The results of 
operations of Bricata have been consolidated with those of OpenText beginning November 24, 2021. 

We believe our acquisitions support our long-term strategic direction, strengthen our competitive position, expand our 
customer base, provide greater scale to accelerate innovation, grow our earnings and provide superior shareholder value. We 
expect to continue to strategically acquire companies, products, services and technologies to augment our existing business. Our 
acquisitions, particularly significant ones, can affect the period-to-period comparability of our results. See Note 19 
“Acquisitions” to our Consolidated Financial Statements for more details.

Impacts of COVID-19

In March 2020, COVID-19 was characterized as a pandemic by the World Health Organization. The spread of COVID-19 

has significantly impacted the global economy and has adversely impacted and may continue to adversely impact our 
operational and financial performance. The extent of the adverse impact of the pandemic on the global economy and markets 
will continue to depend, in part, on the length and severity of the measures taken to limit the spread of the virus, the availability, 
effectiveness and use of treatments and vaccines and on actual and potential resurgences. We are closely monitoring the 
potential effects and impact on our operations, businesses and financial performance, including liquidity and capital usage, 
though the extent is difficult to fully predict due to the evolution of this uncertain situation. 

We continue to conduct business with modifications to employee travel and work locations and also virtualization of 
certain events, along with modified interactions with customers and suppliers, among other modifications. In addition, as many 
local governments and officials have started lifting pandemic restrictions in accordance with the guidance of public health 
experts, in July 2022, we implemented a Flex-Office program in which a majority of our employees work a portion of their time 
in the office and a portion remotely. See “We have implemented a Flex-Office program, which will subject us to certain 
operational challenges and risks” in Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors” included elsewhere within this Annual Report on Form 10-
K. We will continue to actively monitor the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on all aspects of our business and geographies, 
including customer purchasing decisions, and may take further actions that alter our business operations, including our Flex-
Office program, as may be required by governments, or that we determine are in the best interest of our employees, customers, 
partners, suppliers and shareholders. It is uncertain and difficult to predict what the potential effects any such alterations or 

47

modifications may have on our business including the effects on our customers and prospects, or our financial results and our 
ability to successfully execute our business strategies and initiatives. 

The ongoing and ultimate impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our operations and financial performance depends on 

many factors that are not within our control. For more information, please see Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors” included 
elsewhere within this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Impacts of Russia-Ukraine Conflict

In response to the Russia-Ukraine conflict, we have ceased all direct business in Russia and Belarus and with known 
Russian-owned companies. Sanctions and export controls have also been imposed by the United States, Canada and other 
countries in connection with Russia's military actions in Ukraine including restrictions on selling or exporting goods, services or 
technology to certain regions, and travel bans and asset freezes impacting political, military, business and financial 
organizations and individuals in or connected with Russia. To support certain of our cloud customers headquartered in the 
United States or allied countries that rely on our network to manage their global business (including their business in Russia), 
we have nonetheless allowed these customers to continue to use our services to the extent that it can be done in strict 
compliance with all applicable sanctions and export controls. However, we may adjust our business practices as required by 
applicable rules and regulations. Our compliance with sanctions and export controls could impact the fulfillment of certain 
contracts with customers and partners doing business in these affected areas and future revenue streams from impacted parties 
and certain countries. While we do not expect our decision to cease all direct business in Russia and Belarus and with known 
Russian-owned companies to have a material adverse effect on our overall business, results of operations or financial condition, 
it is not possible to predict the broader consequences of this conflict, including adverse effects on the global economy, on our 
business and operations as well as those of our customers, partners and third party service providers. For more information, 
please see Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors” included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Outlook for Fiscal 2023

As an organization, we are committed to “Total Growth”, meaning we strive towards delivering value through organic 

initiatives, innovations and acquisitions, as well as financial performance. With an emphasis on increasing recurring revenues 
and expanding our margins, we believe our Total Growth strategy will ultimately drive overall cash flow generation, thus 
helping to fuel our disciplined capital allocation approach and further our ability to deepen our account coverage and identify 
and execute strategic acquisitions. With strategic acquisitions, we are well positioned to expand our product portfolio and 
improve our ability to innovate and grow organically, which helps us to meet our long-term growth targets. We believe our 
Total Growth strategy is a durable model, that we believe will create both near and long-term shareholder value through organic 
and acquired growth, capital efficiency and profitability.

We are committed to continuous innovation. Our investments in R&D push product innovation, increasing the value of 

our offerings to our installed customer base, which includes Global 10,000 companies (G10K), SMB and consumers. The 
G10K are the world's largest companies, ranked by estimated total revenues, as well as the world's largest governments and 
organizations. More valuable products, coupled with our established global partner program, lead to greater distribution and 
cross-selling opportunities which further help us to achieve organic growth. Over the last three fiscal years, we have invested a 
cumulative total of $1.23 billion in R&D or 12.3% of cumulative revenue for that three-year period. On an annual basis, we 
target to spend 12% to 14% of revenues for R&D expense.

Looking ahead, the destination for innovation is indisputably the cloud. Businesses of all sizes rely on a combination of 
public and private clouds, managed services and off-cloud solutions. As a result, we are committed to continue to modernize 
our technology infrastructure and leverage our existing investments in the OpenText Cloud. The combination of OpenText 
cloud-native applications and managed services, together with the scalability and performance of our partner public cloud 
providers, offer more secure, reliable and compliant solutions to customers wanting to deploy cloud-based Information 
Management applications. The OpenText Cloud is designed to build additional flexibility and scalability for our customers: 
becoming cloud-native, connecting anything, and extending capabilities quickly with multi-tenant SaaS applications and 
services.

We will continue to closely monitor the potential impacts of COVID-19, inflation with respect to wages, services and 
goods, concerns regarding any potential recession, rising interest rates, financial market volatility, and the Russia-Ukraine 
conflict on our business. See Part I, Item 1A, "Risk Factors" included within this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND ESTIMATES

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. GAAP requires us to make estimates, judgments and 

assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the Consolidated Financial Statements. These estimates, judgments and 
assumptions are evaluated on an ongoing basis. We base our estimates on historical experience and on various other 

48

assumptions that we believe are reasonable at that time. Actual results may differ materially from those estimates. The policies 
listed below are areas that may contain key components of our results of operations and are based on complex rules requiring us 
to make judgments and estimates and consequently, we consider these to be our critical accounting policies. Some of these 
accounting policies involve complex situations and require a higher degree of judgment, either in the application and 
interpretation of existing accounting literature or in the development of estimates that affect our financial statements. The 
critical accounting policies which we believe are the most important to aid in fully understanding and evaluating our reported 
financial results include the following:

(i)

(ii)

(iii)

(iv)

Revenue recognition, 

Goodwill, 

Acquired intangibles and

Income taxes.

For a full discussion of all our accounting policies, please see Note 2 “Accounting Policies and Recent Accounting 

Pronouncements” to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

We will continue to monitor the potential impact of COVID-19 on our financial statements and related disclosures, 
including the need for additional estimates going forward, which could include costs related to items such as special charges, 
restructurings, asset impairments and other non-recurring costs. As of June 30, 2022, we have recorded certain estimates in our 
Consolidated Financial Statements resulting from the pandemic, particularly with respect to the COVID-19 Restructuring Plan, 
based on management's estimates and assumptions utilizing the most currently available information. Such estimates may be 
subject to change particularly given the unprecedented nature of the COVID-19 pandemic. Please also see Part I, Item 1A, 
“Risk Factors” in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Revenue recognition

In accordance with Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) Topic 606 "Revenue from Contracts with 

Customers" (Topic 606), we account for a customer contract when we obtain written approval, the contract is committed, the 
rights of the parties, including the payment terms, are identified, the contract has commercial substance and consideration is 
probable of collection. Revenue is recognized when, or as, control of a promised product or service is transferred to our 
customers in an amount that reflects the consideration we expect to be entitled to in exchange for our products and services (at 
its transaction price). Estimates of variable consideration and the determination of whether to include estimated amounts in the 
transaction price are based on readily available information, which may include historical, current and forecasted information, 
taking into consideration the type of customer, the type of transaction and specific facts and circumstances of each arrangement. 
We report revenue net of any revenue-based taxes assessed by governmental authorities that are imposed on and concurrent 
with specific revenue producing transactions.

We have four revenue streams: cloud services and subscriptions, customer support, license and professional service and 

other.

Cloud services and subscriptions revenue

Cloud services and subscriptions revenue are from hosting arrangements where, in connection with the licensing of 
software, the end user does not take possession of the software, as well as from end-to-end fully outsourced B2B integration 
solutions to our customers (collectively referred to as cloud arrangements). The software application resides on our hardware or 
that of a third party, and the customer accesses and uses the software on an as-needed basis. Our cloud arrangements can be 
broadly categorized as "platform as a service" (PaaS), "software as a service" (SaaS), cloud subscriptions and managed services.

PaaS/ SaaS/ Cloud Subscriptions (collectively referred to here as cloud-based solutions): We offer cloud-based 
solutions that provide customers the right to access our software through the internet. Our cloud-based solutions represent 
a series of distinct services that are substantially the same and have the same pattern of transfer to the customer. These 
services are made available to the customer continuously throughout the contractual period. However, the extent to which 
the customer uses the services may vary at the customer’s discretion. The payment for cloud-based solutions may be 
received either at inception of the arrangement, or over the term of the arrangement.

These cloud-based solutions are considered to have a single performance obligation where the customer simultaneously 
receives and consumes the benefit, and as such we recognize revenue for these cloud-based solutions ratably over the term 
of the contractual agreement. For example, revenue related to cloud-based solutions that are provided on a usage basis, 
such as the number of users, is recognized based on a customer’s utilization of the services in a given period.

Additionally, a software license is present in a cloud-based solutions arrangement if all of the following criteria are met:

(i)

The customer has the contractual right to take possession of the software at any time without significant penalty; 
and

49

(ii)

It is feasible for the customer to host the software independent of us.

In these cases where a software license is present in a cloud-based solutions arrangement it is assessed to determine if it is 
distinct from the cloud-based solutions arrangement. The revenue allocated to the distinct software license would be 
recognized at the point in time the software license is transferred to the customer, whereas the revenue allocated to the 
hosting performance obligation would be recognized ratably on a monthly basis over the contractual term unless evidence 
suggests that revenue is earned, or obligations are fulfilled in a different pattern over the contractual term of the 
arrangement.

Managed services: We provide comprehensive B2B process outsourcing services for all day-to-day operations of a 
customers’ B2B integration program. Customers using these managed services are not permitted to take possession of our 
software and the contract is for a defined period, where customers pay a monthly or quarterly fee. Our performance 
obligation is satisfied as we provide services of operating and managing a customer's electronic data interchange (EDI) 
environment. Revenue relating to these services is recognized using an output method based on the expected level of 
service we will provide over the term of the contract.

In connection with cloud subscription and managed service contracts, we often agree to perform a variety of services 
before the customer goes live, such as, converting and migrating customer data, building interfaces and providing training. 
These services are considered an outsourced suite of professional services which can involve certain project-based activities. 
These services can be provided at the initiation of a contract, during the implementation or on an ongoing basis as part of the 
customer life cycle. These services can be charged separately on a fixed fee, a time and materials basis, or the costs associated 
may be recovered as part of the ongoing cloud subscription or managed services fee. These outsourced professional services are 
considered distinct from the ongoing hosting services and represent a separate performance obligation within our cloud 
subscription or managed services arrangements. The obligation to provide outsourced professional services is satisfied over 
time, with the customer simultaneously receiving and consuming the benefits as we satisfy our performance obligations. For 
outsourced professional services, we recognize revenue by measuring progress toward the satisfaction of our performance 
obligation. Progress for services that are contracted for a fixed price is generally measured based on hours incurred as a portion 
of total estimated hours. As a practical expedient, when we invoice a customer at an amount that corresponds directly with the 
value to the customer of our performance to date, we recognize revenue at that amount.

Customer support revenue

Customer support revenue is associated with perpetual, term license and off-cloud subscription arrangements. As 
customer support is not critical to the customers' ability to derive benefit from their right to use our software, customer support 
is considered a distinct performance obligation when sold together in a bundled arrangement along with the software.

 Customer support consists primarily of technical support and the provision of unspecified updates and upgrades on a 
when-and-if-available basis. Customer support for perpetual licenses is renewable, generally on an annual basis, at the option of 
the customer. Customer support for term and subscription licenses is renewable concurrently with such licenses for the same 
duration of time. Payments for customer support are generally made at the inception of the contract term or in installments over 
the term of the maintenance period. Our customer support team is ready to provide these maintenance services, as needed, to the 
customer during the contract term. As the elements of customer support are delivered concurrently and have the same pattern of 
transfer, customer support is accounted for as a single performance obligation. The customer benefits evenly throughout the 
contract period from the guarantee that the customer support resources and personnel will be available to them, and that any 
unspecified upgrades or unspecified future products developed by us will be made available. Revenue for customer support is 
recognized ratably over the contract period based on the start and end dates of the maintenance term, in line with how we 
believe services are provided.

License revenue

Our license revenue can be broadly categorized as perpetual licenses, term licenses and subscription licenses, all of which 

are deployed on the customer’s premises (off-cloud).

Perpetual licenses: We sell perpetual licenses which provide customers the right to use software for an indefinite period 
of time in exchange for a one-time license fee, which is generally paid at contract inception. Our perpetual licenses 
provide a right to use intellectual property (IP) that is functional in nature and have significant stand-alone functionality. 
Accordingly, for perpetual licenses of functional IP, revenue is recognized at the point-in-time when control has been 
transferred to the customer, which normally occurs once software activation keys have been made available for download.

Term licenses and Subscription licenses: We sell both term and subscription licenses which provide customers the right 
to use software for a specified period in exchange for a fee, which may be paid at contract inception or paid in 
installments over the period of the contract. Like perpetual licenses, both our term licenses and subscription licenses are 
functional IP that have significant stand-alone functionality. Accordingly, for both term and subscription licenses, revenue 

50

is recognized at the point-in-time when the customer is able to use and benefit from the software, which is normally once 
software activation keys have been made available for download at the commencement of the term.

Professional service and other revenue

Our professional services, when offered along with software licenses, consist primarily of technical and training services. 

Technical services may include installation, customization, implementation or consulting services. Training services may 
include access to online modules, or the delivery of a training package customized to the customer’s needs. At the customer’s 
discretion, we may offer one, all, or a mix of these services. Payment for professional services is generally a fixed fee or a fee 
based on time and materials. Professional services can be arranged in the same contract as the software license or in a separate 
contract.

As our professional services do not significantly change the functionality of the license and our customers can benefit 
from our professional services on their own or together with other readily available resources, we consider professional services 
distinct within the context of the contract.

Professional service revenue is recognized over time as long as: (i) the customer simultaneously receives and consumes 

the benefits as we perform them, (ii) our performance creates or enhances an asset the customer controls as we perform and (iii) 
our performance does not create an asset with an alternative use, and we have the enforceable right to payment.

If all the above criteria are met, we use an input-based measure of progress for recognizing professional service revenue. 

For example, we may consider total labour hours incurred compared to total expected labour hours. As a practical expedient, 
when we invoice a customer at an amount that corresponds directly with the value to the customer of our performance to date, 
we will recognize revenue at that amount.

Material rights

To the extent that we grant our customer an option to acquire additional products or services in one of our arrangements, 
we will account for the option as a distinct performance obligation in the contract only if the option provides a material right to 
the customer that the customer would not receive without entering into the contract. For example, if we give the customer an 
option to acquire additional goods or services in the future at a price that is significantly lower than the current price, this would 
be a material right as it allows the customer to, in effect, pay in advance for the option to purchase future products or services. If 
a material right exists in one of our contracts, then revenue allocated to the option is deferred and we would recognize that 
deferred revenue only when those future products or services are transferred or when the option expires.

Based on history, our contracts do not typically contain material rights and when they do, the material right is not 

significant to our Consolidated Financial Statements.

Arrangements with multiple performance obligations

Our contracts generally contain more than one of the products and services listed above. Determining whether goods and 

services are considered distinct performance obligations that should be accounted for separately or as a single performance 
obligation may require judgment, specifically when assessing whether both of the following two criteria are met:

•

•

the customer can benefit from the product or service either on its own or together with other resources that are 
readily available to the customer; and

our promise to transfer the product or service to the customer is separately identifiable from other promises in the 
contract.

If these criteria are not met, we determine an appropriate measure of progress based on the nature of our overall promise 

for the single performance obligation.

If these criteria are met, each product or service is separately accounted for as a distinct performance obligation and the 

total transaction price is allocated to each performance obligation on a relative standalone selling price (SSP) basis.

Standalone selling price

The SSP reflects the price we would charge for a specific product or service if it were sold separately in similar 

circumstances and to similar customers. In most cases we are able to establish the SSP based on observable data. We typically 
establish a narrow SSP range for our products and services and assess this range on a periodic basis or when material changes in 
facts and circumstances warrant a review.

If the SSP is not directly observable, then we estimate the amount using either the expected cost plus a margin or residual 

approach. Estimating SSP requires judgment that could impact the amount and timing of revenue recognized. SSP is a formal 

51

process whereby management considers multiple factors including, but not limited to, geographic or region-specific factors, 
competitive positioning, internal costs, profit objectives and pricing practices.

Transaction Price Allocation

In bundled arrangements, where we have more than one distinct performance obligation, we must allocate the transaction 

price to each performance obligation based on its relative SSP. However, in certain bundled arrangements, the SSP may not 
always be directly observable. For instance, in bundled arrangements with license and customer support, we allocate the 
transaction price between the license and customer support performance obligations using the residual approach because we 
have determined that the SSP for licenses in these arrangements are highly variable. We use the residual approach only for our 
license arrangements. When the SSP is observable but contractual pricing does not fall within our established SSP range, then 
an adjustment is required, and we will allocate the transaction price between license and customer support at a constant ratio 
reflecting the mid-point of the established SSP range.

When two or more contracts are entered into at or near the same time with the same customer, we evaluate the facts and 

circumstances associated with the negotiation of those contracts. Where the contracts are negotiated as a package, we will 
account for them as a single arrangement and allocate the consideration for the combined contracts among the performance 
obligations accordingly.

We believe there are significant assumptions, judgments and estimates involved in the accounting for revenue recognition 
as discussed above and these assumptions, judgments and estimates could impact the timing of when revenue is recognized and 
could have a material impact on our Consolidated Financial Statements.

Goodwill

Goodwill represents the excess of the purchase price in a business combination over the fair value of net tangible and 

intangible assets acquired. The carrying amount of goodwill is periodically reviewed for impairment (at a minimum annually) 
and whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying value of this asset may not be recoverable.

Our operations are analyzed by management and our chief operating decision maker (CODM) as being part of a single 
industry segment: the design, development, marketing and sales of Information Management software and solutions. Therefore, 
our goodwill impairment assessment is based on the allocation of goodwill to a single reporting unit.

We perform a qualitative assessment to test our reporting unit's goodwill for impairment. Based on our qualitative 
assessment, if we determine that the fair value of our reporting unit is more likely than not (i.e., a likelihood of more than 50 
percent) to be less than its carrying amount, the quantitative assessment of the impairment test is performed. In the quantitative 
assessment, we compare the fair value of our reporting unit to its carrying value. If the fair value of the reporting unit exceeds 
its carrying value, goodwill is not considered impaired, and we are not required to perform further testing. If the carrying value 
of the net assets of our reporting unit exceeds its fair value, then an impairment loss equal to the difference, but not exceeding 
the total carrying value of goodwill allocated to the reporting unit, would be recorded.

Our annual impairment analysis of goodwill was performed as of April 1, 2022. Our qualitative assessment indicated that 

there were no indications of impairment and therefore there was no impairment of goodwill required to be recorded for Fiscal 
2022 (no impairments were recorded for Fiscal 2021 and Fiscal 2020, respectively).

Acquired intangibles

In accordance with business combinations accounting, we allocate the purchase price of acquired companies to the 
tangible and intangible assets acquired and the liabilities assumed based on their estimated fair values. Such valuations may 
require management to make significant estimates and assumptions, especially with respect to intangible assets. Acquired 
intangible assets typically consist of acquired technology and customer relationships.

In valuing our acquired intangible assets, we may make assumptions and estimates based in part on information obtained 

from the management of the acquired company, which may make our assumptions and estimates inherently uncertain. 
Examples of critical estimates we may make in valuing certain of the intangible assets that we acquire include, but are not 
limited to:

•
•
•
•

future expected cash flows of our individual revenue streams;
historical and expected customer attrition rates and anticipated growth in revenue from acquired customers;
the expected use of the acquired assets; and
discount rates.

52

As a result of the judgments that need to be made, we obtain the assistance of independent valuation firms. We complete 
these assessments as soon as practical after the closing dates. Any excess of the purchase price over the estimated fair values of 
the identifiable net assets acquired is recorded as goodwill.

Although we believe the assumptions and estimates of fair value we have made in the past have been reasonable and 
appropriate, they are based in part on historical experience and information obtained from the management of the acquired 
companies and are inherently uncertain and subject to refinement. Unanticipated events and circumstances may occur that may 
affect the accuracy or validity of such assumptions, estimates or actual results. As a result, during the measurement period, 
which may be up to one year from the acquisition date, we record adjustments to the assets acquired and liabilities assumed 
with the corresponding offset to goodwill, if the changes are related to conditions that existed at the time of the acquisition. 
Upon the conclusion of the measurement period or final determination of the values of assets acquired or liabilities assumed, 
whichever comes first, any subsequent adjustments, based on events that occurred subsequent to the acquisition date, are 
recorded in our Consolidated Statements of Income.

Income taxes

We account for income taxes in accordance with ASC Topic 740, “Income Taxes” (Topic 740).

We account for our uncertain tax provisions by using a two-step approach. The first step is to evaluate the tax position for 

recognition by determining if the weight of the available evidence indicates it is more likely than not, based solely on the 
technical merits, that the position will be sustained on audit, including the resolution of related appeals or litigation processes, if 
any. The second step is to measure the appropriate amount of the benefit to recognize. The amount of benefit to recognize is 
measured as the maximum amount which is more likely than not to be realized. The tax position is derecognized when it is no 
longer more likely than not that the position will be sustained on audit. On subsequent recognition and measurement, the 
maximum amount which is more likely than not to be recognized at each reporting date will represent the Company's best 
estimate, given the information available at the reporting date, although the outcome of the tax position is not absolute or final. 
We recognize both accrued interest and penalties related to liabilities for income taxes within the "Provision for (recovery of) 
income taxes" line of our Consolidated Statements of Income.

Deferred tax assets and liabilities arise from temporary differences between the tax bases of assets and liabilities and their 

reported amounts in the Consolidated Financial Statements that will result in taxable or deductible amounts in future years. 
These temporary differences are measured using enacted tax rates. A valuation allowance is recorded to reduce deferred tax 
assets to the extent that we consider it is more likely than not that a deferred tax asset will not be realized. In determining the 
valuation allowance, we consider factors such as the reversal of deferred income tax liabilities, projected taxable income and 
the character of income tax assets and tax planning strategies. A change to these factors could impact the estimated valuation 
allowance and income tax expense.

The Company’s tax positions are subject to audit by local taxing authorities across multiple global subsidiaries and the 

resolution of such audits may span multiple years. Since tax law is complex and often subject to varied interpretations, it is 
uncertain whether some of the Company’s tax positions will be sustained upon audit. Our assumptions, judgments and 
estimates relative to the current provision for income taxes considers current tax laws, our interpretations of current tax laws 
and possible outcomes of current and future audits conducted by domestic and foreign tax authorities. While we believe the 
assumptions and estimates that we have made are reasonable, such assumptions and estimates could have a material impact to 
our Consolidated Financial Statements upon ultimate resolution of the tax positions.

For additional details, please see Note 15 "Income Taxes" to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this 

Annual Report on Form 10-K.

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

The following tables provide a detailed analysis of our results of operations and financial condition. For each of the 
periods indicated below, we present our revenues by product type, revenues by major geography, cost of revenues by product 
type, total gross margin, total operating margin, gross margin by product type and their corresponding percentage of total 
revenue. 

In addition, we provide Non-GAAP measures for the periods discussed in order to provide additional information to 

investors that we believe will be useful as this presentation is in line with how our management assesses our Company's 
performance. See “Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” below for a reconciliation of GAAP-based measures to Non-
GAAP-based measures.

53

Summary of Results of Operations

(In thousands)

Total Revenues by Product Type:

Cloud services and subscriptions

Customer support

License

Professional service and other

Total revenues

Total Cost of Revenues

Total GAAP-based Gross Profit

Total GAAP-based Gross Margin %

Total GAAP-based Operating Expenses

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2020

$  1,535,017 

$ 

127,572  $  1,407,445 

$ 

249,759  $  1,157,686 

1,330,965 

358,351 

269,511 

3,493,844 

1,062,201 

2,431,643 

 69.6 %

(3,097) 

1,334,062 

58,476 

1,275,586 

(26,360) 

9,614 

107,729 

27,735 

79,994 

384,711 

259,897 

3,386,115 

1,034,466 

2,351,649 

 69.4 %

(18,140) 

(13,716) 

276,379 

30,691 

245,688 

402,851 

273,613 

3,109,736 

1,003,775 

2,105,961 

 67.7 %

1,786,870 

176,124 

1,610,746 

8,314 

1,602,432 

Total GAAP-based Income from Operations

$ 

644,773 

$ 

(96,130)  $ 

740,903 

$ 

237,374  $ 

503,529 

% Revenues by Product Type:

Cloud services and subscriptions

Customer support
License

Professional service and other

Total Cost of Revenues by Product Type:

Cloud services and subscriptions

Customer support

License

Professional service and other

Amortization of acquired technology-based intangible assets

 43.9 %

 38.1 %
 10.3 %

 7.7 %

 41.6 %

 39.4 %
 11.3 %

 7.7 %

 37.2 %

 41.0 %
 13.0 %

 8.8 %

$ 

511,713 

$ 

29,895  $ 

481,818 

$ 

31,878  $ 

449,940 

121,485 

13,501 

216,895 

198,607 

(1,268) 

(415) 

19,712 

(20,189) 

122,753 

13,916 

197,183 

218,796 

(1,141) 

2,595 

(15,720) 

13,079 

123,894 

11,321 

212,903 

205,717 

Total cost of revenues

$  1,062,201 

$ 

27,735  $  1,034,466 

$ 

30,691  $  1,003,775 

% GAAP-based Gross Margin by Product Type:

Cloud services and subscriptions

Customer support

License

Professional service and other

Total Revenues by Geography: (1)
Americas (2)
EMEA (3)
Asia Pacific (4)
Total revenues

% Revenues by Geography:
Americas (2)
EMEA (3)
Asia Pacific (4)

Other Metrics:

GAAP-based gross margin
Non-GAAP-based gross margin (5)
Net income, attributable to OpenText

GAAP-based EPS, diluted
Non-GAAP-based EPS, diluted (5)
Adjusted EBITDA (5)

 66.7 %

 90.9 %

 96.2 %

 19.5 %

 65.8 %

 90.8 %

 96.4 %

 24.1 %

 61.1 %

 90.3 %

 97.2 %

 22.2 %

$  2,187,629 

$ 

118,546  $  2,069,083 

$ 

165,433  $  1,903,650 

1,026,201 

280,014 

(5,406) 

(5,411) 

1,031,607 

285,425 

89,326 

21,620 

942,281 

263,805 

$  3,493,844 

$ 

107,729  $  3,386,115 

$ 

276,379  $  3,109,736 

 62.6 %

 29.4 %

 8.0 %

 69.6 %

 75.6 %

$ 

$ 

397,090 

1.46 

$ 
3.22 
$  1,264,986 

 61.1 %

 30.5 %

 8.4 %

 69.4 %

 76.1 %

$ 

$ 

310,672 

1.14 

$ 
3.39 
$  1,315,033 

 61.2 %

 30.3 %

 8.5 %

 67.7 %

 74.5 %

$ 

$ 

234,225 

0.86 

$ 
2.89 
$  1,148,080 

_______________________________

(1) Total revenues by geography are determined based on the location of our direct end customer.
(2) Americas consists of countries in North, Central and South America.
(3) EMEA primarily consists of countries in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
(4) Asia Pacific primarily consists of Japan, Australia, China, Korea, Philippines, Singapore, India and New Zealand.
(5) See “Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” (discussed later in this MD&A) for definitions and reconciliations of GAAP-based measures to Non-

GAAP-based measures.

54

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Revenues, Cost of Revenues and Gross Margin by Product Type

1)  Cloud Services and Subscriptions:

Cloud services and subscriptions revenues are from hosting arrangements where in connection with the licensing of 

software, the end user does not take possession of the software, as well as from end-to-end fully outsourced B2B integration 
solutions to our customers (collectively referred to as cloud arrangements). The software application resides on our hardware or 
that of a third party, and the customer accesses and uses the software on an as-needed basis via an identified line. Our cloud 
arrangements can be broadly categorized as PaaS, SaaS, cloud subscriptions and managed services. For the year ended June 30, 
2022, our cloud renewal rate, excluding the impact of Carbonite and Zix, was approximately 94% compared to approximately 
93% for the year ended June 30, 2021.

Cost of Cloud services and subscriptions revenues is comprised primarily of third-party network usage fees, maintenance 

of in-house data hardware centers, technical support personnel-related costs and some third party royalty costs.

(In thousands)

Cloud Services and Subscriptions:

Americas
EMEA

Asia Pacific

Total Cloud Services and Subscriptions Revenues

Cost of Cloud Services and Subscriptions Revenues

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

$  1,155,918 
274,824 

$ 

107,474  $  1,048,444 
256,199 
18,625 

$ 

209,001  $ 
23,343 

104,275 

1,535,017 

511,713 

1,473 

127,572 

29,895 

102,802 

1,407,445 

481,818 

17,415 

249,759 

31,878 

2020

839,443 
232,856 

85,387 

1,157,686 

449,940 

GAAP-based Cloud Services and Subscriptions Gross Profit

$  1,023,304 

$ 

97,677  $ 

925,627 

$ 

217,881  $ 

707,746 

GAAP-based Cloud Services and Subscriptions Gross Margin %

 66.7 %

% Cloud Services and Subscriptions Revenues by Geography:

Americas

EMEA

Asia Pacific

 75.3 %

 17.9 %

 6.8 %

 65.8 %

 74.5 %

 18.2 %

 7.3 %

 61.1 %

 72.5 %

 20.1 %

 7.4 %

Cloud services and subscriptions revenues increased by $127.6 million or 9.1% during the year ended June 30, 2022 as 
compared to the prior fiscal year; up 9.8% after factoring in the unfavorable impact of $9.7 million of foreign exchange rate 
changes. The increase was primarily driven by the impact of recent acquisitions, along with organic growth over the 
comparative period. Geographically, the overall change was attributable to an increase in Americas of $107.5 million, an 
increase in EMEA of $18.6 million and an increase in Asia Pacific of $1.5 million.

There were 98 cloud services contracts greater than $1.0 million that closed during Fiscal 2022, compared to 64 contracts 

during Fiscal 2021.

Cost of Cloud services and subscriptions revenues increased by $29.9 million during the year ended June 30, 2022 as 

compared to the prior fiscal year. This was primarily due to an increase in third party network usage fees of $19.9 million, an 
increase in labour-related costs of $8.1 million and an increase in payroll taxes of $1.5 million. Overall, the gross margin 
percentage on Cloud services and subscriptions revenues increased to 67% from 66%.

2)  Customer Support:

Customer support revenues consist of revenues from our customer support and maintenance agreements. These 
agreements allow our customers to receive technical support, enhancements and upgrades to new versions of our software 
products when available. Customer support revenues are generated from support and maintenance relating to current year sales 
of software products and from the renewal of existing maintenance agreements for software licenses sold in prior periods. 
Therefore, changes in Customer support revenues do not always correlate directly to the changes in license revenues from 
period to period. The terms of support and maintenance agreements are typically twelve months, and are renewable, generally 
on an annual basis, at the option of the customer. Our management reviews our Customer support renewal rates on a quarterly 
basis, and we use these rates as a method of monitoring our customer service performance. For the year ended June 30, 2022, 
our Customer support renewal rate was approximately 94%, consistent with the year ended June 30, 2021.

Cost of Customer support revenues is comprised primarily of technical support personnel and related costs, as well as 

third party royalty costs.

55

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(In thousands)

Customer Support Revenues:

Americas

EMEA

Asia Pacific

Total Customer Support Revenues

Cost of Customer Support Revenues

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2020

$ 

743,474 

$ 

(250)  $ 

743,724 

$ 

9,146  $ 

734,578 

475,686 

111,805 

1,330,965 

121,485 

(5,872) 

3,025 

(3,097) 

(1,268) 

481,558 

108,780 

1,334,062 

122,753 

43,111 

6,219 

58,476 

438,447 

102,561 

1,275,586 

(1,141) 

123,894 

GAAP-based Customer Support Gross Profit

$  1,209,480 

$ 

(1,829)  $  1,211,309 

$ 

59,617  $  1,151,692 

GAAP-based Customer Support Gross Margin %

% Customer Support Revenues by Geography:

Americas

EMEA

Asia Pacific

 90.9 %

 55.9 %

 35.7 %

 8.4 %

 90.8 %

 55.7 %

 36.1 %

 8.2 %

 90.3 %

 57.6 %

 34.4 %

 8.0 %

Customer support revenues decreased by $3.1 million or 0.2% during the year ended June 30, 2022 as compared to the 

prior fiscal year; up 1.0% after factoring in the unfavorable impact of $16.3 million of foreign exchange rate changes. 
Geographically, the overall change was attributable to a decrease in EMEA of $5.9 million and a decrease in Americas of $0.2 
million, partially offset by an increase in Asia Pacific of $3.0 million.

Cost of Customer support revenues decreased by $1.3 million during the year ended June 30, 2022 as compared to the 

prior fiscal year. This was primarily due to a decrease in labour-related costs of $1.9 million and a decrease in third party 
network usage fees of $0.3 million, partially offset by an increase in other miscellaneous costs of $1.0 million. Overall, the 
gross margin percentage on Customer support revenues remained stable at 91%.

3)  License:

Our License revenue can be broadly categorized as perpetual licenses, term licenses and subscription licenses. Our 
License revenues are impacted by the strength of general economic and industry conditions, the competitive strength of our 
software products and our acquisitions. Cost of License revenues consists primarily of royalties payable to third parties.

(In thousands)

License Revenues:

Americas

EMEA

Asia Pacific

Total License Revenues

Cost of License Revenues
GAAP-based License Gross Profit

GAAP-based License Gross Margin %

% License Revenues by Geography:

Americas

EMEA

Asia Pacific

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2020

$ 

163,719 

$ 

4,189  $ 

159,530 

$ 

(40,116)  $ 

199,646 

161,735 

32,897 

358,351 

13,501 
344,850 

 96.2 %

$ 

(16,768) 

(13,781) 

(26,360) 

(415) 
(25,945)  $ 

$ 

 45.7 %

 45.1 %

 9.2 %

23,296 

(1,320) 

(18,140) 

2,595 
(20,735)  $ 

$ 

178,503 

46,678 

384,711 

13,916 
370,795 

 96.4 %

 41.5 %

 46.4 %

 12.1 %

155,207 

47,998 

402,851 

11,321 
391,530 

 97.2 %

 49.6 %

 38.5 %

 11.9 %

License revenues decreased by $26.4 million or 6.9% during the year ended June 30, 2022 as compared to the prior fiscal 
year; down 4.6% after factoring in the unfavorable impact of $8.7 million of foreign exchange rate changes. Geographically, the 
overall change was attributable to a decrease in EMEA of $16.8 million and a decrease in Asia Pacific of $13.8 million, 
partially offset by an increase in Americas of $4.2 million.

During Fiscal 2022, we closed 122 license contracts greater than $0.5 million, of which 46 contracts were greater than 
$1.0 million, contributing $131.7 million of License revenues. This was compared to 122 license contracts greater than $0.5 
million during Fiscal 2021, of which 45 contracts were greater than $1.0 million, contributing $131.6 million of License 
revenues.

56

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Cost of License revenues decreased by $0.4 million during the year ended June 30, 2022 as compared to the prior fiscal 

year as a result of lower third-party technology costs. Overall, the gross margin percentage on License revenues remained stable 
at 96%.

4)  Professional Service and Other:

Professional service and other revenues consist of revenues from consulting contracts and contracts to provide 

implementation, training and integration services (professional services). Other revenues consist of hardware revenues, which 
are included within the “Professional service and other” category because they are relatively immaterial to our service revenues. 
Professional services are typically performed after the purchase of new software licenses. Professional service and other 
revenues can vary from period to period based on the type of engagements as well as those implementations that are assumed 
by our partner network. 

Cost of Professional service and other revenues consists primarily of the costs of providing integration, configuration and 

training with respect to our various software products. The most significant components of these costs are personnel-related 
expenses, travel costs and third-party subcontracting. 

(In thousands)

Professional Service and Other Revenues:
Americas

EMEA

Asia Pacific

Total Professional Service and Other Revenues

Cost of Professional Service and Other Revenues

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2020

$ 

124,518 

$ 

7,133  $ 

117,385 

$ 

(12,598)  $ 

129,983 

113,956 

31,037 

269,511 

216,895 

(1,391) 

3,872 

9,614 

19,712 

115,347 

27,165 

259,897 

197,183 

(424) 

(694) 

(13,716) 

(15,720) 

115,771 

27,859 

273,613 

212,903 

GAAP-based Professional Service and Other Gross Profit

$ 

52,616 

$ 

(10,098)  $ 

62,714 

$ 

2,004  $ 

60,710 

GAAP-based Professional Service and Other Gross Margin %

 19.5 %

% Professional Service and Other Revenues by Geography:

Americas

EMEA

Asia Pacific

 46.2 %

 42.3 %

 11.5 %

 24.1 %

 45.2 %

 44.4 %

 10.4 %

 22.2 %

 47.5 %

 42.3 %

 10.2 %

Professional service and other revenues increased by $9.6 million or 3.7% during the year ended June 30, 2022 as 
compared to the prior fiscal year; up 5.5% after factoring in the unfavorable impact of $4.8 million of foreign exchange rate 
changes. Geographically, the overall change was attributable to an increase in Americas of $7.1 million and an increase in Asia 
Pacific of $3.9 million, partially offset by a decrease in EMEA of $1.4 million.

Cost of Professional service and other revenues increased by $19.7 million during the year ended June 30, 2022 as 
compared to the prior fiscal year. This was primarily due to an increase in labour-related costs of $19.4 million and an increase 
in other miscellaneous costs of $0.3 million. Overall, the gross margin percentage on Professional service and other revenues 
decreased to 20% from 24%.

Amortization of Acquired Technology-based Intangible Assets

(In thousands)

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2020

Amortization of acquired technology-based intangible assets 

$ 

198,607  $ 

(20,189)  $ 

218,796  $ 

13,079  $ 

205,717 

Amortization of acquired technology-based intangible assets decreased during the year ended June 30, 2022 by $20.2 
million as compared to the prior fiscal year. This was due to a reduction of $27.9 million relating to intangible assets from 
previous acquisitions becoming fully amortized, partially offset by an increase of $7.7 million relating to amortization of newly 
acquired customer-based intangible assets from recent acquisitions.

57

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Operating Expenses

(In thousands)

Research and development

Sales and marketing

General and administrative

Depreciation

Amortization of acquired customer-based intangible assets

Special charges (recoveries)

Total operating expenses

% of Total Revenues:

Research and development

Sales and marketing

General and administrative

Depreciation

Amortization of acquired customer-based intangible assets

Special charges (recoveries)

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2020

$ 

440,448 

$ 

19,001  $ 

421,447 

$ 

51,036  $ 

370,411 

677,118 

317,085 

88,241 

217,105 

46,873 

54,897 

53,564 

2,976 

561 

45,125 

622,221 

263,521 

85,265 

216,544 

1,748 

37,177 

25,989 

(4,193) 

(3,015) 

(98,680) 

585,044 

237,532 

89,458 

219,559 

100,428 

$  1,786,870 

$ 

176,124  $  1,610,746 

$ 

8,314  $  1,602,432 

 12.6 %

 19.4 %

 9.1 %

 2.5 %

 6.2 %

 1.3 %

 12.4 %

 18.4 %

 7.8 %

 2.5 %

 6.4 %

 0.1 %

 11.9 %

 18.8 %

 7.6 %

 2.9 %

 7.1 %

 3.2 %

Research and development expenses consist primarily of payroll and payroll-related benefits expenses, contracted 
research and development expenses and facility costs. Research and development enables organic growth and improves product 
stability and functionality, and accordingly, we dedicate extensive efforts to update and upgrade our product offerings. The 
primary drivers are typically software upgrades and development.

 (In thousands)

Payroll and payroll-related benefits

Contract labour and consulting

Share-based compensation

Travel and communication

Facilities

Other miscellaneous

Total change in research and development expenses

Change between Fiscal Years
increase (decrease)

2022 and 2021

2021 and 2020

$ 

$ 

17,070  $ 

2,576 

7,263 

294 

(9,053) 

851 

19,001  $ 

40,794 

(838) 

4,550 

(1,454) 

8,327 

(343) 

51,036 

Research and development expenses increased by $19 million during the year ended June 30, 2022 as compared to the 
prior fiscal year, primarily as a result of recent acquisitions. Payroll and payroll-related benefits, which is comprised of salaries, 
benefits and variable short-term incentives, increased by $17.1 million. Additionally, share-based compensation expense 
increased by $7.3 million and contract labour and consulting increased by $2.6 million. These increases were partially offset by 
reductions in facility-related expenses of $9.1 million. Overall, our research and development expenses, as a percentage of total 
revenues, remained stable compared to the prior fiscal year at 13%.

Our research and development labour resources increased by 150 employees, from 4,176 employees at June 30, 2021 to 

4,326 employees at June 30, 2022.

58

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Sales and marketing expenses consist primarily of personnel expenses and costs associated with advertising, marketing 

events and trade shows. 

(In thousands)

Payroll and payroll-related benefits

Commissions

Contract labour and consulting

Share-based compensation

Travel and communication

Marketing expenses

Facilities

Credit loss expense (recovery)

Other miscellaneous

Total change in sales and marketing expenses

Change between Fiscal Years
increase (decrease)

2022 and 2021

2021 and 2020

38,613  $ 

6,993 

2 

4,316 

3,806 

9,579 

(3,991) 

(9,045) 

4,624 

54,897  $ 

28,343 

11,530 

135 

8,977 

(14,641) 

11,522 

(4,151) 

(4,329) 

(209) 

37,177 

$ 

$ 

Sales and marketing expenses increased by $54.9 million during the year ended June 30, 2022 as compared to the prior 

fiscal year, partially as a result of recent acquisitions. Payroll and payroll-related benefits, which is comprised of salaries, 
benefits and variable short-term incentives, increased by $38.6 million. Additionally, marketing expenses increased by $9.6 
million, commissions increased by $7.0 million, other miscellaneous costs increased by $4.6 million, share-based compensation 
expense increased by $4.3 million and travel and communication expenses increased by $3.8 million. These increases were 
partially offset by reductions in credit loss expense of $9.0 million and reductions in facility-related expenses of $4.0 million. 
Overall, our sales and marketing expenses, as a percentage of total revenues, increased to 19% from 18% the prior fiscal year. 

Our sales and marketing labour resources increased by 256 employees, from 2,454 employees at June 30, 2021 to 2,710 

employees at June 30, 2022.

General and administrative expenses consist primarily of payroll and payroll related benefits expenses, related overhead, 

audit fees, other professional fees, contract labour and consulting expenses and public company costs. 

(In thousands)

Payroll and payroll-related benefits

Contract labour and consulting

Share-based compensation

Travel and communication

Facilities

Other miscellaneous

Total change in general and administrative expenses

$ 

Change between Fiscal Years
increase (decrease)

2022 and 2021

2021 and 2020

47,831  $ 

5,294 

2,478 

5,827 

322 

(8,188) 

53,564  $ 

11,580 

464 

5,159 

(3,922) 

(3,838) 

16,546 

25,989 

General and administrative expenses increased by $53.6 million during the year ended June 30, 2022 as compared to the 
prior fiscal year, partially as a result of recent acquisitions. Payroll and payroll-related benefits, which is comprised of salaries, 
benefits and variable short-term incentives, increased by $47.8 million. Additionally, travel and communication expenses 
increased by $5.8 million, contract labour and consulting increased by $5.3 million and share-based compensation expense 
increased by $2.5 million. These increases were partially offset by reductions in other miscellaneous costs, which include 
professional fees such as legal, audit and tax related expenses, of $8.2 million. Overall, general and administrative expenses, as 
a percentage of total revenues, increased to 9% from 8% in the prior fiscal year.

 Our general and administrative labour resources increased by 105 employees, from 1,866 employees at June 30, 2021 to 

1,971 employees at June 30, 2022.

Depreciation expenses:

(In thousands)

Depreciation

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2020

$ 

88,241  $ 

2,976  $ 

85,265  $ 

(4,193)  $ 

89,458 

Depreciation expenses increased during the year ended June 30, 2022 by $3.0 million compared to the prior fiscal year. 

59

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Depreciation expenses as a percentage of total revenue remained stable for the year ended June 30, 2022 at 3% compared 

to the prior fiscal year.

Amortization of acquired customer-based intangible assets:

(In thousands)

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2020

Amortization of acquired customer-based intangible assets

$ 

217,105  $ 

561  $ 

216,544  $ 

(3,015)  $ 

219,559 

Amortization of acquired customer-based intangible assets increased during the year ended June 30, 2022 by $0.6 million 

as compared to the prior fiscal year. This was due to an increase of $9.4 million relating to amortization of newly acquired 
customer-based intangible assets from recent acquisitions, partially offset by a reduction of $8.8 million relating to intangible 
assets from previous acquisitions becoming fully amortized.

Special charges (recoveries):

Special charges (recoveries) typically relate to amounts that we expect to pay in connection with restructuring plans, 

acquisition-related costs and other similar charges and recoveries. Generally, we implement such plans in the context of 
integrating acquired entities with existing OpenText operations and most recently in response to our return to office planning. 
Actions related to such restructuring plans are typically completed within a period of one year. In certain limited situations, if 
the planned activity does not need to be implemented, or an expense lower than anticipated is paid out, we record a recovery of 
the originally recorded expense to Special charges (recoveries).

(In thousands)

Special charges (recoveries)

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2020

$ 

46,873  $ 

45,125  $ 

1,748  $ 

(98,680)  $ 

100,428 

Special charges (recoveries) increased by $45.1 million during the year ended June 30, 2022 as compared to the prior 
fiscal year. This was primarily due to an increase in restructuring activities of $27.2 million related to abandoned facilities and a 
decrease in comparative period recoveries for the Fiscal 2022 Restructuring Plan, COVID-19 Restructuring Plan and Fiscal 
2020 Restructuring Plan. 

Additionally, acquisition related costs increased by $1.0 million and other miscellaneous charges increased by $17.0 
million, primarily driven by pre-acquisition equity incentives, which upon acquisition were replaced by equivalent value cash 
settlements (see Note 19 “Acquisitions” to our Consolidated Financial Statements) compared to the same period in the prior 
fiscal year.

For more details on Special charges (recoveries), see Note 18 “Special Charges (Recoveries)” to our Consolidated 

Financial Statements.

Other Income (Expense), Net

The components of other income (expense), net were as follows:

(In thousands)
Foreign exchange gains (losses) 
OpenText share in net income (loss) of equity investees (1)
Loss on debt extinguishment (2)

Other miscellaneous income (expense)

Total other income (expense), net

__________________________

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

$ 

(2,670)  $ 

(1,397)  $ 

(1,273)  $ 

2,911  $ 

58,702 

(27,413) 

499 

(4,195) 

(27,413) 

689 

62,897 

— 

(190) 

54,197 

17,854 

(1,582) 

2020

(4,184) 

8,700 

(17,854) 

1,392 

$ 

29,118  $ 

(32,316)  $ 

61,434  $ 

73,380  $ 

(11,946) 

(1) Represents our share in net income of equity investees, which approximates fair value and subject to volatility based on market trends and business 

conditions, based on our interest in certain investment funds in which we are a limited partner. Our interests in each of these investees range from 
4% to below 20% and these investments are accounted for using the equity method (see Note 9 “Prepaid Expenses and Other Assets” to our 
Consolidated Financial Statements for more details). 

(2) On December 9, 2021, we redeemed Senior Notes 2026 in full, which resulted in a loss on debt extinguishment of $27.4 million. Of this, $25.0 
million related to the early termination call premium, $6.2 million related to unamortized debt issuance costs and ($3.8) million related to 
unamortized premium (see Note 11 “Long-Term Debt” to our Consolidated Financial Statements for more details). On March 5, 2020, we redeemed 

60

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
in full $800 million aggregate principal amount of our 5.625% Senior Notes due 2023 (Senior Notes 2023), which resulted in a loss on debt 
extinguishment of $17.9 million. Of this, $6.7 million related to unamortized debt issuance costs and the remaining $11.2 million related to the early 
termination call premium.

Interest and Other Related Expense, Net 

Interest and other related expense, net is primarily comprised of interest paid and accrued on our debt facilities, offset by 

interest income earned on our cash and cash equivalents.

(In thousands)
Interest expense related to total outstanding debt (1)
Interest income

Other miscellaneous expense

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2020

$ 

151,569  $ 

5,923  $ 

145,646  $ 

(3,558)  $ 

149,204 

(4,637) 

10,948 

(781) 

1,171 

(3,856) 

9,777 

7,912 

835 

(11,768) 

8,942 

Total interest and other related expense, net

$ 

157,880  $ 

6,313  $ 

151,567  $ 

5,189  $ 

146,378 

__________________________

(1) For more details see Note 11 “Long-Term Debt” to our Consolidated Financial Statements.

Provision for Income Taxes

We operate in several tax jurisdictions and are exposed to various foreign tax rates.

(In thousands)

Provision for income taxes

Year Ended June 30,

2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

2020

$ 

118,752  $ 

(221,154)  $ 

339,906  $ 

229,069  $ 

110,837 

The effective tax rate decreased to a provision of 23.0% for the year ended June 30, 2022, compared to a provision of 

52.2% for the year ended June 30, 2021. Tax expense decreased from $339.9 million during the year ended June 30, 2021 to 
$118.8 million during the year ended June 30, 2022. This was primarily due to (i) a decrease of $300.6 million related to 
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) settlements in Fiscal 2021, (ii) a decrease of $37.5 million related to lower net income before 
taxes, (iii) a decrease of $10.8 million related to passive income from foreign subsidiaries, (iv) a decrease of $9.6 million 
related to tax accruals on unremitted earnings and (v) a decrease of $8.0 million for base erosion and anti-abuse tax (BEAT). 
These were partially offset by (i) an increase of $94.3 million for changes in unrecognized tax benefits, (ii) a net increase of 
$46.8 million related to internal reorganizations and (iii) an increase of $3.5 million for change in valuation allowance. The 
remainder of the difference was due to normal course movements and non-material items.

For information on certain potential tax contingencies, including the CRA matter, see Note 14 “Guarantees and 

Contingencies” and Note 15 “Income Taxes” to our Consolidated Financial Statements. Please also see Part I, Item 1A, “Risk 
Factors” within this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

61

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures

In addition to reporting financial results in accordance with U.S. GAAP, the Company provides certain financial measures 
that are not in accordance with U.S. GAAP (Non-GAAP). These Non-GAAP financial measures have certain limitations in that 
they do not have a standardized meaning and thus the Company's definition may be different from similar Non-GAAP financial 
measures used by other companies and/or analysts and may differ from period to period. Thus, it may be more difficult to 
compare the Company's financial performance to that of other companies. However, the Company's management compensates 
for these limitations by providing the relevant disclosure of the items excluded in the calculation of these Non-GAAP financial 
measures both in its reconciliation to the U.S. GAAP financial measures and its Consolidated Financial Statements, all of which 
should be considered when evaluating the Company's results. 

The Company uses these Non-GAAP financial measures to supplement the information provided in its Consolidated 
Financial Statements, which are presented in accordance with U.S. GAAP. The presentation of Non-GAAP financial measures 
is not meant to be a substitute for financial measures presented in accordance with U.S. GAAP, but rather should be evaluated 
in conjunction with and as a supplement to such U.S. GAAP measures. OpenText strongly encourages investors to review its 
financial information in its entirety and not to rely on a single financial measure. The Company therefore believes that despite 
these limitations, it is appropriate to supplement the disclosure of the U.S. GAAP measures with certain Non-GAAP measures 
defined below.

Non-GAAP-based net income and Non-GAAP-based EPS, attributable to OpenText, are consistently calculated as 
GAAP-based net income or earnings per share, attributable to OpenText, on a diluted basis, excluding the effects of the 
amortization of acquired intangible assets, other income (expense), share-based compensation, and special charges (recoveries), 
all net of tax and any tax benefits/expense items unrelated to current period income, as further described in the tables below. 
Non-GAAP-based gross profit is the arithmetical sum of GAAP-based gross profit and the amortization of acquired technology-
based intangible assets and share-based compensation within cost of sales. Non-GAAP-based gross margin is calculated as 
Non-GAAP-based gross profit expressed as a percentage of total revenue. Non-GAAP-based income from operations is 
calculated as GAAP-based income from operations, excluding the amortization of acquired intangible assets, special charges 
(recoveries), and share-based compensation expense. 

Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (Adjusted EBITDA) is consistently calculated as 

GAAP-based net income, attributable to OpenText, excluding interest income (expense), provision for income taxes, 
depreciation and amortization of acquired intangible assets, other income (expense), share-based compensation and special 
charges (recoveries).

The Company's management believes that the presentation of the above defined Non-GAAP financial measures provides 

useful information to investors because they portray the financial results of the Company before the impact of certain non-
operational charges. The use of the term “non-operational charge” is defined for this purpose as an expense that does not impact 
the ongoing operating decisions taken by the Company's management. These items are excluded based upon the way the 
Company's management evaluates the performance of the Company's business for use in the Company's internal reports and are 
not excluded in the sense that they may be used under U.S. GAAP. 

The Company does not acquire businesses on a predictable cycle, and therefore believes that the presentation of Non-
GAAP measures, which in certain cases adjust for the impact of amortization of intangible assets and the related tax effects that 
are primarily related to acquisitions, will provide readers of financial statements with a more consistent basis for comparison 
across accounting periods and be more useful in helping readers understand the Company’s operating results and underlying 
operational trends. Additionally, the Company has engaged in various restructuring activities over the past several years, 
primarily due to acquisitions and most recently in response to our return to office planning, that have resulted in costs 
associated with reductions in headcount, consolidation of leased facilities and related costs, all which are recorded under the 
Company’s “Special charges (recoveries)” caption on the Consolidated Statements of Income. Each restructuring activity is a 
discrete event based on a unique set of business objectives or circumstances, and each differs in terms of its operational 
implementation, business impact and scope, and the size of each restructuring plan can vary significantly from period to period. 
Therefore, the Company believes that the exclusion of these special charges (recoveries) will also better aid readers of financial 
statements in the understanding and comparability of the Company's operating results and underlying operational trends. 

In summary, the Company believes the provision of supplemental Non-GAAP measures allow investors to evaluate the 
operational and financial performance of the Company's core business using the same evaluation measures that management 
uses, and is therefore a useful indication of OpenText's performance or expected performance of future operations and 
facilitates period-to-period comparison of operating performance (although prior performance is not necessarily indicative of 
future performance). As a result, the Company considers it appropriate and reasonable to provide, in addition to U.S. GAAP 
measures, supplementary Non-GAAP financial measures that exclude certain items from the presentation of its financial results.

The following charts provide unaudited reconciliations of U.S. GAAP-based financial measures to Non-GAAP-based 

financial measures for the following periods presented.

62

Reconciliation of selected GAAP-based measures to Non-GAAP-based measures 
for the year ended June 30, 2022 
(In thousands, except for per share data)

Cost of revenues

Cloud services and subscriptions

Customer support

Professional service and other

Amortization of acquired technology-based intangible assets

GAAP-based gross profit and gross margin (%) / Non-GAAP-based gross 

profit and gross margin (%)

Operating expenses

Research and development

Sales and marketing

General and administrative

Amortization of acquired customer-based intangible assets
Special charges (recoveries)

GAAP-based income from operations / Non-GAAP-based income from 

operations

Other income (expense), net

Provision for income taxes

GAAP-based net income / Non-GAAP-based net income, attributable to 

OpenText

GAAP-based EPS / Non-GAAP-based EPS-diluted, attributable to 

OpenText

_________________________________

Year Ended June 30, 2022

GAAP-
based 
Measures 
% of Total 
Revenue

GAAP-based 
Measures

Non-GAAP-
based 
Measures

Non-GAAP-
based 
Measures
% of Total 
Revenue

Adjustments Note

$ 

511,713 

$ 

(5,285)  (1) $  506,428 

121,485 

216,895 

198,607 

(2,399)  (1)

(3,740)  (1)

(198,607)  (2)

119,086 

213,155 

— 

  2,431,643 

69.6%

210,031 

(3)

  2,641,674 

75.6%

440,448 

677,118 

317,085 

217,105 
46,873 

644,773 

29,118 

118,752 

397,090 

(17,122)  (1)

(22,628)  (1)

(18,382)  (1)

(217,105)  (2)
(46,873)  (4)

423,326 

654,490 

298,703 

— 
— 

532,141 

(5)

  1,176,914 

(29,118)  (6)

— 

23,913 

(7)

142,665 

479,110 

(8)

876,200 

$ 

1.46 

$ 

1.76 

(8) $ 

3.22 

(1) Adjustment relates to the exclusion of share-based compensation expense from our Non-GAAP-based operating expenses as this expense is 

excluded from our internal analysis of operating results.

(2) Adjustment relates to the exclusion of amortization expense from our Non-GAAP-based operating expenses as the timing and frequency of 

amortization expense is dependent on our acquisitions and is hence excluded from our internal analysis of operating results.

(3) GAAP-based and Non-GAAP-based gross profit stated in dollars and gross margin stated as a percentage of total revenue.
(4) Adjustment relates to the exclusion of special charges (recoveries) from our Non-GAAP-based operating expenses as special charges (recoveries) 
are generally incurred in the periods relevant to an acquisition and include certain charges or recoveries that are not indicative or related to 
continuing operations and are therefore excluded from our internal analysis of operating results. See Note 18 “Special Charges (Recoveries)” to our 
Consolidated Financial Statements for more details.

(5) GAAP-based and Non-GAAP-based income from operations stated in dollars.
(6) Adjustment relates to the exclusion of other income (expense) from our Non-GAAP-based operating expenses as other income (expense) generally 
relates to the transactional impact of foreign exchange and is generally not indicative or related to continuing operations and is therefore excluded 
from our internal analysis of operating results. Other income (expense) also includes our share of income (losses) from our holdings in investments 
as a limited partner. We do not actively trade equity securities in these privately held companies nor do we plan our ongoing operations based 
around any anticipated fundings or distributions from these investments. We exclude gains and losses on these investments as we do not believe they 
are reflective of our ongoing business and operating results.

(7) Adjustment relates to differences between the GAAP-based tax provision rate of approximately 23% and a Non-GAAP-based tax rate of 

approximately 14%; these rate differences are due to the income tax effects of items that are excluded for the purpose of calculating Non-GAAP-
based net income. Such excluded items include amortization, share-based compensation, special charges (recoveries) and other income (expense), 
net. Also excluded are tax benefits/expense items unrelated to current period income such as changes in reserves for tax uncertainties and valuation 
allowance reserves and “book to return” adjustments for tax return filings and tax assessments. Included is the amount of net tax benefits arising 
from the internal reorganization that occurred in Fiscal 2017 assumed to be allocable to the current period based on the forecasted utilization period. 
In arriving at our Non-GAAP-based tax rate of approximately 14%, we analyzed the individual adjusted expenses and took into consideration the 
impact of statutory tax rates from local jurisdictions incurring the expense.

63

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(8) Reconciliation of GAAP-based net income to Non-GAAP-based net income:

Year Ended June 30, 2022

Per share diluted

GAAP-based net income, attributable to OpenText

$ 

397,090  $ 

Add:

Amortization

Share-based compensation

Special charges (recoveries)

Other (income) expense, net

GAAP-based provision for income taxes

Non-GAAP-based provision for income taxes

415,712 

69,556 

46,873 

(29,118)   

118,752 

(142,665)   

Non-GAAP-based net income, attributable to OpenText

$ 

876,200  $ 

1.46 

1.52 

0.26 

0.17 

(0.11) 

0.44 

(0.52) 

3.22 

Year Ended June 30, 2022

$ 

$ 

397,090 

118,752 
157,880 

198,607 

217,105 

88,241 

69,556 

46,873 

(29,118) 

1,264,986 

Reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA

GAAP-based net income, attributable to OpenText

Add:

Provision for income taxes
Interest and other related expense, net

Amortization of acquired technology-based intangible assets

Amortization of acquired customer-based intangible assets

Depreciation

Share-based compensation

Special charges (recoveries)

Other (income) expense, net

Adjusted EBITDA

64

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Reconciliation of selected GAAP-based measures to Non-GAAP-based measures 
for the year ended June 30, 2021 
(In thousands, except for per share data)

Cost of revenues

Cloud services and subscriptions

Customer support

Professional service and other

Amortization of acquired technology-based intangible assets

GAAP-based gross profit and gross margin (%) / Non-GAAP-based gross 

Year Ended June 30, 2021

GAAP-based 
Measures

GAAP-based 
Measures 
% of Total 
Revenue

Adjustments Note

Non-GAAP-
based 
Measures

Non-GAAP-
based 
Measures
% of Total 
Revenue

$ 

481,818 

$ 

(3,419)  (1) $ 

478,399 

122,753 

197,183 

218,796 

(1,910)  (1)

(2,565)  (1)

(218,796)  (2)

120,843 

194,618 

— 

profit and gross margin (%)

  2,351,649 

69.4%

226,690 

(3)

  2,578,339 

76.1%

Operating expenses

Research and development

Sales and marketing

General and administrative

Amortization of acquired customer-based intangible assets

Special charges (recoveries)

GAAP-based income from operations / Non-GAAP-based income from 

operations

Other income (expense), net

Provision for income taxes

GAAP-based net income / Non-GAAP-based net income, attributable to 

OpenText

GAAP-based EPS / Non-GAAP-based EPS-diluted, attributable to 

OpenText

_________________________________________

421,447 

622,221 

263,521 

216,544 

1,748 

740,903 

61,434 

339,906 

310,672 

(9,859)  (1)

(18,312)  (1)

(15,904)  (1)

(216,544)  (2)

(1,748)  (4)

411,588 

603,909 

247,617 

— 

— 

489,057 

(5)

  1,229,960 

(61,434)  (6)

— 

(188,931)  (7)

150,975 

616,554 

(8)

927,226 

$ 

1.14 

$ 

2.25 

(8) $ 

3.39 

(1) Adjustment relates to the exclusion of share-based compensation expense from our Non-GAAP-based operating expenses as this expense is 

excluded from our internal analysis of operating results.

(2) Adjustment relates to the exclusion of amortization expense from our Non-GAAP-based operating expenses as the timing and frequency of 

amortization expense is dependent on our acquisitions and is hence excluded from our internal analysis of operating results.

(3) GAAP-based and Non-GAAP-based gross profit stated in dollars and gross margin stated as a percentage of total revenue.
(4) Adjustment relates to the exclusion of special charges (recoveries) from our Non-GAAP-based operating expenses as special charges (recoveries) 
are generally incurred in the periods relevant to an acquisition and include certain charges or recoveries that are not indicative or related to 
continuing operations and are therefore excluded from our internal analysis of operating results. See Note 18 “Special Charges (Recoveries)” to our 
Consolidated Financial Statements for more details.

(5) GAAP-based and Non-GAAP-based income from operations stated in dollars.
(6) Adjustment relates to the exclusion of other income (expense) from our Non-GAAP-based operating expenses as other income (expense) generally 
relates to the transactional impact of foreign exchange and is generally not indicative or related to continuing operations and is therefore excluded 
from our internal analysis of operating results. Other income (expense) also includes our share of income (losses) from our holdings in investments 
as a limited partner. We do not actively trade equity securities in these privately held companies nor do we plan our ongoing operations based 
around any anticipated fundings or distributions from these investments. We exclude gains and losses on these investments as we do not believe they 
are reflective of our ongoing business and operating results.

(7) Adjustment relates to differences between the GAAP-based tax provision rate of approximately 52% and a Non-GAAP-based tax rate of 

approximately 14%; these rate differences are due to the income tax effects of items that are excluded for the purpose of calculating Non-GAAP-
based net income. Such excluded items include amortization, share-based compensation, special charges (recoveries) and other income (expense), 
net. Also excluded are tax benefits/expense items unrelated to current period income such as changes in reserves for tax uncertainties and valuation 
allowance reserves and “book to return” adjustments for tax return filings and tax assessments. Included is the amount of net tax benefits arising 
from the internal reorganization that occurred in Fiscal 2017 assumed to be allocable to the current period based on the forecasted utilization period. 
In arriving at our Non-GAAP-based tax rate of approximately 14%, we analyzed the individual adjusted expenses and took into consideration the 
impact of statutory tax rates from local jurisdictions incurring the expense. The GAAP-based tax provision rate for the year ended June 30, 2021 
includes an income tax provision charge from IRS settlements partially offset by a tax benefit from the release of unrecognized tax benefits due to 
the conclusion of relevant tax audits that was recognized during the second quarter of Fiscal 2021.

65

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(8) Reconciliation of GAAP-based net income to Non-GAAP-based net income:

Year Ended June 30, 2021

Per share diluted

GAAP-based net income, attributable to OpenText

$ 

310,672  $ 

Add:

Amortization

Share-based compensation

Special charges (recoveries)

Other (income) expense, net

GAAP-based provision for income taxes

Non-GAAP-based provision for income taxes

435,340 

51,969 

1,748 

(61,434)   

339,906 

(150,975)   

Non-GAAP-based net income, attributable to OpenText

$ 

927,226  $ 

1.14 

1.59 

0.19 

0.01 

(0.22) 

1.23 

(0.55) 

3.39 

Year Ended June 30, 2021

$ 

$ 

310,672 

339,906 

151,567 

218,796 

216,544 

85,265 

51,969 

1,748 

(61,434) 

1,315,033 

Reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA

GAAP-based net income, attributable to OpenText

Add:

Provision for income taxes

Interest and other related expense, net

Amortization of acquired technology-based intangible assets

Amortization of acquired customer-based intangible assets

Depreciation

Share-based compensation

Special charges (recoveries)

Other (income) expense, net

Adjusted EBITDA

66

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Reconciliation of selected GAAP-based measures to Non-GAAP-based measures 
for the year ended June 30, 2020 
(In thousands, except for per share data)

Cost of revenues

Cloud services and subscriptions

Customer support

Professional service and other

Amortization of acquired technology-based intangible assets

GAAP-based gross profit and gross margin (%) /
Non-GAAP-based gross profit and gross margin (%)

Operating expenses

Research and development

Sales and marketing

General and administrative

Amortization of acquired customer-based intangible assets

Special charges (recoveries)

GAAP-based income from operations / Non-GAAP-based income from 
operations

Other income (expense), net

Provision for (recovery of) income taxes

GAAP-based net income / Non-GAAP-based net income, attributable to 
OpenText

GAAP-based EPS/ Non-GAAP-based EPS-diluted, attributable to 
OpenText

_________________________________________

Year Ended June 30, 2020

GAAP-based 
Measures

GAAP-based 
Measures 
% of Total 
Revenue

Adjustments Note

Non-GAAP-
based 
Measures

Non-GAAP-
based 
Measures
% of Total 
Revenue

$ 

449,940 

$ 

(1,642)  (1) $ 

448,298 

123,894 

212,903 

205,717 

(1,207)  (1)

(1,294)  (1)

(205,717)  (2)

122,687 

211,609 

— 

  2,105,961 

67.7%

(209,860)  (3)

  2,315,821 

74.5%

370,411 

585,044 

237,532 

219,559 

100,428 

503,529 

(11,946) 

110,837 

234,225 

(5,309)  (1)

(9,335)  (1)

(10,745)  (1)

(219,559)  (2)

(100,428)  (4)

365,102 

575,709 

226,787 

— 

— 

555,236 

11,946 

16,897 

(5)

(6)

(7)

  1,058,765 

— 

127,734 

550,285 

(8)

784,510 

$ 

0.86 

$ 

2.03 

(8) $ 

2.89 

(1) Adjustment relates to the exclusion of share-based compensation expense from our Non-GAAP-based operating expenses as this expense is 

excluded from our internal analysis of operating results.

(2) Adjustment relates to the exclusion of amortization expense from our Non-GAAP-based operating expenses as the timing and frequency of 

amortization expense is dependent on our acquisitions and is hence excluded from our internal analysis of operating results.

(3) GAAP-based and Non-GAAP-based gross profit stated in dollars and gross margin stated as a percentage of total revenue.
(4) Adjustment relates to the exclusion of special charges (recoveries) from our Non-GAAP-based operating expenses as special charges (recoveries) 
are generally incurred in the periods relevant to an acquisition and include certain charges or recoveries that are not indicative or related to 
continuing operations and are therefore excluded from our internal analysis of operating results. See Note 18 "Special Charges (Recoveries)" to our 
Consolidated Financial Statements for more details.

(5) GAAP-based and Non-GAAP-based income from operations stated in dollars.
(6) Adjustment relates to the exclusion of other income (expense) from our Non-GAAP-based operating expenses as other income (expense) generally 
relates to the transactional impact of foreign exchange and is generally not indicative or related to continuing operations and is therefore excluded 
from our internal analysis of operating results. Other income (expense) also includes our share of income (losses) from our holdings in investments 
as a limited partner. We do not actively trade equity securities in these privately held companies nor do we plan our ongoing operations based 
around any anticipated fundings or distributions from these investments. We exclude gains and losses on these investments as we do not believe they 
are reflective of our ongoing business and operating results.

(7) Adjustment relates to differences between the GAAP-based tax provision rate of approximately 32% and a Non-GAAP-based tax rate of 

approximately 14%; these rate differences are due to the income tax effects of items that are excluded for the purpose of calculating Non-GAAP-
based net income. Such excluded items include amortization, share-based compensation, special charges (recoveries) and other income (expense), 
net. Also excluded are tax benefits/expense items unrelated to current period income such as changes in reserves for tax uncertainties and valuation 
allowance reserves and “book to return” adjustments for tax return filings and tax assessments. Included is the amount of net tax benefits arising 
from the internal reorganization that occurred in Fiscal 2017 assumed to be allocable to the current period based on the forecasted utilization period. 
In arriving at our Non-GAAP-based tax rate of approximately 14%, we analyzed the individual adjusted expenses and took into consideration the 
impact of statutory tax rates from local jurisdictions incurring the expense.

67

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(8) Reconciliation of GAAP-based net income to Non-GAAP-based net income:

Year Ended June 30, 2020

Per share diluted

GAAP-based net income, attributable to OpenText

$ 

234,225  $ 

Add:

Amortization

Share-based compensation

Special charges (recoveries)

Other (income) expense, net

GAAP-based provision for (recovery of) income taxes

Non-GAAP-based provision for income taxes

Non-GAAP-based net income, attributable to OpenText

$ 

Reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA

GAAP-based net income, attributable to OpenText

Add:

Provision for (recovery of) income taxes

Interest and other related expense, net

Amortization of acquired technology-based intangible assets

Amortization of acquired customer-based intangible assets

Depreciation

Share-based compensation

Special charges (recoveries)

Other (income) expense, net

Adjusted EBITDA

425,276 

29,532 

100,428 

11,946 

110,837 

(127,734)   

784,510  $ 

$ 

$ 

0.86 

1.56 

0.11 

0.37 

0.04 

0.41 

(0.46) 

2.89 

Year Ended June 30, 2020

234,225 

110,837 

146,378 

205,717 

219,559 

89,458 

29,532 

100,428 

11,946 

1,148,080 

68

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

The following tables set forth changes in cash flows from operating, investing and financing activities for the periods 

indicated: 

(In thousands) 
Cash and cash equivalents
Restricted cash (1)
Total cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash

__________________________

As of June 30, 
2022

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

As of June 30, 
2021

Change 
increase 
(decrease)

As of June 30, 
2020

$  1,693,741  $ 

86,435  $  1,607,306  $ 

2,170 

(324)   

2,494 

$  1,695,911  $ 

86,111  $  1,609,800  $ 

(85,544)  $  1,692,850 
(1,919)   
4,413 
(87,463)  $  1,697,263 

(1) Restricted cash is classified under the Prepaid expenses and other current assets and Other assets line items on the Consolidated 
Balance Sheets (see Note 9 “Prepaid Expenses and Other Assets” to our Consolidated Financial Statements for more details).

Year Ended June 30,

(In thousands) 
Cash provided by operating activities
Cash used in investing activities
Cash provided by (used in) financing activities

Change

2022
105,690  $ 
981,810  $ 
(970,959)  $ 
(902,189)  $ 
138,456  $  1,063,003  $ 

$ 
$ 
$ 

Change

2021
2020
954,536 
876,120  $ 
(68,770)  $  1,400,647  $  (1,469,417) 
(924,547)  $  (2,193,326)  $  1,268,779 

(78,416)  $ 

Cash and cash equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents primarily consist of balances with banks as well as deposits with original maturities of 90 days 

or less.

We continue to anticipate that our cash and cash equivalents, as well as available credit facilities, will be sufficient to fund 

our anticipated cash requirements for working capital, contractual commitments, capital expenditures, dividends and operating 
needs for the next twelve months. Any further material or acquisition-related activities may require additional sources of 
financing and would be subject to the financial covenants established under our credit facilities. For more details, see “Long-
term Debt and Credit Facilities” below. 

As of June 30, 2022, we have recognized a provision of $19.9 million (June 30, 2021—$27.5 million) in respect of both 

additional foreign taxes or deferred income tax liabilities for temporary differences related to the undistributed earnings of 
certain non-United States subsidiaries and planned periodic repatriations from certain German subsidiaries, that will be subject 
to withholding taxes upon distribution.

We have deferred a total of approximately $99.0 million of tax payments under the CARES Act and other COVID-19 
related tax relief programs in EMEA since our fourth quarter of Fiscal 2020. During the year ended June 30, 2022, we made 
repayments of approximately $16.0 million related to amounts previously deferred. As of June 30, 2022, we have remaining 
deferrals of $23.0 million which will become payable throughout Fiscal 2023.

Cash flows provided by operating activities 

Cash flows from operating activities increased by $105.7 million, due to an increase in net income after the impact of non-

cash items of $25.9 million and a increase in changes from working capital of $80.0 million.

The increase in operating cash flow from changes in working capital was primarily due to the net impact of the following 

increases: 

(i) $175.4 million relating to income taxes payable, net of receivables;

(ii) $23.3 million relating to net operating lease assets and liabilities;

(iii) $21.0 million relating to accounts receivable;

(iv) $5.4 million relating to other assets; and

(v) $1.4 million relating to contract assets.

These increases in operating cash flows were partially offset by the following decreases:

(i) $51.7 million relating to prepaid expenses and other current assets;

(ii) $50.3 million relating to accounts payable and accrued liabilities; and

(iii) $44.5 million relating to deferred revenues.

During the fourth quarter of Fiscal 2022 our days sales outstanding (DSO) was 43 days compared to a DSO of 44 days 
during the fourth quarter of Fiscal 2021, largely a result of improvement in collections efficiency. The per day impact of our 

69

 
 
 
DSO in the fourth quarter of Fiscal 2022 and Fiscal 2021 on our cash flows was $10.0 million and $9.9 million, respectively. In 
arriving at DSO, we exclude contract assets as these assets do not provide an unconditional right to the related consideration 
from the customer.

Cash flows used in investing activities

Our cash flows used in investing activities is primarily on account of acquisitions and additions of property and 

equipment. 

Cash flows used in investing activities increased by $902.2 million, primarily due to consideration paid for acquisitions 

during Fiscal 2022, which includes cash paid for the acquisitions of Zix of $856.2 million and Bricata of $17.8 million.

Cash flows provided by (used in) financing activities 

Our cash flows from financing activities generally consist of long-term debt financing and amounts received from stock 

options exercised by our employees. These inflows are typically offset by scheduled and non-scheduled repayments of our 
long-term debt financing and, when applicable, the payment of dividends and/or repurchases of our Common Shares. 

Cash flows provided by financing activities increased by $1.1 billion. This is primarily due to the net impact of the 

following activities:

(i) $1.5 billion relating to proceeds from the issuance of Senior Notes 2031 and Senior Notes 2029 (both defined 
below), of which a portion of the net proceeds was used to redeem $850 million of our Senior Notes 2026 (as 
defined below).

The increases in cash flows provided by financing activities were partially offset by the following decreases:

(i) $250.0 million relating to higher repayments of our long-term debt and Revolver (as defined below), which is 
inclusive of $850 million redemption of Senior Notes 2026 (as defined below) during our second quarter of 
Fiscal 2022, partially offset by $600.0 million repaid on amounts previously drawn on our Revolver in the 
second quarter of Fiscal 2021;

(ii) $177.0 million relating to the repurchase and cancellation of 3,809,559 Common Shares under our share 
repurchase plans authorized on both November 5, 2020 and November 4, 2021 (as discussed below);

(iii) $25.0 million relating to early call termination premium upon redemption of Senior Notes 2026 and 

$17.2 million relating to debt issuance costs for the issuance of Senior Notes 2031 and Senior Notes 2029;

(iv) $27.0 million relating to higher cash dividends paid to shareholders;

(v) $12.9 million lower proceeds from the issuance of Common Shares for the exercise of options and the 

OpenText Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP);

(vi) $46.8 million relating to cash used in the repurchase of Common Shares on the open market for potential 

reissuance under our Long-Term Incentive Plans (LTIP) or other stock compensation plans; and

(vii)$0.4 million relating to a cash distribution to non-controlling interests holder. 

Cash Dividends

During the year ended June 30, 2022, we declared and paid cash dividends of $0.8836 per Common Share in the 
aggregate amount of $237.7 million (year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020—$0.7770 and $0.6984 per Common Share, 
respectively, in the aggregate amount of $210.7 million and $188.7 million, respectively).

Future declarations of dividends and the establishment of future record and payment dates are subject to final 
determination and discretion of the Board. See Item 5 “Dividend Policy” included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for 
more information.

Long-term Debt and Credit Facilities

Senior Unsecured Fixed Rate Notes

Senior Notes 2031

On November 24, 2021, OpenText Holdings, Inc. (OTHI), a wholly-owned indirect subsidiary of the Company, issued 

$650 million in aggregate principal amount of 4.125% Senior Notes due 2031 guaranteed by the Company (Senior Notes 2031) 
in an unregistered offering to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act, and to certain non-
U.S. persons in offshore transactions pursuant to Regulation S under the Securities Act. Senior Notes 2031 bear interest at a rate 

70

of 4.125% per annum, payable semi-annually in arrears on June 1 and December 1, commencing on June 1, 2022. Senior Notes 
2031 will mature on December 1, 2031, unless earlier redeemed, in accordance with their terms, or repurchased.

OTHI may redeem all or a portion of the Senior Notes 2031 at any time prior to December 1, 2026 at a redemption price 
equal to 100% of the principal amount of the Senior Notes 2031 plus an applicable premium, plus accrued and unpaid interest, 
if any, to the redemption date. OTHI may also redeem up to 40% of the aggregate principal amount of the Senior Notes 2031, 
on one or more occasions, prior to December 1, 2024, using the net proceeds from certain qualified equity offerings at a 
redemption price of 104.125% of the principal amount, plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to the redemption date, subject 
to compliance with certain conditions. OTHI may, on one or more occasions, redeem the Senior Notes 2031, in whole or in 
part, at any time on and after December 1, 2026 at the applicable redemption prices set forth in the indenture governing the 
Senior Notes 2031, dated as of November 24, 2021, among OTHI, the Company, the subsidiary guarantors party thereto, The 
Bank of New York Mellon, as U.S. trustee, and BNY Trust Company of Canada, as Canadian trustee (the 2031 Indenture), plus 
accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to the redemption date. 

If we experience one of the kinds of change of control triggering events specified in the 2031 Indenture, OTHI will be 
required to make an offer to repurchase the Senior Notes 2031 at a price equal to 101% of the principal amount of the Senior 
Notes 2031, plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to the date of purchase.

The 2031 Indenture contains covenants that limit OTHI, the Company and certain of the Company’s subsidiaries’ ability 

to, among other things: (i) create certain liens and enter into sale and lease-back transactions; (ii) in the case of our non-
guarantor subsidiaries, create, assume, incur or guarantee additional indebtedness of OTHI, the Company or the guarantors 
without such subsidiary becoming a subsidiary guarantor of Senior Notes 2031; and (iii) consolidate, amalgamate or merge 
with, or convey, transfer, lease or otherwise dispose of its property and assets substantially as an entirety to, another person. 
These covenants are subject to a number of important limitations and exceptions as set forth in the 2031 Indenture. The 2031 
Indenture also provides for events of default, which, if any of them occurs, may permit or, in certain circumstances, require the 
principal, premium, if any, interest and any other monetary obligations on all the then-outstanding Senior Notes 2031 to be due 
and payable immediately.

Senior Notes 2031 are guaranteed on a senior unsecured basis by the Company and the Company’s existing and future 
wholly-owned subsidiaries (other than OTHI) that borrow or guarantee the obligations under our existing senior credit facilities. 
Senior Notes 2031 and the guarantees rank equally in right of payment with all of the Company’s, OTHI’s and the guarantors’ 
existing and future senior unsubordinated debt and will rank senior in right of payment to all of the Company’s, OTHI’s and the 
guarantors’ future subordinated debt. Senior Notes 2031 and the guarantees will be effectively subordinated to all of the 
Company’s, OTHI’s and the guarantors’ existing and future secured debt, including the obligations under the senior credit 
facilities, to the extent of the value of the assets securing such secured debt.

The foregoing description of the 2031 Indenture does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by 

reference to the full text of the 2031 Indenture, which is filed as an exhibit to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed 
with the SEC on November 24, 2021.

Senior Notes 2030

On February 18, 2020 Open Text Holdings, Inc. (OTHI), a wholly-owned indirect subsidiary of the Company, issued 
$900 million in aggregate principal amount of 4.125% Senior Notes due 2030 guaranteed by the Company (Senior Notes 2030) 
in an unregistered offering to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act, and to certain non-
U.S. persons in offshore transactions pursuant to Regulation S under the Securities Act. Senior Notes 2030 bear interest at a rate 
of 4.125% per annum, payable semi-annually in arrears on February 15 and August 15, commencing on August 15, 2020. 
Senior Notes 2030 will mature on February 15, 2030, unless earlier redeemed, in accordance with their terms, or repurchased.

OTHI may redeem all or a portion of the Senior Notes 2030 at any time prior to February 15, 2025 at a redemption price 
equal to 100% of the principal amount of the Senior Notes 2030 plus an applicable premium, plus accrued and unpaid interest, 
if any, to the redemption date. OTHI may also redeem up to 40% of the aggregate principal amount of the Senior Notes 2030, 
on one or more occasions, prior to February 15, 2025, using the net proceeds from certain qualified equity offerings at a 
redemption price of 104.125% of the principal amount, plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to the redemption date, subject 
to compliance with certain conditions. OTHI may, on one or more occasions, redeem the Senior Notes 2030, in whole or in 
part, at any time on and after February 15, 2025 at the applicable redemption prices set forth in the indenture governing the 
Senior Notes 2030, dated as of February 18, 2020, among OTHI, the Company, the subsidiary guarantors party thereto, The 
Bank of New York Mellon, as U.S. trustee, and BNY Trust Company of Canada, as Canadian trustee (the 2030 Indenture), plus 
accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to the redemption date. 

If we experience one of the kinds of change of control triggering events specified in the 2030 Indenture, OTHI will be 
required to make an offer to repurchase the Senior Notes 2030 at a price equal to 101% of the principal amount of the Senior 
Notes 2030, plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to the date of purchase.

71

The 2030 Indenture contains covenants that limit the Company, OTHI and certain of the Company's subsidiaries’ ability 

to, among other things: (i) create certain liens and enter into sale and lease-back transactions; (ii) in the case of our non-
guarantor subsidiaries, create, assume, incur or guarantee additional indebtedness of the Company, OTHI or the guarantors 
without such subsidiary becoming a subsidiary guarantor of Senior Notes 2030; and (iii) consolidate, amalgamate or merge 
with, or convey, transfer, lease or otherwise dispose of its property and assets substantially as an entirety to, another person. 
These covenants are subject to a number of important limitations and exceptions as set forth in the 2030 Indenture. The 2030 
Indenture also provides for events of default, which, if any of them occurs, may permit or, in certain circumstances, require the 
principal, premium, if any, interest and any other monetary obligations on all the then-outstanding Senior Notes 2030 to be due 
and payable immediately.

Senior Notes 2030 are guaranteed on a senior unsecured basis by the Company and the Company's existing and future 
wholly-owned subsidiaries (other than OTHI) that borrow or guarantee the obligations under our existing senior credit facilities. 
Senior Notes 2030 and the guarantees rank equally in right of payment with all of the Company, OTHI and the guarantors’ 
existing and future senior unsubordinated debt and will rank senior in right of payment to all of the Company, OTHI and the 
guarantors’ future subordinated debt. Senior Notes 2030 and the guarantees will be effectively subordinated to all of the 
Company, OTHI and the guarantors’ existing and future secured debt, including the obligations under the senior credit 
facilities, to the extent of the value of the assets securing such secured debt.

The foregoing description of the 2030 Indenture does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by 

reference to the full text of the 2030 Indenture, which is filed as an exhibit to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed 
with the SEC on February 18, 2020.

Senior Notes 2029

On November 24, 2021, we issued $850 million in aggregate principal amount of 3.875% Senior Notes due 2029 (Senior 
Notes 2029) in an unregistered offering to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act and to 
certain non-U.S. persons in offshore transactions pursuant to Regulation S under the Securities Act. Senior Notes 2029 bear 
interest at a rate of 3.875% per annum, payable semi-annually in arrears on June 1 and December 1, commencing on June 1, 
2022. Senior Notes 2029 will mature on December 1, 2029, unless earlier redeemed, in accordance with their terms, or 
repurchased. 

We may redeem all or a portion of the Senior Notes 2029 at any time prior to December 1, 2024 at a redemption price 

equal to 100% of the principal amount of the Senior Notes 2029 plus an applicable premium, plus accrued and unpaid interest, 
if any, to the redemption date. We may also redeem up to 40% of the aggregate principal amount of the Senior Notes 2029, on 
one or more occasions, prior to December 1, 2024, using the net proceeds from certain qualified equity offerings at a 
redemption price of 103.875% of the principal amount, plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to the redemption date, subject 
to compliance with certain conditions. We may, on one or more occasions, redeem the Senior Notes 2029, in whole or in part, 
at any time on and after December 1, 2024 at the applicable redemption prices set forth in the indenture governing the Senior 
Notes 2029, dated as of November 24, 2021, among the Company, the subsidiary guarantors party thereto, The Bank of New 
York Mellon, as U.S. trustee, and BNY Trust Company of Canada, as Canadian trustee (the 2029 Indenture), plus accrued and 
unpaid interest, if any, to the redemption date. 

If we experience one of the kinds of change of control triggering events specified in the 2029 Indenture, we will be 
required to make an offer to repurchase the Senior Notes 2029 at a price equal to 101% of the principal amount of the Senior 
Notes 2029, plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to the date of purchase.

The 2029 Indenture contains covenants that limit our and certain of our subsidiaries’ ability to, among other things: (i) 
create certain liens and enter into sale and lease-back transactions; (ii) in the case of our non-guarantor subsidiaries, create, 
assume, incur or guarantee additional indebtedness of the Company or the guarantors without such subsidiary becoming a 
subsidiary guarantor of Senior Notes 2029; and (iii) consolidate, amalgamate or merge with, or convey, transfer, lease or 
otherwise dispose of its property and assets substantially as an entirety to, another person. These covenants are subject to a 
number of important limitations and exceptions as set forth in the 2029 Indenture. The 2029 Indenture also provides for events 
of default, which, if any of them occurs, may permit or, in certain circumstances, require the principal, premium, if any, interest 
and any other monetary obligations on all the then-outstanding Senior Notes 2029 to be due and payable immediately.

Senior Notes 2029 are guaranteed on a senior unsecured basis by our existing and future wholly-owned subsidiaries that 

borrow or guarantee the obligations under our existing senior credit facilities. Senior Notes 2029 and the guarantees rank 
equally in right of payment with all of our and our guarantors’ existing and future senior unsubordinated debt and will rank 
senior in right of payment to all of our and our guarantors’ future subordinated debt. Senior Notes 2029 and the guarantees will 
be effectively subordinated to all of our and our guarantors’ existing and future secured debt, including the obligations under 
the senior credit facilities, to the extent of the value of the assets securing such secured debt. 

72

The foregoing description of the 2029 Indenture does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by 

reference to the full text of the 2029 Indenture, which is filed as an exhibit to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed 
with the SEC on November 24, 2021.

Senior Notes 2028

On February 18, 2020 we issued $900 million in aggregate principal amount of 3.875% Senior Notes due 2028 (Senior 

Notes 2028) in an unregistered offering to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act and to 
certain non-U.S. persons in offshore transactions pursuant to Regulation S under the Securities Act. Senior Notes 2028 bear 
interest at a rate of 3.875% per annum, payable semi-annually in arrears on February 15 and August 15, commencing on August 
15, 2020. Senior Notes 2028 will mature on February 15, 2028, unless earlier redeemed, in accordance with their terms, or 
repurchased.

We may redeem all or a portion of the Senior Notes 2028 at any time prior to February 15, 2023 at a redemption price 

equal to 100% of the principal amount of the Senior Notes 2028 plus an applicable premium, plus accrued and unpaid interest, 
if any, to the redemption date. We may also redeem up to 40% of the aggregate principal amount of the Senior Notes 2028, on 
one or more occasions, prior to February 15, 2023, using the net proceeds from certain qualified equity offerings at a 
redemption price of 103.875% of the principal amount, plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to the redemption date, subject 
to compliance with certain conditions. We may, on one or more occasions, redeem the Senior Notes 2028, in whole or in part, 
at any time on and after February 15, 2023 at the applicable redemption prices set forth in the indenture governing the Senior 
Notes 2028, dated as of February 18, 2020, among the Company, the subsidiary guarantors party thereto, The Bank of New 
York Mellon, as U.S. trustee, and BNY Trust Company of Canada, as Canadian trustee (the 2028 Indenture), plus accrued and 
unpaid interest, if any, to the redemption date.

If we experience one of the kinds of change of control triggering events specified in the 2028 Indenture, we will be 
required to make an offer to repurchase the Senior Notes 2028 at a price equal to 101% of the principal amount of the Senior 
Notes 2028, plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to the date of purchase.

The 2028 Indenture contains covenants that limit our and certain of our subsidiaries’ ability to, among other things: (i) 
create certain liens and enter into sale and lease-back transactions; (ii) in the case of our non-guarantor subsidiaries, create, 
assume, incur or guarantee additional indebtedness of the Company or the guarantors without such subsidiary becoming a 
subsidiary guarantor of Senior Notes 2028; and (iii) consolidate, amalgamate or merge with, or convey, transfer, lease or 
otherwise dispose of its property and assets substantially as an entirety to, another person. These covenants are subject to a 
number of important limitations and exceptions as set forth in the 2028 Indenture. The 2028 Indenture also provides for events 
of default, which, if any of them occurs, may permit or, in certain circumstances, require the principal, premium, if any, interest 
and any other monetary obligations on all the then-outstanding Senior Notes 2028 to be due and payable immediately.

Senior Notes 2028 are guaranteed on a senior unsecured basis by our existing and future wholly-owned subsidiaries that 

borrow or guarantee the obligations under our existing senior credit facilities. Senior Notes 2028 and the guarantees rank 
equally in right of payment with all of our and our guarantors’ existing and future senior unsubordinated debt and will rank 
senior in right of payment to all of our and our guarantors’ future subordinated debt. Senior Notes 2028 and the guarantees will 
be effectively subordinated to all of our and our guarantors’ existing and future secured debt, including the obligations under 
the senior credit facilities, to the extent of the value of the assets securing such secured debt.

The foregoing description of the 2028 Indenture does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by 

reference to the full text of the 2028 Indenture, which is filed as an exhibit to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed 
with the SEC on February 18, 2020.

Senior Notes 2026

On May 31, 2016 we issued $600 million in aggregate principal amount of 5.875% Senior Notes due 2026 (Senior Notes 
2026) in an unregistered offering to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act, and to certain 
non-U.S. persons in offshore transactions pursuant to Regulation S under the Securities Act. Senior Notes 2026 had interest at a 
rate of 5.875% per annum, payable semi-annually in arrears on June 1 and December 1, commencing on December 1, 2016. 
Senior Notes 2026 would have matured on June 1, 2026.

On December 20, 2016, we issued an additional $250 million in aggregate principal amount by reopening our Senior 
Notes 2026 at an issue price of 102.75%. The additional notes have identical terms, are fungible with and are a part of a single 
series with the previously issued $600 million aggregate principal amount of Senior Notes 2026. The outstanding aggregate 
principal amount of Senior Notes 2026, after taking into consideration the additional issuance, was $850 million as of 
December 9, 2021.

On December 9, 2021, we redeemed Senior Notes 2026 in full at a price equal to 102.9375% of the principal amount plus 

accrued and unpaid interest to, but excluding, the redemption date. A portion of the net proceeds from the offerings of Senior 

73

Notes 2029 and Senior Notes 2031 was used to redeem Senior Notes 2026. Upon redemption, Senior Notes 2026 were 
cancelled, and any obligation thereunder was extinguished. The resulting loss of $27.4 million, consisting of $25.0 million 
relating to the early termination call premium, $6.2 million relating to unamortized debt issuance costs and ($3.8) million 
relating to unamortized premium, has been recorded as a component of Other income (expense), net in our Consolidated 
Statements of Income. See Note 23 “Other Income (Expense), Net” to our Consolidated Financial Statements.

Term Loan B

On May 30, 2018, we entered into a credit facility, which provides for a $1 billion term loan facility with certain lenders 
named therein, Barclays Bank PLC (Barclays), as sole administrative agent and collateral agent, and as lead arranger and joint 
bookrunner (Term Loan B) and borrowed the full amount on May 30, 2018 to, among other things, repay in full the loans under 
our prior $800 million term loan credit facility originally entered into on January 16, 2014. Repayments made under Term Loan 
B are equal to 0.25% of the principal amount in equal quarterly installments for the life of Term Loan B, with the remainder due 
at maturity.

Borrowings under Term Loan B are secured by a first charge over substantially all of our assets on a pari passu basis with 

the Revolver. Term Loan B has a seven-year term, maturing in May 2025.

Borrowings under Term Loan B bear interest at a rate per annum equal to an applicable margin plus, at the borrower’s 

option, either (1) the Eurodollar rate for the interest period relevant to such borrowing or (2) an ABR rate. The applicable 
margin for borrowings under Term Loan B is 1.75%, with respect to LIBOR advances and 0.75%, with respect to ABR 
advances. The interest on the current outstanding balance for Term Loan B is equal to 1.75% plus LIBOR (subject to a 0.00% 
floor). As of June 30, 2022, the outstanding balance on the Term Loan B bears an interest rate of 2.81%. For more information 
regarding the impact and discontinuance of LIBOR, see “Stress in the global financial system may adversely affect our finances 
and operations in ways that may be hard to predict or to defend against” included within Part I, Item 1A, “Risk Factors” of this 
Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Term Loan B has incremental facility capacity of (i) $250 million plus (ii) additional amounts, subject to meeting a 

“consolidated senior secured net leverage” ratio not exceeding 2.75:1.00, in each case subject to certain conditions. 
Consolidated senior secured net leverage ratio is defined for this purpose as the proportion of our total debt reduced by 
unrestricted cash, including guarantees and letters of credit, that is secured by our or any of our subsidiaries’ assets, over our 
trailing twelve months net income before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, restructuring, share-based compensation 
and other miscellaneous charges.

Under Term Loan B, we must maintain a “consolidated net leverage” ratio of no more than 4:1 at the end of each financial 

quarter. Consolidated net leverage ratio is defined for this purpose as the proportion of our total debt reduced by unrestricted 
cash, including guarantees and letters of credit, over our trailing twelve months net income before interest, taxes, depreciation, 
amortization, restructuring, share-based compensation and other miscellaneous charges. As of June 30, 2022, our consolidated 
net leverage ratio was 2.0:1.

Revolver

On October 31, 2019, we amended our committed revolving credit facility (the Revolver) to increase the total 
commitments under the Revolver from $450 million to $750 million as well as to extend the maturity from May 5, 2022 to 
October 31, 2024. Borrowings under the Revolver are secured by a first charge over substantially all of our assets, on a pari 
passu basis with Term Loan B. The Revolver has no fixed repayment date prior to the end of the term. Borrowings under the 
Revolver bear interest per annum at a floating rate of LIBOR plus a fixed margin dependent on our consolidated net leverage 
ratio ranging from 1.25% to 1.75%. For more information regarding the impact and discontinuance of LIBOR, see “Stress in 
the global financial system may adversely affect our finances and operations in ways that may be hard to predict or to defend 
against” included within Part I, Item 1A, “Risk Factors” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for Fiscal 2021.

Under the Revolver, we must maintain a “consolidated net leverage” ratio of no more than 4:1 at the end of each financial 

quarter. Consolidated net leverage ratio is defined for this purpose as the proportion of our total debt reduced by unrestricted 
cash, including guarantees and letters of credit, over our trailing twelve months net income before interest, taxes, depreciation, 
amortization, restructuring, share-based compensation and other miscellaneous charges.

As of June 30, 2022, we had no outstanding balance under the Revolver (June 30, 2021—nil). 

For further details relating to our debt, please see Note 11 “Long-Term Debt” to our Consolidated Financial Statements.

Shelf Registration Statement 

On December 6, 2021, we filed a universal shelf registration statement on Form S-3 with the SEC, which became 
effective automatically (the Shelf Registration Statement). The Shelf Registration Statement allows for primary and secondary 

74

offerings from time to time of equity, debt and other securities, including Common Shares, Preference Shares, debt securities, 
depositary shares, warrants, purchase contracts, units and subscription receipts. A short-form base shelf prospectus qualifying 
the distribution of such securities was concurrently filed with Canadian securities regulators on December 6, 2021. The type of 
securities and the specific terms thereof will be determined at the time of any offering and will be described in the applicable 
prospectus supplement to be filed separately with the SEC and Canadian securities regulators.

Share Repurchase Plan / Normal Course Issuer Bid

On November 5, 2020, the Board authorized the Fiscal 2021 Repurchase Plan, pursuant to which we were authorized to 
purchase in open market transactions, from time to time over the 12 month period commencing November 12, 2020, up to an 
aggregate of $350 million of our Common Shares on the NASDAQ Global Select Market, the TSX and/or other exchanges and 
alternative trading systems in Canada and/or the United States, if eligible, subject to applicable law and stock exchange rules. 
The price that we were authorized to pay for Common Shares in open market transactions was the market price at the time of 
purchase or such other price as was permitted by applicable law or stock exchange rules. 

The Fiscal 2021 Repurchase Plan was effected in accordance with Rule 10b-18 under the Exchange Act (Rule 10b-18). 
Purchases made under the Fiscal 2021 Repurchase Plan were subject to a limit of 13,618,774 shares (representing 5% of the 
Company’s issued and outstanding Common Shares as of November 4, 2020). All Common Shares purchased by us pursuant to 
the Fiscal 2021 Repurchase Plan were cancelled.

On November 4, 2021, the Board authorized the Fiscal 2022 Repurchase Plan, pursuant to which we may purchase in 

open market transactions, from time to time over the 12 month period commencing November 12, 2021, up to an aggregate of 
$350 million of our Common Shares on the NASDAQ Global Select Market, the Toronto Stock Exchange (as part of a Fiscal 
2022 NCIB) and/or other exchanges and alternative trading systems in Canada and/or the United States, if eligible, subject to 
applicable law and stock exchange rules. The price that we have paid and will pay for Common Shares in open market 
transactions has been and will be the market price at the time of purchase or such other price as may be permitted by applicable 
law or stock exchange rules.

The Fiscal 2022 Repurchase Plan has been and will be effected in accordance with Rule 10b-18. Purchases made under 

the Fiscal 2022 Repurchase Plan are subject to a limit of 13,638,008 shares (representing 5% of the Company’s issued and 
outstanding Common Shares as of October 31, 2021). All Common Shares purchased by us pursuant to the Fiscal 2022 
Repurchase Plan have been and will be cancelled.

During the year ended June 30, 2022, we repurchased and cancelled 3,809,559 Common Shares for $177.0 million (year 

ended June 30, 2021 and 2020— 2,500,000 and nil Common Shares for $119.1 million and nil, respectively). Share repurchases 
during the year ended June 30, 2022 were completed under our share repurchase plans authorized on both November 5, 2020 
and November 4, 2021.

Normal Course Issuer Bid

The Company established the Fiscal 2021 NCIB in order to provide it with a means to execute purchases over the TSX as 

part of the overall Fiscal 2021 Repurchase Plan.

The TSX approved the Company’s notice of intention to commence the Fiscal 2021 NCIB pursuant to which the 
Company was authorized to purchase Common Shares over the TSX for the period commencing November 12, 2020 until 
November 11, 2021 in accordance with the TSX's normal course issuer bid rules, including that such purchases were to be made 
at prevailing market prices or as otherwise permitted. Under the rules of the TSX, the maximum number of Common Shares 
that could be purchased in this period was 13,618,774 (representing 5% of the Company’s issued and outstanding Common 
Shares as of November 4, 2020), and the maximum number of Common Shares that could be purchased on a single day was 
143,424 Common Shares, which was 25% of 573,699 (the average daily trading volume for the Common Shares on the TSX 
for the six months ended October 31, 2020), subject to certain exceptions for block purchases, subject in any case to the volume 
and other limitations under Rule 10b-18.

The Company renewed the Fiscal 2022 NCIB in order to provide it with a means to execute purchases over the TSX as 

part of the overall Fiscal 2022 Repurchase Plan.

The TSX approved the Company's notice of intention to commence the Fiscal 2022 NCIB pursuant to which the Company 

may purchase Common Shares over the TSX for the period commencing November 12, 2021 until November 11, 2022 in 
accordance with the TSX's normal course issuer bid rules, including that such purchases are to be made at prevailing market 
prices or as otherwise permitted. Under the rules of the TSX, the maximum number of Common Shares that may be purchased 
in this period is 13,638,008 (representing 5% of the Company’s issued and outstanding Common Shares as of October 31, 
2021), and the maximum number of Common Shares that may be purchased on a single day is 112,590 Common Shares, which 
is 25% of 450,361 (the average daily trading volume for the Common Shares on the TSX for the six months ended October 31, 

75

2021), subject to certain exceptions for block purchases, subject in any case to the volume and other limitations under Rule 
10b-18.

Pensions

As of June 30, 2022, our total unfunded pension plan obligations were $63.5 million, of which $2.5 million is payable 
within the next twelve months. We expect to be able to make the long-term and short-term payments related to these obligations 
in the normal course of operations. 

Our anticipated payments under our most significant plans, Open Text Document Technologies GmbH (CDT), GXS 

GmbH (GXS GER), GXS Philippines, Inc. (GXS PHP), for the fiscal years indicated below are as follows:

2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028 to 2032

Total

Fiscal years ending June 30,

CDT

GXS GER

GXS PHP

$ 

907  $ 
942 
990 
1,030 
1,078 
6,464 

$ 

11,411  $ 

915  $ 
937 
926 
920 
911 
22,047 

26,656  $ 

85 
122 
170 
179 
544 
2,740 

3,840 

For a detailed discussion on pensions, see Note 12 “Pension Plans and Other Post Retirement Benefits” to our 

Consolidated Financial Statements.

Commitments and Contractual Obligations 

As of June 30, 2022, we have entered into the following contractual obligations with minimum payments for the indicated 

fiscal periods as follows: 

Payments due between

$ 

Total
5,344,048  $ 
278,179 

July 1, 2022 - 
June 30, 2023

July 1, 2023 -  
June 30, 2025

July 1, 2025 -
June 30, 2027

July 1, 2027
 and beyond

168,919  $ 
62,833 

1,262,379  $ 
94,212 

263,500  $ 
56,855 

3,649,250 
64,279 

124,095 

68,143 

43,273 

12,679 

— 

$ 

5,746,322  $ 

299,895  $ 

1,399,864  $ 

333,034  $ 

3,713,529 

Long-term debt obligations (1)
Operating lease obligations (2)
Purchase obligations for 
contracts not accounted for as 
lease obligations 

__________________________

(1)

Includes interest up to maturity and principal payments. Please see Note 11 “Long-Term Debt” to our Consolidated Financial 
Statements for more details.

(2) Represents the undiscounted future minimum lease payments under our operating leases liabilities and excludes sublease income 
expected to be received under our various sublease agreements with third parties. Please see Note 6 “Leases” to our Consolidated 
Financial Statements for more details.

Guarantees and Indemnifications

We have entered into customer agreements which may include provisions to indemnify our customers against third party 
claims that our software products or services infringe certain third-party intellectual property rights and for liabilities related to 
a breach of our confidentiality obligations. We have not made any material payments in relation to such indemnification 
provisions and have not accrued any liabilities related to these indemnification provisions in our Consolidated Financial 
Statements. 

Occasionally, we enter into financial guarantees with third parties in the ordinary course of our business, including, 
among others, guarantees relating to taxes and letters of credit on behalf of parties with whom we conduct business. Such 
agreements have not had a material effect on our results of operations, financial position or cash flows. 

76

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Litigation

We are currently involved in various claims and legal proceedings.

Quarterly, we review the status of each significant legal matter and evaluate such matters to determine how they should be 

treated for accounting and disclosure purposes in accordance with the requirements of ASC Topic 450-20 “Loss 
Contingencies” (Topic 450-20). Specifically, this evaluation process includes the centralized tracking and itemization of the 
status of all our disputes and litigation items, discussing the nature of any litigation and claim, including any dispute or claim 
that is reasonably likely to result in litigation, with relevant internal and external counsel, and assessing the progress of each 
matter in light of its merits and our experience with similar proceedings under similar circumstances.

If the potential loss from any claim or legal proceeding is considered probable and the amount can be reasonably 

estimated, we accrue a liability for the estimated loss in accordance with Topic 450-20. As of the date of this Annual Report on 
Form 10-K, the aggregate of such accrued liabilities was not material to our consolidated financial position or results of 
operations and we do not believe as of the date of this filing that it is reasonably possible that a loss exceeding the amounts 
already recognized will be incurred that would be material to our consolidated financial position or results of operations. As 
described more fully below, we are unable at this time to estimate a possible loss or range of losses in respect of certain 
disclosed matters.

Contingencies

CRA Matter

As part of its ongoing audit of our Canadian tax returns, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has disputed our transfer 
pricing methodology used for certain intercompany transactions with our international subsidiaries and has issued notices of 
reassessment for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016. Assuming the utilization of available tax 
attributes (further described below), we estimate our potential aggregate liability, as of June 30, 2022, in connection with the 
CRA's reassessments for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016, to be limited to penalties, interest 
and provincial taxes that may be due of approximately $75 million. As of June 30, 2022, we have provisionally paid 
approximately $34 million in order to fully preserve our rights to object to the CRA's audit positions, being the minimum 
payment required under Canadian legislation while the matter is in dispute. This amount is recorded within “Long-term income 
taxes recoverable” on the Consolidated Balance Sheets as of June 30, 2022.

The notices of reassessment for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016 would, as drafted, 
increase our taxable income by approximately $90 million to $100 million for each of those years, as well as impose a 10% 
penalty on the proposed adjustment to income. Audits by the CRA of our tax returns for fiscal years prior to Fiscal 2012 have 
been completed with no reassessment of our income tax liability.

We strongly disagree with the CRA's positions and believe the reassessments of Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, 

Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016 (including any penalties) are without merit, and we are continuing to contest these reassessments. 
On June 30, 2022, we filed a notice of appeal with the Tax Court of Canada seeking to reverse all such reassessments (including 
any penalties) in full.

Even if we are unsuccessful in challenging the CRA's reassessments to increase our taxable income for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 

2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016, we have elective deductions available for those years (including carry-backs 
from later years) that would offset such increased amounts so that no additional cash tax would be payable, exclusive of any 
assessed penalties and interest, as described above.

The CRA has also audited Fiscal 2017 on a basis that we strongly disagree with and are contesting. The focus of the CRA 

audit has been the valuation of certain intellectual property and goodwill when one of our subsidiaries continued into Canada 
from Luxembourg in July 2016. In accordance with applicable rules, these assets were recognized for tax purposes at fair 
market value as of that time, which value was supported by an expert valuation prepared by an independent leading accounting 
and advisory firm. In conjunction with the Fiscal 2017 audit, the CRA issued a proposal letter dated April 7, 2021 (Proposal 
Letter) indicating to us that it proposes to reassess our Fiscal 2017 tax year to reduce the depreciable basis of these assets. We 
have made extensive submissions in support of our position. CRA’s position for Fiscal 2017 relies in significant part on the 
application of its positions regarding our transfer pricing methodology that are the basis for its reassessment of our fiscal years 
2012 to 2016 described above, and that we believe are without merit. Other aspects of CRA’s position for Fiscal 2017 conflict 
with the expert valuation prepared by the independent leading accounting and advisory firm that was used to support our 
original filing position. On January 27, 2022, the CRA issued a notice of reassessment in respect of Fiscal 2017 on the basis of 
its position set forth in the Proposal Letter. On April 19, 2022, we filed our notice of objection regarding the reassessment in 
respect of Fiscal 2017. If we are ultimately unsuccessful in defending our position, the estimated impact of the proposed 
adjustment could result in us recording an income tax expense, with no immediate cash payment, to reduce the stated value of 
our deferred tax assets of up to approximately $470 million. Any such income tax expense could also have a corresponding 

77

cash tax impact that would primarily occur over a period of several future years based upon annual income realization in 
Canada. We strongly disagree with the CRA’s position for Fiscal 2017 and intend to vigorously defend our original filing 
position, We are not required to provisionally pay any cash amounts to the CRA as a result of the reassessment in respect of 
Fiscal 2017 due to the utilization of available tax attributes; however, to the extent the CRA reassesses subsequent fiscal years 
on a similar basis, we expect to make certain minimum payments required under Canadian legislation, which may need to be 
provisionally made starting in Fiscal 2024 while the matter is in dispute. 

We will continue to vigorously contest the adjustments to our taxable income and any penalty and interest assessments, as 

well as any reduction to the basis of our depreciable property. We are confident that our original tax filing positions were 
appropriate. Accordingly, as of the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K, we have not recorded any accruals in respect of 
these reassessments or proposed reassessment in our Consolidated Financial Statements. The CRA is currently in preliminary 
stages of auditing Fiscal 2018 and Fiscal 2019.

Carbonite Class Action Complaint

On August 1, 2019, prior to our acquisition of Carbonite, a purported stockholder of Carbonite filed a putative class action 

complaint against Carbonite, its former Chief Executive Officer, Mohamad S. Ali, and its former Chief Financial Officer, 
Anthony Folger, in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts captioned Ruben A. Luna, Individually 
and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated v. Carbonite, Inc., Mohamad S. Ali, and Anthony Folger (No. 1:19-cv-11662-
LTS). The complaint alleges violations of the federal securities laws under Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange 
Act of 1934, as amended, and Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder. The complaint generally alleges that the defendants made 
materially false and misleading statements in connection with Carbonite’s Server Backup VM Edition, and seeks, among other 
things, the designation of the action as a class action, an award of unspecified compensatory damages, costs and expenses, 
including counsel fees and expert fees, and other relief as the court deems appropriate. On August 23, 2019, a nearly identical 
complaint was filed in the same court captioned William Feng, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated v. 
Carbonite, Inc., Mohamad S. Ali, and Anthony Folger (No. 1:19- cv-11808-LTS) (together with the Luna Complaint, the 
“Securities Actions”). On November 21, 2019, the district court consolidated the Securities Actions, appointed a lead plaintiff, 
and designated a lead counsel. On January 15, 2020, the lead plaintiff filed a consolidated amended complaint generally making 
the same allegations and seeking the same relief as the complaint filed on August 1, 2019. The defendants moved to dismiss the 
Securities Actions on March 10, 2020. The motion was fully briefed in June 2020 and a hearing on the motion to dismiss the 
Securities Actions was held on October 15, 2020. Following the hearing, on October 22, 2020, the district court granted with 
prejudice the defendants’ motion to dismiss the Securities Actions. On November 20, 2020, the lead plaintiff filed a notice of 
appeal to the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. On December 21, 2021, the First Circuit issued a decision reversing and 
remanding the Securities Actions to the district court for further proceedings. The defendants remain confident in their position, 
believe the Securities Actions are without merit and will continue to vigorously defend the matter.

Carbonite vs Realtime Data

On February 27, 2017, before our acquisition of Carbonite, a non-practicing entity named Realtime Data LLC (Realtime 

Data) filed a lawsuit against Carbonite in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas “Realtime Data LLC v. 
Carbonite, Inc. et al (No 6:17-cv-00121-RWS-JDL).” Therein, it alleged that certain of Carbonite’s cloud storage services 
infringe upon certain patents held by Realtime Data. Realtime Data’s complaint against Carbonite sought damages in an 
unspecified amount and injunctive relief. On December 19, 2017, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas 
transferred the case to the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts (No. 1:17-cv-12499). Realtime Data has also 
filed numerous other patent suits on the same asserted patents against other companies. After a stay pending appeal in one of 
those suits, on January 21, 2021, the district court held a hearing to construe the claims of the asserted patents. As to the fourth 
patent asserted against Carbonite, on September 24, 2019, the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office Patent Trial and Appeal Board 
invalidated certain claims of that patent, including certain claims that had been asserted against Carbonite. The parties then 
jointly stipulated to dismiss that patent from this action. On August 23, 2021, in one of the suits against other companies, the 
District of Delaware (No. 1:17-cv-800), held all of the patents asserted against Carbonite to be invalid. Realtime Data has 
appealed that decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. We continue to vigorously defend the matter, and 
the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts has issued a claim construction order. We anticipate motion practice 
based upon the result of that order. We have not accrued a loss contingency related to this matter because litigation related to a 
non-practicing entity is inherently unpredictable. Although a loss is reasonably possible, an unfavorable outcome is not 
considered by management to be probable at this time and we remain unable to reasonably estimate a possible loss or range of 
loss associated with this litigation.

Please also see Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for Fiscal 2022.

78

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements 

We do not enter into off-balance sheet financing as a matter of practice, except for guarantees relating to taxes and letters 

of credit on behalf of parties with whom we conduct business.

Item 7A.  Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk

We are primarily exposed to market risks associated with fluctuations in interest rates on our term loans, revolving loans 

and foreign currency exchange rates.

Interest rate risk

Our exposure to interest rate fluctuations relate primarily to our Term Loan B and the Revolver. 

As of June 30, 2022, we had an outstanding balance of $957.5 million on Term Loan B. Term Loan B bears a floating 

interest rate of 1.75% plus LIBOR. As of June 30, 2022, an adverse change of one percent on the interest rate would have the 
effect of increasing our annual interest payment on Term Loan B by approximately $9.6 million, assuming that the loan balance 
as of June 30, 2022 is outstanding for the entire period (June 30, 2021—$9.7 million).

As of June 30, 2022, we had no outstanding balance under the Revolver. Borrowings under the Revolver bear interest per 
annum at a floating rate of LIBOR plus a fixed rate that is dependent on our consolidated net leverage ratio ranging from 1.25% 
to 1.75%. As of June 30, 2022, with no outstanding balance on the Revolver, an adverse change of one percent on the interest 
rate would have no effect on our annual interest payment (June 30, 2021—nil).

For more information regarding the impact and discontinuance of LIBOR, see “Stress in the global financial system may 

adversely affect our finances and operations in ways that may be hard to predict or to defend against” included within Part I, 
Item 1A, “Risk Factors” on this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Foreign currency risk

Foreign currency transaction risk

We transact business in various foreign currencies. Our foreign currency exposures typically arise from intercompany 

fees, intercompany loans and other intercompany transactions that are expected to be cash settled in the near term and are 
transacted in non-functional currency. We expect that we will continue to realize gains or losses with respect to our foreign 
currency exposures. Our ultimate realized gain or loss with respect to foreign currency exposures will generally depend on the 
size and type of cross-currency transactions that we enter into, the currency exchange rates associated with these exposures and 
changes in those rates. Additionally, we have hedged certain of our Canadian dollar foreign currency exposures relating to our 
payroll expenses in Canada.

Based on the foreign exchange forward contracts outstanding as of June 30, 2022, a one cent change in the Canadian 

dollar to U.S. dollar exchange rate would have caused a change of $0.5 million in the mark to market on our existing foreign 
exchange forward contracts (June 30, 2021—$0.7 million).

Foreign currency translation risk

Our reporting currency is the U.S. dollar. Fluctuations in foreign currencies impact the amount of total assets and 
liabilities that we report for our foreign subsidiaries upon the translation of these amounts into U.S. dollars. In particular, the 
amount of cash and cash equivalents that we report in U.S. dollars for a significant portion of the cash held by these subsidiaries 
is subject to translation variance caused by changes in foreign currency exchange rates as of the end of each respective 
reporting period (the offset to which is recorded to accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) on our Consolidated 
Balance Sheets). 

79

The following table shows our cash and cash equivalents denominated in certain major foreign currencies as of June 30, 

2022 (equivalent in U.S. dollar):

(In thousands)
Euro
British Pound
Canadian Dollar
Swiss Franc
Other foreign currencies
Total cash and cash equivalents denominated in foreign currencies
U.S. Dollar
Total cash and cash equivalents 

U.S. Dollar
 Equivalent at 
June 30, 2022

U.S. Dollar
 Equivalent at 
June 30, 2021

$ 

$ 

254,546  $ 
44,020 
14,640 
48,674 
127,060 
488,940 
1,204,801 
1,693,741  $ 

331,974 
78,140 
26,632 
44,900 
128,879 
610,525 
996,781 
1,607,306 

If overall foreign currency exchange rates in comparison to the U.S. dollar uniformly weakened by 10%, the amount of 
cash and cash equivalents we would report in equivalent U.S. dollars would decrease by $48.9 million (June 30, 2021—$61.1 
million), assuming we have not entered into any derivatives discussed above under “Foreign Currency Transaction Risk.”

Item 8.  Financial Statements and Supplementary Data

The response to this Item 8 is submitted as a separate section of this Annual Report on Form 10-K. See Part IV, Item 15.

Item 9.  Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure

None.

Item 9A.  Controls and Procedures

(A) Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures 

As of the end of the period covered by this Annual Report on Form 10-K, our management, with the participation of the 
Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, performed an evaluation of the effectiveness of the design and operation 
of our disclosure controls and procedures as defined in Rule 13a-15(e) promulgated under the Exchange Act. Based upon that 
evaluation, the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that as of June 30, 2022, our disclosure controls 
and procedures were effective to provide reasonable assurance that information required to be disclosed in our reports filed or 
submitted under the Exchange Act were recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the 
Securities and Exchange Commission’s rules and forms, and that information required to be disclosed by us in the reports we 
file under the Exchange Act (according to Rule 13(a)-15(e)) is accumulated and communicated to our management, including 
the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.

(B) Management’s Annual Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting

Our management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting (ICFR), 

as such term is defined in Exchange Act Rule 13a-15(f). ICFR is a process designed by, or under the supervision of, our Chief 
Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer and effected by our Board of Directors, management and other personnel, to 
provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of our financial reporting and the preparation of our financial statements 
for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. ICFR includes those policies and procedures 
that (i) pertain to the maintenance of records that in reasonable detail accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and 
dispositions of assets; (ii) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of 
financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that our receipts and expenditures are 
being made only in accordance with the authorizations of our management and our directors; and (iii) provide reasonable 
assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of our assets that could have 
a material effect on our financial statements.

Our management assessed our ICFR as of June 30, 2022, the end of our most recent fiscal year. In making our assessment, 

our management used the criteria established in Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of 
Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.

80

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Our management has excluded the ICFR of Zix, which we acquired on December 23, 2021 as discussed in Note 19 
“Acquisitions” to the Consolidated Financial Statements included elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Total 
revenues subject to Zix’s ICFR represented 2.5% of our consolidated total revenues for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2022. 
Total assets subject to Zix’s ICFR represented 9.6% of our consolidated total assets as of June 30, 2022 (of which $868 million, 
or 8.5% of our consolidated total assets, represents goodwill and net intangible assets subject to our internal control over 
financial reporting as of June 30, 2022). Under guidelines established by the SEC, companies are permitted to exclude 
acquisitions from their assessment of ICFR for a period of up to one year following an acquisition while integrating the 
acquired company.

Based on the results of our evaluation, our management, including the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial 
Officer, concluded that our ICFR was effective as of June 30, 2022. The results of our management’s assessment were reviewed 
with our Audit Committee and the conclusion that our ICFR was effective as of June 30, 2022 has been audited by KPMG LLP, 
our independent registered public accounting firm, as stated in their report which is included in Part IV, Item 15 of this Annual 
Report.

Our management, including the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, do not expect that our disclosure 

controls or our ICFR will prevent or detect all error or all fraud. A control system, no matter how well designed and operated, 
can provide only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the control system's objectives will be met. The design of a control 
system must reflect the fact that there are resource constraints, and the benefits of controls must be considered relative to their 
costs. Further, because of the inherent limitations in all control systems, no evaluation of controls can provide absolute 
assurance that misstatements due to error or fraud will not occur or that all control issues and instances of fraud, if any, have 
been detected. These inherent limitations include the realities that judgments in decision-making can be faulty and that 
breakdowns can occur because of simple error. Controls can also be circumvented by the individual acts of some persons, by 
collusion of two or more people, or by management override of the controls. The design of any system of controls is based in 
part on certain assumptions about the likelihood of future events, and there can be no assurance that any design will succeed in 
achieving its stated goals under all potential future conditions. Any evaluation of prospective control effectiveness, with respect 
to future periods, is subject to risks. Over time, controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions or 
deterioration in the degree of compliance with policies or procedures.

(C) Attestation Report of the Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

KPMG LLP, our independent registered public accounting firm, has issued a report under Public Company Accounting 

Oversight Board Auditing Standards AS 2201 on the effectiveness of our ICFR. See Part IV, Item 15 of this Annual Report on 
Form 10-K.

(D) Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting (ICFR)

Based on the evaluation completed by our management, in which our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer 

participated, our management has concluded that, except as noted above with respect to the acquisition of Zix, there were no 
changes in our internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 13a-15(f) under the Exchange Act) during the fiscal 
quarter ended June 30, 2022 that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over 
financial reporting.

Item 9B.  Other Information

None.

Item 9C.  Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdictions that Prevent Inspections

Not Applicable.

81

Item 10.  Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance 

Part III

The following table sets forth certain information as to our directors and executive officers as of July 30, 2022.

Name 
Mark J. Barrenechea
Madhu Ranganathan
Michael Acedo
Gordon A. Davies
Prentiss Donohue
Paul Duggan
Simon Harrison
Kristina Lengyel
Muhi Majzoub
James McGourlay
Renee McKenzie
Sandy Ono
Douglas M. Parker
Howard Rosen
Brian Sweeney
P. Thomas Jenkins
Randy Fowlie (2)(3)
Major General David Fraser (3)
Gail E. Hamilton (1)
Robert Hau (2)
Ann M. Powell (1)
Stephen J. Sadler
Harmit Singh (2)
Michael Slaunwhite (1)(3)
Katharine B. Stevenson (2)
Deborah Weinstein (1)(3)

Senior Vice President, Chief Information Officer

Age Office and Position Currently Held With Company
57 Vice Chair, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Technology Officer, Director
58 Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
41
Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer & Corporate Secretary
60 Executive Vice President, Special Advisor to the Chief Executive Officer
52 Executive Vice President, SMB/C Sales
47 Executive Vice President, Worldwide Renewals
52 Executive Vice President, Enterprise Sales
54 Executive Vice President, Customer Solutions
62 Executive Vice President, Chief Product Officer
53 Executive Vice President, International Sales
47
40 Executive Vice President, Chief Marketing Officer
51 Executive Vice President, Corporate Development
58
58 Executive Vice President, Chief Human Resources Officer
62 Chairman of the Board
62 Director
65 Director
72 Director
56 Director
56 Director
71 Director
59 Director
61 Director
60 Director
62 Director

Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer

_______________________________

(1) Member of the Compensation Committee.
(2) Member of the Audit Committee.
(3) Member of the Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee.

Mark J. Barrenechea

Mr. Barrenechea joined OpenText in January 2012 as the President and Chief Executive Officer. In January 2016, Mr. 

Barrenechea took on the role of Chief Technology Officer, while remaining the Company’s Chief Executive Officer. In 
September 2017, Mr. Barrenechea was appointed Vice Chair, in addition to remaining the Chief Executive Officer and Chief 
Technology Officer. Before joining OpenText, Mr. Barrenechea was President and Chief Executive Officer of Silicon Graphics 
International Corporation (SGI), where he also served as a member of the Board. During Mr. Barrenechea's tenure at SGI, he 
led strategy and execution, which included transformative acquisition of assets, as well as penetrating diverse new markets and 
geographic regions. Mr. Barrenechea also served as a director of SGI from 2006 to 2012. Prior to SGI, Mr. Barrenechea served 
as Executive Vice President and CTO for CA, Inc. (CA), (formerly Computer Associates International, Inc.) from 2003 to 2006 
and was a member of the executive management team. Before going to CA, Mr. Barrenechea was the Senior Vice President of 
Applications Development at Oracle Corporation from 1997 to 2003, managing a multi-thousand person global team while 
serving as a member of the executive management team. From 1994 to 1997, Mr. Barrenechea served as Vice President of 
Development at Scopus, a software applications company. Prior to Scopus, Mr. Barrenechea was the Vice President of 
Development at Tesseract, where he was responsible for reshaping the company's line of CRM and human capital management 
software. Mr. Barrenechea serves as a member of the Board and Audit Committee Chair of Dick's Sporting Goods. In the past 

82

five years, Mr. Barrenechea also served as a director of Hamilton Insurance Group and as a board member of Avery Dennison 
Corporation. Mr. Barrenechea holds a Bachelor of Science degree in computer science from Saint Michael's College. He has 
been the recipient of many awards, including the 2011 Best Large Company CEO from the San Francisco Business Times and 
2015 Results-Oriented CEO of the year by CEO World Awards. Mr. Barrenechea has authored several books including The 
Intelligent and Connected Enterprise, The Golden Age of Innovation, Digital Manufacturing, Digital Financial Services, On 
Digital, Digital: Disrupt or Die, eGovernment or Out of Government, Enterprise Information Management: The Next 
Generation of Enterprise Software. He has also written a number of whitepapers, such as The Resilient Organization: 
COVID-19 and New Ways to Work, The Cloud: Destination for Innovation, Security: Creating Trust in a Zero Trust World and 
The Information Advantage.

Madhu Ranganathan

Ms. Ranganathan joined OpenText as Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer in April 2018. With more than 25 
years of financial leadership experience, Ms. Ranganathan most recently served as the Chief Financial Officer for [24]7.ai from 
June 2008 to March 2018. Ms. Ranganathan also held senior financial roles at Rackable Systems from December 2005 to May 
2008, Redback Networks from August 2002 to November 2005, and Backweb Technologies from December 1996 to January 
2000. She also has public accounting experience with PriceWaterhouseCoopers LLC. Ms. Ranganathan currently serves as a 
Board Member for the Bank of Montreal and Akamai Technologies. In past years she served as a Board Member of 
ServiceSource and Watermark, a Bay Area organization focused on professional development for women. Ms. Ranganathan 
holds an MBA in Finance from the University of Massachusetts, is a member of the AICPA and a Chartered Accountant 
(India).

Michael Acedo 

Mr. Acedo has served as Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary since January 2022. Since 

joining OpenText in 2014, Mr. Acedo has held various increasingly senior legal roles, primarily supporting corporate 
governance, external reporting, investor relations, Corporate Citizenship, capital markets, corporate communications, 
government relations, and merger and acquisitions matters and, most recently, as the Vice President, General Counsel–
Corporate & Corporate Secretary. Mr. Acedo is responsible for leading the global legal organization, including the Office of the 
Chief Compliance Officer and the Corporate Secretarial department. Prior to joining OpenText, Mr. Acedo practiced corporate 
and securities law, with a concentration on international capital markets and merger and acquisitions transactions, at the global 
law firm, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP. Mr. Acedo holds a Law Degree from The University of Western 
Ontario, Canada (including Law exchange at Hong Kong University) and a B.A. (Honours) from The University of Toronto, 
and is a member of the New York State Bar Association and a Foreign Legal Consultant with the Law Society of Ontario.

Gordon A. Davies

Mr. Davies joined OpenText as the Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary in September 2009. In March 2016, Mr. 

Davies was appointed as Executive Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Development, and remained the 
Corporate Secretary until September 2018. In January 2022, Mr. Davies was appointed to serve as Special Advisor to the Chief 
Executive Officer. After thirteen years, Mr. Davies will retire from OpenText in September 2022. Prior to joining OpenText, 
Mr. Davies was the Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary of Nortel Networks Corporation. During his sixteen years at 
Nortel, Mr. Davies acted as Deputy General Counsel and Corporate Secretary during 2008, and as interim Chief Legal Officer 
and Corporate Secretary in 2005 and again in 2007. He led the Corporate Securities legal team as General Counsel-Corporate 
from 2003, with responsibility for providing legal support on all corporate and securities law matters, and spent five years in 
Europe supporting all aspects of the Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) business, ultimately as General Counsel, EMEA. 
Prior to joining Nortel, Mr. Davies practiced securities law at a major Toronto law firm. Mr. Davies holds an LL.B and an 
MBA from the University of Ottawa, and a B.A. from the University of British Columbia. He is a member of the Law Society 
of Upper Canada, the Canadian Bar Association, the Association of Canadian General Counsel and the Society of Corporate 
Secretaries and Governance Professionals.

83

Prentiss Donohue

Mr. Donohue has served as Executive Vice President of Small and Medium-sized Business and Consumer (SMB/C) Sales 

since December 2020. Prior to this role, Mr. Donohue served as Senior Vice President, Portfolio Group from January 2019 to 
December 2020 and as Senior Vice President of Professional Services from April 2016 to January 2019. He brings over 20 
years of experience in support and services management. Prior to joining OpenText, Mr. Donohue served as Group Vice 
President and General Manager of Advanced Customer Services for Oracle Corporation from January 2010 to March 2016, 
where he was responsible for driving Oracle’s innovative software, systems and cloud services. From April 1998 to December 
2010, Mr. Donohue worked at Sun Microsystems in various leadership roles, including in Managed Services Management and 
Corporate Marketing. Mr. Donohue served on the board of directors of Summit Charter School until May 2016. Mr. Donohue 
holds a BA from the University of Colorado and has completed executive leadership programs at the University of Michigan’s 
Ross School of Business and the University of Hong Kong.

Paul Duggan

Mr. Duggan has served as Executive Vice President, Worldwide Renewals since July 2021. Prior to this role, Mr. Duggan 

served as Senior Vice President, Revenue Operations from January 2017 to July 2021. He is responsible for operations across 
sales, professional services, business networks and customer support. Prior to joining OpenText, Mr. Duggan held various roles 
at Oracle Corporation, including Group Vice President of Support Renewal Sales, North America from December 1999 to 
January 2017. Previously, Mr. Duggan served on the advisory board for the Technology Services Industry Association from 
2016 to 2017. He has completed executive leadership programs at the University of Michigan Ross School of Business and 
IESE Business School in Barcelona, Spain.

Simon Harrison

Mr. Harrison has served as the Company’s Executive Vice President of Enterprise Sales since March 2021. Prior to this, 

Mr. Harrison, who joined the Company through its acquisition of IXOS AG, has held a number of senior leadership roles, 
including serving as its Executive Vice President, Worldwide Sales from October 2017 to March 2021, Senior Vice President of 
Enterprise Sales from 2015 to 2017, Senior Vice President of Fast Growth Markets from 2014 to 2015 and as the Company’s 
Senior Vice President of Sales for the EMEA region from 2012 to 2014. Mr. Harrison holds an honors degree in Computer 
Science from Leeds University.

Kristina Lengyel

Ms. Lengyel has served as the Company's Executive Vice President, Customer Solutions since March 2021. Prior to 
joining OpenText, Ms. Lengyel served as Vice President of Global Solutions at Salesforce from July 2019 to March 2021, 
heading their global analytics (Tableau) services practice. Ms. Lengyel held key executive roles at Kronos (now Ultimate 
Kronos Group), overseeing global customer solutions and engineering, from 2010 to 2019. Ms. Lengyel also served as a 
member of the executive leadership team at Open Solutions (acquired by Fiserv) from 2006 to 2009, and at Concerto (now 
Aspect) Software from 2001 to 2003. Ms. Lengyel currently serves on the board of Local Measure. Ms. Lengyel holds a 
Master's Degree in Business Administration from Northeastern University and a Bachelor's Degree in computer engineering 
from Sault College of Applied Arts and Technology.

Muhi Majzoub

Mr. Majzoub has served as Executive Vice President, Chief Product Officer since September 2019. Prior to this role, Mr. 
Majzoub served as Executive Vice President, Engineering from January 2016 to September 2019 and as Senior Vice President, 
Engineering from June 2012 to January 2016. Mr. Majzoub is responsible for managing product development cycles, global 
development organization and driving internal operations and development processes. Mr. Majzoub is a seasoned enterprise 
software technology executive having recently served as Head of Products for NorthgateArinso, a private company that 
provides global Human Resources software and services. Prior to this, Mr. Majzoub was Senior Vice President of Product 
Development for CA, Technologies from June 2004 to July 2010. Mr. Majzoub also worked for several years as Vice President 
for Product Development at Oracle Corporation from January 1989 to June 2004. Mr. Majzoub attended San Francisco State 
University.

James McGourlay

Mr. McGourlay has served as Executive Vice President, International Sales since July 2021. Prior to this, Mr. McGourlay 
was the Company's Executive Vice President, Customer Operations from October 2017 to July 2021, Senior Vice President of 
Global Technical Services from May 2015 to October 2017 and Senior Vice President of Worldwide Customer Service from 
February 2012 to May 2015. Mr. McGourlay joined OpenText in 1997 and held progressive positions in information 

84

technology, technical support, product support and special projects, including, Director, Customer Service and Vice President, 
Customer Service.

Renee McKenzie

Ms. McKenzie was appointed Senior Vice President, Chief Information Officer for OpenText in April 2021. Ms. 
McKenzie joined the Company in 2004 and has held a number of positions within the Company, including Vice President, 
Enterprise Business Systems from 2015 to 2021. Ms. McKenzie holds a Master's Degree in Business Administration and a 
Bachelor's Degree in Biology & Psychology from Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

Sandy Ono

Ms. Ono joined OpenText as Executive Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer in January 2022. Ms. Ono is 
responsible for driving marketing and communications worldwide, from brand to demand, to deliver growth for the Company. 
Prior to joining OpenText, Ms. Ono was Vice President, Growth Marketing at Hewlett Packard Enterprise from 2015 to 2022 
and in the Strategy & Operations practice at Deloitte Consulting from 2003 to 2015. Ms. Ono has a bachelor’s degree in 
business administration and rhetoric from UC Berkeley, and her MBA from the Wharton School of Business.

Douglas M. Parker

Mr. Parker has served as the Company’s Executive Vice President, Corporate Development since January 2022. Prior to 
this, Mr. Parker was the Company’s Senior Vice President, Corporate Development from October 2019 to January 2022. From 
January 2018 to October 2019, Mr. Parker served as President & Chief Executive Officer of Quarterhill Inc., focused on the 
acquisition, management and growth of companies in dedicated technology areas. Mr. Parker previously served as Senior Vice 
President, Corporate Development of OpenText from 2015 to 2017. Prior to this role, Mr. Parker held the position of Vice 
President, General Counsel & Assistant Secretary from 2009 to 2015, where he was responsible for a variety of corporate legal, 
litigation management and governance activities. Mr. Parker also served as Executive Sponsor to OpenText Brazil operations in 
2014. Prior to joining OpenText, Mr. Parker worked for Nortel Networks Corporation in a variety of senior legal roles, 
including Managing Attorney, where he was responsible for the company’s global M&A legal function from 2006 to 2009. Mr. 
Parker holds an Executive Masters of Business Administration from the Richard Ivey School of Business, the University of 
Western Ontario, a Bachelor of Laws degree from Queen’s University, and a Bachelor of Arts (Honors) degree from Trinity 
College, the University of Toronto.

Howard Rosen

Mr. Rosen joined OpenText as Senior Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer in April 2020. Prior to joining 
OpenText, Mr. Rosen served as Vice President, Global Controller and Principal Accounting Officer at Wesco Aircraft from 
September 2018 to March 2020. Mr. Rosen also served as Vice President and Corporate Controller at Safe-Guard Products 
International from June 2017 to September 2018, as Senior Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer at RioCan from 2011 
to 2016, as Chief Accounting Officer, Global Controller at Husky Injection Moldings System from 2010 to 2011 and as Senior 
Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer at MDS Inc. from 2007 to 2010. Mr. Rosen is a CPA and holds a BSBA, 
Accounting from Georgetown University.

Brian Sweeney

Mr. Sweeney joined OpenText as Chief Human Resources Officer in October 2018. He has over 25 years of experience as 

a Human Resource (HR) leader in high growth, global technology businesses, and professional services consulting. He has led 
organizational growth and transformation initiatives, including international expansion, M&A, global talent management, 
compensation and benefits, employee engagement, communication and cultural transformation. Prior to joining OpenText, Mr. 
Sweeney worked at Amgen Inc. from 2003 to 2018, where he served in various HR leadership roles, including Global VP of 
HR, Head of HR for Global R&D and VP of International Human Resources. Prior to this, Mr. Sweeney worked at Dell, where 
he served as Director of Worldwide Compensation and Benefits from 1993 to 1997 and HR Director from 1997 to 2001. From 
1989 to 1992, Mr. Sweeney was a Human Resource consultant at AON Hewitt Associates, working across multiple client 
industry sectors in the practice areas of employee benefits and executive compensation. Earlier in his professional career, Mr. 
Sweeney worked in corporate sales and sales management for Steelcase, Inc. Mr. Sweeney holds an MBA from the University 
of Michigan and a Bachelor's degree in Sociology from Vanderbilt University.

P. Thomas Jenkins 

Mr. Jenkins is Chair of the Board of OpenText. From 1994 to 2005, Mr. Jenkins was President, then Chief Executive 
Officer and then from 2005 to 2013, Chief Strategy Officer of OpenText. Mr. Jenkins has served as a Director of OpenText 

85

since 1994 and as its Chairman since 1998. In addition to his OpenText responsibilities, Mr. Jenkins is Chair of the World Wide 
Web Foundation, a Commissioner of the Tri-Lateral Commission. Mr. Jenkins has also served as a board member of Manulife 
Financial Corporation, Thomson Reuters Inc. and TransAlta Corporation. He was also past Chair of the Ontario Global 100 
(OG100) and past Canadian Co-Chair of the Atlantik Bruecke. He was the tenth Chancellor of the University of Waterloo and 
was the Chair of the National Research Council of Canada (NRC). Mr. Jenkins received an M.B.A. from Schulich School of 
Business at York University, an M.A.Sc. from the University of Toronto and a B.Eng. & Mgt. from McMaster University. Mr. 
Jenkins received honorary doctorates from six universities. He is a member of the Waterloo Region Entrepreneur Hall of Fame, 
a Companion of the Canadian Business Hall of Fame and recipient of the Ontario Entrepreneur of the Year award, the 
McMaster Engineering L.W. Shemilt Distinguished Alumni Award and the Schulich School of Business Outstanding Executive 
Leadership award. He is a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Engineering (FCAE). Mr. Jenkins was awarded the Canadian 
Forces Decoration (CD), the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Medal (QJDM) and the Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal 
Republic of Germany. Mr. Jenkins is an Officer of the Order of Canada (OC).

Randy Fowlie

Mr. Fowlie has served as a director of OpenText since March 1998. From December 2010 to April 2017, Mr. Fowlie was 
the President and CEO of RDM Corporation, a leading provider of specialized hardware and software solutions in the electronic 
payment industry. Mr. Fowlie operated a consulting practice from July 2006 to December 2010. From January 2005 until July 
2006, Mr. Fowlie held the position of Vice President and General Manager, Digital Media, of Harris Corporation, formerly 
Leitch Technology Corporation (Leitch), a company that was engaged in the manufacturing of audio and video infrastructure 
products for the professional broadcast and video industry. From June 1999 to January 2005, Mr. Fowlie held the position of 
Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer of Inscriber Technology Corporation (Inscriber), a software company 
providing products to the broadcast and video industry. From February 1998 to June 1999, Mr. Fowlie was the Chief Financial 
Officer of Inscriber. Inscriber was acquired by Leitch in January 2005. Prior to working at Inscriber Mr. Fowlie was a partner 
with KPMG LLP, Chartered Accountants, where he worked from 1984 to February 1998. Mr. Fowlie received a B.B.A.
(Honours) from Wilfrid Laurier University and is a Chartered Professional Accountant. Mr. Fowlie is also a director of 
InvestorCom Inc. and Sapphire Digital Health Solutions Inc., both privately held companies. In the last five years, Mr. Fowlie 
also served as a director of Dye & Durham Limited (TSX: DND) a leading provider of cloud-based software and technology 
solutions for legal and business professionals.

Major General David Fraser

Major-General (Ret.) David Fraser has served as a director of OpenText since September 2018. Mr. Fraser is the President 

of Aegis Six Corporation of Toronto. Mr. Fraser was commissioned as an Infantry Officer following graduation from Carleton 
University with a Bachelor of Arts in 1980. He served in various command and staff positions in the Princess Patricia’s 
Canadian Light Infantry from platoon to Division throughout his 30 year career. Most notable, he commanded the NATO 
coalition in southern Afghanistan in 2006. He is a graduate of the Canadian Forces Command and Staff College in Toronto, 
holds a Master’s of Management and Policy and is a graduate of the United States Capstone Program (Executive School for 
generals). His honors and awards including the Commander of Military Merit, the Canadian Meritorious Service Cross, the 
Meritorious Service Medal, the United States Legion of Honor and Bronze Star (for service in Afghanistan), and leadership 
recognition awards from the Netherlands, Poland, and NATO. He is the recipient of the Vimy award for contributions to 
leadership and international affairs and the Atlantic Council Award for international leadership. Upon his departure from the 
military, Mr. Fraser joined the private sector and, along with his partners, created Blue Goose Pure Foods. Mr. Fraser joined 
INKAS® Armored Vehicle Manufacturing as their Chief Operating Officer in 2015 until 2017. In 2016, he founded Aegis Six 
Corporation, which aims at addressing the needs of capacity building abroad and for the private sector within Canada. Mr. 
Fraser currently works with the Bank of Montreal on their Canadian Defence Community Banking Program, serves as a 
director of Route1, Inc, Antoxa Corp. and the Canadian Forces College Foundation and is a member of The Prince’s Charities 
Advisory Council. In the last five years, Mr. Fraser was also a member of the Conference of Defence Association board. Mr. 
Fraser is also a mentor at the Ivey Business School and is the co-author of Operation Medusa, The Furious Battle that Saved 
Afghanistan from the Taliban.

86

Gail E. Hamilton

 Ms. Hamilton has served as a director of OpenText since December 2006. Ms. Hamilton previously led a team of over 
2,000 employees worldwide as Executive Vice President at Symantec Corp (Symantec), an infrastructure software company, 
and had “P&L” responsibility for their global services and support business. While leading Symantec's $2 billion enterprise and 
consumer business, Ms. Hamilton helped steer the company through an aggressive acquisition strategy. In 2003, Information 
Security magazine recognized Ms. Hamilton as one of the “20 Women Luminaries” shaping the security industry. Ms. 
Hamilton has over 20 years of experience growing leading technology and services businesses in the enterprise market. She has 
extensive management experience at Compaq and Hewlett Packard, as well as Microtec Research. Ms. Hamilton received both 
a BSEE from the University of Colorado and an MSEE from Stanford University. Currently, Ms. Hamilton is also a director of 
Arrow Electronics. In the past five years Ms. Hamilton also served as a director of Ixia and Westmoreland Coal Company. She 
was named as one of WomenInc.'s 2018 Most Influential Corporate Board Directors.

Robert Hau

Mr. Hau has served as a director of OpenText since September 2020. He is the Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer at 
Fiserv, Inc., and provides oversight for all financial functions of the company. Mr. Hau has nearly 30 years of experience in 
business and financial leadership roles. Prior to joining Fiserv, he was Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of 
TE Connectivity Ltd. from 2012 to 2016, where he was responsible for developing and implementing financial strategy, as well 
as creating the financial infrastructure necessary to drive the company’s financial direction, vision and compliance initiatives. 
Previously, Mr. Hau served as Chief Financial Officer for Lennox International Inc. Mr. Hau also spent 22 years at Honeywell 
International Inc. in a variety of progressive financial and operations leadership roles, including serving as Chief Financial 
Officer of its Aerospace Business Group, Specialty Materials Business Group and Aerospace Electronic Systems Unit. Mr. Hau 
holds a Master’s degree in business administration from the USC Marshall School of Business and a Bachelor’s degree in 
business administration from Marquette University.

Ann M. Powell

Ms. Powell has served as a director of OpenText since June 2021. She is the EVP, Global Chief Human Resource Officer 

for Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS) whose mission is to discover, develop and deliver innovative medicines that help patients 
prevail over serious diseases. With a focus on business performance, Ms. Powell leads efforts to drive the corporation’s global 
people strategy, empowering the company’s current and future workforce and building a healthy culture focused on serving 
patients and communities. Ms. Powell works across the enterprise to support BMS’s commitment to creating an energizing 
work experience and a culture that is powerfully diverse and globally inclusive. Ms. Powell’s industry experience and expertise 
lie in executive compensation, global leadership development, change management, global diversity and inclusion, training 
design and delivery, recruitment and placement, labour relations, mergers and acquisitions, divestitures and green field start-
ups. With a career spanning both international and domestic assignments, Ms. Powell has held leadership roles of increasing 
responsibility within the gas, chemical and pharmaceutical industries, including Dow Chemical and Wyeth Pharmaceuticals. 
Prior to joining BMS in 2013, Ms. Powell was the Chief Human Resources Officer for Shire Pharmaceuticals. Ms. Powell holds 
a B.S. degree from Iowa State University, a Master’s degree in Industrial Relations, University of Minnesota, and is certified as 
a Senior Professional in Human Resources (SPHR®).

Stephen J. Sadler

Mr. Sadler has served as a director of OpenText since September 1997. From April 2000 to present, Mr. Sadler has served 
as the Chairman and CEO of Enghouse Systems Limited, a publicly traded software company that provides enterprise software 
solutions focusing on remote work, contact centers, visual computing and communications for next generation software defined 
networks. Mr. Sadler was previously Chief Financial Officer, President and Chief Executive Officer of GEAC Computer 
Corporation Ltd. (GEAC). Prior to Mr. Sadler's involvement with GEAC, he held executive positions with Phillips Electronics 
Limited and Loblaws Companies Limited, and was Chairman of Helix Investments (Canada) Inc. Currently, Mr. Sadler is a 
director of Enghouse Systems Limited. Mr. Sadler has a Business and Security Valuation certificate from Canadian Association 
of Business Valuators, holds a B.A. Sc. (Honours) in Industrial Engineering and an M.B.A. (Dean's List) from York University. 
He is also a Chartered Professional Accountant.

Harmit Singh

Mr. Singh has served as a director of OpenText since September 2018. He is the Executive Vice President and Chief 
Financial Officer of Levi Strauss & Co., where he is responsible for managing the company’s finance, information technology, 
strategic sourcing and global business services functions globally. This includes financial planning and analysis; strategic 
planning and corporate development; accounting and controls; tax; enterprise risk management; treasury; internal audit; and 
investor relations. Mr. Singh is a seasoned financial executive with almost 30 years of experience in driving growth for global 

87

consumer brands. Prior to joining Levi Strauss & Co. in January 2013, Mr. Singh has served as Chief Financial Officer of Hyatt 
Hotels Corporation, where he played an instrumental role in successfully establishing a global financial structure, taking the 
company public, building a strong balance sheet, and driving growth by supporting capital deployment for acquisition and 
investments. Before Hyatt Hotels Corporation, Mr. Singh held various global leadership roles at Yum! Brands Inc., one of the 
world’s largest restaurant companies, (including acting as Chief Financial Officer of Pizza Hut and Chief Financial Officer of 
Yum International). Early in his career, Mr. Singh also worked at American Express India and PriceWaterhouse in India. Mr. 
Singh holds a Bachelor of Commerce from Shri Ram College of Commerce, Delhi University, and is a Chartered Accountant 
from India. He is also a member of the CNBC Global CFO Council and Wall Street Journal CFO Network. In October 2016, 
Mr. Singh was named to the board of directors of Buffalo Wild Wings Inc., the owner, operator and franchisor of Buffalo 
Wings® restaurants, where he served as a director and Chair of the Audit Committee until February 2018.

Michael Slaunwhite

Mr. Slaunwhite has served as a director of OpenText since March 1998. Mr. Slaunwhite also previously served on the 
board of Vector Talent Holdings, L.P., the parent holding company of Saba Software from 2017 to December 2020. Previously, 
Mr. Slaunwhite also served as Chairman of the Board of Saba Software. Prior to his appointment at Vector Talent Holdings, 
Mr. Slaunwhite served as CEO and Chairman of Halogen Software Inc. from 2000 to August 2006, as President and Chairman 
from 1995 to 2000, and as a Director and Chairman from 1995 up to its acquisition by Vector Talent Holdings in 2017. From 
1994 to 1995, Mr. Slaunwhite was an independent consultant to a number of companies, assisting them with strategic and 
financing plans. Mr. Slaunwhite was the Chief Financial Officer of Corel Corporation from 1988 to 1993. Mr. Slaunwhite holds 
a B.A. Commerce (Honours) from Carleton University.

Katharine B. Stevenson

Ms. Stevenson has served as a director of OpenText since December 2008. She has extensive corporate governance 
experience, having served on numerous public company and not-for-profit boards in Canada and the US over the past two 
decades, where she has consistently assumed leadership roles. Ms. Stevenson is the Chair of the Board of the Canadian Imperial 
Bank of Commerce (CIBC). Ms. Stevenson also serves on the board of Capital Power Corporation and the board of Unity 
Health Toronto. Ms. Stevenson also served as a director of CAE Inc. She was previously a financial executive in the 
telecommunications and banking sectors. Ms. Stevenson holds a B.A. (Magna Cum Laude) from Harvard University. She is 
certified with the professional designation ICD.D. granted by the Institute of Corporate Directors (ICD). Ms. Stevenson has 
been named one of the Top 100 Most Powerful Women in Canada.

Deborah Weinstein

Ms. Weinstein has served as a director of OpenText since December 2009. Ms. Weinstein is a co-founder and partner of 

LaBarge Weinstein LLP, a business law firm based in Ottawa, Ontario, since 1997. Ms. Weinstein's legal practice specializes in 
corporate finance, securities law, mergers and acquisitions and business law representation of public and private companies, 
primarily in knowledge-based growth industries. Prior to founding LaBarge Weinstein LLP, Ms. Weinstein was a partner of the 
law firm Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP, where she practiced from 1990 to 1997 in Ottawa, and in Toronto from 1985 to 1987. 
Ms. Weinstein also serves on a number of not-for-profit boards. Ms. Weinstein has been recognized by Martindale-Hubbell 
(U.S.) with the highest possible rating in both Legal Ability and Ethical Standards. As well LaBarge Weinstein has been 
recognized by Canadian Lawyer as one of the Top 10 Corporate Boutiques. Ms. Weinstein holds an LL.B. from Osgoode Hall 
Law School of York University.

Involvement in Certain Legal Proceedings

Mr. Sadler was a director of Frontline Technologies Inc. (formerly Belzberg Technologies Inc.) from October 1997 to 
April 2012. Subsequent to Mr. Sadler's resignation, Frontline Technologies Inc. filed an assignment into bankruptcy under 
applicable bankruptcy and insolvency laws of Canada. 

88

Audit Committee

The Audit Committee currently consists of four directors, Mr. Fowlie (Chair), Mr. Hau, Mr. Singh and Ms. Stevenson, all 

of whom have been determined by the Board of Directors to be independent as that term is defined in NASDAQ Rule 
5605(a)(2) and in Rule 10A-3 promulgated by the SEC under the Exchange Act, and within the meaning of our director 
independence standards and those of any exchange, quotation system or market upon which our securities are traded.

The responsibilities, mandate and operation of the Audit Committee are set out in the Audit Committee Charter, a copy of 

which is available on the Company's website, investors.opentext.com under the Corporate Governance section.

The Board of Directors has determined that Mr. Fowlie qualifies as an “audit committee financial expert” as such term is 

defined in SEC Regulation S-K, Item 407(d)(5)(ii).

Code of Business Conduct and Ethics

We have a Code of Business Conduct and Ethics (the Ethics Code) that applies to all of our directors, officers and 

employees. The Ethics Code incorporates our guidelines designed to deter wrongdoing and to promote honest and ethical 
conduct, including the ethical handling of actual or apparent conflicts of interest between personal and professional 
relationships, and compliance with all applicable laws and regulations. The Ethics Code also incorporates our expectations of 
our employees that enable us to provide full, fair, accurate, timely and understandable disclosure in our filings with the SEC 
and other public communications.

The full text of the Ethics Code is published on our web site at investors.opentext.com under the Corporate Governance 

section.

If we make any substantive amendments to the Ethics Code or grant any waiver, including any implicit waiver, from a 

provision of the Ethics Code to our Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer or Chief Accounting Officer, we will 
disclose the nature of the amendment or waiver on our website at investors.opentext.com or on a Current Report on Form 8-K.

Board Diversity and Term Limits

The Company, including the Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee, views diversity in a broad context and 
considers a variety of factors when assessing nominees for the Board. The Company has established a Board Diversity Policy 
recognizing that a Board made up of highly qualified directors from diverse backgrounds, including diversity of gender, age, 
race, sexual orientation, religion, ethnicity and geographic representation, is important. 

In reference to the disclosure requirements under the CBCA, the Company has not adopted a written policy that 

specifically relates to the identification and nomination of women, aboriginal peoples in Canada, persons with disabilities and 
members of visible minorities (each, the “Designated Groups”) for election as directors. As discussed above, the Board 
Diversity Policy of the Company includes consideration of broader categories of diversity beyond those of the Designated 
Groups but which encompass the Designated Groups and which the Board of Directors considers to be better aligned to achieve 
the range of perspectives, experience and expertise required by the Company. For each of the four Designated Groups, the 
Company has not established a specific target number or percentage, nor a specific target date by which to achieve a specific 
target number or percentage of members of each Designated Groups on the Board, as we consider a multitude of factors, 
including skills, experience, expertise, character and the Company’s objective and challenges at the time in determining the best 
nominee at such time. As of the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K, there are currently four women on the Board which 
represents approximately 33% of the current Board, and 40% of the current independent Board members. One director self-
identified to the Company as a person with disabilities. 

The Company has not set term limits for independent directors because it values the cumulative experience and 

comprehensive knowledge of the Company that long serving directors possess. The Company does not have a director 
retirement policy. However, the Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee considers the results of its director 
assessment process in determining the nominees to be put forward. In conducting director evaluations and nominations, the 
Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee considers the composition of the Board and whether there is a need to 
include nominees with different skills, experiences and perspectives on the Board. This flexible approach allows the Company 
to consider each director individually as well as the Board composition generally to determine if the appropriate balance is 
being achieved. 

89

The table below reports self-identified diversity statistics for the Board as required by NASDAQ Rule 5606.

Board Diversity Matrix (As of June 30, 2022)

Country of Principal Executive Offices:

Foreign Private Issuer
Disclosure Prohibited Under Home Country Law

Total Number of Directors

Canada

Yes
No

12

Part I: Gender Identity

Directors

Part II: Demographic Background

Female

Male

Non-Binary

Did Not 
Disclose 
Gender

4

6

0

2

Underrepresented Individual in Home Country Jurisdiction

LGBTQ+
Did Not Disclose Demographic Background

1

0
3

Diversity in Executive Officer Positions 

The Company is committed to a diverse and inclusive workplace, including advancing women to executive officer 

positions. The Company has adopted a formal written Global Employment Equity and Diversity Policy which expresses its 
commitment to fostering a diverse and inclusive workplace for all employees, regardless of culture, national origin, race, color, 
gender, gender identification, sexual orientation, family status, age, veteran status, disability, or religion, or other basis. A 
principal objective of our Global Employment Equity and Diversity Policy is to support and monitor the identification, 
development and retention of diverse employees, including gender diversity at executive and leadership positions. We will 
continue to develop a sustainable culture of equity, diversity and inclusion that provides all employees an opportunity to excel, 
and strive to present diverse slates of candidates for all our roles and mandate it for our senior leader positions. At the executive 
officer level, we consider a multitude of factors, including skills, experience, expertise, character and the Company’s objectives 
and challenges at the time in determining the best appointment at such time. To advance equity, diversity and inclusion, we 
have committed to have, by 2030, a majority of ethnically diverse staff, with a 50/50 gender representation in key roles and 
40% women in leadership positions at all management levels. The Company currently has one woman as a Named Executive 
Officer (20%) and four women as executive officers part of the executive leadership team (ELT) (30%), while approximately 
21% of existing positions on the senior leadership team (SLT), exclusive of our ELT, are held by women. 17% of SLT 
members are based outside of North America. In addition, three members of the ELT and SLT have self-identified to the 
Company as a visible minority.

Item 11.  Executive Compensation 

TALENT AND COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT

Our Talent and Compensation Committee of Open Text’s board of directors (the Talent and Compensation Committee, 

the Compensation Committee or the Committee) has reviewed and discussed with our management the following 
Compensation Discussion and Analysis (CD&A). Based on this review and discussion, our Talent and Compensation 
Committee has recommended to the Board that the following CD&A be included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for Fiscal 
2022.

This report is provided by the following independent directors, who comprise our Compensation Committee:

Michael Slaunwhite (Chair), Gail E. Hamilton, Ann M. Powell, Deborah Weinstein.

To the extent that this Annual Report on Form 10-K has been or will be specifically incorporated by reference into any 
filing by us under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (Exchange Act), 
this “Compensation Committee Report” shall not be deemed “soliciting materials”, unless specifically otherwise provided in 
any such filing.

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COMPENSATION DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

The following discussion and analysis of compensation arrangements of the following individuals for the fiscal year 
which ended on June 30, 2022 (Fiscal 2022), should be read together with the compensation tables and related disclosures set 
forth below: (i) our principal executive officer, (ii) our principal financial officer, and (iii) our three most highly compensated 
executive officers, other than our principal executive officer and principal financial officer (collectively, the Named Executive 
Officers). This discussion contains forward-looking statements that are based on our current plans, considerations, expectations 
and projections regarding future compensation programs. Actual compensation programs that we adopt in the future may differ 
materially from the various planned programs summarized in this discussion.

Payments in Canadian dollars included herein, unless otherwise specified, are converted to U.S. dollars using an average 

annual exchange rate of 0.792677. 

Overview of Compensation Program

Determining the compensation of our Named Executive Officers is the responsibility of the Compensation Committee, 
either alone or in certain circumstances, in consultation with the Board. The Compensation Committee ensures compensation 
decisions are in line with our goal to provide total compensation to our Named Executive Officers that (i) is fair, reasonable and 
consistent with our compensation philosophy to achieve our short-term and long-term business goals, and (ii) provides market 
competitive compensation. The Named Executive Officers who are the subject of this CD&A are:

• Mark J. Barrenechea - Vice Chair, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Technology Officer (CEO)

• Madhu Ranganathan - Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (CFO)

•

Simon Harrison - Executive Vice President, Enterprise Sales 

• Muhi Majzoub - Executive Vice President, Chief Product Officer 

•

Gordon A. Davies - Executive Vice President, Special Advisor to the Chief Executive Officer 

Compensation Oversight Process

Role of Compensation Committee

The Compensation Committee has responsibility for the oversight of executive compensation within the terms and 

conditions of our various compensation plans. The Compensation Committee approves the compensation of our executive 
officers, with the exception of our CEO. In making compensation decisions for our executive officers relating to, among other 
things, performance targets, base salary, bonuses, executive benefits, short-term incentives and long-term incentives, the 
Compensation Committee considers the input of the CEO. With respect to the compensation of our CEO, the Compensation 
Committee makes recommendations to the Board (excluding the CEO) for approval. The Compensation Committee reviews 
and recommends for approval all equity awards related to executive compensation prior to final approval and granting by the 
Board.

The Board, the Compensation Committee, and our management have instituted a set of detailed policies and procedures to 

evaluate the performance of each of our Named Executive Officers which help determine the amount of the short-term 
incentives and long-term incentives to award to each Named Executive Officer. The performance of each of our Named 
Executive Officers, other than our CEO, is assessed by our CEO in his capacity as the direct supervisor of the other Named 
Executive Officers. The performance of our CEO is assessed by the Board (excluding the CEO). The Board conducts 
discussions and makes decisions with respect to the performance of our CEO in special sessions from which management is 
absent.

The Compensation Committee considers previous compensation awards, competitive market practice, the impact of tax, 

accounting treatments, applicable regulatory requirements and the results of the most recent shareholder advisory vote on 
executive compensation when approving compensation programs. See “Shareholder Engagement and Say-on-Pay.”

During Fiscal 2022, the Committee’s work included the following: 

•

Executive Compensation Review - The Compensation Committee continually reviews compensation practices and 
policies with respect to our senior management team against similar-sized software and technology companies with 
a global presence, in order to allow us to place our compensation practices for these positions in a market context. 
This benchmarking may include a review of base salary, short-term incentives and long-term incentives. 

91

•

Long-Term Incentive Plan - The Compensation Committee reviewed semi-annual analysis provided by Mercer 
Canada Limited (Mercer) related to performance under all outstanding Performance Share Unit Programs (for details 
on the programs, refer to the section titled “Long Term Incentives”).

Although the Compensation Committee has responsibility for decisions on executive compensation, it may consider input 

from management, analysis provided from the compensation consultant, as well as other factors that the Committee considers 
appropriate.

Compensation Consultant 

NASDAQ standards require compensation committees to have certain responsibilities and authority regarding the 
retention, oversight and funding of committees' advisors and perform an evaluation of each advisor's independence, taking into 
consideration all factors relevant to that person's independence from management. NASDAQ standards also require that such 
rights and responsibilities be enumerated in the compensation committee's charter. While, as a foreign private issuer under the 
U.S. federal securities laws, we are exempt from these rules, nonetheless, our Compensation Committee has the sole authority 
to retain and terminate outside consultants. From time to time, the Compensation Committee seeks the advice of an outside 
compensation consultant to provide assistance and guidance on compensation issues. The compensation consultant may provide 
the Compensation Committee with relevant information pertaining to market compensation levels, alternative compensation 
plan designs, market trends and best practices and may assist the Compensation Committee with respect to determining the 
appropriate benchmarks for each Named Executive Officer's compensation.

In Fiscal 2022, the Compensation Committee retained Frederic W. Cook & Co., Inc. (FW Cook), an independent 
consulting firm specializing in executive compensation consulting. During Fiscal 2022, the Chairman and members of the 
Compensation Committee held discussions from time to time with representatives of FW Cook in connection with 
compensation market practices, and potential impacts on Company's financial performance. FW Cook reviewed relevant 
information and industry benchmarks on matters relating to CEO and executive officer compensation. In addition, in Fiscal 
2022, management engaged AON Consulting, Inc. (AON), an independent consulting firm, to review our peer group and supply 
market data to assist in the evaluation of our approach to executive and director compensation. For further information, see 
“Compensation Philosophy and Objectives” below. 

The Compensation Committee met six times during Fiscal 2022. Management assisted in the coordination and preparation 

of the meeting agenda and materials for each meeting. The agenda is reviewed and approved by the Chairman of the 
Compensation Committee. The meeting materials are generally posted and made available to the other Committee members and 
invitees, if any, for review approximately one week in advance of each meeting.

Shareholder Engagement and Say-on-Pay

We have a longstanding practice of proactive shareholder engagement every quarter, during both the proxy season and 

non-quiet periods, to address investor questions and concerns and encourage their feedback on a variety of topics such as 
company performance, executive compensation, and environmental, governance and social issues. These meetings are primarily 
attended by members of management, including some led by our CEO, Chief Financial Officer and Investor Relations team, as 
well as where appropriate, members of our Board from time to time. Throughout Fiscal 2022, we met or initiated contact with 
shareholders representing:

At our last annual meeting of shareholders held on September 15, 2021, we received 77.94% in favour of our approach to 

executive compensation. While we received a substantial majority of support, this result is not aligned with our historical 
support of over 90% approval. 

92

Prior to and following last year’s annual meeting of shareholders, in full collaboration with our Board, we and, in certain 

instances, our Compensation Committee Chair, directly engaged with our U.S., Canadian and global shareholders to discuss, 
among other things, their feedback regarding our approach to executive compensation. While our shareholders were generally 
supportive of the design of our executive compensation program, including that we continue to increase the proportion of our 
executive officers’ compensation being “at risk” in line with our peers, we received questions from a limited number of our 
institutional shareholders regarding the one-time special awards granted to our CEO and the amount of CEO total 
compensation. 

The CEO’s compensation plan is structured to align with long-term shareholder return and to reward outstanding 
performance, provide incentives for continued long-term sustainable growth, accomplish the Board’s retention objectives and 
reflect the dual responsibilities of our CEO who serves as both our CEO and Chief Technology Officer. In reviewing executive 
compensation, the Compensation Committee benchmarks against U.S. software and technology companies with a global 
presence, and not Canadian companies, for a variety of factors including that greater than 95% of our revenues are outside of 
Canada and most of the executive leadership team are based in the U.S. Specifically, four of our five Named Executive 
Officers, including our CEO, and a majority of our executive leadership team are located in the highly competitive Silicon 
Valley - a key market for multi-national executive talent in the software and technology industry - which has higher pay levels 
than the limited market for software and technology executives in Canada. Our executive compensation benchmarking, like that 
of our direct competitors, is focused on the compensation practices of U.S.-based peer companies, as we generally recruit from 
U.S.-based competitors for executive leadership talent. Executive talent from Canada and from adjacent sectors such as 
telecommunications is not viewed as reflecting the same competition for company talent. The Board believes that our CEO’s 
total compensation is reasonable relative to comparable U.S. software and technology companies with a global presence. See 
“Compensation Philosophy and Objectives” for our benchmarking practices.

Nonetheless, we considered and evaluated the feedback received from our shareholders. For Fiscal 2022, the Company 

did not award any one-time special grants to the CEO or any other Named Executive Officer. Further, the Compensation 
Committee decisions resulted in the CEO’s total compensation, as reported in the Summary Compensation Table, to be 24% 
lower in Fiscal 2022 than in Fiscal 2021. See “Summary Compensation Table.” We value the input of our shareholders and will 
continue to engage with our shareholders to consider their views expressed through our annual Say-on-Pay voting process. 

93

Compensation Philosophy and Objectives

We believe that compensation plays an important role in achieving short and long-term business objectives that ultimately 

drives business success in alignment with long-term shareholder value creation.

The objectives of our compensation program are to:

l Attract and retain highly qualified executive officers 

who have a history of proven success.

l Align the interests of executive officers with our 

shareholders' interests and with the execution of our 
business strategy by evaluating executive performance 
on the basis of key financial metrics which we believe 
closely correlate to long-term shareholder value.

l Motivate and reward our high caliber executive team 
through competitive pay practices and an appropriate 
mix of short and long-term incentives.

l Tie compensation awards directly to key financial 
metrics with evaluations based on achieving and 
overachieving predetermined objectives.

Our compensation philosophy is based on three fundamental 
principles:

l Strong link to business strategy - Our short and long-
term goals are reflected in our overall compensation 
program.

l Pay for performance - We aim to reward sustained 

company performance by aligning a significant portion 
of total compensation to our financial results and 
strategic objectives. We believe compensation should 
fluctuate with financial performance and accordingly, 
we structure total compensation to be at or above our 
peer group median when our financial performance 
exceeds our target performance and likewise, we 
structure total compensation to be below our peer group 
median if our financial performance falls below our 
targets. See “Aligning CEO Pay with Shareholders’ 
Interests.”

l Market relevant - Our compensation program provides 
market competitive pay in terms of value and structure 
in order to retain talent who are performing according to 
their objectives and to attract new talent of the highest 
caliber. We use market data of similarly-sized U.S. 
software and technology companies with a global 
presence, rather than Canadian companies, for a variety 
of  factors including that greater than 95% of our 
revenues are outside of Canada, most of the executive 
leadership team are based in the U.S., and we generally 
recruit from U.S.-based competitors for executive 
leadership talent. We aim to position our executive 
officers’ compensation targets at the median in relation 
to our peer group, however, actual pay depends on 
performance of the executive officers and the Company.

Our reward package is based primarily on results achieved by the Company as a whole. The Compensation Committee 
has the flexibility to exercise discretion to ensure total compensation appropriately reflects performance. The Compensation 
Committee rarely exercises said discretion.

Competitive Compensation

Aggregate compensation for each Named Executive Officer is designed to be market competitive. The Compensation 

Committee researches and refers to the compensation practices of similarly situated companies in determining our 
compensation policy. Although the Compensation Committee reviews each element of compensation for market 
competitiveness and may weigh a particular element more heavily than another based on our Named Executive Officer's role 
within the Company, the focus remains on being competitive in the market with respect to total compensation. 

In particular, we are a global cloud software company with greater than 95% of our revenues outside of Canada, including 

59% of our revenues in the U.S. Four of our five Named Executive Officers, including our CEO, and a majority of our 
executive leadership team are located in the highly competitive Silicon Valley - a key market for multi-national executive talent 
in the software and technology industry. Our executive compensation benchmarking, like that of our direct competitors, is 
focused on the compensation practices of U.S.-based peer companies, as we generally recruit from U.S.-based competitors for 
executive leadership talent. Executive talent from Canada and adjacent sectors such as telecommunications is not viewed as 
reflecting the same competition for company talent. 

The Compensation Committee recognizes that, while executive compensation levels in Silicon Valley are higher than the 

market for compensation in Canada, recruiting talent from this area is critical for our success. Attracting and retaining talent 
with the highest level of industry expertise is the basis for the Company’s business and strategy, and therefore our 
compensation practices must align with market expectations where the industry skills reside. Further, the Compensation 
Committee also acknowledges that paying U.S. market compensation to U.S. executives in U.S. dollars may result in the 
appearance of higher relative compensation compared to other Canadian companies. Converting amounts paid to U.S.-based 

94

executives in U.S. dollars to Canadian dollars further gives the appearance of high compensation in Canadian dollars if  
analyzed against other Canadian companies. The Compensation Committee believes that this appearance of high compensation 
relative to Canadian companies mischaracterizes the Company’s pay practices and that paying according to each executive’s 
local market serves the long-term interests of our shareholders better than being unable to find appropriate leadership talent.

Peer Group

The Compensation Committee periodically reviews market data related to compensation levels and programs at 
comparable peer companies. Our peer group consists of 17 companies in the software and technology industry, including 16 
U.S.-based companies and one company based in Israel. The peer group is reviewed annually. In Fiscal 2022, no new 
companies were added or removed to our peer group. Below is our peer group list for Fiscal 2022 and the criteria considered.

General Description
Global software and service 
providers that are similar in 
size, business complexity, 
and scope of operations to us.

Criteria Considered
Key metrics considered include revenue, market 
capitalization, number of employees, and net 
income.

Generally, organizations within our peer group 
are in a similar software/technology industry 
with similar revenues, market size and number of 
employees.

Peer Group List

Akamai Technologies, Inc.
Amdocs Ltd.
Autodesk, Inc.
Avaya Inc.
Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc.
Cadence Design Systems, Inc.
CDK Global LLC
Check Point Software Technologies Ltd.
Citrix Systems, Inc.
NetApp, Inc.
Nuance Communications, Inc.
Pitney Bowes Inc.
Palo Alto Networks, Inc.
Sabre Corporation
SS&C Technologies, Inc.
Synopsys, Inc.
Teradata Corporation

Compensation Decisions for Fiscal 2022

Aligned with our competitive compensation philosophy, we continue to ensure market alignment of total compensation 

positioning for our Named Executive Officers. In setting executive compensation levels for the fiscal year in the first quarter of 
Fiscal 2022, the Compensation Committee considered our relative performance against our peers, including our strong 3-year 
TSR performance (for the three years ended June 30, 2021, our annual compounded TSR was 15% versus our peer median of 
10%), our revenue was above the peer median and our operating income approximated the 75th percentile. 

The Compensation Committee made certain decisions at the start of Fiscal 2022 that resulted in the CEO’s total 
compensation, as reported in the Summary Compensation Table, to be 24% lower in Fiscal 2022 than in Fiscal 2021 
notwithstanding strong relative performance at the time the decisions were made. In addition, our CEO was not provided any 
adjustment to base salary or short-term incentive target despite having had no increase in base salary or short-term incentive 
target for the past five fiscal years and despite market adjustments being made to the base salary and short-term incentive 
targets for our other Named Executive Officers in Fiscal 2022. Further, our CEO gave up $1.25 million in cash compensation in 
Fiscal 2021 to mitigate the operational impacts of COVID-19, which was not repaid by the Company. 

To ensure an appropriate portion of our Named Executive Officers pay is “at risk” in alignment with shareholders, and 
with the advice of our external compensation consultant, for Fiscal 2022 we increased the long-term incentive targets of our 
Named Executive Officers, a component of total compensation where we have historically lagged the market. For our CEO, his 
long-term incentive target was increased to align with the market data of our peers. The Compensation Committee considered 
this increase appropriate in light of the need to retain high-quality leadership to drive our growth strategy, our historical strong 
performance relative to our peers, and the positive future trajectory of the company. 

Further, prior to setting executive compensation, the Compensation Committee considered internal pay equity and 
determined that, given the dual responsibilities of being both CEO and Chief Technology Officer, the CEO pay differential is 
appropriate to other Named Executive Officers.

95

Performance Graph

The following graph compares for each of the five fiscal years ended June 30, 2022, the yearly percentage change in the 

cumulative total shareholder return on our Common Shares with the average cumulative total return of the NASDAQ 
Composite Index, the S&P/TSX Composite Index (the Indices) and our peer group listed above. The graph illustrates the 
cumulative return on a $100 investment in our Common Shares made on June 30, 2017, as compared with the cumulative return 
on a $100 investment in the respective Indices and the average cumulative return on a $100 investment in our peer group made 
on the same day. Dividends declared on securities comprising the respective Indices and our peer group and declared on our 
Common Shares are assumed to be reinvested. The performance of our Common Shares as set out in the graph is based upon 
historical data and is not indicative of, nor intended to forecast, future performance of our Common Shares. The graph lines 
merely connect measurement dates and do not reflect fluctuations between those dates. As illustrated in the graph below, due to 
significant market volatility in the software and technology sector as a result of rising interest rates and inflation, during 
calendar year 2022 the cumulative total shareholder return on our Common Shares has seen a significant reduction relative to 
the S&P/TSX Composite Index.

The information contained in the above graph shall not be deemed to be filed as part of this document, does not constitute 
soliciting material and should not be deemed filed or incorporated by reference into any other filing of the Company under the 
Securities Act or the Exchange Act, except to the extend we specifically incorporate the graph by reference.

96

Aligning CEO Pay with Shareholders’ Interests

We look at pay for performance from different perspectives to ensure there is strong alignment between what our 
executive officers earn and our total shareholder return (TSR). A realized and realizable pay analysis shows the actual value of 
compensation awarded to our CEO in each of the last five fiscal years as of June 30, 2022 relative to the amount reported. This 
analysis also compares the actual value to the CEO for each $100 of compensation awarded each fiscal year to the value earned 
by shareholders over the same period. We have indexed these values at $100 to provide a meaningful comparison.

The graphic and table below illustrate that the actual value of CEO compensation is aligned with the experience of 

shareholders. This analysis shows that the executive compensation program has performed as intended, reinforcing 
accountability as the actual value (realized and realizable) for each fiscal year fluctuates with our share performance.

Fiscal year 

Total direct
compensation
awarded (1)

Actual value (realized
and realizable) at 
June 30, 2022 (2)

Period

2018

2019

2020

2021

2022

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

7,107,769  $ 

8,082,359  $ 

9,702,562  $ 

20,930,804  $ 

15,920,496  $ 

____________________

7,083,960 

July 1, 2017 to June 30, 2022

9,490,814 

July 1, 2018 to June 30, 2022

7,688,300 

July 1, 2019 to June 30, 2022

9,168,585 

July 1, 2020 to June 30, 2022

9,255,014 

July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

Value of $100

CEO(3)

Shareholders(4)

99.67  $ 

117.43  $ 

79.24  $ 

43.80  $ 

58.13  $ 

130.74 

115.29 

96.85 

92.36 

75.93 

(1)

Includes salary, short-term incentive, stock awards and option awards, as reported in the summary compensation table each year. For Fiscal 2021, 
the value of performance stock options included in total direct compensation awarded assumes that the maximum performance level is achieved; if 
such options are measured assuming performance target, the total direct compensation awarded in Fiscal 2021 is $17,113,304. 

(2) Represents the actual value to the CEO of compensation awarded each year, realized between grant and June 30, 2022 or still realizable on June 30, 

2022. Realized value includes cash compensation paid for the fiscal year, including salary, short-term incentive (earned for the fiscal year but paid in 
the following fiscal year), payouts of RSUs and PSUs that have vested, and gains realized from stock options exercised. Realizable value includes 
the value of RSUs and PSUs that have not vested, and outstanding stock options that were in-the-money.

(3) Represents the actual value (realized and realizable) to the CEO for each $100 of total direct compensation awarded for each fiscal year.
(4) Represents the cumulative value of a $100 investment in common shares made on the first trading day of the period, assuming dividends are 

reinvested.

Further, the value that our executives realize from our long-term incentive programs is a key driver of the pay for 
performance relationship. The table below illustrates the difference in actual value (realized and realizable) and the grant date 
fair value of stock and option awards as reported in the summary compensation table each year. 

The actual value (realized and realizable) received by our CEO has been 40% lower than the grant date fair value of stock 
and option awards reported in the summary compensation table over the last five fiscal years. Further, all option awards granted 
during the last four fiscal years remain subject to share price performance in order to be realized or realizable for actual value.

97

Grant date

August 7, 2017

August 7, 2017

August 6, 2018

August 6, 2018

August 5, 2019

August 5, 2019

August 10, 2020

August 10, 2020

August 10, 2020

August 9, 2021

August 9, 2021

Number of stock 
awards (1)

Number of option 
awards (1)

Exercise price of 
options

Grant date fair 
value reported (2)

Actual value 
(realized and 
realizable) at June 
30, 2022 (3)

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

—   

189,180 

125,200   

— 

—   

161,040 

111,960   

— 

—   

273,010 

124,410   

—   

—   

— 

213,680 

750,000   (4)  $ 

174,810   

— 

—   

256,410 

144,160   

— 

$ 

$ 

$ 

34.49  $ 

1,407,556  $ 

633,753 

—  $ 

3,538,963  $ 

4,288,957 

39.27  $ 

1,407,800  $ 

0 

—  $ 

3,693,934  $ 

6,510,189 

38.76  $ 

1,751,342  $ 

0 

—  $ 

4,970,594  $ 

4,707,674 

45.81  $ 

45.81  $ 

1,750,993  $ 

7,635,000  $ 

0 

0 

—  $ 

8,991,036  $ 

6,614,810 

52.62  $ 

2,499,173  $ 

0 

—  $ 

9,621,323  $ 

5,455,014 

$ 

47,267,714  $ 

28,210,397 

Total (Reported vs. Actual Value)

______________________

(1) Number of stock and option awards reported in the Grants of Plan-Based Awards table relating to Fiscal 2018 to Fiscal 2022. PSUs 

are reported at target. All option awards granted remain outstanding and have not been exercised for value.

(2) Represents the amount recognized as the aggregate grant date fair value of equity-based compensation awards, as calculated in 

accordance with ASC Topic 718 for the fiscal year in which the awards were granted, as reported in the summary compensation 
table for the applicable year.

(3) Based upon the closing price for the Company's Common Shares as traded on the NASDAQ on June 30, 2022 of $37.84.
(4)

In Fiscal 2021, Mr. Barrenechea received a one-time grant of performance stock options under the 2004 Stock Option Plan with 
vesting subject to certain performance conditions. The amount in the table represents the maximum number of options that may vest 
if maximum performance level is achieved under such grant as reported in the Summary Compensation Table. These are the only 
active performance stock options for Mr. Barrenechea. For Fiscal 2022, the Company did not award any one-time special grants to 
the CEO or any other Named Executive Officer.

Our Compensation Program

We believe that transparent, objective and easily verifiable corporate goals play an important role in creating and 
maintaining an effective compensation strategy for our Named Executive Officers. Our objective is to facilitate an increase in 
shareholder value, over the longer term, through the achievement of these corporate goals under the leadership of our Named 
Executive Officers working in conjunction with all of our valued employees.

We use a combination of fixed and variable compensation to motivate our executive officers to achieve our corporate 

goals. For Fiscal 2022, the basic components of our executive officer compensation program were:

•

•

•

Fixed pay; 

Short-term incentives; and 

Long-term incentives. 

To ensure alignment of the interests of our executive officers with the interests of our shareholders, our executive officers 

have a significant proportion of compensation “at risk.” Compensation that is “at risk” means compensation that may or may 
not be paid to an executive officer depending on whether the Company and such executive officer is able to meet or exceed 
applicable performance targets. Short-term incentives and long-term incentives meet this definition of compensation which is at 
risk, and long-term incentives are an additional incentive used to promote the creation of longer-term shareholder value. In 
general, the greater the executive officer’s influence upon our financial or operational results, the higher is the “at risk” portion 
of the executive officer's compensation. The Board and the Compensation Committee have broad discretion to make positive or 
negative adjustments if it considers them to be reasonably appropriate. Discretion may, from time to time, be applied in order to 
avoid unintended windfalls or penalties for plan participants. Events that might warrant such discretionary adjustments include, 
but are not limited to, terrorism, political unrest, war, pandemics and natural disasters. No such discretion was applied to the 
variable cash incentive payouts nor long-term incentive payouts during Fiscal 2022.

The Compensation Committee annually considers the percentage of each Named Executive Officer's total compensation 

that is “at risk” depending on the Named Executive Officer's responsibilities and objectives.

98

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The chart below provides the approximate percentage of target total compensation, reflective of the compensation 
adjustments discussed above, provided to each Named Executive Officer that was either fixed pay or “at risk” for Fiscal 2022:

Fixed Pay 
Percentage
(“Not At Risk”)

Short-Term 
Incentive
Percentage 
(at 100% target)
(“At Risk”)

Long-Term Incentive
Percentage 
(at 100% target)
(“At Risk”)

8%

19%

21%

21%

17%

12%

19%

21%

21%

21%

80%

62%

58%

58%

62%

Named Executive Officer

Mark J. Barrenechea

Madhu Ranganathan

Simon Harrison

Muhi Majzoub

Gordon A. Davies

Fixed Pay

Fixed pay includes:

•

•

•

Base salary; 

Perquisites; and 

Other benefits. 

Base Salary

The base salary review for each Named Executive Officer takes into consideration factors such as current competitive 
market conditions and particular skills (such as leadership ability and management effectiveness, experience, responsibility and 
proven or expected performance) of the particular individual. The Compensation Committee obtains information regarding 
competitive market conditions through the assistance of management and our compensation consultants.

For details on our benchmarking process, see “Competitive Compensation” and “Peer Group” above.

Perquisites

Our Named Executive Officers receive a minimal amount of non-cash compensation in the form of executive perquisites. 
In order to remain competitive in the marketplace, our Named Executive Officers are entitled to some limited benefits that are 
not otherwise available to all of our employees, including:

•

•

An annual executive medical physical examination;

A base allowance to cover expenses such as financial planning, tax preparation or club memberships.

Other Benefits

We provide various employee benefit programs on the same terms to all employees, including our Named Executive 

Officers, such as, but not limited to:

• Medical health insurance; 

•

•

•

Dental insurance; 

Life insurance; and

Tax based retirement savings plans matching contributions. 

Short-Term Incentives

In Fiscal 2022, all of our Named Executive Officers participated in our short-term incentive plan, which is designed to 
motivate achievement of our short-term corporate goals. These short-term corporate goals are typically derived from our annual 
business plan which is prepared by management and approved by the Board. Awards made under the short-term incentive plan 
are made using cash only.

The amount of the short-term incentive payable to each Named Executive Officer, in general, is based on the attainment 
of pre-established quantitative corporate objectives related to improving shareholder and company value, as applicable, which 
are reviewed and approved by the Compensation Committee and the Board. For all Named Executive Officers with the 
exception of Mr. Harrison, these objectives consist of worldwide revenues and worldwide adjusted operating income. 

99

Worldwide revenues are derived from the “Total Revenues” line of our audited income statement with certain adjustments 
relating to the aging of accounts receivable. Worldwide revenues are an important metric for measuring our growth and helps us 
to assess our Named Executive Officers’ performance. 

Worldwide adjusted operating income, which is intended to reflect the operational effectiveness of our leadership, is 
calculated as total revenues less the total cost of revenues and operating expenses excluding amortization of intangible assets, 
special charges and stock-based compensation expense. Worldwide adjusted operating income is also adjusted to remove the 
impact of foreign exchange.

Due to his responsibilities as Executive Vice President, Enterprise Sales, Mr. Harrison's objectives consist of enterprise 
license revenue, first year maintenance (FYM), cloud minimum contract value (MCV), Enterprise professional services revenue 
(PS) primarily within North America and EMEA and worldwide adjusted operating income.

Enterprise license revenues are a component of “License” revenue line of our audited income statement. FYM is allocated 

for the first annual term of maintenance as invoiced for new license deals, which is a component of our Customer support line 
of our audited income statement. MCV is the total projected commissionable incremental revenue in a signed and written 
agreement between the Company and its customer. It represents the minimum amount of new revenue that we expect to receive 
from a contract. For the purposes of calculating the achievement of this performance objective, we only consider MCV that is 
derived from new business. Enterprise PS revenues are a component of our “Professional Services and Other” line of our 
audited income statement.

For Fiscal 2022, the following table illustrates the total short-term target awards for each Named Executive Officer, along 

with the associated weighting of the related performance measures.

Named Executive Officer

Mark J. Barrenechea

Madhu Ranganathan

Simon Harrison

Muhi Majzoub

Gordon A. Davies

Total Target
Award

Worldwide 
Revenues

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

1,425,000 

600,000 

500,000 

500,000 

454,204 

50%

50%

N/A

50%

50%

Enterprise 
License, FYM, 
MCV and PS 
Revenue

Worldwide 
Adjusted 
Operating 
Income

N/A

N/A

70%

N/A

N/A

50%

50%

30%

50%

50%

For the short-term incentive award amounts that would be earned at each of threshold, target and maximum levels of 

performance, for applicable objectives, see “Grants of Plan-Based Awards for Fiscal 2022” below.

For each performance measure noted above, the Compensation Committee approves the total target award eligible to be 

earned by a Named Executive Officer, and the Board applies a threshold and target level of performance. Where applicable, the 
Board also applies an objective formula for determining the percentage payout under awards for levels of performance above 
and below threshold and target. To the extent target performance is exceeded, the award will be proportionately greater. The 
threshold and target levels and payout formula are set forth below as well as actual performance and payout percentages 
achieved in Fiscal 2022. In each case, performance targets for Fiscal 2022 were higher than the performance targets for Fiscal 
2021. The Fiscal 2022 performance target for worldwide adjusted operating income was set slightly below actual performance 
in Fiscal 2021 to account for targeted investments undertaken by the Company to reposition our business, products and talent 
capabilities for our accelerated migration to the Cloud and achieve our longer-term objective of accelerated revenue growth. 
The performance target for worldwide adjusted operating income would have been higher than actual performance in Fiscal 
2021, which was a record year for worldwide adjusted operating income, if not for the additional costs related to these 
investments planned for, and made in, Fiscal 2022.

The table below illustrates the percentage of the target awards paid to our Named Executive Officers in accordance with 

our actual results achieved during Fiscal 2022.

Objectives (in millions)
Worldwide Revenues
Enterprise License, FYM, MCV and PS Revenue
Worldwide Adjusted Operating Income (2)
_______________________________

Threshold 
Target

Target

Fiscal 2022
Actual (1)

$ 
$ 
$ 

3,087  $ 
746  $ 
1,026  $ 

3,468  $ 
839  $ 
1,153  $ 

3,569 
875 
1,213 

% Target 
Actually 
Achieved

 103 %
 104 %
 105 %

% of 
Payment per 
Fiscal 2022 
Payout Table
 200 %
 200 %
 200 %

(1) Adjusted to remove the impact of foreign exchange.
(2) This is a non-GAAP measure adjusted to remove the impact of foreign currency.

100

In Fiscal 2022, we achieved 103% of our worldwide revenue target; 104% of our enterprise license, FYM, MCV and 

PS revenue; and 105% of our worldwide adjusted operating income target. The table below illustrates under the “% 
Attainment” column that an achievement of 103% of target for the worldwide revenue performance criteria results in an 
award payment of 200% of the target award amount; an achievement of 104% of target for the enterprise license, FYM, 
MCV and PS revenue performance criteria results in an award payment of 200% of the target award amount; and an 
achievement of 105% of target for the worldwide adjusted operating income performance criterion results in an award 
payment of 200% of the target award amount. 

Worldwide Revenues, Enterprise License, FYM, MCV and PS Revenue, and Worldwide Adjusted Operating Income - 
Attainment and Corresponding Payment
% Attainment
% Payment
100.0%
100.5%
101.0%
101.5%
102% and above

% Payment
100%
125%
150%
175%
200% cap

% Attainment
0 - 89%
90 - 91%
92 - 93%
94 - 95%
96 - 97%
98 - 99%

—%
15%
40%
55%
70%
85%

Formula: Actual / Target = % of Attainment
Linear x25 for every 0.5% over 100%

 The actual short-term incentive award earned by each Named Executive Officer for Fiscal 2022 was determined in 
accordance with the formulas described above and are reflective of the strong performance levels achieved by the Company in 
Fiscal 2022 related to this “at risk” compensation component. We have set forth below for each Named Executive Officer the 
award amount actually paid for Fiscal 2022, and the percentage of target award amount represented by the actual award paid, 
broken out by performance measure as follows:

Mark J. Barrenechea 

Performance Measure:

Worldwide Revenues

Worldwide Adjusted Operating Income

Total

Madhu Ranganathan

Performance Measure:

Worldwide Revenues

Worldwide Adjusted Operating Income
Total

Payable at
Target

Payable at
Threshold

Actual
Payable
($)

Actual
Payable
(% of Target) 

$ 

$ 

712,500  $ 

106,875  $  1,425,000 

712,500  $ 

106,875  $  1,425,000 

$  1,425,000  $ 

213,750  $  2,850,000 

 200  %

 200  %

 200  %

Payable at
Target

Payable at
Threshold

Actual
Payable
($)

Actual
Payable
(% of Target) 

$ 

$ 
$ 

300,000  $ 

45,000  $ 

600,000 

300,000  $ 
600,000  $ 

45,000  $ 
600,000 
90,000  $  1,200,000 

 200 %

 200 %
 200 %

101

Simon Harrison

Performance Measure:

Enterprise License, FYM, MCV and PS Revenue

Worldwide Adjusted Operating Income

Total

Muhi Majzoub 

Performance Measure:

Worldwide Revenues

Worldwide Adjusted Operating Income

Total

Gordon A. Davies 

Performance Measure:

Worldwide Revenues

Worldwide Adjusted Operating Income

Total

Long-Term Incentives 

Payable at
Target

Payable at
Threshold

Actual
Payable
($)

Actual
Payable
(% of Target) 

350,000  $ 

52,500  $ 

700,000 

150,000  $ 

22,500  $ 

300,000 

500,000  $ 

75,000  $  1,000,000 

 200 %

 200 %

 200 %

Payable at
Target

Payable at
Threshold

Actual
Payable
($)

Actual
Payable
(% of Target) 

250,000  $ 

37,500  $ 

500,000 

250,000  $ 

37,500  $ 

500,000 

500,000  $ 

75,000  $  1,000,000 

 200 %

 200 %

 200 %

Payable at
Target

Payable at
Threshold

Actual
Payable
($)

Actual
Payable
(% of Target) 

227,102  $ 

34,065  $ 

454,204 

227,102  $ 

34,065  $ 

454,204 

454,204  $ 

68,130  $ 

908,408 

 200 %

 200 %

 200 %

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

As with many North American software and technology companies, we have a general practice of granting variable long-
term incentives to executive officers, including our Named Executive Officers. Our long-term incentives represent a significant 
proportion of our Named Executive Officers’ total compensation, and its purpose is two-fold: (i) as a component of a 
competitive compensation package; and (ii) to align the interests of our Named Executive Officers with the interests of our 
shareholders. Grants are consistent with competitive market practice, and vesting occurs over time, to ensure alignment with 
our performance over the longer term. Usually, a very high percentage of the long-term incentive is “at risk” indicating we will 
not provide any compensation to the executive unless shareholders have received a positive return.

Long-Term Incentive Plans (LTIP) - General

We incentivize our executive officers, including our Named Executive Officers, in part, with long-term compensation 

pursuant to our LTIP. For each LTIP grant, a target value is established by the Compensation Committee for each Named 
Executive Officer, except for the CEO, whose target value is established by the Board, based on competitive market practice 
and by the respective Named Executive Officer’s ability to influence financial or operational performance. 

The performance targets and the weightings of performance targets under each LTIP are first recommended by the 
Compensation Committee and then approved by the Board. Grants are generally made annually and are comprised of the 
components outlined in the table below. No dividends are paid or accrued on PSUs or RSUs for grants made during or prior to 
Fiscal 2022. For grants made on or after Fiscal 2023, when cash dividends are paid by the Company on outstanding Common 
Shares, the Company will credit additional dividend equivalent PSUs and RSUs to the participant’s account. Dividend 
equivalent PSUs and RSUs will be subject to the same terms and conditions as the granted PSUs or RSUs, as applicable, and 
vest and are settled at the same time and in the same form as the PSUs or RSUs to which such dividend equivalent PSUs or 
RSUs relate.

102

Vehicle

% of Total 
LTIP

Description

Vesting

Payout

Performance 
Share Units 
(PSU)

50% of 
LTIP target 
award value

Restricted 
Share Units 
(RSU)

25% of 
LTIP target 
award value

The value of each PSU is equivalent to one 
Common Share. The number of PSUs granted is 
determined by converting the dollar value of the 
target award to PSUs, based on an average share 
price determined at time of Board grant. The 
number of PSUs to vest will be based on the 
Company’s relative TSR at the end of a three-year 
period as compared to the TSR of companies 
comprising the constituents of the S&P MidCap400 
Software and Services Index.

Cliff vesting in 
the third year 
following the 
determination 
by the Board 
that the 
performance 
criteria have 
been met.

The value of each RSU is equivalent to one 
Common Share. The number of RSUs granted is 
determined by converting the dollar value of the 
target award to RSUs, based on an average share 
price determined at time of Board grant.

Cliff vesting, 
generally three 
years after grant 
date.

Stock 
Options

25% of 
LTIP target 
award value

The dollar value of the target award is converted to 
a number of options using a Black Scholes model. 
The exercise price is equal to the closing price of 
our Common Shares on the trading day preceding 
the date of grant.

Vesting is 
typically 25% 
on each of the 
first four 
anniversaries of 
grant date. 
Options expire 
seven years 
after the grant 
date.

Once vested, units will 
be settled in either 
Common Shares or 
cash, at the discretion of 
the Board. We expect to 
settle these awards in 
Common Shares.

Once vested, units will 
be settled in either 
Common Shares or 
cash, at the discretion of 
the Board. We expect to 
settle these awards in 
Common Shares.

Once vested, 
participants may 
exercise options for 
Common Shares.

Payouts under LTIP grants:

• May also be subject to certain limitations in the event of early termination of employment or change in control of the 

Company; and 

•

Are subject to mandatory repayment or “claw-back” in the event of fraud, willful misconduct or gross negligence by 
any executive officer, including a Named Executive Officer, affecting the financial performance or financial 
statements of the Company or the price of our Common Shares.

LTIP 2024

Grants made in Fiscal 2022 under the LTIP (collectively referred to as “LTIP 2024” because the PSUs and RSUs do not 

vest until Fiscal 2024) took effect on August 9, 2021, with the goal of measuring performance over the three-year period 
starting July 1, 2021. The table below illustrates the target value of each element under LTIP 2024 for each Named Executive 
Officer.

Named Executive Officer

Performance Share Units

Restricted Share Units

Stock Options

Total

Mark J. Barrenechea

Madhu Ranganathan

Simon Harrison

Muhi Majzoub

Gordon A. Davies

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

5,000,000  $ 

1,000,000  $ 

675,000  $ 

675,000  $ 

675,000  $ 

2,500,000  $ 

2,500,000  $ 

10,000,000 

500,000  $ 

337,500  $ 

337,500  $ 

337,500  $ 

500,000  $ 

337,500  $ 

337,500  $ 

337,500  $ 

2,000,000 

1,350,000 

1,350,000 

1,350,000 

The LTIP is an annual program, so LTIP awards granted in Fiscal 2022 under LTIP 2024 were in addition to the annual 

LTIP awards granted in Fiscal 2021, Fiscal 2020, and prior years. For details of our previous LTIPs, see Item 11 of our Annual 
Report on Form 10-K for the relevant year. 

LTIP 2024 - PSUs

With respect to our PSUs, we use relative TSR to benchmark the Company’s performance against the performance of the 

corporations comprising the constituents of the S&P Mid Cap 400 Software & Services Index (the Index). The Index is 
comprised of 400 U.S. public companies with market capitalization of $1.6 billion to $17.9 billion and is a useful measure of 

103

the performance of mid-sized companies. Relative TSR is the sole measure for each Named Executive Officer's performance 
over the relevant three-year period for LTIP 2024 with respect to PSUs. 

If the Company's relative cumulative TSR, compared to the 
cumulative TSR of the Index is:

Then the percentage of the PSU target award that will be paid 
out will be:

Below 25th percentile

25th percentile

50th percentile

80th percentile

0%

50%

100%

200%

Any target percentile achieved between 25th and 80th percentile will be interpolated to determine a payout that can range 

from 50% to 200% of the target award.

The amounts that may be realized for PSU awards under LTIP 2024 are as follows, calculated based on the market price 

of our Common Shares on the NASDAQ as of June 30, 2022, and applied to the number of PSUs granted to the Named 
Executive Officers on August 9, 2021, based on the levels of achievement disclosed above. See “Grants of Plan-Based Awards 
in Fiscal 2022” for the number of PSUs granted in Fiscal 2022.

Named Executive Officer

Mark J. Barrenechea

Madhu Ranganathan

Simon Harrison

Muhi Majzoub
Gordon A. Davies (1)
______________________

LTIP 2024 PSUs value as of June 30, 2022

50% Payout 

100% Payout 

200% Payout 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

1,818,401  $ 

3,636,802  $ 

363,643  $ 

245,393  $ 

245,393  $ 

245,393  $ 

727,285  $ 

490,785  $ 

490,785  $ 

490,785  $ 

7,273,604 

1,454,570 

981,570 

981,570 

981,570 

(1) On January 24, 2022, the Company announced that Mr. Davies would retire in September 2022. As a result, Mr. Davies will forfeit 

PSU awards granted to him under LTIP 2024. 

LTIP 2024 - RSUs

RSUs vest over three years and do not have any specific performance-based vesting criteria. Provided the eligible 
employee remains employed throughout the vesting period, all RSUs granted shall become vested RSUs at the end of the LTIP 
2024 period.

The following RSU award values under LTIP 2024 have been calculated based on the market price of our Common 
Shares on the NASDAQ as of June 30, 2022, and applied to the number of RSUs granted to the Named Executive Officers on 
August 9, 2021. See “Grants of Plan-Based Awards in Fiscal 2022” for the number of RSUs granted in Fiscal 2022.

LTIP 2024 RSUs

Named Executive Officer

Mark J. Barrenechea
Madhu Ranganathan

Simon Harrison

Muhi Majzoub
Gordon A. Davies (1)
______________________

Value as of June 30, 2022

$ 
$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

1,818,212 
363,642 

245,582 

245,582 

245,582 

(1) On January 24, 2022, the Company announced that Mr. Davies would retire in September 2022. As a result, Mr. Davies will forfeit 

RSU awards granted to him under LTIP 2024.

LTIP 2024 - Stock Options

The stock options granted in connection with LTIP 2024 vest over four years, do not have any specific performance-based 

vesting criteria and, if not exercised, expire after seven years. Our Named Executive Officers will only realize value on these 
stock options with future OpenText share price appreciation from the date of grant. For a discussion of the assumptions used in 
the valuation of stock options, see Note 13 “Share Capital, Option Plans and Share-based Payments” to our Notes to 
Consolidated Financial Statements under Item 8 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

104

With respect to stock option grants, the Board will determine the following, based upon the recommendation of the 
Compensation Committee: the executive officers entitled to participate in our stock option plan, the number of options to be 
granted, and any other material terms and conditions of the stock option grant.  

All stock option grants, whether part of the LTIP or granted separately for new hires, promotions, retention or other 

reasons, are governed by our stock option plans. In addition, grants and exercises of stock options are subject to our Insider 
Trading Policy. For details of our Insider Trading Policy, see “Other Information With Respect to Our Compensation Program - 
Insider Trading Policy” below.

Other Long-Term Equity Grants

In addition to grants made in connection with our LTIP program, from time to time, we may grant stock options and/or 

RSUs to new strategic hires and to our employees in recognition of their service, such as for promotions, retention, or other 
reasons. In Fiscal 2022, we did not grant any special one-time grants to any of our Named Executive Officers. 

Executive Change in Control and Severance Benefits

Our severance benefit agreements are designed to provide reasonable compensation to departing senior executive officers 

under certain circumstances. While we do not believe that the severance benefits would be a determinative factor in a senior 
executive's decision to join or remain with the Company, the absence of such benefits, we believe, would present a distinct 
competitive disadvantage in the market for talented executive officers. Furthermore, we believe that it is important to set forth 
the benefits payable in triggering circumstances in advance in an attempt to avoid future disputes or litigation.

The severance benefits we offer to our senior executive officers are competitive with similarly situated individuals and 
companies. We have structured our senior executive officers' change in control benefits as “double trigger” benefits, meaning 
that the benefits are only paid in the event of, first, a change in control transaction, and second, there is a change in relationship 
between the Company and the senior executive officer within one year after the transaction. These benefits attempt to provide 
an incentive to our senior executive officers to remain employed with the Company in the event of such a transaction.

Other Information With Respect to Our Compensation Program

Pension Plans

We do not provide pension benefits or any non-qualified deferred compensation to any of our Named Executive Officers.

Share Ownership Guidelines

We currently have equity ownership guidelines (Share Ownership Guidelines), the objective of which is to encourage our 

senior management, including our Named Executive Officers, and our directors to buy and hold Common Shares in the 
Company based upon an investment target. We believe that the Share Ownership Guidelines help align the financial interests of 
our senior management team and directors with the financial interests of our shareholders.

The equity ownership levels are as follows:

CEO
Other senior management
Non-management director

4x base salary
1x base salary
5x annual retainer

For purposes of the Share Ownership Guidelines, individuals are deemed to hold all securities over which he or she is the 
registered or beneficial owner thereof under the rules of Section 13(d) of the Exchange Act through any contract, arrangement, 
understanding, relationship or otherwise in which such person has or shares:

•

•

voting power which includes the power to vote, or to direct the voting of, such security; and/or 

investment power which includes the power to dispose, or to direct the disposition of, such security. 

Also, Common Shares will be valued at the greater of their book value (i.e., purchase price) or the current market value. 

On an annual basis, the Compensation Committee reviews the recommended ownership levels under the Share Ownership 
Guidelines and the compliance by our executive officers and directors with the Share Ownership Guidelines.

The Board implemented the Share Ownership Guidelines in October 2009 and recommends that equity ownership levels 

be achieved within five years of becoming a member of the executive leadership team, including Named Executive Officers. 
The Board also recommends that the executive leadership team retain their ownership levels for so long as they remain 
members of the executive leadership team.

105

Named Executive Officers

Named Executive Officers may achieve these Share Ownership Guidelines through the exercise of stock option awards, 
Common Shares received as a result of vested RSUs or PSUs, purchases under the OpenText Employee Stock Purchase Plan 
(ESPP), through open market purchases made in compliance with applicable securities laws or through any equity plan(s) we 
may adopt from time to time providing for the acquisition of Common Shares. Until the Share Ownership Guidelines are met, it 
is recommended that a Named Executive Officer retain a portion of any stock option exercise or LTIP award in Common 
Shares to contribute to the achievement of the Share Ownership Guidelines. Common Shares issuable pursuant to the 
unexercised options shall not be counted towards meeting the equity ownership target.

As of the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K, all Named Executive Officers comply with the Share Ownership 

Guidelines for Fiscal 2022, as they have met the share ownership guidelines.

Directors

With respect to non-management directors, both Common Shares and deferred stock units (DSUs) are counted towards 

the achievement of the Share Ownership Guidelines. The Company currently has a Directors’ Deferred Share Unit Plan (DSU 
Plan), whereby any non-management director of the Company may elect to defer all or part of his or her retainer and/or fees in 
the form of common stock equivalents. As of the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K, all non-management directors, have 
exceeded the Share Ownership Guidelines applicable to them, which is five times their annual retainer, with the exception of 
Ms. Powell, who joined as a member of our Board in June 2021. Ms. Powell has until November 3, 2026, to meet the applicable 
requirements of the Share Ownership Guidelines. For further details, see the table below titled “Director Compensation for 
Fiscal 2022.” 

Insider Trading Policy

All of our employees, officers and directors, including our Named Executive Officers, are required to comply with our 

Insider Trading Policy. Our Insider Trading Policy prohibits the purchase, sale or trade of our securities with the knowledge of 
material inside information. In addition, our Insider Trading Policy prohibits our employees, officers and directors, including 
our Named Executive Officers, from, directly or indirectly, short selling any security of the Company or entering into any other 
arrangement that results in a gain only if the value of the Company's securities decline in the future, selling a “call option” 
giving the holder an option to purchase securities of the Company, or buying a “put option” giving the holder an option to sell 
securities of the Company. The definition of “trading in securities” includes any derivatives-based, monetization, non-recourse 
loan or similar arrangement that changes the insider’s economic exposure to or interest in securities of the Company and which 
may not necessarily involve a sale.

All grants of stock options are subject to our Insider Trading Policy and as a result, stock options may not be granted 
during the “blackout” period beginning on the fifteenth day of the last month of each quarter and ending at the beginning of the 
second trading day following the date on which the Company’s quarterly or annual financial results, as applicable, have been 
publicly released. If the Board approves the issuance of stock options during the blackout period, these stock options are not 
granted until the blackout period is over. The price at which stock options are granted is not less than the closing price of the 
Company’s Common Shares on the trading day for the NASDAQ market immediately preceding the applicable grant date.

106

Summary Compensation Table

The following table sets forth summary information concerning the annual compensation of our Named Executive 
Officers. All numbers are rounded to the nearest dollar or whole share. Changes in exchange rates will impact payments 
illustrated below that are made in currencies other than the U.S. dollar. Any Canadian dollar payments included herein have 
been converted to U.S. dollars at an annual average rate of 0.792677, 0.773416, and 0.746217, for Fiscal 2022, Fiscal 2021, and 
Fiscal 2020, respectively.

Mark J. Barrenechea
Vice Chair, Chief Executive 
Officer and Chief Technology 
Officer

Fiscal
Year 
2022

Salary
($) (1)
$  950,000 

Bonus
($) (2)

—  $ 

Stock
Awards
($) (3)
9,621,323 

Option
Awards
($) (4)

$  2,499,173  $ 

Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
Compensation
($) (1)(5)

All Other
Compensation
($) (6)
2,850,000  $  16,947 

Total ($)
15,937,443 

(7) $ 

2021

$  890,625 

—  $ 

8,991,036 

$  9,385,993  $ 

1,663,150  $  31,825 

(8) $ 

20,962,629 

2020

$  932,188  $ 273,028  $ 

4,970,594 

$  1,751,342  $ 

1,775,410  $  47,643 

(8) $ 

9,750,205 

Madhu Ranganathan

2022

$  600,000 

—  $ 

1,924,114 

$ 

499,815  $ 

1,200,000  $ 

— 

(9) $ 

4,223,929 

Executive Vice President and 
Chief Financial Officer 

2021

$  468,750 

—  $ 

1,765,137 

$  1,319,658  $ 

937,534  $ 

— 

(8) $ 

4,491,079 

Simon Harrison

2022

$  500,000 

—  $ 

1,298,676 

2020

$  490,625  $  22,807  $ 

781,072 

$ 

$ 

275,201  $ 

699,068  $ 

— 

(8) $ 

2,268,773 

337,434  $ 

1,000,000  $  304,118 

(10) $ 

3,440,228 

Executive Vice President, 
Enterprise Sales

2021

$  421,875 

—  $ 

1,415,475 

$  1,140,192  $ 

844,239  $  304,118 

(10) $ 

4,125,899 

Muhi Majzoub

2022

$  500,000 

—  $ 

1,298,676 

2020

$  399,896  $  17,310  $ 

354,786 

$ 

$ 

125,091  $ 

413,648  $  278,775 

(10) $ 

1,589,506 

337,434  $ 

1,000,000  $ 

4,995 

(7) $ 

3,141,105 

Executive Vice President, Chief 
Product Officer

Gordon A. Davies
Executive Vice President, Special 
Advisor to the Chief Executive 
Officer

_______________________

2021

$  398,437 

—  $ 

1,377,238 

$  1,087,917  $ 

796,904  $ 

— 

(8) $ 

3,660,496 

2020

$  417,031  $  19,386  $ 

781,072 

$ 

275,201  $ 

594,208  $ 

— 

(8) $ 

2,086,898 

2022

$  454,204 

—  $ 

1,298,676 

 (11)  $ 

337,434  $ 

908,408  $ 

4,075 

(7) $ 

3,002,797 

2021

$  373,415 

—  $ 

1,370,111 

 (12)  $  1,004,026  $ 

746,856  $ 

— 

(8) $ 

3,494,408 

2020

$  377,096  $  17,530  $ 

781,072 

$ 

275,201  $ 

537,306  $ 

— 

(8) $ 

1,988,205 

(1) Amounts reflect Fiscal 2021 and Fiscal 2020 COVID-19 compensation adjustments, which included a base salary reduction for each of the Named 

Executive Officers effective May 15, 2020, and the subsequent restoration of those adjustments which became effective December 1, 2020. See Item 
11 of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for Fiscal 2021 for further details on our COVID-19 compensation adjustments.

(2) Amounts set forth in this column for Fiscal 2021 represent a special performance bonus, approved by the Board, equal to an amount equal to the 

reductions in their Fiscal 2020 salary and annual incentive payout made pursuant to the previously disclosed COVID-19 compensation adjustments. 
The special performance bonus was paid in September 2020; however, as it related to performance in Fiscal 2020, the bonus received by each of the 
Named Executive Officers was included in Fiscal 2020.

(3) The amounts set forth in this column represent the aggregate grant date fair value, as computed in accordance with ASC Topic 718 “Compensation-

Stock Compensation” (Topic 718). Grant date fair value may vary from the target value indicated in the table set forth above in the section “LTIP 
2024.” For a discussion of the assumptions used in these valuations, see Note 13 “Share Capital, Option Plans and Share-based Payments” to our 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements under Item 8 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K. For the maximum value that may be received under 
the PSU awards granted in Fiscal 2022 by each Named Executive Officer, see the “Maximum” column under “Estimated Future Payouts under 
Equity Incentive Plan Awards” under the “Grants of Plan-Based Awards in Fiscal 2022” table below.

(4) Amounts set forth in this column represent the amount recognized as the aggregate grant date fair value of stock option awards, as calculated in 

accordance with Topic 718 for the fiscal year in which the awards were granted. In all cases, these amounts do not reflect whether the recipient has 
actually realized a financial benefit from the exercise of the awards. The performance options granted to Mr. Barrenechea in Fiscal 2021 have been 
reflected and valued here assuming achievement at the maximum performance level. For a discussion of the assumptions used in this valuation, see 
Note 13 “Share Capital, Option Plans and Share-based Payments” to our Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements under Item 8 of this Annual 
Report on Form 10-K.

(5) The amounts set forth in this column for Fiscal 2022 represent payments under the short-term incentive plan based on actual performance achieved.
(6) Except as otherwise indicated the amounts in “All Other Compensation” primarily include (i) medical examinations and (ii) tax preparation and 
financial advisory fees paid. “All Other Compensation” does not include benefits received by the Named Executive Officers which are generally 
available to all our salaried employees.

(7) Represents amounts we paid or reimbursed for tax, financial, and estate planning.
(8) For details of the amounts of fees or expenses we paid or reimbursed please refer to Summary Compensation Table in Item 11 of our Annual Report 

on Form 10-K for the corresponding fiscal years ended June 30, 2021 and June 30, 2020.

(9) The total value of all perquisites and personal benefits for this Named Executive Officer was less than $10,000, and, therefore, excluded.
(10) Represents amounts we paid or reimbursed for housing allowance inclusive of a related tax gross-up amount of $160,118, $160,118 and $146,775 

for the fiscal years ended June 30, 2022, 2021 and 2020, respectively.

(11) Includes PSU and RSU awards granted to Mr. Davies under LTIP 2024, which will be forfeited as a result of Mr. Davies planned retirement from 

the Company in September 2022.

107

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(12) Includes PSU and RSU awards granted to Mr. Davies under LTIP 2023, which will be forfeited as a result of Mr. Davies planned retirement from 

the Company in September 2022.

Grants of Plan-Based Awards in Fiscal 2022

The following table sets forth certain information concerning grants of awards made to each Named Executive Officer 

during Fiscal 2022.

Name 

Grant Date

Threshold 
($)

Target 
($)

Maximum 
($)

Estimated Future Payouts
Under Non-Equity 
Incentive Plan Awards (1)

All Other Option
Awards: Number
of Securities
Underlying (2)
Options
(#)

Exercise or
Base Price
of Option
Awards

Grant
Date Fair
Value of
Options (3)

($/share)

Awards ($)

Mark J. Barrenechea

August 9, 2021

$  213,750  $ 1,425,000  $  2,850,000   

256,410  $  52.62  $  2,499,173 

Madhu Ranganathan

August 9, 2021

Simon Harrison

Muhi Majzoub

August 9, 2021

August 9, 2021

Gordon A. Davies

August 9, 2021

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

90,000  $  600,000  $  1,200,000   

51,280  $  52.62  $ 

499,815 

75,000  $  500,000  $  1,000,000   

34,620  $  52.62  $ 

337,434 

75,000  $  500,000  $  1,000,000   

34,620  $  52.62  $ 

337,434 

68,130  $  454,204  $  908,408   

34,620  $  52.62  $ 

337,434 

Name

Mark J. Barrenechea

Madhu Ranganathan

Simon Harrison

Muhi Majzoub
Gordon A. Davies (6)
____________________________

Grant Date

August 9, 2021

August 9, 2021

August 9, 2021

August 9, 2021

August 9, 2021

Estimated Future Payouts
Under Equity
Incentive Plan Awards (4)
Target
(#)

Threshold
(#)

Maximum
(#)

All Other Stock
Awards: Number
of Securities
Underlying (5)
Stock
(#)

Grant
Date Fair
Value of
Stock (3) 

Awards ($)

48,055   

96,110   

192,220   

48,050  $ 

9,621,323 

9,610   

19,220   

38,440   

9,610  $ 

1,924,114 

6,485   

12,970   

25,940   

6,490  $ 

1,298,676 

6,485   

12,970   

25,940   

6,490  $ 

1,298,676 

6,485   

12,970   

25,940   

6,490  $ 

1,298,676 

(1) Represents the threshold, target and maximum estimated payouts under our short-term incentive plan for Fiscal 2022. For further 
information, see “Compensation Discussion and Analysis - Aligning Officers' Interests with Shareholders' Interests - Short-Term 
Incentives” above.

(2) For further information regarding our options granting procedures, see “Compensation Discussion and Analysis - Aligning Officers' 

Interests with Shareholders' Interests - Long-Term Incentives” above.

(3) Amounts set forth in this column represent the amount recognized as the aggregate grant date fair value of equity-based 

compensation awards, as calculated in accordance with ASC Topic 718 for the fiscal year in which the awards were granted. In all 
cases, these amounts do not reflect whether the recipient has actually realized a financial benefit from the exercise of the awards. 
For a discussion of the assumptions used in this valuation, see Note 13 “Share Capital, Option Plans and Share-based Payments” to 
our Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements under Item 8 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

(4) Represents the threshold, target and maximum estimated payouts under our LTIP 2024 PSUs for all Named Executive Officers. For 

further information, see “Compensation Discussion and Analysis - Aligning Officers' Interests with Shareholders' Interests - Long-
Term Incentives - LTIP 2024.”

(5) Represents the estimated payouts under our LTIP 2024 RSUs. For further information, see “Compensation Discussion and Analysis 

- Aligning Officers' Interests with Shareholders' Interests - Long-Term Incentives - LTIP 2024” above.

(6) PSU and RSU awards granted under LTIP 2024 will be forfeited by Mr. Davies as a result of his planned retirement from the 

Company in September 2022.

108

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Outstanding Equity Awards at End of Fiscal 2022

The following table sets forth certain information regarding outstanding equity awards held by each Named Executive 

Officer as of June 30, 2022.

Option Awards (1) 

Stock Awards

Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options (#)
Exercisable 

Number of
Securities
Underlying
Unexercised
Options (#)
Non-
exercisable

Option
Exercise
Price ($) 

Option 
Expiration
Date 

Number 
of Shares 
or Units 
of Stock 
That 
Have Not 
Vested 
(#)(2)

Market 
Value of 
Shares or 
Units of 
Stock That 
Have Not 
Vested 
($) (2)

Name

Grant Date

Equity 
Incentive
Plan 
Awards:
Number of
unearned 
shares,
units or 
other
rights that 
have
not vested
(#) (3)

Equity 
Incentive
Plan 
Awards:
Market or
payout value 
of unearned 
shares,
units or 
other
rights that 
have not 
vested ($) (3)

200,000 
324,255 

189,180 

120,780 

136,506 

53,420 

— 

— 

—  $  32.63  June 1, 2024
—  $  32.63  June 1, 2024

—  $  34.49  August 7, 2024

40,260  $  39.27  August 6, 2025

136,504  $  38.76  August 5, 2026

160,260  $  45.81  August 10, 2027

750,000  $  45.81  August 10, 2027

256,410  $  52.62  August 9, 2028

220,132 

21,450 

21,450 

12,210 

—  $  34.71  May 11, 2025

7,150  $  39.27  August 6, 2025

21,450  $  38.76  August 5, 2026

142,844  $  45.81  August 10, 2027

— 

51,280  $  52.62  August 9, 2028

20,000 

20,000  $  34.48 

November 6, 
2024

9,383 

9,750 

9,540 

— 

3,127  $  39.27  August 6, 2025

9,750  $  38.76  August 5, 2026

124,212  $  45.81  August 10, 2027

34,620  $  52.62  August 9, 2028

Mark J. 
Barrenechea

June 1, 2017
June 1, 2017

August 7, 2017

August 6, 2018

August 5, 2019

August 10, 2020  

August 10, 2020  

August 9, 2021

August 5, 2019

August 5, 2019

August 10, 2020

August 10, 2020

August 9, 2021

August 9, 2021

Madhu 
Ranganathan May 11, 2018

Simon 
Harrison

August 6, 2018

August 5, 2019

August 10, 2020  

August 9, 2021

August 5, 2019

August 5, 2019

August 10, 2020
August 10, 2020

August 9, 2021

August 9, 2021

November 6, 2017

August 6, 2018

August 5, 2019

August 10, 2020  

August 9, 2021

August 5, 2019
August 5, 2019

August 10, 2020

August 10, 2020

August 9, 2021

August 9, 2021

Muhi 
Majzoub

July 31, 2015

37,840 

—  $  22.87  July 31, 2022

109

41,470 

$  1,569,225 

98,270 

$  3,718,537 

48,050 

$  1,818,212 

82,940 

$  3,138,450 

76,540 

$  2,896,274 

96,110 

$  3,636,802 

6,520 

$ 

246,717 

13,215 

$ 

500,056 

9,610 

$ 

363,642 

2,960 

$ 

112,006 

10,848 

$ 

410,488 

6,490 

$ 

245,582 

13,030 

17,490 

19,220 

5,920 

13,670 

12,970 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

493,055 

661,822 

727,285 

224,013 

517,273 

490,785 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
32,560 

36,960 

23,595 

45,000 

21,450 

9,348 

—  $  29.75  July 29, 2023

—  $  34.49  August 7, 2024

7,865  $  39.27  August 6, 2025

30,000  $  40.20  May 7, 2026

21,450  $  38.76  August 5, 2026

118,324  $  45.81  August 10, 2027

— 

34,620  $  52.62  August 9, 2028

July 29, 2016

August 7, 2017

August 6, 2018

May 7, 2019

August 5, 2019

August 10, 2020  

August 9, 2021

August 5, 2019

August 5, 2019

August 10, 2020

August 10, 2020

August 9, 2021

August 9, 2021

6,520 

$ 

246,717 

10,495 

$ 

397,131 

6,490 

$ 

245,582 

13,030 

13,390 

12,970 

$ 

$ 

$ 

493,055 

506,678 

490,785 

Gordon A. 
Davies

August 6, 2018

May 7, 2019

August 5, 2019

— 

7,150  $  39.27  August 6, 2025

15,000 

30,000  $  40.20  May 7, 2026

— 

21,450  $  38.76  August 5, 2026

August 10, 2020  

9,540 

108,482  $  45.81  August 10, 2027

— 

34,620  $  52.62  August 9, 2028

August 9, 2021
August 5, 2019

August 5, 2019

August 10, 2020

August 10, 2020

August 9, 2021

August 9, 2021

6,520 

$ 

246,717 

10,187  (4) $ 

385,476 

6,490  (5) $ 

245,582 

13,030 

$ 

493,055 

13,670  (5) $ 

517,273 

12,970  (5) $ 

490,785 

______________________________

(1) Options in the table above vest annually over a period of 4 years starting from the date of grant, with the exception of (i) 750,000 performance 

options granted to the CEO in Fiscal 2021 assuming achievement of maximum performance level and (ii) options granted to certain of our executive 
officers on August 10, 2020 in recognition of their service which vest annually over a 5 year period, with the first vesting date being two years from 
the date of grant. For additional detail, see Item 11 of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for Fiscal 2021.

(2) Represents each Named Executive Officer's target number of RSUs granted pursuant to LTIP 2022, LTIP 2023, LTIP 2024, and other non-LTIP 
related RSUs, which vest upon the schedules described above in “Compensation Discussion and Analysis - Aligning Officers' Interests with 
Shareholders' Interests - Long Term Incentives.” These amounts illustrate the market value as of June 30, 2022, based upon the closing price for the 
Company's Common Shares as traded on the NASDAQ on such date of $37.84.

(3) Represents each Named Executive Officer's target number of PSUs granted pursuant to the LTIP 2022, LTIP 2023, and LTIP 2024, which vest upon 
the schedules described above in “Compensation Discussion and Analysis - Aligning Officers' Interests with Shareholders' Interests - Long Term 
Incentives.” These amounts illustrate the market value as of June 30, 2022, based upon the closing price for the Company's Common Shares as 
traded on the NASDAQ on such date of $37.84.
8,509 RSUs will be forfeited by Mr. Davies as a result of his planned retirement from the Company in September 2022.
(4)
(5) Entire award will be forfeited by Mr. Davies as a result of his planned retirement from the Company in September 2022.

As of June 30, 2022, options to purchase an aggregate of 8,820,662 Common Shares had been previously granted 
(assuming maximum performance level achievement of Mr. Barrenechea's performance options) and are outstanding under our 
stock option plans, of which 2,892,889 Common Shares were vested. Options to purchase an additional 9,594,844 Common 
Shares remain available for issuance pursuant to our stock option plans. Our outstanding options pool represents 3.3% of the 
Common Shares issued and outstanding as of June 30, 2022.

During Fiscal 2022, the Company granted options to purchase 2,553,060 Common Shares or 0.9% of the Common Shares 

issued and outstanding as of June 30, 2022.

110

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Option Exercises and Stock Vested in Fiscal 2022

The following table sets forth certain details with respect to each of the Named Executive Officers concerning the exercise 

of stock options and vesting of stock in Fiscal 2022:

Name
Mark J. Barrenechea
Madhu Ranganathan
Simon Harrison
Muhi Majzoub
Gordon A. Davies

Option Awards

Stock Awards (3)

Number of Shares
Acquired on Exercise
(#) 

Value Realized on
Exercise(1) 
($) 

Number of Shares
Acquired on Vesting
(#) 

Value Realized on 
Vesting(2) 
($)

196,560  $ 
—  $ 
71,840  $ 
23,140  $ 
99,280  $ 

4,936,274   
—   
1,378,021   
583,309   
1,634,768   

126,142  $ 
24,641  $ 
11,811  $ 
26,537  $ 
24,087  $ 

6,510,189 
1,273,396 
611,072 
1,370,997 
1,244,389 

_______________________________

(1)  “Value realized on exercise” is the excess of the market price, at date of exercise, of the shares underlying the options over the 

exercise price of the options.

(2)  “Value realized on vesting” is the market price of the underlying Common Shares on the vesting date.
(3)  Relates to the vesting of PSUs and RSUs under our LTIP 2021.

Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control

We have entered into employment contracts with each of our Named Executive Officers. These contracts may require us 
to make certain types of payments and provide certain types of benefits to the Named Executive Officers upon the occurrence 
of any of these events:

•

•

If the Named Executive Officer is terminated without cause; and

If there is a change in control in the ownership of the Company and subsequent to the change in control, there is a 
change in the relationship between the Company and the Named Executive Officer. 

When determining the amounts and the type of compensation and benefits to provide in the event of a termination or 

change in control described above, we considered available information with respect to amounts payable to similarly situated 
officers of our peer groups and the position held by the Named Executive Officer within the Company. The amounts payable 
upon termination or change in control represent the amounts determined by the Company and are not the result of any 
individual negotiations between us and any of our Named Executive Officers.

Our employment agreements with our Named Executive Officers are similar in structure, terms and conditions, with the 

key exception of the amount of severance payments, which is determined by the position held by the Named Executive Officer. 
Details are set out below of each of their potential payments upon a termination by the Company without cause and upon a 
change in control event where there is a subsequent change in the relationship between the Company and the Named Executive 
Officer.

Termination Without Cause

If the Named Executive Officer is terminated without cause, we may be obligated to make payments or provide benefits to 

the Named Executive Officer. A termination without cause means a termination of a Named Executive Officer for any reason 
other than the following, each of which provides “cause” for termination:

•

•

•

•

•

•

The failure by the Named Executive Officer to attempt in good faith to perform his duties, other than as a result of a 
physical or mental illness or injury;

The Named Executive Officer's willful misconduct or gross negligence of a material nature in connection with the 
performance of his duties which is or could reasonably be expected to be injurious to the Company; 

The breach by the Named Executive Officer of his fiduciary duty or duty of loyalty to the Company; 

The Named Executive Officer's intentional and unauthorized removal, use or disclosure of information relating to 
the Company, including customer information, which is injurious to the Company or its customers; 

The willful performance by the Named Executive Officer of any act of dishonesty or willful misappropriation of 
funds or property of the Company or its affiliates;

The indictment of the Named Executive Officer or a plea of guilty or nolo contender to a felony or other serious 
crime involving moral turpitude;

111

 
 
 
 
 
 
•

•

The material breach by the Named Executive Officer of any obligation material to his employment relationship with 
the Company; or 

The material breach by the Named Executive Officer of the Company's policies and procedures which breach causes 
or could reasonably be expected to cause harm to the Company;

provided that in certain of the circumstances listed above, OpenText has given the Named Executive Officer reasonable notice 
of the reason for termination as well as a reasonable opportunity to correct the circumstances giving rise to the termination.

Change in Control

If there is a change in control of the Company and within one year of such change in control event, there is a change in the 

relationship between the Company and the Named Executive Officer without the Named Executive Officer's written consent, 
we may be obligated to provide payments or benefits to the Named Executive Officer, unless such a change is in connection 
with the termination of the Named Executive Officer either for cause or due to the death or disability of the Named Executive 
Officer.

A change in control includes the following events:

•

•

•

•

The sale, lease, exchange or other transfer, in one transaction or a series of related transactions, of all or substantially 
all of the Company’s assets;

The approval by the holders of Common Shares of any plan or proposal for the liquidation or dissolution of the 
Company;

Any transaction in which any person or group acquires ownership of more than 50% of outstanding Common 
Shares; or

Any transaction in which a majority of the Board is replaced over a twelve-month period and such replacement of 
the Board was not approved by a majority of the Board still in office at the beginning of such period.

Examples of a change in the relationship between the Named Executive Officer and the Company where payments or 

benefits may be triggered following a change in control event include:

•

•

•

•

A material diminution in the duties and responsibilities of the Named Executive Officer, other than (a) a change 
arising solely out of the Company becoming part of a larger organization following the change in control event or 
any related change in the reporting hierarchy or (b) a reorganization of the Company resulting in similar changes to 
the duties and responsibilities of similarly situated executive officers; 

A material reduction to the Named Executive Officer's compensation, other than a similar reduction to the 
compensation of similarly situated executive officers; 

A relocation of the Named Executive Officer's primary work location by more than fifty miles;

A reduction in the title or position of the Named Executive Officer, other than (a) a change arising solely out of the 
Company becoming part of a larger organization following the change in control event or any related change in the 
reporting hierarchy or (b) a reorganization of the Company resulting in similar changes to the titles or positions of 
similarly situated executive officers; 

None of our Named Executive Officers are entitled to the payments or benefits described below, or any other payments or 

benefits, solely upon a change in control where there is no change to the Named Executive Officer's relationship with the 
Company.

Amounts Payable Upon Termination or Change in Control

Pursuant to our employment agreements with our Named Executive Officers and the terms of our LTIP, each Named 
Executive Officer’s entitlement upon termination of employment without cause or following a change in the Named Executive 
Officer’s relationship with the Company, both absent a change in control event and within twelve months of a change in control 
event, are set forth below.

112

No Change in Control

Mark J. 
Barrenechea
Madhu 
Ranganathan

Simon Harrison

Muhi Majzoub

Termination without cause or 
Change in relationship
Termination without cause or 
Change in relationship
Termination without cause or 
Change in relationship
Termination without cause or 
Change in relationship

Gordon A. 
Davies

Termination without cause or 
Change in relationship

____________________________

No change in control

Base

Short term 
incentives (1)

LTIP (2)

Options (3)

24 months

24 months

Prorated

Vested

Employee and 
Medical Benefits (4)

24 months(5)

12 months

12 months

Prorated

Vested

12 months

12 months

12 months

Prorated

Vested

12 months

12 months

12 months

Prorated

Vested

12 months

12 months

12 months

Prorated

Vested

12 months

(1) Assuming 100% achievement of the expected targets for the fiscal year in which the triggering event occurred.
(2) LTIP amounts are prorated for the number of months of participation at termination date in the applicable 38-month performance 
period. If the termination date is before the commencement of the 19th month of the performance period, a prorated LTIP will not 
be paid.

(3) Already vested as of termination date with no acceleration of unvested options. For a period of 90 days following the termination 

date, the Named Executive Officer has the right to exercise all options which have vested as of the date of termination.

(4) Employee and medical benefits provided to each Named Executive Officer immediately prior to the occurrence of the trigger event.
In accordance with the terms of his employment agreement, as amended, Mr. Barrenechea is entitled to participate until the age of 
(5)
65 in healthcare benefits substantially similar to what he currently receives as Vice Chair, Chief Executive Officer and Chief 
Technology Officer of the Company. These benefits will be provided at the cost of the Company, provided that Mr. Barrenechea 
continues to be responsible for funding an amount that is equal to his employee contribution as Vice Chair, Chief Executive Officer 
and Chief Technology Officer, unless he becomes employed elsewhere, at which point this benefit will terminate. In the event that 
the employee or company contribution funding increases, Mr. Barrenechea would be responsible for that increase.

Within 12 Months of a Change in Control

Mark J. 
Barrenechea
Madhu 
Ranganathan
Simon Harrison Termination without cause or 

Termination without cause or 
Change in relationship
Termination without cause or 
Change in relationship

Muhi Majzoub

Gordon A. 
Davies

Change in relationship
Termination without cause or 
Change in relationship
Termination without cause or 
Change in relationship

Within 12 Months of a Change in Control

Base

Short term 
incentives (1)

24 months

24 months

24 months

24 months

12 months

12 months

24 months

24 months

24 months

24 months

LTIP 
100% 
Vested
100% 
Vested
100% 
Vested
100% 
Vested
100% 
Vested

Options (2)

Employee and 
Medical Benefits (3)

100% Vested

24 months(4)

100% Vested

24 months

100% Vested

12 months

100% Vested

24 months

100% Vested

24 months

_____________________________

(1) Assuming 100% achievement of the expected targets for the fiscal year in which the triggering event occurred.
(2) For a period of 90 days following the termination date, the Named Executive Officer has the right to exercise all options which are 

deemed to have vested as of the date of termination.

(3) Employee and medical benefits provided to each Named Executive Officer immediately prior to the occurrence of the trigger event. 
(4)

In accordance with the terms of his employment agreement, as amended, Mr. Barrenechea is entitled to participate until the age of 
65 in healthcare benefits substantially similar to what he currently receives as Vice Chair, Chief Executive Officer and Chief 
Technology Officer of the Company. These benefits will be provided at the cost of the Company, provided that Mr. Barrenechea 
continues to be responsible for funding an amount that is equal to his employee contribution as Vice Chair, Chief Executive Officer 
and Chief Technology Officer, unless he becomes employed elsewhere, at which point this benefit will terminate. In the event that 
the employee or company contribution funding increases, Mr. Barrenechea would be responsible for that increase.

In addition to the information identified above, each Named Executive Officer is entitled to all accrued payments up to the 

date of termination, including all earned but unpaid short-term incentive amounts and earned but unsettled LTIP. Except as 

113

otherwise required by law, we are required to make all these payments and provide these benefits over a period of 12 months or 
24 months, depending on the Named Executive Officer’s entitlement and the circumstances which triggered our obligation to 
make such payments and provide such benefits, from the date of the event which triggered our obligation. With respect to 
payments to Mr. Barrenechea, the Company intends to make all required payments to Mr. Barrenechea no later than two and a 
half months after the end of the later of the fiscal year or calendar year in which the payments are no longer subject to a 
substantial risk of forfeiture.

In return for receiving the payments and the benefits described above, each Named Executive Officer must comply with 

certain obligations in favor of the Company, including a non-disparagement obligation. Also, each Named Executive Officer is 
bound by a confidentiality and non-solicitation agreement where the non-solicitation obligation lasts 6 months from the date of 
termination of his employment.

Any breach by a Named Executive Officer of any provision of his contractual agreements may only be waived upon the 

review and approval of the Board.

Quantitative Estimates of Payments upon Termination or Change in Control

Further information regarding payments to our Named Executive Officers in the event of a termination or a change in 
control may be found in the table below. This table sets forth the estimated amount of payments and other benefits each Named 
Executive Officer would be entitled to receive upon the occurrence of the indicated event, assuming that the event occurred on 
June 30, 2022. Amounts (i) potentially payable under plans which are generally available to all salaried employees, such as life 
and disability insurance, and (ii) earned but unpaid, in both cases, are excluded from the table. The values related to vesting of 
stock options and awards are based upon the fair market value of our Common Shares of $37.84 per share as reported on the 
NASDAQ on June 30, 2022, the last trading day of our fiscal year. The other material assumptions made with respect to the 
numbers reported in the table below are:

•

•

•

Payments in Canadian dollars included herein are converted to U.S. dollars using an exchange rate, as of June 30, 
2022, of 0.792677;

The salary and incentive payments are calculated based on the amounts of salary, incentive and benefit payments 
which were payable to each Named Executive Officer as of June 30, 2022; and

Payments under the LTIPs are calculated as though 100% of LTIP 2024 (granted in Fiscal 2022), LTIP 2023 
(granted in Fiscal 2021), and LTIP 2022 (granted in Fiscal 2020) have vested with respect to a termination without 
cause or change in relationship following a change in control event, and as though a pro-rated amount have vested 
with respect to no change in control event.

Actual payments made at any future date may vary, including the amount the Named Executive Officer would have 

accrued under the applicable benefit or compensation plan as well as the price of our Common Shares. 

Named Executive Officer

Mark J. 
Barrenechea

Madhu 
Ranganathan

Simon 
Harrison

Termination Without 
Cause / Change in 
Relationship with no 
Change in Control

Termination Without 
Cause / Change in 
Relationship, within 
12 months following a 
Change in Control

Termination Without 
Cause / Change in 
Relationship with no 
Change in Control

Termination Without 
Cause / Change in 
Relationship, within 
12 months following a 
Change in Control

Termination Without 
Cause / Change in 
Relationship with no 
Change in Control

Short-term
Incentive
Payment
($) 

Gain on Vesting 
of LTIP and 
Non-LTIP RSUs
($)

Gain on
Vesting of
Stock Options
($) 

Employee
Benefits
($) 

Salary
($) 

Total
($)

$  1,900,000  $  2,850,000  $  9,474,140  $ 

—  $ 

33,893  (1) $  14,258,033 

$  1,900,000  $  2,850,000  $  16,777,499  $ 

—  $ 

33,893 

$  21,561,392 

$ 

600,000  $ 

600,000  $  1,496,901  $ 

—  $ 

— 

$  2,696,901 

$  1,200,000  $  1,200,000  $  2,992,576  $ 

—  $ 

— 

$  5,392,576 

$ 

500,000  $ 

500,000  $ 

960,304  $ 

—  $  304,118 

$  2,264,422 

114

 
 
Muhi 
Majzoub

Gordon A. 
Davies

Termination Without 
Cause / Change in 
Relationship, within 
12 months following a 
Change in Control

Termination Without 
Cause / Change in 
Relationship with no 
Change in Control

Termination Without 
Cause / Change in 
Relationship, within 
12 months following a 
Change in Control

Termination Without 
Cause / Change in 
Relationship with no 
Change in Control

Termination Without 
Cause / Change in 
Relationship, within 
12 months following a 
Change in Control

$ 

500,000  $ 

500,000  $  2,000,147  $ 

67,200  $  304,118 

$  3,371,465 

$ 

500,000  $ 

500,000  $  1,324,569  $ 

—  $ 

4,995 

$  2,329,564 

$  1,000,000  $  1,000,000  $  2,379,947  $ 

—  $ 

9,989 

$  4,389,936 

$ 

360,037  $ 

454,204  $  1,317,794  $ 

—  $ 

4,075 

$  2,136,110 

$ 

720,075  $ 

908,408  $  2,378,887  $ 

—  $ 

8,150 

$  4,015,520 

_____________________________

(1)

In accordance with the terms of his employment agreement, as amended, Mr. Barrenechea is entitled to participate until the age of 
65 in healthcare benefits substantially similar to what he currently receives as Chief Executive Officer of the Company. These 
benefits will be provided at the cost of the Company, provided that Mr. Barrenechea continues to be responsible for funding an 
amount that is equal to his employee contribution as Chief Executive Officer, unless he becomes employed elsewhere, at which 
point this benefit will terminate. In the event that the employee or company contribution funding increases, Mr. Barrenechea would 
be responsible for that increase.

Director Compensation for Fiscal 2022

The following table sets forth summary information concerning the annual compensation received by each of the non-

management directors of OpenText for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2022. 

Fees Earned or 
Paid in Cash (1)
($)

Stock
Awards (2)
($)

Option
Awards
($)

Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
Compensation
($) 

All Other
Compensation
($) 

200,000  $ 

436,841  $  —  $ 

75,550  $ 

392,178  $  —  $ 

75,000  $ 

280,520  $  —  $ 

90,000  $ 

327,886  $  —  $ 

100,000  $ 

258,560  $  —  $ 

106,667  $ 

319,939  $  —  $ 

—  $ 

—  $ 

—  $ 

—  $ 

—  $ 

—  $ 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

Total
($)

636,841 

467,728 

355,520 

417,886 

358,560 

426,606 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

—  $ 

419,589  $  —  $ 

—  $  429,167  (14) $ 

848,756 

25,000  $ 

349,596  $  —  $ 

1,725  $ 

470,498  $  —  $ 

—  $ 

—  $ 

444,891  $  —  $ 

465,341  $  —  $ 

—  $ 

—  $ 

—  $ 

—  $ 

— 

— 

— 

— 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

374,596 

472,223 

444,891 

465,341 

P. Thomas Jenkins (3)
Randy Fowlie (4)
David Fraser (5)
Gail E. Hamilton (6)
Robert Hau (7)
Ann M. Powell (8)
Stephen J. Sadler (9)
Harmit Singh (10)
Michael Slaunwhite (11)
Katharine B. Stevenson (12)
Deborah Weinstein (13)
______________________________

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

(1) Non-management directors may elect to defer all or a portion of their retainer and/or fees in the form of Common Share equivalent 
units under our Directors' Deferred Share Unit Plan (DSU Plan) based on the value of the Company's shares as of the date fees 
would otherwise be paid. The DSU Plan, originally effective February 2, 2010, and amended and restated in October 2018, is 
available to any non-management director of the Company and is designed to promote greater alignment of long-term interests 
between directors of the Company and its shareholders. DSUs granted as compensation for directors' fees vest immediately whereas 
the annual DSU grant vests at the Company’s next annual general meeting. No DSUs are payable by the Company until the director 
ceases to be a member of the Board.

(2) The amounts set forth in this column represents the amount recognized as the aggregate grant date fair value of equity-based 

compensation awards, inclusive of DSU dividend equivalents, as calculated in accordance with ASC Topic 718. These amounts do 

115

 
not reflect whether the recipient has actually realized a financial benefit from the awards. For a discussion of the assumptions used 
in this valuation, see Note 13 “Share Capital, Option Plans and Share-based Payments” to our consolidated financial statements. In 
Fiscal 2022, Messrs. Jenkins, Fowlie, Fraser, Hau, Sadler, Singh, and Slaunwhite and Mses. Hamilton, Powell, Stevenson and 
Weinstein received 8,959, 8,020, 5,607, 5,120, 8,552, 6,962, 9,664, 6,695, 6,285, 9,092, and 9,549 DSUs, respectively.

(3) As of June 30, 2022, Mr. Jenkins holds 135,553 DSUs. Mr. Jenkins serves as Chairman of the Board.
(4) As of June 30, 2022, Mr. Fowlie holds 114,156 DSUs.
(5) As of June 30, 2022, Mr. Fraser holds 25,493 DSUs.
(6) As of June 30, 2022, Ms. Hamilton holds 90,538 DSUs.
(7) As of June 30, 2022, Mr. Hau holds 11,013 DSUs.
(8) As of June 30, 2022, Ms. Powell holds 6,285 DSUs.
(9) As of June 30, 2022, Mr. Sadler holds 110,059 DSUs.
(10) As of June 30, 2022, Mr. Singh holds 29,761 DSUs.
(11) As of June 30, 2022, Mr. Slaunwhite holds 131,202 DSUs.
(12) As of June 30, 2022, Ms. Stevenson holds 110,638 DSUs.
(13) As of June 30, 2022, Ms. Weinstein holds 126,170 DSUs.
(14) During Fiscal 2022, Mr. Sadler received $429,167 in consulting fees, paid or payable in cash, for assistance with acquisition-related 
business activities. Mr. Sadler abstained from voting on all transactions from which he would potentially derive consulting fees.

116

The Board sets the level of compensation for directors, based on the recommendations of the Corporate Governance and 

Nominating Committee. From time to time, the Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee reviews the amount and 
form of compensation paid to directors, having regard to the workload and responsibilities involved in being an effective 
director, and benchmarked against director compensation for comparable companies. The committee’s review may be 
conducted with the assistance of outside consultants. Directors who are salaried officers or employees receive no compensation 
for serving as directors. Mr. Barrenechea was the only employee director in Fiscal 2022. The material terms of our director 
compensation arrangements are as follows: 

Description 
Annual Chairman retainer fee payable to the Chairman of the 
Board

Amount and Frequency of Payment

$200,000 per year payable following our Annual General 
Meeting

Annual retainer fee payable to each non-management director $75,000 per director payable following our Annual General 

Meeting

Annual Audit Committee retainer fee payable to each member 
of the Audit Committee

$25,000 per year payable at $6,250 at the beginning of each 
quarterly period.

Annual Audit Committee Chair retainer fee payable to the 
Chair of the Audit Committee

$10,000 per year payable at $2,500 at the beginning of each 
quarterly period.

Annual Compensation Committee retainer fee payable to each 
member of the Compensation Committee

$15,000 per year payable at $3,750 at the beginning of each 
quarterly period.

Annual Compensation Committee Chair retainer fee payable 
to the Chair of the Compensation Committee

$10,000 per year payable at $2,500 at the beginning of each 
quarterly period.

Annual Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee 
retainer fee payable to each member of the Corporate 
Governance & Nominating Committee

$10,000 per year payable at $2,500 at the beginning of each 
quarterly period.

Annual Corporate Governance & Nominating Committee 
Chair retainer fee payable to the Chair of the Corporate 
Governance & Nominating Committee

$8,000 per year payable at $2,000 at the beginning of each 
quarterly period.

Excess travel fee payable to each non-management director 
attending a meeting who travels more than six hours

$2,000 per meeting when applicable

The Board has adopted a DSU Plan which is available to any non-management director of the Company. In Fiscal 2022, 

certain directors elected to receive DSUs instead of a cash payment for their directors’ fees. In addition to the scheduled fee 
arrangements set forth in the table above, whether paid in cash or DSUs, non-management directors also receive an annual DSU 
grant representing the long-term component of their compensation. The amount of the annual DSU grant is discretionary; 
however, historically, the amount of this grant has been determined and updated on a periodic basis with the assistance of the 
Compensation Committee and the compensation consultant and benchmarked against director compensation for comparable 
companies. For Fiscal 2022, the annual DSU grant was approximately $250,000 for each non-management director and 
approximately $320,000 for the Chairman of the Board. DSUs granted as compensation for directors' fees vest immediately 
whereas the annual DSU grant vests at the Company’s next annual general meeting. No DSUs are payable by the Company 
until the director ceases to be a member of the Board.

As with its employees, the Company believes that granting compensation to directors in the form of equity, such as DSUs, 

promotes a greater alignment of long-term interests between directors of the Company and the shareholders of the Company 
and since Fiscal 2013 the Company has taken the position that non-management directors will receive DSUs instead of stock 
options where granting of equity awards is appropriate. All non-management directors have exceeded the Share Ownership 
Guidelines applicable to them, which is five times their annual retainer, other than Ms. Powell, who has until November 3, 
2026, to meet the applicable requirements of the Share Ownership Guidelines. For further details of our Share Ownership 
Guidelines as they relate to directors, see “Share Ownership Guidelines” above.

The Company does not have a retirement policy for its directors; however, the Company does review its director 

performance annually as part of its governance process.

117

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

The members of our Compensation Committee consist of Mr. Slaunwhite (Chair) and Mses. Hamilton and Weinstein. 

None of the members of the Compensation Committee have been or are an officer or employee of the Company, or any of our 
subsidiaries, or had any relationship requiring disclosure herein. None of our executive officers served as a member of the 
compensation committee of another entity (or other committee of the board of directors performing equivalent functions, or in 
the absence of any such committee, the entire board of directors) one of whose executive officers served as a director of ours.

Board's Role in Risk Oversight

The Board has overall responsibility for risk oversight. The Board is responsible for overseeing management’s 

implementation and operation of enterprise risk management, either directly or through its committees, which shall report to the 
Board with respect to risk oversight undertaken in accordance with their respective charters. At least annually, the Board shall 
review reports provided by management on the risks inherent in the business of the Company (including appropriate crisis 
preparedness, business continuity, information system controls, cybersecurity and disaster recovery plans), the appropriate 
degree of risk mitigation and risk control, overall compliance with and the effectiveness of the Company’s risk management 
policies, and residual risks remaining after implementation of risk controls. In addition, each committee reviews and reports to 
the Board on risk oversight matters, as described below.

The Audit Committee oversees risks related to our accounting, financial statements and financial reporting process. On a 
quarterly basis, the Audit Committee also reviews reports provided by management on the risks inherent in the business of the 
Company, including those related to cybersecurity and disaster recovery plans, and reports to the Board with respect to risk 
oversight undertaken.

The Compensation Committee oversees risks which may be associated with our compensation policies, practices and 
programs, in particular with respect to our executive officers. The Compensation Committee assesses such risks with the review 
and assistance of the Company's management and the Compensation Committee's external compensation consultants.

The Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee monitors risk and potential risks with respect to the effectiveness 

of the Board, and considers aspects such as director succession, Board composition and the principal policies that guide the 
Company's overall corporate governance.

The members of each of the Audit Committee, Compensation Committee, and the Corporate Governance and Nominating 

Committee are all “independent” directors within the meaning ascribed to it in Multilateral Instrument 52-110-Audit 
Committees as well as the listing standards of NASDAQ, and, in the case of the Audit Committee, the additional independence 
requirements set out by the SEC.

All of our directors are kept informed of our business through open discussions with our management team, including our 

CEO, who serves on our Board. The Board also receives documents, such as quarterly and periodic management reports and 
financial statements, as well our directors have access to all books, records and reports upon request, and members of 
management are available at all times to answer any questions which Board members may have.

Item 12.  Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters 

The following table sets forth certain information as of June 30, 2022 regarding Common Shares beneficially owned by 

the following persons or companies: (i) each person or company known by us to be the beneficial owner of approximately 5% 
or more of our outstanding Common Shares, (ii) each director of our Company, (iii) each Named Executive Officer, and (iv) all 
directors and executive officers as a group. Except as otherwise indicated, we believe that the beneficial owners of the Common 
Shares listed below have sole investment and voting power with respect to such Common Shares, subject to community 
property laws where applicable. 

The number and percentage of shares beneficially owned as exhibited in Item 12 is based on filings made in accordance 

with the rules of the SEC and is not necessarily indicative of beneficial ownership for any other purpose. Under these rules, 
beneficial ownership includes any shares as to which a person has sole or shared voting or investment power and also any 
shares of Common Shares underlying options or warrants that are exercisable by that person within 60 days of June 30, 2022. 
Unless otherwise indicated, the address of each person or entity named in the table is “care of” Open Text Corporation, 275 
Frank Tompa Drive, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 0A1.

118

Name and Address of Beneficial Owner 
Jarislowsky, Fraser Ltd. (1)
1010 Sherbrooke St. West, Montreal QC H3A 2R7
FMR LLC (1)
245 Summer Street, Boston, MA 02210
P. Thomas Jenkins (2)
Mark J. Barrenechea (3)
Michael Slaunwhite (4)
Madhu Ranganathan (5)
Muhi Majzoub (6)
Randy Fowlie (7)
Stephen J. Sadler (8)
Gordon A. Davies (9)
Deborah Weinstein (10)
Katharine B. Stevenson (11)
Simon Harrison (12)
Gail E. Hamilton (13)
Harmit Singh (14)
David Fraser (15)
Robert Hau (16)
Ann M. Powell (17)
All executive officers and directors as a group (18)
_________________________________________

Amount and Nature of
Beneficial Ownership 

Percent of Common
Shares Outstanding 

15,309,077 

13,686,967 

2,388,057 

2,338,995 

804,432 

366,065 

353,339 

304,734 

240,137 

156,070 

141,248 

127,346 

123,062 

85,626 

24,839 

20,571 

6,091 
1,363 

5.68%

5.06%

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*
*

7,788,953 

2.84%

* 

(1)

Less than 1% 
Information regarding the shares outstanding is based on information filed in Schedule 13G, 13F, or Schedule 13G/A with the SEC. 
The percentage of Common Shares outstanding is calculated using the total shares outstanding as of June 30, 2022. 

(2)  Includes 2,258,804 Common Shares owned and 129,253 deferred stock units (DSUs) which are exercisable.
(3)  Includes 1,088,819 Common Shares owned, 1,024,141 options which are exercisable and 226,035 options which will become 

exercisable within 60 days of June 30, 2022.

(4)  Includes 678,152 Common Shares owned and 126,280 DSUs which are exercisable.
(5)  Includes 19,132 Common Shares owned, 275,242 options which are exercisable and 71,691 options which will become exercisable 

within 60 days of June 30, 2022.

(6)  Includes 85,525 Common Shares owned, 206,753 options which are exercisable and 61,061 options which will become exercisable 

within 60 days of June 30, 2022.

(7)  Includes 195,500 Common Shares owned and 109,234 DSUs which are exercisable.
(8)  Includes 135,000 Common Shares owned and 105,137 DSUs which are exercisable.
(9)  Includes 73,816 Common Shares owned, 24,540 options which are exercisable and 57,714 options which will become exercisable 

within 60 days of June 30, 2022.

(10) Includes 20,000 Common Shares owned and 121,248 DSUs which are exercisable. 
(11) Includes 21,630 Common Shares owned and 105,716 DSUs which are exercisable.
(12) Includes 22,285 Common Shares owned, 48,673 options which are exercisable and 52,104 options which will become exercisable 

within 60 days of June 30, 2022.

(13) Includes 10 Common Shares owned and 85,616 DSUs which are exercisable.
(14) Includes 24,839 DSUs which are exercisable.
(15) Includes 20,571 DSUs which are exercisable.
(16) Includes 6,091 DSUs which are exercisable.
(17) Includes 1,363 DSUs which are exercisable. 
(18) Includes 4,651,211 Common Shares owned, 1,695,590 options which are exercisable, 606,804 options which will become 

exercisable within 60 days of June 30, 2022, and 835,348 DSUs which are exercisable.

119

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Securities Authorized for Issuance under Equity Compensation Plans 

The following table sets forth summary information relating to our various stock compensation plans as of June 30, 2022: 

Plan Category

Equity compensation plans approved 
by security holders:
Equity compensation plans not 
approved by security holders:

Under deferred stock unit awards
Under performance stock unit 
awards
Under restricted stock unit awards

Total

Number of securities
to be issued upon exercise
of outstanding options,
warrants, and rights  

Weighted average
exercise price
of outstanding options,
warrants, and rights 

(a)

8,820,662

885,701

812,937
3,205,450
13,724,750

(b)

$42.74

N/A

N/A

N/A

Number of securities
remaining available
for future issuance
under equity
compensation plans
(excluding securities
reflected in column a) 

(c)

9,594,844

—

—

—
9,594,844

For more information regarding stock compensation plans, please refer to Note 13 “Share Capital, Option Plans and 

Share-based Payments” to our Consolidated Financial Statements within this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Item 13.  Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence

Related Transactions Policy and Director Independence

We have adopted a written policy that all transactional agreements between us and our officers, directors and affiliates 
will be first approved by a majority of the independent directors. Once these agreements are approved, payments made pursuant 
to the agreements are approved by the members of our Audit Committee.

Our procedure regarding the approval of any related party transaction is that the material facts of such transaction shall be 

reviewed by the independent members of our Audit Committee and the transaction approved by a majority of the independent 
members of our Audit Committee. The Audit Committee reviews all transactions wherein we are, or will be a participant and 
any related party has or will have a direct or indirect interest. In determining whether to approve a related party transaction, the 
Audit Committee generally takes into account, among other facts it deems appropriate: whether the transaction is on terms no 
less favorable than terms generally available to an unaffiliated third party under the same or similar circumstances; the extent 
and nature of the related person's interest in the transaction; the benefits to the company of the proposed transaction; if 
applicable, the effects on a director's independence; and if applicable, the availability of other sources of comparable services or 
products.

The Board has determined that all directors, except Messrs. Barrenechea and Sadler, meet the independence requirements 

under the NASDAQ Listing Rules and qualify as “independent directors” under those Listing Rules. Mr. Barrenechea is not 
considered independent by virtue of being our Vice Chair, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Technology Officer. See 
“Transactions with Related Persons” below with respect to payments made to Mr. Sadler. Each of the members of our 
Compensation Committee, Audit Committee and Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee is an independent director. 

Transactions With Related Persons

One of our directors, Mr. Sadler, received consulting fees for assistance with acquisition-related business activities 
pursuant to a consulting agreement with the Company. Mr. Sadler's consulting agreement, which was adopted by way of Board 
resolution effective July 1, 2011, is for an indefinite period. The material terms of the agreement are as follows: Mr. Sadler is 
paid at the rate of Canadian dollars (CAD) $450 per hour for services relating to his consulting agreement. In addition, he is 
eligible to receive a bonus fee equivalent to 1.0% of the acquired company's revenues, up to CAD $10.0 million in revenue, 
plus an additional amount of 0.5% of the acquired company's revenues above CAD $10.0 million. The total bonus fee payable, 
for any given fiscal year, is subject to an annual limit of CAD $450,000 per single acquisition and an aggregate annual limit of 
CAD $980,000. The acquired company's revenues, for this purpose, is equal to the acquired company's revenues for the 12 
months prior to the date of acquisition. During Fiscal 2022, Mr. Sadler received CAD $0.5 million in consulting fees from 
OpenText (equivalent to $0.4 million USD), for assistance with acquisition-related business activities. Mr. Sadler abstained 
from voting on all transactions from which he would potentially derive consulting fees. Additionally, Mr. Sadler has direct or 
indirect control over a material interest in Enghouse Systems Limited, a publicly traded software company, which acquired 

120

 
 
 
 
 
Dialogic Group Inc, (“Dialogic”) in 2020. Prior to Dialogic being acquired by Enghouse Systems Limited, OpenText entered 
into a product supply and license agreement to purchase certain software licenses from a subsidiary of Dialogic under which the 
company makes payments in the normal course of business. During Fiscal 2022, OpenText paid $2.0 million under such an 
agreement.

Item 14.  Principal Accountant Fees and Services 

The aggregate fees for professional services rendered by our independent registered public accounting firm, KPMG LLP, 

for Fiscal 2022 and Fiscal 2021 were:

(In thousands)
Audit fees (1) (2)
Audit-related fees (2) (3)
Tax fees (4)
All other fees (5)
Total

Year ended June 30, 

2022

2021

$ 

$ 

6,622  $ 

72 

— 

— 

6,694  $ 

5,341 

6 

7 

— 

5,354 

____________________________________

(1) Audit fees were primarily for professional services rendered for (a) the annual audits of our consolidated financial statements and 

the accompanying attestation report regarding our ICFR contained in our Annual Report on Form 10-K, (b) the review of quarterly 
financial information included in our Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, (c) audit services related to mergers and acquisitions, (d) 
fees associated with non-periodic securities filings, and (e) annual statutory audits where applicable.

(2) 2021 Audit fees includes a reclassification of fees for non-periodic filings with the SEC previously included within the audit-related 

fees category.

(3) Audit related fees were primarily for assurance and related services, such as IT assurance engagements and accounting research 

services.

(4) Tax fees were for services related to tax compliance, including the preparation of tax returns, tax planning and tax advice. 
(5) All other fees consist of fees for services other than the services reported in audit fees, audit-related fees, and tax fees. 

OpenText's Audit Committee has established a policy of reviewing, in advance, and either approving or not approving, all 
audit, audit-related, tax and other non-audit services that our independent registered public accounting firm provides to us. This 
policy requires that all services received from our independent registered public accounting firm be approved in advance by the 
Audit Committee or a delegate of the Audit Committee. The Audit Committee has delegated the pre-approval responsibility to 
the Chair of the Audit Committee. All services that KPMG LLP provided to us in Fiscal 2022 and Fiscal 2021 have been pre-
approved by the Audit Committee. 

The Audit Committee has determined that the provision of the services as set out above is compatible with the 

maintaining of KPMG LLP's independence in the conduct of its auditing functions.

121

 
 
 
 
 
 
Item 15.  Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules

(a) Financial Statements and Schedules

Part IV

Index to Consolidated Financial Statements and Supplementary Data (Item 8)
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm (KPMG LLP, Toronto, Canada, Auditor Firm ID: 
85)
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
Consolidated Balance Sheets
Consolidated Statements of Income
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
Consolidated Statements of Shareholders' Equity
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(b) The following documents are filed as a part of this report: 

Page Number

125

127
128
129
130
131
132

134

1) Consolidated financial statements and Reports of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm and the related 
notes thereto are included in Part II, Item 8.

2) Valuation and Qualifying Accounts; see Note 4 “Allowance for Credit Losses” and Note 15 “Income Taxes” in the 
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included in Part II, Item 8.

3) Exhibits: The following exhibits are filed as part of this Annual Report on Form 10-K or are incorporated by 
reference to exhibits previously filed with the SEC. Exhibits not incorporated by reference to a prior filing are 
designated by a cross (+); all exhibits not so designated are incorporated by reference to a prior filing as indicated. 
Management contracts relating to compensatory plans or arrangements are designated by a star (*).

Exhibit
Number

2.1

Description

Report or Registration 
Statement

Exhibit 
Reference

Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated November 10, 2019, by and among Open Text 
Corporation, Coral Merger Sub Inc. and Carbonite, Inc.

Company’s Form 8-K, filed 
November 12, 2019

Exhibit 2.1

3.1

Articles of Amalgamation of the Company

3.2

Articles of Amendment of the Company

3.3

Articles of Amendment of the Company

3.4

Articles of Amalgamation of the Company

3.5

3.6

3.7

Articles of Amalgamation of the Company, dated July 1, 2001

Articles of Amalgamation of the Company, dated July 1, 2002

Articles of Amalgamation of the Company, dated July 1, 2003

122

Company’s registration 
statement on Form F-1, filed 
November 1, 1995, or 
Amendments 1, 2 or 3 thereto 
(filed December 28, 1995, 
January 22, 1996 and January 
23, 1996, respectively)

Company’s registration 
statement on Form F-1, filed 
November 1, 1995, or 
Amendments 1, 2 or 3 thereto 
(filed December 28, 1995, 
January 22, 1996 and January 
23, 1996, respectively)

Company’s registration 
statement on Form F-1, filed 
November 1, 1995, or 
Amendments 1, 2 or 3 thereto 
(filed December 28, 1995, 
January 22, 1996 and January 
23, 1996, respectively)

Company’s registration 
statement on Form F-1, filed 
November 1, 1995, or 
Amendments 1, 2 or 3 thereto 
(filed December 28, 1995, 
January 22, 1996 and January 
23, 1996, respectively)

Company’s Form 10-K, filed 
September 28, 2001

Company’s Form 10-K, filed 
September 28, 2002

Company’s Form 10-K, filed 
September 29, 2003

Exhibit 3.10

Exhibit 3.11

4.3

4.4

4.5

4.6

4.7

3.8

3.9

3.10

3.11

4.1

Articles of Amalgamation of the Company, dated July 1, 2004

Articles of Amalgamation of the Company, dated July 1, 2005

Articles of Continuance of the Company, dated December 29, 2005

By-Law 1 of Open Text Corporation

Company’s Form 10-K, filed 
September 13, 2004

Company’s Form 10-K, filed 
September 27, 2005

Company’s Form 10-Q, filed 
February 3, 2006

Company’s Form 8-K, filed 
September 26, 2013

Description of the Registrant's Securities Registered Pursuant to Section 12 of the 
Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Company’s Form 10-K, filed 
August 1, 2019

Exhibit 3.12

Exhibit 3.13

Exhibit 3.1

Exhibit 3.1

Exhibit 4.1

4.2

Form of Common Share Certificate

Company’s registration 
statement on Form F-1 
(Registration Number 
33-98858), filed November 1, 
1995, or Amendments 1, 2 or 3 
thereto (filed December 28, 
1995, January 22, 1996 and 
January 23, 1996, respectively)

Amended and Restated Shareholder Rights Plan Agreement between Open Text 
Corporation and Computershare Investor Services, Inc. dated September 4, 2019

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
September 4, 2019

Exhibit 4.1

Indenture, dated as of February 18, 2020, between Open Text Corporation and the Bank 
of NY Mellon, as U.S. Trustee, and BNY Trust Company of Canada, as Canadian 
trustee
Indenture, dated as of February 18, 2020, between Open Text Holdings, Inc. and the 
Bank of NY Mellon, as U.S. Trustee, and BNY Trust Company of Canada, as Canadian 
trustee
Indenture governing the Company's 3.875% Senior Notes due 2029, dated as of 
November 24, 2021, among the Company, the subsidiary guarantors party thereto, The 
Bank of New York Mellon, as U.S. trustee, and BNY Trust Company of Canada, as 
Canadian trustee. 

Indenture governing OTHI's 4.125% Senior Notes due 2031, dated as of November 24, 
2021, among OTHI, the Company, the subsidiary guarantors party thereto, The Bank of 
New York Mellon, as U.S. trustee, and BNY Trust Company of Canada, as Canadian 
trustee.

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
February 18, 2020

Exhibit 4.1

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
February 18, 2020

Exhibit 4.3

Company's Form 8-K filed 
November 24, 2021

Exhibit 4.1

Company's Form 8-K filed 
November 24, 2021

Exhibit 4.3

Company’s Form 10-K filed 
August 20, 1999

10.1*

1998 Stock Option Plan

10.2*

10.3*

10.4*

10.5

10.6*

10.7*

10.8*

10.9*

10.10

10.11

10.12

Form of Indemnity Agreement between the Company and certain of its officers dated 
September 7, 2006

Company’s Form 10-K filed 
September 12, 2006

Consulting Agreement between Steven Sadler and SJS Advisors Inc. and the Company, 
dated May 3, 2005

Company’s Form 10-K filed 
August 26, 2008

Exhibit 10.26

Exhibit 10.28

OpenText Corporation Directors' Deferred Share Unit Plan, as amended and restated 
October 30, 2018

Company’s Form 10-Q filed 
January 31, 2019

Exhibit 10.1

Amended and Restated Credit Agreement among Open Text Corporation and certain of 
its subsidiaries, the Lenders, Barclays Bank PLC, Royal Bank of Canada, Barclays 
Capital and RBC Capital Markets, dated as of November 9, 2011

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
November 9, 2011

Exhibit 99.1

OpenText Corporation Long-Term Incentive Plan 2015 for eligible employees, 
effective October 3, 2012

Company’s Form 10-Q filed 
November 1, 2012

Employment Agreement, dated October 30, 2012 between Mark Barrenechea and the 
Company

Company’s Form 10-Q filed 
November 1, 2012

Exhibit 10.2

Exhibit 10.3

Amendment No. 1 to the Employment Agreement between Mark J. Barrenechea and the 
Company dated January 24, 2013 (amending the Employment Agreement between 
Mark J. Barrenechea and the Company dated October 30, 2012)

Company’s Form 10-Q filed 
January 25, 2013

Exhibit 10.3

Employment Agreement, as of December 19, 2012, between Gordon A. Davies and the 
Company

Company’s Form 10-K filed 
August 1, 2013

Exhibit 10.20

First Amendment to Amended and Restated Credit Agreement and Amended and 
Restated Security and Pledge Agreement, dated as of December 16, 2013, between 
Open Text ULC, as term borrower, Open Text ULC, Open Text Inc. and Open Text 
Corporation, as revolving credit borrowers, the domestic guarantors party thereto, each 
of the lenders party thereto, Barclays Bank PLC, as sole administrative agent and 
collateral agent, and Royal Bank of Canada, as documentary credit lender

Credit Agreement, dated as of January 16, 2014, among Open Text Corporation, as 
guarantor, Ocelot Merger Sub, Inc., which on January 16, 2014 merged with and into 
GXS Group, Inc. which survived such merger, as borrower, the other domestic 
guarantors party thereto, the lenders named therein, as lenders, Barclays Bank PLC, as 
sole administrative agent and collateral agent, and with Barclays and RBC Capital 
Markets, as lead arrangers and joint bookrunners
Second Amendment to Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated as of December 
22, 2014, between Open Text ULC, as term borrower, Open Text ULC, Open Text 
Holdings, Inc. and Open Text Corporation, as revolving credit borrowers, the domestic 
guarantors party thereto, each of the lenders party thereto, Barclays Bank PLC, as sole 
administrative agent and collateral agent, and Royal Bank of Canada, as documentary 
credit lender

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
December 20, 2013

Exhibit 10.1

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
January 16, 2014

Exhibit 10.1

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
December 23, 2014

Exhibit 10.1

10.13*

Employment Agreement, dated November 30, 2012, between Muhi Majzoub and the 
Company

Company’s Form 10-K filed 
July 31, 2014

Exhibit 10.20

123

10.14*

10.15

10.16

10.17*

10.18

10.19*

10.20

10.21

Amendment No. 2 to the Employment Agreement between Mark J. Barrenechea and the 
Company dated July 30, 2014 (amending the Employment Agreement between Mark J. 
Barrenechea and the Company dated October 30, 2012)
Repricing Amendment and Amendment No. 2 dated as of February 22, 2017 to Credit 
Agreement, by and among Open Text Corporation, as guarantor, Open Text GXS ULC, 
as borrower, the other guarantors party thereto, each of the lenders party thereto and 
Barclays Bank PLC, as administrative agent

Amendment No. 3 to Second Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated as of 
May 5, 2017, among Open Text ULC, Open Text Holdings, Inc. and Open Text 
Corporation, as borrowers, the guarantors party thereto, each of the lenders party 
thereto, and Barclays Bank PLC, as sole administrative agent and collateral agent
Amendment No. 3 to the Employment Agreement between Mark J. Barrenechea and the 
Company dated June 1, 2017 (amending the Employment Agreement between Mark J. 
Barrenechea and the Company dated October 30, 2012)
Amendment No. 4 to Second Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated as of 
September 6, 2017, among Open Text ULC, Open Text Holdings, Inc. and Open Text 
Corporation, as borrowers, the guarantors party thereto, each of the lenders party 
thereto, and Barclays Bank PLC, as sole administrative agent and collateral agent

Company’s Form 10-K filed 
July 31, 2014

Exhibit 10.23

Company’s Form 8-K filed  
February 22, 2017

Exhibit 10.1

Company’s Form 10-Q filed 
May 8, 2017

Exhibit 10.2

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
June 6, 2017

Exhibit 10.1

Company’s Form 10-Q filed 
November 2, 2017

Exhibit 10.1

Employment Agreement, dated January 30, 2018, among the Company, Open Text Inc. 
and Madhu Ranganathan

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
February 1, 2018

Exhibit 10.1

Amended and Restated Credit Agreement dated as of May 30, 2018, by and among 
Open Text Corporation, as borrower, the guarantors party thereto, each of the lenders 
party thereto and Barclays Bank PLC, as administrative agent and collateral agent

Third Amended and Restated Credit Agreement dated as of May 30, 2018, by and 
among Open Text ULC, Open Text Holdings, Inc. and Open Text Corporation, as 
borrowers, the guarantors party thereto, each of the lenders party thereto, Barclays Bank 
PLC, as administrative agent, collateral agent and swing line lender and Royal Bank of 
Canada as documentary credit lender

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
May 30, 2018

Exhibit 10.1

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
May 30, 2018

Exhibit 10.2

10.22*

Employment Agreement, dated October 1, 2017, between Simon (Ted) Harrison and the 
Company

Company’s Form 10-K filed 
August 2, 2018

Exhibit 10.31

10.23

10.24*

10.25

10.26

21.1+

23.1+

31.1+

31.2+

32.1+

32.2+

Fourth Amended and Restated Credit Agreement dated as of October 31, 2019, by and 
among Open Text ULC, Open Text Holdings, Inc. and Open Text Corporation, as 
borrowers, the guarantors party thereto, each of the lenders party thereto, Barclays Bank 
PLC, as administrative agent, collateral agent and swing line lender and Royal Bank of 
Canada as documentary credit lender

Amendment No. 4 to the Employment Agreement between Mark J. Barrenechea and the 
Company dated August 14, 2020 (amending the Employment Agreement between Mark 
J. Barrenechea and the Company dated October 30, 2012, as amended)

Open Text Corporation 2004 Stock Option Plan, as amended and restated on September 
14, 2020

Open Text Corporation 2004 Employee Stock Purchase Plan, as amended and restated 
on September 14, 2020

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
November 5, 2019

Exhibit 10.1

Company’s Form 8-K filed 
August 14, 2020

Exhibit 10.1

Company's Registration 
Statement on Form S-8 filed 
September 30, 2020
Company's Registration 
Statement on Form S-8 filed 
September 30, 2020

Exhibit 4.1

Exhibit 4.2

List of the Company's Subsidiaries

Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

Certification of the Chief Executive Officer, pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a) of the 
Exchange Act, as adopted pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

Certification of the Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a) of the Exchange 
Act, as adopted pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

Certification of the Chief Executive Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C Section 1350, as 
adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

Certification of the Chief Financial Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C Section 1350, as 
adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

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124

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Shareholders and Board of Directors of Open Text Corporation

Opinion on the Consolidated Financial Statements

We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of Open Text Corporation (the Company) as of June 30, 2022 
and 2021, the related consolidated statements of income, comprehensive income, shareholders’ equity, and cash flows for each 
of the years in the three-year period ended June 30, 2022 , and the related notes (collectively, the consolidated financial 
statements). In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of 
the Company as of June 30, 2022 and 2021, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for each of the years in the 
three-year period ended June 30, 2022, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.
We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) 
(PCAOB), the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of June 30, 2022, based on criteria established in Internal 
Control – Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission, 
and our report dated August 3, 2022 expressed an unqualified opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control 
over financial reporting.

Basis for Opinion

These consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express 
an opinion on these consolidated financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the 
PCAOB and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and 
the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the 
audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial statements are free of material misstatement, 
whether due to error or fraud. Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the 
consolidated financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such 
procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the consolidated financial 
statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, 
as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the consolidated financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a 
reasonable basis for our opinion.

Critical Audit Matters

The critical audit matters communicated below are matters arising from the current period audit of the consolidated financial 
statements that were communicated or required to be communicated to the audit committee and that: (1) relate to accounts or 
disclosures that are material to the consolidated financial statements and (2) involved our especially challenging, subjective, or 
complex judgments. The communication of critical audit matters does not alter in any way our opinion on the consolidated 
financial statements, taken as a whole, and we are not, by communicating the critical audit matters below, providing separate 
opinions on the critical audit matters or on the accounts or disclosures to which they relate.

Evaluation of the determination of standalone selling prices of revenue performance obligations for customer contracts with 
a software license

As discussed in Note 2 and Note 3 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company generally sells or licenses its software 
in combination with other products and services such as customer support and professional services. The accounting for 
customer contracts with a software license requires an allocation of the transaction price to each distinct performance obligation 
based on the determination of the standalone selling price (SSP).  SSP for a performance obligation in a customer contract is an 
estimate of the price that would be charged for the specific product or service if it was sold separately in similar circumstances 
and to similar customers. This estimate determines the allocation of the transaction price and affects the amount and timing of 
revenue recognized for each performance obligation in a customer contract. SSP is estimated based on the impact of geographic 
or regional specific factors, profit objectives and pricing practices for different performance obligations.     

We identified the evaluation of the determination of the SSP of revenue performance obligations for customer contracts with a 
software license as a critical audit matter. A higher degree of auditor judgment was required to evaluate the approach and the 
significant assumptions, including the basis for stratification, used to establish SSP for each performance obligation which 
could be offered in a customer contract. 

The primary procedures we performed to address this critical audit matter included the following. We evaluated the design and 
tested the operating effectiveness of certain internal controls over the Company’s revenue process, including controls over the 
approach and the significant assumptions used to determine SSP for identified performance obligations in customer contracts 

125

which include a software license. We evaluated the approach used to determine SSP based on current pricing patterns in 
relevant customer contracts, historical analysis of renewal contract pricing completed by the Company and pricing practices 
observed in the industry. We inspected a selection of contracts from the SSP population and compared attributes such as price 
and employee consultant level to historical information.  

Assessment of uncertain tax positions

As discussed in Note 2, Note 14 and Note 15 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company has recognized uncertain 
tax positions including associated interest and penalties. The Company’s tax positions are subject to audit by local taxing 
authorities across multiple global subsidiaries and the resolution of such audits may span multiple years. Tax law is complex 
and often subject to varied interpretations. Accordingly, the ultimate outcome with respect to taxes the Company may owe may 
differ from the amounts recognized. 

We identified the assessment of uncertain tax positions as a critical audit matter. The assessment of tax exposures and the 
ultimate resolution of uncertain tax positions requires a higher degree of auditor judgment in evaluating the Company’s 
interpretation of, and compliance with, tax law globally across multiple jurisdictions. 

The primary procedures we performed to address this critical audit matter included the following. We evaluated the design and 
tested the operating effectiveness of certain internal controls over the Company’s process to assess uncertain tax positions, 
including controls related to the interpretation of tax law and identification of uncertain tax positions, the evaluation of which of 
the Company’s tax positions may not be sustained upon audit and the estimation of exposures associated with uncertain tax 
positions. We involved domestic and international tax professionals with specialized skills and knowledge who assisted in 
assessing filed tax positions and transfer pricing studies, and evaluating the Company’s interpretation of tax law and its 
assessment of certain tax uncertainties and expected outcomes, including, if applicable, the measurement thereof, by reading 
advice obtained from the Company’s external specialists and correspondence with taxation authorities.

/s/ KPMG LLP

Chartered Professional Accountants, Licensed Public Accountants 
We have served as the Company’s auditor since 2001.
Toronto, Canada 
August 3, 2022

126

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Shareholders and Board of Directors of Open Text Corporation:

Opinion on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting 

We have audited Open Text Corporation’s internal control over financial reporting as of June 30, 2022, based on criteria 
established in Internal Control – Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the 
Treadway Commission. In our opinion, Open Text Corporation (the Company) maintained, in all material respects, effective 
internal control over financial reporting as of June 30, 2022, based on criteria established in Internal Control – Integrated 
Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.  

We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) 
(PCAOB), the consolidated balance sheets of the Company as of June 30, 2022 and 2021, the related consolidated statements of 
income, comprehensive income, shareholders’ equity, and cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended June 
30, 2022, and the related notes (collectively, the consolidated financial statements), and our report dated August 3, 2022 
expressed an unqualified opinion on those consolidated financial statements.

The Company acquired Zix Corporation on December 23, 2021, and management excluded from its assessment of the 
effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of June 30, 2022, Zix Corporation’s internal control 
over financial reporting associated with 2.5% of consolidated total revenues and 9.6% of consolidated total assets (of which 
$868 million, or 8.5% of consolidated total assets, represents goodwill and net intangible assets included within the scope of the 
assessment) included in the consolidated financial statements of the Company as of and for the year ended June 30, 2022. Our 
audit of internal control over financial reporting of the Company also excluded an evaluation of the internal control over 
financial reporting of Zix Corporation.

Basis for Opinion 

The Company’s management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its 
assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Our 
responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’s internal control over financial reporting based on our audit. We are a 
public accounting firm registered with the PCAOB and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in 
accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange 
Commission and the PCAOB.

We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the 
audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all 
material respects. Our audit of internal control over financial reporting included obtaining an understanding of internal control 
over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, and testing and evaluating the design and operating 
effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk. Our audit also included performing such other procedures as we 
considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

Definition and Limitations of Internal Control Over Financial Reporting 

A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the 
reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally 
accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures 
that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and 
dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit 
preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and 
expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the 
company; and (3) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or 
disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.

Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, 
projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate 
because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

/s/ KPMG LLP

Chartered Professional Accountants, Licensed Public Accountants 
Toronto, Canada 
August 3, 2022

127

OPEN TEXT CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(In thousands of U.S. dollars, except share data)

Cash and cash equivalents
Accounts receivable trade, net of allowance for credit losses of $16,473 as of June 30, 2022 

$ 

1,693,741  $ 

1,607,306 

ASSETS

June 30, 2022

June 30, 2021

and $22,151 as of June 30, 2021 (Note 4)

Contract assets (Note 3)
Income taxes recoverable (Note 15)
Prepaid expenses and other current assets (Note 9)

Total current assets

Property and equipment (Note 5)
Operating lease right of use assets (Note 6)
Long-term contract assets (Note 3)
Goodwill (Note 7)
Acquired intangible assets (Note 8)
Deferred tax assets (Note 15)
Other assets (Note 9)
Long-term income taxes recoverable (Note 15)

Total assets

LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY

Current liabilities:

Accounts payable and accrued liabilities (Note 10)
Current portion of long-term debt (Note 11)
Operating lease liabilities (Note 6)
Deferred revenues (Note 3)
Income taxes payable (Note 15)
Total current liabilities

Long-term liabilities:

Accrued liabilities (Note 10)
Pension liability (Note 12)
Long-term debt (Note 11)
Long-term operating lease liabilities (Note 6)
Long-term deferred revenues (Note 3)
Long-term income taxes payable (Note 15)
Deferred tax liabilities (Note 15)
Total long-term liabilities

Shareholders’ equity:

Share capital and additional paid-in capital (Note 13)

269,522,639 and 271,540,755 Common Shares issued and outstanding at June 30, 2022 

and June 30, 2021, respectively; authorized Common Shares: unlimited

Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) (Note 21)
Retained earnings
Treasury stock, at cost (3,706,420 and 1,567,664 shares at June 30, 2022 and June 30, 2021, 

respectively)

Total OpenText shareholders' equity

Non-controlling interests

Total shareholders’ equity
Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity

Guarantees and contingencies (Note 14)
Related party transactions (Note 25)
Subsequent event (Note 26)

426,652 
26,167 
18,255 
120,552 
2,285,367 
244,709 
198,132 
19,719 
5,244,653 
1,075,208 
810,154 
256,987 
44,044 
10,178,973  $ 

448,607  $ 
10,000 
56,380 
902,202 
51,069 
1,468,258 

18,208 
60,951 
4,209,567 
198,695 
91,144 
34,003 
65,887 
4,678,455 

2,038,674 
(7,659) 
2,160,069 

(159,966) 
4,031,118 
1,142 
4,032,260 
10,178,973  $ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

438,547 
25,344 
32,312 
98,551 
2,202,060 
233,595 
234,532 
19,222 
4,691,673 
1,187,260 
796,738 
208,894 
35,362 
9,609,336 

423,592 
10,000 
58,315 
852,629 
17,368 
1,361,904 

28,830 
74,511 
3,578,859 
224,453 
98,989 
34,113 
108,224 
4,147,979 

1,947,764 
66,238 
2,153,326 

(69,386) 
4,097,942 
1,511 
4,099,453 
9,609,336 

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

128

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
OPEN TEXT CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
(In thousands of U.S. dollars, except share and per share data)

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

Revenues (Note 3):

Cloud services and subscriptions
Customer support
License
Professional service and other

Total revenues

Cost of revenues:

$ 

1,535,017  $ 
1,330,965 
358,351 
269,511 
3,493,844 

1,407,445  $ 
1,334,062 
384,711 
259,897 
3,386,115 

Cloud services and subscriptions
Customer support
License
Professional service and other
Amortization of acquired technology-based intangible assets 

(Note 8)

Total cost of revenues

Gross profit
Operating expenses:

Research and development
Sales and marketing
General and administrative
Depreciation
Amortization of acquired customer-based intangible assets (Note 8)
Special charges (recoveries) (Note 18)

Total operating expenses

Income from operations
Other income (expense), net (Note 23)
Interest and other related expense, net
Income before income taxes
Provision for income taxes (Note 15)
Net income
Net (income) loss attributable to non-controlling interests
Net income attributable to OpenText
Earnings per share—basic attributable to OpenText (Note 24)
Earnings per share—diluted attributable to OpenText (Note 24)
Weighted average number of Common Shares outstanding—basic (in 

'000's)

Weighted average number of Common Shares outstanding—diluted (in 

$ 

$ 
$ 
$ 

'000's)

511,713 
121,485 
13,501 
216,895 

198,607 
1,062,201 
2,431,643 

440,448 
677,118 
317,085 
88,241 
217,105 
46,873 
1,786,870 
644,773 
29,118 
(157,880)   
516,011 
118,752 
397,259  $ 
(169)   
397,090  $ 
1.46  $ 
1.46  $ 

481,818 
122,753 
13,916 
197,183 

218,796 
1,034,466 
2,351,649 

421,447 
622,221 
263,521 
85,265 
216,544 
1,748 
1,610,746 
740,903 
61,434 
(151,567)   
650,770 
339,906 
310,864  $ 
(192)   
310,672  $ 
1.14  $ 
1.14  $ 

1,157,686 
1,275,586 
402,851 
273,613 
3,109,736 

449,940 
123,894 
11,321 
212,903 

205,717 
1,003,775 
2,105,961 

370,411 
585,044 
237,532 
89,458 
219,559 
100,428 
1,602,432 
503,529 
(11,946) 
(146,378) 
345,205 
110,837 
234,368 
(143) 
234,225 
0.86 
0.86 

271,271 

272,533 

270,847 

271,909 

273,479 

271,817 

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

129

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
OPEN TEXT CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
(In thousands of U.S. dollars)

Net income
Other comprehensive income (loss)—net of tax:
Net foreign currency translation adjustments
Unrealized gain (loss) on cash flow hedges:

Unrealized gain (loss) - net of tax expense (recovery) effect of 
($671), $1,532, and ($599) for the year ended June 30, 2022, 
2021 and 2020, respectively
(Gain) loss reclassified into net income - net of tax (expense) 
recovery effect of $134, ($1,182), and $355 for the year ended 
June 30, 2022, 2021 and 2020, respectively

Actuarial gain (loss) relating to defined benefit pension plans:

Actuarial gain (loss) - net of tax expense (recovery) effect of 
$1,866, $990 and $1,219 for the year ended June 30, 2022, 2021 
and 2020, respectively
Amortization of actuarial (gain) loss into net income - net of tax 
(expense) recovery effect of $290, $379 and $520 for the year 
ended June 30, 2022, 2021 and 2020, respectively

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 

397,259  $ 

310,864  $ 

234,368 

(78,724)   

42,440 

(7,784) 

(1,859)   

4,246 

(1,662) 

373 

(3,280)   

985 

5,595 

3,987 

1,245 

718 

1,020 

917 

Total other comprehensive income (loss) net
Total comprehensive income 
Comprehensive (income) loss attributable to non-controlling interests
Total comprehensive income attributable to OpenText

$ 

(73,897)   
323,362 

(169)   
323,193  $ 

48,413 
359,277 

(192)   
359,085  $ 

(6,299) 
228,069 
(143) 
227,926 

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

130

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
OPEN TEXT CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
(In thousands of U.S. dollars and shares)

Balance as of June 30, 2019

Issuance of Common Shares

Common Shares and 
Additional Paid in Capital

Treasury Stock

Shares

Amount

Shares

Amount

Retained
Earnings

Accumulated  
Other
Comprehensive
Income

Non-
Controlling 
Interests

Total

  269,834  $ 1,774,214 

(803)  $  (28,766)  $ 2,113,883  $ 

24,124  $ 

1,215  $ 3,884,670 

Under employee stock option plans

Under employee stock purchase plans

1,530 

499 

41,282 

17,757 

29,532 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

(300) 

(12,424) 

(11,008) 

481 

17,582 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

1,605 

573 

— 

— 

— 

(2,500) 

— 

— 

Share-based compensation

Purchase of treasury stock

Issuance of treasury stock

Dividends declared 
($0.6984 per Common Share)
Other comprehensive income (loss) - net

Non-controlling interest

Net income
Balance as of June 30, 2020

Adoption of ASU 2016-13 - cumulative 
effect, net

Issuance of Common Shares

Under employee stock option plans

Under employee stock purchase plans

Share-based compensation

Purchase of treasury stock

Issuance of treasury stock

Repurchase of Common Shares
Dividends declared 
($0.7770 per Common Share)

Other comprehensive income (loss) - net

Net income
Balance as of June 30, 2021

Issuance of Common Shares

Under employee stock option plans

Under employee stock purchase plans

Share-based compensation

Purchase of treasury stock

Issuance of treasury stock

— 

— 

— 

— 

  (188,712) 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

(6,299) 

— 

— 

— 
  271,863  $ 1,851,777 

  234,225 

(622)  $  (23,608)  $ 2,159,396  $ 

— 

— 

— 

— 

(2,450) 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

49,565 

22,307 

51,969 

— 

193 

— 

— 

6,690 

— 

— 

(1,455) 

(64,847) 

316 

12,379 

— 

— 
  271,541  $ 1,947,764 

— 

— 
(1,568)  $  (69,386)  $ 2,153,326  $ 

  310,672 

950 

842 

— 

— 

— 

32,714 

33,806 

69,556 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

(2,630) 

  (111,593) 

492 

21,013 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

41,282 

17,757 

29,532 

(12,424) 

6,574 

— 

  (188,712) 

— 

(39) 

(6,299) 

(39) 

— 
17,825  $ 

143 

  234,368 
1,319  $ 4,006,709 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

(2,450) 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

49,565 

28,997 

51,969 

(64,847) 

— 

  (119,105) 

— 

  (210,662) 

— 
66,238  $ 

192 

  310,864 
1,511  $ 4,099,453 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

32,714 

33,806 

69,556 

  (111,593) 

— 

  (176,987) 

— 

  (237,655) 

(73,897) 

— 

(73,897) 

— 

— 

(538) 

(396) 

169 

  397,259 

Repurchase of Common Shares

(3,810) 

Dividends declared 
($0.8836 per Common Share)

Other comprehensive income (loss) - net

Distribution to non-controlling interest

Net income

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

  (152,692) 

— 

  (237,655) 

— 

— 

— 

— 

— 

  397,090 

Balance as of June 30, 2022

  269,523  $ 2,038,674 

(3,706)  $ (159,966)  $ 2,160,069  $ 

(7,659)  $ 

1,142  $ 4,032,260 

131

— 

  (103,630) 

— 

  (210,662) 

— 

— 

48,413 

— 

48,413 

(12,379) 

(15,475) 

— 

— 

(21,013) 

(24,295) 

— 

— 

142 

— 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
OPEN TEXT CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(In thousands of U.S. dollars)

Cash flows from operating activities:
Net income
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating 
activities:

Depreciation and amortization of intangible assets
Share-based compensation expense
Pension expense
Amortization of debt issuance costs
Write off of right of use assets
Loss on extinguishment of debt
Loss on sale and write down of property and equipment
Deferred taxes
Share in net (income) loss of equity investees

Changes in operating assets and liabilities:

Accounts receivable
Contract assets
Prepaid expenses and other current assets
Income taxes
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities
Deferred revenue
Other assets
Operating lease assets and liabilities, net

Net cash provided by operating activities
Cash flows from investing activities:

Additions of property and equipment
Purchase of Zix Corporation, net of cash acquired
Purchase of Bricata Inc.
Purchase of XMedius
Purchase of Carbonite, Inc., net of cash and restricted cash acquired
Purchase of Dynamic Solutions Group Inc.
Other investing activities

Net cash used in investing activities
Cash flows from financing activities:

Proceeds from issuance of Common Shares from exercise of stock 

options and ESPP

Proceeds from long-term debt and Revolver
Repayment of long-term debt and Revolver
Debt extinguishment costs
Debt issuance costs
Repurchase of Common Shares
Purchase of treasury stock
Distribution to non-controlling interest
Payments of dividends to shareholders

Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities
Foreign exchange gain (loss) on cash held in foreign currencies
Increase (decrease) in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash during 

the year

2022

Year Ended June 30,
2021

2020

$ 

397,259  $ 

310,864  $ 

234,368 

503,953 
69,556 
6,606 
5,422 
17,707 
27,413 
294 
(36,088)   
(58,702)   

81,841 
(37,966)   
(13,954)   
34,589 
(24,177)   
(5,236)   
17,297 
(4,004)   

981,810 

(93,109)   
(856,175)   
(17,753)   

— 
— 
— 
(3,922)   
(970,959)   

67,215 

1,500,000 
(860,000)   
(24,969)   
(17,159)   
(176,987)   
(111,593)   
(396)   
(237,655)   
138,456 
(63,196)   

520,605 
51,969 
6,616 
4,548 
— 
— 
2,771 
73,039 
(62,897)   

60,954 
(39,333)   
37,733 
(140,763)   
26,088 
39,295 
11,914 
(27,283)   
876,120 

(63,675)   

— 
— 
444 
— 
(971)   
(4,568)   
(68,770)   

80,067 

— 

(610,000)   

— 
— 

(119,105)   
(64,847)   

— 

(210,662)   
(924,547)   
29,734 

514,734 
29,532 
5,802 
4,633 
36,864 
17,854 
9,714 
51,388 
(8,700) 

84,499 
(40,301) 
(6,897) 
(35,086) 
30,613 
25,306 
1,127 
(914) 
954,536 

(72,709) 
— 
— 
(73,335) 
(1,305,097) 
(4,149) 
(14,127) 
(1,469,417) 

66,600 

3,150,000 
(1,713,631) 
(11,248) 
(21,806) 
— 
(12,424) 
— 
(188,712) 
1,268,779 
(178) 

86,111 

(87,463)   

753,720 

Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at beginning of the year
Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at end of the year

1,609,800 
1,695,911  $ 

1,697,263 
1,609,800  $ 

943,543 
1,697,263 

$ 

132

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
OPEN TEXT CORPORATION
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(In thousands of U.S. dollars)

Reconciliation of cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash:
Cash and cash equivalents
Restricted cash (1)
Total cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash

June 30, 2022

June 30, 2021

June 30, 2020

$ 

$ 

1,693,741  $ 
2,170 
1,695,911  $ 

1,607,306  $ 
2,494 
1,609,800  $ 

1,692,850 
4,413 
1,697,263 

_________________________________

(1)

 Restricted cash is classified under the Prepaid expenses and other current assets and Other assets line items on the Consolidated 
Balance Sheets (Note 9).

Supplemental cash flow disclosures (Note 6 and Note 22)

See accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

133

 
 
 
OPEN TEXT CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
For the Year Ended June 30, 2022
(Tabular amounts in thousands of U.S. dollars, except share and per share data)

NOTE 1—BASIS OF PRESENTATION

The accompanying Consolidated Financial Statements include the accounts of Open Text Corporation and our 

subsidiaries, collectively referred to as “OpenText” or the “Company”. We wholly own all of our subsidiaries with the 
exception of Open Text South Africa Proprietary Ltd. (OT South Africa), which as of June 30, 2022, was 70% owned by 
OpenText. All intercompany balances and transactions have been eliminated.

Previously, our ownership in EC1 Pte. Ltd. (GXS Singapore) was 81%. During the first quarter of Fiscal 2022 (as defined 
below), we made a final cash distribution of $0.4 million to the non-controlling interest holder in GXS Singapore as part of the 
process to liquidate the subsidiary. During the year ended June 30, 2022, the liquidation of GXS Singapore was completed.

Throughout this Annual Report on Form 10-K: (i) the term “Fiscal 2023” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2022 
and ending June 30, 2023; (ii) the term “Fiscal 2022” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2021 and ended June 30, 2022; 
(iii) the term “Fiscal 2021” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2020 and ended June 30, 2021; (iv) the term “Fiscal 
2020” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2019 and ended June 30, 2020; (v) the term “Fiscal 2019” means our fiscal 
year beginning on July 1, 2018 and ended June 30, 2019; (vi) the term “Fiscal 2018” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 
2017 and ended June 30, 2018; (vii) the term “Fiscal 2017” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2016 and ended June 30, 
2017; (viii) the term “Fiscal 2016” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2015 and ended June 30, 2016; (ix) the term 
“Fiscal 2015” means our fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2014 and ended June 30, 2015; (x) the term “Fiscal 2014” means our 
fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2013 and ended June 30, 2014; and (xi) the term “Fiscal 2013” means our fiscal year beginning 
on July 1, 2012 and ended June 30, 2013.

These Consolidated Financial Statements are expressed in U.S. dollars and are prepared in accordance with United States 
generally accepted accounting principles (U.S. GAAP). The information furnished reflects all adjustments necessary for a fair 
presentation of the results for the periods presented.

Use of estimates 

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. GAAP requires us to make certain estimates, judgments 

and assumptions that affect the amounts reported in the Consolidated Financial Statements. These estimates, judgments and 
assumptions are evaluated on an ongoing basis. We base our estimates on historical experience and on various other 
assumptions that we believe are reasonable at that time, the results of which form the basis for making judgments about the 
carrying values of assets and liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources. Actual results may differ from those 
estimates. In particular, key estimates, judgments and assumptions include those related to: (i) revenue recognition, 
(ii) accounting for income taxes, (iii) testing of goodwill for impairment, (iv) the valuation of acquired intangible assets, (v) the 
valuation of long-lived assets, (vi) the recognition of contingencies, (vii) restructuring accruals, (viii) acquisition accruals and 
pre-acquisition contingencies, (ix) the valuation of stock options granted and obligations related to share-based payments, 
including the valuation of our long-term incentive plans, and (x) the valuation of pension obligations. 

In March 2020, COVID-19 was characterized as a pandemic by the World Health Organization. The spread of COVID-19 

continues to impact the global economy. As the impacts of the pandemic continue to evolve, estimates and assumptions about 
future events and their effects cannot be determined with certainty and therefore require increased judgment. As of June 30, 
2022, we have recorded certain estimates resulting from the pandemic, particularly with respect to the COVID-19 Restructuring 
Plan (as defined herein) and allowance for credit losses, based on management's estimates and assumptions utilizing the most 
currently available information. Such estimates may be subject to change particularly given the unprecedented nature of the 
COVID-19 pandemic. We will continue to monitor the potential impact of COVID-19 on our financial statements and related 
disclosures, including the need for additional estimates going forward, which could include costs related to potential items such 
as special charges (recoveries), restructurings, asset impairments and other non-recurring costs. Please see Note 18 “Special 
Charges (Recoveries)” and “Risk Factors” included within Part I, Item 1A, “Risk Factors” within this Annual Report on Form 
10-K.

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NOTE 2—ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND RECENT ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

Accounting Policies

Cash and cash equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents include balances with banks as well as deposits that have original terms to maturity of three 
months or less. Cash equivalents are recorded at cost and typically consist of term deposits, commercial paper, certificates of 
deposit and short-term interest-bearing investment-grade securities of major banks in the countries in which we operate.

Accounts Receivable and Allowance for Credit Losses

From time to time, we may sell certain accounts receivable to a financial institution on a non-recourse basis for cash, less 

a discount. Proceeds from the sale of receivables approximate their discounted book value and are included in operating cash 
flows on the Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows. 

In accordance with ASC Topic 326, “Financial Instruments - Credit Losses” (Topic 326), we recognize expected credit 

losses for accounts receivable and contract assets based on lifetime expected losses. We recognize a loss allowance using a 
collective assessment for accounts receivable, including contract assets, with similar risk characteristics based on historical 
credit loss experience, adjusted for forward-looking factors specific to the debtors and economic environment. We continue to 
maintain an allowance for 100% of all accounts deemed to be uncollectible. 

Customer creditworthiness is evaluated prior to order fulfillment and based on evaluations, we adjust our credit limit to 
the respective customer. In addition to these evaluations, we conduct on-going credit evaluations of our customers' payment 
history and current creditworthiness. To date, the actual losses have been within our expectations. No single customer 
accounted for more than 10% of the accounts receivable balance as of June 30, 2022 and 2021, respectively.

Property and equipment

Property and equipment are stated at the lower of cost or net realizable value and shown net of depreciation which is 

computed on a straight-line basis over the estimated useful lives of the related assets. Gains and losses on asset disposals are 
taken into income in the year of disposition. Fully depreciated property and equipment are retired from the Consolidated 
Balance Sheets when they are no longer in use. Please see the “Impairment of long-lived assets” section below for policy on 
property and equipment impairments. The following represents the estimated useful lives of property and equipment as of 
June 30, 2022:

Furniture, equipment and other
Computer hardware
Computer software
Capitalized software development costs
Leasehold improvements
Building

Capitalized Software

5 to 15 years
3 to 5 years
3 to 7 years
3 to 5 years
Lesser of the lease term or 5 years
40 years

We capitalize software development costs in accordance with ASC Topic 350-40, “Internal-Use Software.” We capitalize 

costs for software to be used internally when we enter the application development stage. This occurs when we complete the 
preliminary project stage, management authorizes and commits to funding the project, and it is feasible that the project will be 
completed, and the software will perform the intended function. We cease to capitalize costs related to a software project when 
it enters the post-implementation and operation stage. If different determinations are made with respect to the state of 
development of a software project, then the amount capitalized and the amount charged to expense for that project could differ 
materially.

 Costs capitalized during the application development stage consist of payroll and related costs for employees who are 

directly associated with, and who devote time directly to, a project to develop software for internal use. We also capitalize the 
direct costs of materials and services, which generally includes outside contractors, and interest. We do not capitalize any 
general and administrative or overhead costs or costs incurred during the application development stage related to training or 
data conversion costs. Costs related to upgrades and enhancements to internal-use software, if those upgrades and 
enhancements result in additional functionality, are capitalized. If upgrades and enhancements do not result in additional 
functionality, those costs are expensed as incurred. If different determinations are made with respect to whether upgrades or 

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enhancements to software projects would result in additional functionality, then the amount capitalized and the amount charged 
to expense for that project could differ materially. 

We amortize capitalized costs with respect to development projects for internal-use software when the software is ready 
for use. The capitalized software development costs are generally amortized using the straight-line method over a 3-to-5 year 
period. In determining and reassessing the estimated useful life over which the cost incurred for the software should be 
amortized, we consider the effects of obsolescence, technology, competition and other economic factors. If different 
determinations are made with respect to the estimated useful life of the software, the amount of amortization charged in a 
particular period could differ materially. 

As of June 30, 2022 and 2021 our capitalized software development costs were $149.1 million and $127.7 million, 
respectively. Our additions, relating to capitalized software development costs, incurred during Fiscal 2022 and Fiscal 2021 
were $18.2 million and $15.4 million, respectively.

Leases

We enter into operating leases, both domestically and internationally, for certain facilities, automobiles, data centers and 

equipment for use in the ordinary course of business. Leases with an initial term of 12 months or less are not recorded on the 
Consolidated Balance Sheets and we do not have any material finance leases. 

In accordance with ASC Topic 842, “Leases” (Topic 842), we account for a contract as a lease when we have the right to 
direct the use of the asset for a period of time while obtaining substantially all of the asset’s economic benefits. We determine 
the initial classification and measurement of our right of use (ROU) assets and lease liabilities at the lease commencement date 
and thereafter if modified.

ROU assets represent our right to control the underlying assets under lease, and the lease liability is our obligation to 
make the lease payments related to the underlying assets under lease, over the contractual term. ROU assets and lease liabilities 
are recognized on the Consolidated Balance Sheets based on the present value of future minimum lease payments to be made 
over the lease term. When available, we will use the rate implicit in the lease to discount lease payments to present value. 
However, real estate leases generally do not provide a readily determinable implicit rate, therefore, we must estimate our 
incremental borrowing rate to discount the lease payments. We estimate our incremental borrowing rate based on a 
collateralized basis with similar terms and payments, in an economic environment where the leased asset is located. 

The ROU asset equals the lease liability, adjusted for any initial direct costs, prepaid rent and lease incentives on initial 
recognition. Fixed lease costs are included in the recognition of ROU assets and lease liabilities. Variable lease costs are not 
included in the measurement of the lease liability. These variable lease payments are recognized in the Consolidated Statements 
of Income in the period in which the obligation for those payments is incurred. Lease expense for minimum lease payments 
continues to be recognized in the Consolidated Statements of Income on a straight-line basis over the lease term. 

We have not elected the practical expedient to combine lease and non-lease components in the determination of lease 
costs for our facility leases. For all other asset classes, we have elected the practical expedient to combine the lease and the non-
lease components. The lease liability includes lease payments related to options to extend or renew the lease term only if we are 
reasonably certain we will exercise those options. Our leases typically do not contain any material residual value guarantees or 
restrictive covenants. 

In certain circumstances, we sublease all or a portion of a leased facility to various other companies through a sublease 

agreement.

Business combinations

We apply the provisions of ASC Topic 805, “Business Combinations” (Topic 805), in the accounting for our acquisitions. 

It requires us to recognize separately from goodwill the assets acquired and the liabilities assumed at their acquisition date fair 
values. Goodwill as of the acquisition date is measured as the excess of consideration transferred over the net of the acquisition 
date fair values of the assets acquired and the liabilities assumed. While we use our best estimates and assumptions to 
accurately value assets acquired and liabilities, including contingent consideration where applicable, assumed at the acquisition 
date, our estimates are inherently uncertain and subject to refinement, particularly since these assumptions and estimates are 
based in part on historical experience and information obtained from the management of the acquired companies. As a result, 
during the measurement period, which may be up to one year from the acquisition date, we may record adjustments to the assets 
acquired and liabilities assumed with the corresponding offset to goodwill in the period identified. Furthermore, when valuing 
certain intangible assets that we have acquired, critical estimates may be made relating to, but not limited to: (i) future expected 
cash flows from software license sales, cloud SaaS, "desktop as a service" (DaaS) and PaaS contracts, support agreements, 
consulting agreements and other customer contracts (ii) the acquired company's technology and competitive position, as well as 
assumptions about the period of time that the acquired technology will continue to be used in the combined company's product 
portfolio, and (iii) discount rates. Upon the conclusion of the measurement period or final determination of the values of assets 

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acquired or liabilities assumed, whichever comes first, any subsequent adjustments would be recorded to our Consolidated 
Statements of Income. 

For a given acquisition, we may identify certain pre-acquisition contingencies as of the acquisition date and may extend 

our review and evaluation of these pre-acquisition contingencies throughout the measurement period in order to obtain 
sufficient information to assess whether we include these contingencies as a part of the purchase price allocation and, if so, to 
determine the estimated amounts. 

If we determine that a pre-acquisition contingency (non-income tax related) is probable in nature and estimable as of the 
acquisition date, we record our best estimate for such a contingency as a part of the preliminary purchase price allocation. We 
often continue to gather information and evaluate our pre-acquisition contingencies throughout the measurement period and if 
we make changes to the amounts recorded or if we identify additional pre-acquisition contingencies during the measurement 
period, such amounts will be included in the purchase price allocation during the measurement period and, subsequently, in our 
results of operations. 

Uncertain tax positions and tax related valuation allowances assumed in connection with a business combination are 
initially estimated as of the acquisition date. We review these items during the measurement period as we continue to actively 
seek and collect information relating to facts and circumstances that existed at the acquisition date. Changes to these uncertain 
tax positions and tax related valuation allowances made subsequent to the measurement period, or if they relate to facts and 
circumstances that did not exist at the acquisition date, are recorded in the "Provision for (recovery of) income taxes" line of our 
Consolidated Statements of Income.

Goodwill

Goodwill represents the excess of the purchase price in a business combination over the fair value of net tangible and 

intangible assets acquired. The carrying amount of goodwill is periodically reviewed for impairment (at a minimum annually) 
and whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying value of this asset may not be recoverable. 

Our operations are analyzed by management and our chief operating decision maker (CODM) as being part of a single 
industry segment: the design, development, marketing and sales of Information Management software and solutions. Therefore, 
our goodwill impairment assessment is based on the allocation of goodwill to a single reporting unit. 

We perform a qualitative assessment to test our reporting unit's goodwill for impairment. Based on our qualitative 
assessment, if we determine that the fair value of our reporting unit is more likely than not (i.e., a likelihood of more than 50 
percent) to be less than its carrying amount, the quantitative assessment of the impairment test is performed. In the quantitative 
assessment, we compare the fair value of our reporting unit to its carrying value. If the fair value of the reporting unit exceeds 
its carrying value, goodwill is not considered impaired and we are not required to perform further testing. If the carrying value 
of the net assets of our reporting unit exceeds its fair value, then an impairment loss equal to the difference, but not exceeding 
the total carrying value of goodwill allocated to the reporting unit, would be recorded. 

Our annual impairment analysis of goodwill was performed as of April 1, 2022. Our qualitative assessment indicated that 

there were no indications of impairment and therefore there was no impairment of goodwill required to be recorded for Fiscal 
2022 (no impairments were recorded for Fiscal 2021 and Fiscal 2020, respectively).

Acquired intangibles

Acquired intangibles consist of acquired technology and customer relationships associated with various acquisitions. 
Acquired technology is initially recorded at fair value based on the present value of the estimated net future income-producing 
capabilities of software products acquired on acquisitions. We amortize acquired technology over its estimated useful life on a 
straight-line basis. 

Customer relationships represent relationships that we have with customers of the acquired companies and are either 
based upon contractual or legal rights or are considered separable; that is, capable of being separated from the acquired entity 
and being sold, transferred, licensed, rented or exchanged. These customer relationships are initially recorded at their fair value 
based on the present value of expected future cash flows. We amortize customer relationships on a straight-line basis over their 
estimated useful lives. 

We continually evaluate the remaining estimated useful life of our intangible assets being amortized to determine whether 

events and circumstances warrant a revision to the remaining period of amortization.

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Impairment of long-lived assets

We account for the impairment and disposition of long-lived assets in accordance with ASC Topic 360, “Property, Plant, 

and Equipment” (Topic 360). We test long-lived assets or asset groups, such as property and equipment, ROU assets and 
definite lived intangible assets, for recoverability when events or changes in circumstances indicate that their carrying amount 
may not be recoverable. Circumstances which could trigger a review include, but are not limited to: significant adverse changes 
in the business climate or legal factors; current period cash flow or operating losses combined with a history of losses or a 
forecast of continuing losses associated with the use of the asset; and a current expectation that the asset will more likely than 
not be sold or disposed of before the end of its estimated useful life. 

Recoverability is assessed based on comparing the carrying amount of the asset to the aggregate pre-tax undiscounted 
cash flows expected to result from the use and eventual disposal of the asset or asset group. Impairment is recognized when the 
carrying amount is not recoverable and exceeds the fair value of the asset or asset group. The impairment loss, if any, is 
measured as the amount by which the carrying amount exceeds fair value, which for this purpose is based upon the discounted 
projected future cash flows of the asset or asset group. 

We have not recorded any significant impairment charges for long-lived assets during Fiscal 2022, Fiscal 2021 and Fiscal 

2020, respectively.

Derivative financial instruments

We use derivative financial instruments to manage foreign currency rate risk. We account for these instruments in 
accordance with ASC Topic 815, “Derivatives and Hedging” (Topic 815), which requires that every derivative instrument be 
recorded on the balance sheet as either an asset or liability measured at its fair value as of the reporting date. Topic 815 also 
requires that changes in our derivative financial instruments' fair values be recognized in earnings; unless specific hedge 
accounting and documentation criteria are met (i.e., the instruments are accounted for as hedges). We recorded the effective 
portions of the gain or loss on derivative financial instruments that were designated as cash flow hedges in "Accumulated other 
comprehensive income (loss)", net of tax, in our accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets. Any ineffective or excluded 
portion of a designated cash flow hedge, if applicable, was recognized in our Consolidated Statements of Income.

Asset retirement obligations

We account for asset retirement obligations in accordance with ASC Topic 410, “Asset Retirement and Environmental 
Obligations” (Topic 410), which applies to certain obligations associated with “leasehold improvements” within our leased 
office facilities. Topic 410 requires that a liability be initially recognized for the estimated fair value of the obligation when it is 
incurred. The associated asset retirement cost is capitalized as part of the carrying amount of the long-lived asset and 
depreciated over the remaining life of the underlying asset and the associated liability is accreted to the estimated fair value of 
the obligation at the settlement date through periodic accretion charges which are generally recorded within "General and 
administrative" expense in our Consolidated Statements of Income. When the obligation is settled, any difference between the 
final cost and the recorded amount is recognized as income or loss on settlement in our Consolidated Statements of Income.

Revenue recognition

In accordance with ASC Topic 606, we account for a customer contract when we obtain written approval, the contract is 

committed, the rights of the parties, including the payment terms, are identified, the contract has commercial substance and 
consideration is probable of collection. Revenue is recognized when, or as, control of a promised product or service is 
transferred to our customers in an amount that reflects the consideration we expect to be entitled to in exchange for our products 
and services (at its transaction price). Estimates of variable consideration and the determination of whether to include estimated 
amounts in the transaction price are based on readily available information, which may include historical, current and forecasted 
information, taking into consideration the type of customer, the type of transaction and specific facts and circumstances of each 
arrangement. We report revenue net of any revenue-based taxes assessed by governmental authorities that are imposed on and 
concurrent with specific revenue producing transactions. 

We have four revenue streams: cloud services and subscriptions, customer support, license, and professional service and 

other.

Cloud services and subscriptions revenue

Cloud services and subscriptions revenue are from hosting arrangements where in connection with the licensing of 
software, the end user does not take possession of the software, as well as from end-to-end fully outsourced B2B integration 
solutions to our customers (collectively referred to as cloud arrangements). The software application resides on our hardware or 
that of a third party, and the customer accesses and uses the software on an as-needed basis. Our cloud arrangements can be 
broadly categorized as PaaS, SaaS, cloud subscriptions and managed services. 

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PaaS/ SaaS/ Cloud Subscriptions (collectively referred to here as cloud-based solutions): We offer cloud-based 
solutions that provide customers the right to access our software through the internet. Our cloud-based solutions represent 
a series of distinct services that are substantially the same and have the same pattern of transfer to the customer. These 
services are made available to the customer continuously throughout the contractual period. However, the extent to which 
the customer uses the services may vary at the customer’s discretion. The payment for cloud-based solutions may be 
received either at inception of the arrangement, or over the term of the arrangement. 

These cloud-based solutions are considered to have a single performance obligation where the customer simultaneously 
receives and consumes the benefit, and as such we recognize revenue for these cloud-based solutions ratably over the term 
of the contractual agreement. For example, revenue related to cloud-based solutions that are provided on a usage basis, 
such as the number of users, is recognized based on a customer’s utilization of the services in a given period.

 Additionally, a software license is present in a cloud-based solutions arrangement if all of the following criteria are met:

(i) The customer has the contractual right to take possession of the software at any time without significant penalty; 

and

(ii) It is feasible for the customer to host the software independent of us. 

In these cases where a software license is present in a cloud-based solutions arrangement it is assessed to determine if it is 
distinct from the cloud-based solutions arrangement. The revenue allocated to the distinct software license would be 
recognized at the point in time the software license is transferred to the customer, whereas the revenue allocated to the 
hosting performance obligation would be recognized ratably on a monthly basis over the contractual term unless evidence 
suggests that revenue is earned, or obligations are fulfilled in a different pattern over the contractual term of the 
arrangement. 

Managed services: We provide comprehensive B2B process outsourcing services for all day-to-day operations of a 
customers’ B2B integration program. Customers using these managed services are not permitted to take possession of our 
software and the contract is for a defined period, where customers pay a monthly or quarterly fee. Our performance 
obligation is satisfied as we provide services of operating and managing a customer's EDI environment. Revenue relating 
to these services is recognized using an output method based on the expected level of service we will provide over the 
term of the contract. 

In connection with cloud subscription and managed service contracts, we often agree to perform a variety of services 
before the customer goes live, such as, converting and migrating customer data, building interfaces and providing training. 
These services are considered an outsourced suite of professional services which can involve certain project-based activities. 
These services can be provided at the initiation of a contract, during the implementation or on an ongoing basis as part of the 
customer life cycle. These services can be charged separately on a fixed fee or time and materials basis, or the costs associated 
may be recovered as part of the ongoing cloud subscription or managed services fee. These outsourced professional services are 
considered to be distinct from the ongoing hosting services and represent a separate performance obligation within our cloud 
subscription or managed services arrangements. The obligation to provide outsourced professional services is satisfied over 
time, with the customer simultaneously receiving and consuming the benefits as we satisfy our performance obligations. For 
outsourced professional services, we recognize revenue by measuring progress toward the satisfaction of our performance 
obligation. Progress for services that are contracted for a fixed price is generally measured based on hours incurred as a portion 
of total estimated hours. As a practical expedient, when we invoice a customer at an amount that corresponds directly with the 
value to the customer of our performance to date, we recognize revenue at that amount.

Customer support revenue

Customer support revenue is associated with perpetual, term license and off-cloud subscription arrangements. As 
customer support is not critical to the customer's ability to derive benefit from its right to use our software, customer support is 
considered as a distinct performance obligation when sold together in a bundled arrangement along with the software. 

Customer support consists primarily of technical support and the provision of unspecified updates and upgrades on a 
when-and-if-available basis. Customer support for perpetual licenses is renewable, generally on an annual basis, at the option of 
the customer. Customer support for term and subscription licenses is renewable concurrently with such licenses for the same 
duration of time. Payments for customer support are generally made at the inception of the contract term or in installments over 
the term of the maintenance period. Our customer support team is ready to provide these maintenance services, as needed, to the 
customer during the contract term. As the elements of customer support are delivered concurrently and have the same pattern of 
transfer, customer support is accounted for as a single performance obligation. The customer benefits evenly throughout the 
contract period from the guarantee that the customer support resources and personnel will be available to them, and that any 
unspecified upgrades or unspecified future products developed by us will be made available. Revenue for customer support is 
recognized ratably over the contract period based on the start and end dates of the maintenance term, in line with how we 
believe services are provided.

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License revenue

Our license revenue can be broadly categorized as perpetual licenses, term licenses and subscription licenses, all of which 

are deployed on the customer’s premises (off-cloud). 

Perpetual licenses: We sell perpetual licenses which provide customers the right to use software for an indefinite period 
of time in exchange for a one-time license fee, which is generally paid at contract inception. Our perpetual licenses 
provide a right to use IP that is functional in nature and have significant stand-alone functionality. Accordingly, for 
perpetual licenses of functional IP, revenue is recognized at the point-in-time when control has been transferred to the 
customer, which normally occurs once software activation keys have been made available for download.

Term licenses and Subscription licenses: We sell both term and subscription licenses which provide customers the right 
to use software for a specified period in exchange for a fee, which may be paid at contract inception or paid in 
installments over the period of the contract. Like perpetual licenses, both our term licenses and subscription licenses are 
functional IP that have significant stand-alone functionality. Accordingly, for both term and subscription licenses, revenue 
is recognized at the point-in-time when the customer is able to use and benefit from the software, which is normally once 
software activation keys have been made available for download at the commencement of the term.

Professional service and other revenue

Our professional services, when offered along with software licenses, consists primarily of technical services and training 

services. Technical services may include installation, customization, implementation or consulting services. Training services 
may include access to online modules or delivering a training package customized to the customer’s needs. At the customer’s 
discretion, we may offer one, all, or a mix of these services. Payment for professional services is generally a fixed fee or is a fee 
based on time and materials. Professional services can be arranged in the same contract as the software license or in a separate 
contract. 

As our professional services do not significantly change the functionality of the license and our customers can benefit 
from our professional services on their own or together with other readily available resources, we consider professional services 
as distinct within the context of the contract. 

Professional service revenue is recognized over time so long as: (i) the customer simultaneously receives and consumes 
the benefits as we perform them, (ii) our performance creates or enhances an asset the customer controls as we perform, and 
(iii) our performance does not create an asset with alternative use and we have enforceable right to payment. 

If all the above criteria are met, we use an input-based measure of progress for recognizing professional service revenue. 

For example, we may consider total labour hours incurred compared to total expected labour hours. As a practical expedient, 
when we invoice a customer at an amount that corresponds directly with the value to the customer of our performance to date, 
we will recognize revenue at that amount.

Material rights

To the extent that we grant our customer an option to acquire additional products or services in one of our arrangements, 
we will account for the option as a distinct performance obligation in the contract only if the option provides a material right to 
the customer that the customer would not receive without entering into the contract. For example, if we give the customer an 
option to acquire additional goods or services in the future at a price that is significantly lower than the current price, this would 
be a material right as it allows the customer to, in effect, pay in advance for the option to purchase future products or services. If 
a material right exists in one of our contracts, then revenue allocated to the option is deferred and we would recognize revenue 
only when those future products or services are transferred or when the option expires. 

Based on history, our contracts do not typically contain material rights and when they do, the material right is not 

significant to our Consolidated Financial Statements.

Arrangements with multiple performance obligations

Our contracts generally contain more than one of the products and services listed above. Determining whether goods and 

services are considered distinct performance obligations that should be accounted for separately or as a single performance 
obligation may require judgment, specifically when assessing whether both of the following two criteria are met: 

•

•

the customer can benefit from the product or service either on its own or together with other resources that are 
readily available to the customer; and 

our promise to transfer the product or service to the customer is separately identifiable from other promises in the 
contract. 

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If these criteria are not met, we determine an appropriate measure of progress based on the nature of our overall promise 

for the single performance obligation. 

If these criteria are met, each product or service is separately accounted for as a distinct performance obligation and the 

total transaction price is allocated to each performance obligation on a relative SSP basis.

Standalone selling price

The SSP reflects the price we would charge for a specific product or service if it were sold separately in similar 

circumstances and to similar customers. In most cases we can establish the SSP based on observable data. We typically 
establish a narrow SSP range for our products and services and assess this range on a periodic basis or when material changes in 
facts and circumstances warrant a review. 

If the SSP is not directly observable, then we estimate the amount using either the expected cost plus a margin or residual 

approach. Estimating SSP requires judgment that could impact the amount and timing of revenue recognized. SSP is a formal 
process whereby management considers multiple factors including, but not limited to, geographic or regional specific factors, 
competitive positioning, internal costs, profit objectives, and pricing practices.

Transaction Price Allocation

In bundled arrangements, where we have more than one distinct performance obligation, we must allocate the transaction 

price to each performance obligation based on its relative SSP. However, in certain bundled arrangements, the SSP may not 
always be directly observable. For instance, in bundled arrangements with license and customer support, we allocate the 
transaction price between the license and customer support performance obligations using the residual approach because we 
have determined that the SSP for licenses in these arrangements are highly variable. We use the residual approach only for our 
license arrangements. When the SSP is observable but contractual pricing does not fall within our established SSP range, then 
an adjustment is required, and we will allocate the transaction price between license and customer support at a constant ratio 
reflecting the mid-point of the established SSP range. 

When two or more contracts are entered into at or near the same time with the same customer, we evaluate the facts and 

circumstances associated with the negotiation of those contracts. Where the contracts are negotiated as a package, we will 
account for them as a single arrangement and allocate the consideration for the combined contracts among the performance 
obligations accordingly.

Sales to resellers

We execute certain sales contracts through resellers, distributors and channel partners (collectively referred to as 
resellers). Typically, we conclude that the resellers are Open Text customers in our reseller agreements. The resellers have 
control over the pricing, service and products prior to being transferred to the end customer. We also assess the creditworthiness 
of each reseller and if they are newly formed, undercapitalized or in financial difficulty, we defer any revenues expected to 
emanate from such reseller and recognize revenue only when cash is received, and all other revenue recognition criteria under 
ASC Topic 606 are met.

Rights of return and other incentives

We do not generally offer rights of return or any other incentives such as concessions, product rotation, or price protection 
and, therefore, do not provide for or make estimates of rights of return and similar incentives. However, we do offer consumers 
who purchase certain of our products on-line directly from us an unconditional full 70-days money-back guarantee. Distributors 
and resellers are also permitted to return the consumer products, subject to certain limitations. Revenue is reduced for such 
rights based on the estimate of future returns originating from contractual agreements with these customers. 

Additionally, in some contracts, however, discounts may be offered to the customer for future software purchases and 
other additional products or services. Such arrangements grant the customer an option to acquire additional goods or services in 
the future at a discount and therefore are evaluated under guidance related to “material rights” as discussed above.

Other policies

Payment terms and conditions vary by contract type, although terms generally include a requirement of payment within 30 

to 60 days of the invoice date. In certain arrangements, we will receive payment from a customer either before or after the 
performance obligation to which the invoice relates has been satisfied. As a practical expedient, we do not account for 
significant financing components if the period between when we transfer the promised good or service to the customer and 
when the customer pays for the product or service will be one year or less. On that basis, our contracts for license and 
maintenance typically do not contain a significant financing component, however, in determining the transaction price we 

141

consider whether we need to adjust the promised consideration for the effects of the time value of money if the timing of 
payments provides either the customer or OpenText with a significant benefit of financing. Our managed services contracts may 
not include an upfront charge for outsourced professional services performed as part of an implementation and are recovered 
through an ongoing fee. Therefore, these contracts may be expected to have a financing component associated with revenue 
being recognized in advance of billings. 

We may modify contracts to offer customers additional products or services. The additional products and services will be 

considered distinct from those products or services transferred to the customer before the modification and will be accounted 
for as a separate contract. We evaluate whether the price for the additional products and services reflects the SSP adjusted as 
appropriate for facts and circumstances applicable to that contract. In determining whether an adjustment is appropriate, we 
evaluate whether the incremental consideration is consistent with the prices previously paid by the customer or similar 
customers. 

Certain of our subscription services and product support arrangements generally contain performance response time 
guarantees. For subscription services arrangements, we estimate variable consideration using a portfolio approach because 
performance penalties are tied to standard response time requirements. For product support arrangements, we estimate variable 
consideration on a contract basis because such arrangements are customer-specific. For both subscription services and product 
support arrangements, we use an expected value approach to estimate variable consideration based on historical business 
practices and current and future performance expectations to determine the likelihood of incurring penalties.

Performance Obligations

A summary of our typical performance obligations and when the obligations are satisfied are as follows:

Performance Obligation
Cloud services and subscriptions revenue:
Outsourced Professional Services

Managed Services / Ongoing Hosting / SaaS

Customer support revenue:
When and if available updates and upgrades and technical 
support
License revenue:
Software licenses (Perpetual, Term, Subscription)

When Performance Obligation is Typically Satisfied

As the services are provided (over time)

Over the contract term, beginning on the date that service is 
made available (i.e., “Go live”) to the customer (over time)

Ratable over the course of the service term (over time)

When software activation keys have been made available for 
download (point in time)

Professional service and other revenue:
Professional services

As the services are provided (over time)

Incremental Costs of Obtaining a Contract with a Customer

Incremental costs of obtaining a contract include only those costs that we incur to obtain a contract that we would not 

have incurred if the contract had not been obtained, such as sales commissions. We have determined that certain of our 
commission programs meet the requirements to be capitalized. Some commission programs are not subject to capitalization as 
the commission expense is paid and recognized as the related revenue is recognized. In assessing costs to obtain a contract, we 
apply a practical expedient that allows us to assess our incremental costs on a portfolio of contracts with similar characteristics 
instead of assessing the incremental costs on each individual contract. We do not expect the financial statement effects of 
applying this practical expedient to the portfolio of contracts to be materially different than if we were to apply the new 
standard to each individual contract. 

We pay commissions on the sale of new customer contracts as well as for renewals of existing contracts to the extent the 

renewals generate incremental revenue. Commissions paid on renewal contracts are limited to the incremental new revenue and 
therefore these payments are not commensurate with the commission paid on the original sale. We allocate commission costs to 
the performance obligations in an arrangement consistent with the allocation of the transaction price. Commissions allocated to 
the license performance obligation are expensed at the time the license revenue is recognized. Commissions allocated to 
professional service performance obligations are expensed as incurred, as these contracts are generally for one year or less and 
we apply a practical expedient to expense costs as incurred if the amortization period would have been one year or less. 
Commissions allocated to maintenance, managed services, on-going hosting arrangements or other recurring services, are 
capitalized and amortized consistent with the pattern of transfer to the customer of the services over the period expected to 
benefit from the commission payment. As commissions paid on renewals are not commensurate with the original sale, the 

142

period of benefit considers anticipated renewals. The benefit period is estimated to be approximately six years which is based 
on our customer contracts and the estimated life of our technology. 

Expenses for incremental costs associated with obtaining a contract are recorded within "Sales and marketing" expense in 

the Consolidated Statements of Income. 

Our short-term capitalized costs to obtain a contract are included in "Prepaid expenses and other current assets", while our 

long-term capitalized costs to obtain a contract are included in "Other assets" on our Consolidated Balance Sheets.

Research and development costs

Research and development costs internally incurred in creating computer software to be sold, licensed or otherwise 
marketed are expensed as incurred unless they meet the criteria for deferral and amortization, as described in ASC Topic 
985-20, “Costs of Software to be Sold, Leased, or Marketed” (Topic 985-20). In accordance with Topic 985-20, costs related to 
research, design and development of products are charged to expense as incurred and capitalized between the dates that the 
product is considered to be technologically feasible and is considered to be ready for general release to customers. In our 
historical experience, the dates relating to the achievement of technological feasibility and general release of the product have 
substantially coincided. In addition, no significant costs are incurred subsequent to the establishment of technological 
feasibility. As a result, we do not capitalize any research and development costs relating to internally developed software to be 
sold, licensed or otherwise marketed.

Advertising Expenses

Advertising costs, which include digital advertising, marketing programs and other promotional costs, are expensed as 

incurred. Advertising expenses incurred in Fiscal 2022, Fiscal 2021 and Fiscal 2020 were $59.6 million, $52.9 million and 
$32.1 million, respectively.

Income taxes

We account for income taxes in accordance with ASC Topic 740, “Income Taxes” (Topic 740). Deferred tax assets and 

liabilities arise from temporary differences between the tax bases of assets and liabilities and their reported amounts in the 
Consolidated Financial Statements that will result in taxable or deductible amounts in future years. These temporary differences 
are measured using enacted tax rates. A valuation allowance is recorded to reduce deferred tax assets to the extent that we 
consider it is more likely than not that a deferred tax asset will not be realized. In determining the valuation allowance, we 
consider factors such as the reversal of deferred income tax liabilities, projected taxable income, and the character of income tax 
assets and tax planning strategies. A change to these factors could impact the estimated valuation allowance and income tax 
expense. 

We account for our uncertain tax provisions by using a two-step approach. The first step is to evaluate the tax position for 

recognition by determining if the weight of the available evidence indicates it is more likely than not, based solely on the 
technical merits, that the position will be sustained on audit, including the resolution of related appeals or litigation processes, if 
any. The second step is to measure the appropriate amount of the benefit to recognize. The amount of benefit to recognize is 
measured as the maximum amount which is more likely than not to be realized. The tax position is derecognized when it is no 
longer more likely than not that the position will be sustained on audit. On subsequent recognition and measurement, the 
maximum amount which is more likely than not to be recognized at each reporting date will represent the Company's best 
estimate, given the information available at the reporting date, although the outcome of the tax position is not absolute or final. 
We recognize both accrued interest and penalties related to liabilities for income taxes within the "Provision for (recovery of) 
income taxes" line of our Consolidated Statements of Income (see Note 15 “Income Taxes” for more details).

Equity investments

We invest in investment funds in which we are a limited partner. Our interests in each of these investees range from 4% to 

below 20%. These investments are accounted for using the equity method. Our share of net income or losses based on our 
interest in these investments, which approximates fair value, is recorded as a component of "Other income (expense), net" in 
our Consolidated Statements of Income (see Note 23 “Other Income (Expense), Net” for more details).

Fair value of financial instruments

Carrying amounts of certain financial instruments, including cash and cash equivalents, accounts receivable and accounts 
payable (trade and accrued liabilities) approximate the fair value due to the relatively short period of time between origination 
of the instruments and their expected realization. 

143

The fair value of our Senior Notes is determined based on observable market prices and categorized as a Level 2 
measurement. The carrying value of our other long-term debt facilities approximates the fair value since the interest rate is at 
market. 

We apply the provisions of ASC Topic 820, “Fair Value Measurement” (Topic 820), to our derivative financial 
instruments that we are required to carry at fair value pursuant to other accounting standards (see Note 16 “Fair Value 
Measurement” for more details).

Foreign currency

Our Consolidated Financial Statements are presented in U.S. dollars. In general, the functional currency of our 

subsidiaries is the local currency. For each subsidiary, assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated into 
U.S dollars at the exchange rates in effect at the balance sheet dates and revenues and expenses are translated at the average 
exchange rates prevailing during the previous month of the transaction. The effect of foreign currency translation adjustments 
are recorded as a component of “Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss).” Transactional foreign currency gains 
(losses) included in the Consolidated Statements of Income under the line item “Other income (expense), net” for Fiscal 2022, 
Fiscal 2021 and Fiscal 2020 were $(2.67) million, $(1.3) million, and $(4.2) million, respectively.

Restructuring charges

We record restructuring charges relating to contractual lease obligations, not accounted for under Topic 842, and other 

exit costs in accordance with ASC Topic 420, “Exit or Disposal Cost Obligations” (Topic 420). Topic 420 requires that a 
liability for a cost associated with an exit or disposal activity be recognized and measured initially at its fair value in the period 
in which the liability is incurred. In order to incur a liability pursuant to Topic 420, our management must have established and 
approved a plan of restructuring in sufficient detail. A liability for a cost associated with involuntary termination benefits is 
recorded when benefits have been communicated and a liability for a cost to terminate an operating lease or other contract is 
incurred, when the contract has been terminated in accordance with the contract terms or we have ceased using the right 
conveyed by the contract, such as vacating a leased facility not accounted for under Topic 842. 

The recognition of restructuring charges requires us to make certain judgments regarding the nature, timing and amount 
associated with the planned restructuring activities, including estimating sub-lease income and the net recoverable amount of 
equipment to be disposed of. At the end of each reporting period, we evaluate the appropriateness of the remaining accrued 
balances (see Note 18 “Special Charges (Recoveries)” for more details).

Loss Contingencies

We are currently involved in various claims and legal proceedings. Quarterly, we review the status of each significant 

legal matter and evaluate such matters to determine how they should be treated for accounting and disclosure purposes in 
accordance with the requirements of ASC Topic 450-20, "Loss Contingencies" (Topic 450-20). Specifically, this evaluation 
process includes the centralized tracking and itemization of the status of all our disputes and litigation items, discussing the 
nature of any litigation and claim, including any dispute or claim that is reasonably likely to result in litigation, with relevant 
internal and external counsel, and assessing the progress of each matter in light of its merits and our experience with similar 
proceedings under similar circumstances. 

If the potential loss from any claim or legal proceeding is considered probable and the amount can be reasonably 

estimated, we accrue a liability for the estimated loss in accordance with Topic 450-20. As of the date of this Annual Report on 
Form 10-K, the aggregate of such accrued liabilities was not material to our consolidated financial position or results of 
operations and we do not believe as of the date of this filing that it is reasonably possible that a loss exceeding the amounts 
already recognized will be incurred that would be material to our consolidated financial position or results of operations. As 
described more fully below, we are unable at this time to estimate a possible loss or range of losses in respect of certain 
disclosed matters (see Note 14 “Guarantees and Contingencies” for more details).

Net income per share

Basic net income per share is computed using the weighted average number of Common Shares outstanding including 

contingently issuable shares where the contingency has been resolved. Diluted net income per share is computed using the 
weighted average number of Common Shares and stock equivalents outstanding using the treasury stock method during the 
year. For periods in which we incur a net loss, our outstanding Common Share equivalents are not included in the calculation of 
diluted earnings (loss) per share as their effect is antidilutive. Accordingly, basic and diluted net loss per share for those periods 
are identical. See Note 24 “Earnings Per Share” for more details.

144

Share-based payment

We measure share-based compensation costs, in accordance with ASC Topic 718, “Compensation - Stock 

Compensation” (Topic 718) on the grant date, based on the calculated fair value of the award. We have elected to treat awards 
with graded vesting as a single award when estimating fair value. Compensation cost is recognized on a straight-line basis over 
the employee requisite service period, which in our circumstances is the stated vesting period of the award, provided that total 
compensation cost recognized at least equals the pro-rata value of the award that has vested. Compensation cost is initially 
based on the estimated number of options for which the requisite service is expected to be rendered. This estimate is adjusted in 
the period once actual forfeitures are known (see Note 13 “Share Capital, Option Plans and Share-based Payments” for more 
details).

Accounting for Pensions, post-retirement and post-employment benefits

Pension expense is accounted for in accordance with ASC Topic 715, “Compensation-Retirement Benefits” (Topic 715). 

Pension expense consists of actuarially computed costs of pension benefits in respect of the current year of service, imputed 
returns on plan assets (for funded plans) and imputed interest on pension obligations. The expected costs of post-retirement 
benefits, other than pensions, are accrued in the Consolidated Financial Statements based upon actuarial methods and 
assumptions. 

The over-funded or under-funded status of defined benefit pension and other post-retirement plans are recognized as an 

asset or a liability (with the offset to “Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)”, net of tax, within “Shareholders' 
equity”), respectively, on the Consolidated Balance Sheets. Actuarial gains or losses in excess of 10% of the projected benefit 
obligation are recognized as a component of "Other Comprehensive Income (Loss), net" and subsequently amortized as a 
component of net periodic benefit costs over the average remaining service period of the plan’s active employees. See Note 12 
“Pension Plans and Other Post Retirement Benefits” for more details.

Accounting Pronouncements Adopted in Fiscal 2022

During Fiscal 2022, we have adopted the following Accounting Standards Update (ASU) that did not have a material 

impact to our reported financial position, results of operations or cash flows:

•

ASU 2019-12 “Income Taxes (Topic 740): Simplifying the Accounting for Income Taxes”

Business Combinations

In October 2021, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued ASU 2021-08 “Business Combinations (Topic 

805): Accounting for Contract Assets and Contract Liabilities from Contracts with Customers.” This standard requires contract 
assets and contract liabilities acquired in a business combination to be recognized and measured as if the acquirer had originated 
the original contract in accordance with Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) Topic 606. Previously, contract assets and 
contract liabilities were measured at fair value.

The standard is effective for us in our fiscal year ending June 30, 2024, with early adoption permitted. We elected to early 

adopt the ASU during our second quarter of Fiscal 2022. Early adoption required retrospective adoption to business 
combinations completed on or after July 1, 2021 and prospective adoption to business combinations occurring on or after the 
date of adoption. There was no retrospective impact of early adoption as we did not have acquisitions during our first quarter of 
Fiscal 2022. Acquisitions disclosed in Note 19 “Acquisitions” are in accordance with ASU 2021-08. The adoption did not have 
a material impact to our reported financial position, results of operations or cash flows.

145

NOTE 3—REVENUES

Disaggregation of Revenue

We have four revenue streams: cloud services and subscriptions, customer support, license, and professional service and 

other. The following tables disaggregate our revenue by significant geographic area, based on the location of our direct end 
customer, by type of performance obligation and timing of revenue recognition for the periods indicated:

Total Revenues by Geography:

Americas (1)
EMEA (2)
Asia Pacific (3)

Total revenues

Total Revenues by Type of Performance Obligation:
Recurring revenues (4)

Cloud services and subscriptions revenue
Customer support revenue

Total recurring revenues

License revenue (perpetual, term and subscriptions)
Professional service and other revenue

Total revenues

Total Revenues by Timing of Revenue Recognition:

Point in time
Over time (including professional service and other revenue)

Total revenues

___________________________

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 

2,187,629  $ 

2,069,083  $ 

1,903,650 

1,026,201 

1,031,607 

280,014 
3,493,844  $ 

285,425 
3,386,115  $ 

942,281 

263,805 
3,109,736 

1,535,017  $ 
1,330,965 
2,865,982  $ 
358,351 
269,511 
3,493,844  $ 

1,407,445  $ 
1,334,062 
2,741,507  $ 
384,711 
259,897 
3,386,115  $ 

1,157,686 
1,275,586 
2,433,272 
402,851 
273,613 
3,109,736 

358,351  $ 
3,135,493  $ 
3,493,844  $ 

384,711  $ 
3,001,404  $ 
3,386,115  $ 

402,851 
2,706,885 
3,109,736 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 
$ 
$ 

(1) Americas consists of countries in North, Central and South America.
(2) EMEA primarily consists of countries in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
(3) Asia Pacific primarily consists of Japan, Australia, China, Korea, Philippines, Singapore, India and New Zealand.
(4) Recurring revenue is defined as the sum of Cloud services and subscriptions revenue and Customer support revenue.

Contract Balances

A contract asset, net of allowance for credit losses, will be recorded if we have recognized revenue but do not have an 
unconditional right to the related consideration from the customer. For example, this will be the case if implementation services 
offered in a cloud arrangement are identified as a separate performance obligation and are provided to a customer prior to us 
being able to bill the customer. In addition, a contract asset may arise in relation to subscription licenses if the license revenue 
that is recognized upfront exceeds the amount that we are able to invoice the customer at that time. Contract assets are 
reclassified to accounts receivable when the rights become unconditional.

The balance for our contract assets and contract liabilities (i.e., deferred revenues) for the periods indicated below were as 

follows:

Short-term contract assets 
Long-term contract assets 
Short-term deferred revenues
Long-term deferred revenues

As of June 30, 2022

As of June 30, 2021

$ 
$ 
$ 
$ 

26,167  $ 
19,719  $ 
902,202  $ 
91,144  $ 

25,344 
19,222 
852,629 
98,989 

146

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The difference in the opening and closing balances of our contract assets and deferred revenues primarily results from the 

timing difference between our performance and the customer’s payments. We fulfill our obligations under a contract with a 
customer by transferring products and services in exchange for consideration from the customer. During the year ended June 
30, 2022, we reclassified $37.1 million (year ended June 30, 2021 - $39.2 million) of contract assets to receivables as a result of 
the right to the transaction consideration becoming unconditional. During the year ended June 30, 2022, 2021 and 2020 
respectively, there was no significant impairment loss recognized related to contract assets.

We recognize deferred revenue when we have received consideration, or an amount of consideration is due from the 

customer for future obligations to transfer products or services. Our deferred revenues primarily relate to cloud services and 
customer support agreements which have been paid for by customers prior to the performance of those services. The amount of 
revenue that was recognized during the year ended June 30, 2022 that was included in the deferred revenue balances at June 30, 
2021 was $843 million (year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020 —$811 million and $631 million, respectively).

Incremental Costs of Obtaining a Contract with a Customer

Incremental costs of obtaining a contract include only those costs that we incur to obtain a contract that we would not 
have incurred if the contract had not been obtained, such as sales commissions. The following table summarizes the changes in 
total capitalized costs to obtain a contract, since June 30, 2019:

Capitalized costs to obtain a contract as of June 30, 2019
New capitalized costs incurred
Amortization of capitalized costs
Adjustments on account of foreign exchange
Capitalized costs to obtain a contract as of June 30, 2020
New capitalized costs incurred
Amortization of capitalized costs
Adjustments on account of foreign exchange
Capitalized costs to obtain a contract as of June 30, 2021
New capitalized costs incurred
Amortization of capitalized costs
Impact of foreign exchange rate changes
Capitalized costs to obtain a contract as of June 30, 2022

$ 

$ 

48,284 
29,427 
(16,919) 
371 
61,163 
32,202 
(21,960) 
1,495 
72,900 
39,852 
(26,255) 
(3,935) 
82,562 

During the year ended June 30, 2022, 2021 and 2020 respectively, there was no significant impairment loss recognized 

related to capitalized costs to obtain a contract. Refer to Note 9 “Prepaid Expenses and Other Assets” for additional information 
on incremental costs of obtaining a contract.

Transaction Price Allocated to the Remaining Performance Obligations

As of June 30, 2022, approximately $1.5 billion of revenue is expected to be recognized from remaining performance 

obligations on existing contracts. We expect to recognize approximately 45% of this amount over the next 12 months and the 
remaining balance substantially over the next three years thereafter. We apply the practical expedient and do not disclose 
performance obligations that have original expected durations of one year or less. 

Refer to Note 2 “Accounting Policies and Recent Accounting Pronouncements” for additional information on our revenue 

policy.

147

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NOTE 4—ALLOWANCE FOR CREDIT LOSSES

The following illustrates the activity in our allowance for credit losses on accounts receivable:

Balance as of June 30, 2019
Bad debt expense
Write-off /adjustments
Balance as of June 30, 2020
Adoption of ASC Topic 326 - cumulative effect
Credit loss expense
Write-off /adjustments
Balance as of June 30, 2021
Credit loss expense (recovery)
Write-off / adjustments
Balance as of June 30, 2022

$ 

$ 

$ 
$ 

$ 

17,011 
11,461 
(7,566) 
20,906 
3,025 
7,132 
(8,912) 
22,151 
(1,913) 
(3,765) 
16,473 

Included in accounts receivable are unbilled receivables in the amount of $47.9 million as of June 30, 2022 (June 30, 2021

—$51.4 million).

As of June 30, 2022, we have an allowance for credit losses of $0.7 million for contract assets (June 30, 2021—$0.4 

million). For additional information on contract assets please see Note 3 “Revenues.”

NOTE 5—PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT

Furniture, equipment and other
Computer hardware
Computer software
Capitalized software development costs
Leasehold improvements
Land and buildings
Total

Furniture, equipment and other
Computer hardware
Computer software
Capitalized software development costs
Leasehold improvements
Land and buildings
Total

NOTE 6—LEASES

As of June 30, 2022

Accumulated
Depreciation

Cost

52,381  $ 
332,462 
142,094 
149,053 
107,739 
49,011 
832,740  $ 

(39,643)  $ 
(226,341)   
(117,026)   
(101,874)   
(86,514)   
(16,633)   
(588,031)  $ 

As of June 30, 2021

Accumulated
Depreciation

Cost

41,074  $ 
313,946 
129,690 
127,697 
106,656 
48,537 
767,600  $ 

(33,744)  $ 
(212,448)   
(104,654)   
(86,466)   
(81,135)   
(15,558)   
(534,005)  $ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

Net

12,738 
106,121 
25,068 
47,179 
21,225 
32,378 
244,709 

Net

7,330 
101,498 
25,036 
41,231 
25,521 
32,979 
233,595 

We enter into operating leases, both domestically and internationally, for certain facilities, automobiles, data centers and 
equipment for use in the ordinary course of business. The duration of the majority of these leases generally ranges from 1 to 10 
years, some of which include options to extend for an additional 3 to 5 years after the initial term. Additionally, the land upon 
which our headquarters in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada is located is leased from the University of Waterloo for a period of 49 
years beginning in December 2005, with an option to renew for an additional term of 49 years. Leases with an initial term of 12 
months or less are not recorded on our Consolidated Balance Sheets and we do not have any material finance leases. 

148

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Lease Costs and Other Information

The following illustrates the various components of operating lease costs for the period indicated: 

Operating lease cost

Short-term lease cost

Variable lease cost

Sublease income
Total lease cost

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

62,401  $ 

63,068  $ 

687 

2,694 

(10,008)   
55,774  $ 

881 

2,754 

(6,469)   
60,234  $ 

68,705 

1,178 

3,536 

(6,035) 
67,384 

$ 

$ 

The weighted average remaining lease term and discount rate for the periods indicated below were as follows:

Weighted-average remaining lease term
Weighted-average discount rate

Supplemental Cash Flow Information

As of June 30, 2022
6.13 years
 2.95 %

As of June 30, 2021
6.47 years
 2.82 %

The following table presents supplemental information relating to cash flows arising from lease transactions. Cash 
payments made for variable lease costs and short-term leases are not included in the measurement of operating lease liabilities, 
and, as such, are excluded from the amounts below:

Cash paid for amounts included in the measurement of 

operating lease liabilities

Right of use assets obtained in exchange for new operating lease 

liabilities (1) (2) (3)

$ 

$ 

___________________________

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

70,611  $ 

72,871  $ 

71,900 

39,155  $ 

82,718  $ 

32,328 

(1) The year ended June 30, 2022 excludes the impact of $8.1 million of right of use (ROU) assets obtained through the acquisition of 
Zix Corporation. See Note 19 “Acquisitions” for further details including expected finalization of preliminary purchase price 
allocation.

(2) The year ended June 30, 2021 excludes the release of $22.6 million of lease liabilities relating to office space that was abandoned 
during the fourth quarter of Fiscal 2020 and has since been early terminated or assigned to a third party. These recoveries were 
recorded in “Special charges (recoveries)” in the Consolidated Statements of Income. Please see Note 18 “Special Charges 
(Recoveries).”

(3) The year ended June 30, 2020 excludes the impact of $60.1 million and $2.9 million of ROU assets acquired through the 

acquisitions of Carbonite and XMedius, respectively.

149

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Maturity of Lease Liabilities 

The following table presents the future minimum lease payments under our operating leases liabilities as of June 30, 2022:

Fiscal years ending June 30,
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
Thereafter
Total lease payments
Less: Imputed interest
Total
Reported as:

Current operating lease liabilities
Non-current operating lease liabilities
Total

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

62,833 
51,779 
42,433 
29,674 
27,181 
64,279 
278,179 
(23,104) 
255,075 

56,380 
198,695 
255,075 

Operating lease maturity amounts included in the table above do not include sublease income expected to be received 
under our various sublease agreements with third parties. Under the agreements initiated with third parties, we expect to receive 
sublease income of $12.1 million in Fiscal 2023 and $47.2 million thereafter.

NOTE 7—GOODWILL

Goodwill is recorded when the consideration paid for an acquisition of a business exceeds the fair value of identifiable net 

tangible and intangible assets. The following table summarizes the changes in goodwill:

Balance as of June 30, 2020

$ 

4,672,356 

Adjustments relating to acquisitions prior to Fiscal 2021 that had open measurement periods (Note 19)

Impact of foreign exchange rate changes

Balance as of June 30, 2021

Acquisition of Zix Corporation (Note 19)

Acquisition of Bricata Inc. (Note 19)

Impact of foreign exchange rate changes

Balance as of June 30, 2022

NOTE 8—ACQUIRED INTANGIBLE ASSETS

Technology assets

Customer assets

Total

Technology assets

Customer assets

Total

(2,002) 

21,319 

4,691,673 

581,032 

9,643 

(37,695) 

$ 

5,244,653 

Cost

As of June 30, 2022

Accumulated 
Amortization

999,032  $ 

1,595,219 

(738,710)  $ 

(780,333)   

Net

260,322 

814,886 

2,594,251  $ 

(1,519,043)  $ 

1,075,208 

Cost

As of June 30, 2021

Accumulated 
Amortization

1,003,730  $ 

1,386,533 

(635,965)  $ 

(567,038)   

Net

367,765 

819,495 

2,390,263  $ 

(1,203,003)  $ 

1,187,260 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

150

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Where applicable, the above balances as of June 30, 2022 have been reduced to reflect the impact of intangible assets 
where the gross cost has become fully amortized during the year ended June 30, 2022. The impact of this resulted in a reduction 
of $91 million to technology assets cost and accumulated amortization.

The weighted average amortization periods for acquired technology and customer intangible assets are approximately six 

years and eight years, respectively.

The following table shows the estimated future amortization expense for the fiscal years indicated. This calculation 

assumes no future adjustments to acquired intangible assets:

Fiscal years ending June 30,
2023
2024
2025
2026

2027
2028 and Thereafter
Total

NOTE 9—PREPAID EXPENSES AND OTHER ASSETS

Prepaid expenses and other current assets:

Deposits and restricted cash
Capitalized costs to obtain a contract
Short-term prepaid expenses and other current assets
Total

Other assets:

Deposits and restricted cash
Capitalized costs to obtain a contract
Investments
Long-term prepaid expenses and other long-term assets
Total

$ 

$ 

347,172 
267,276 
156,410 
113,164 
43,271 
147,915 
1,075,208 

As of June 30, 2022

As of June 30, 2021

6,300  $ 
27,077 
87,175 
120,552  $ 

3,027 
22,601 
72,923 
98,551 

As of June 30, 2022

As of June 30, 2021

6,462  $ 
55,484 
173,205 
21,836 
256,987  $ 

11,577 
50,299 
121,777 
25,241 
208,894 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

Deposits and restricted cash primarily relate to security deposits provided to landlords in accordance with facility lease 

agreements and cash restricted per the terms of certain contractual-based agreements.

Capitalized costs to obtain a contract relate to incremental costs of obtaining a contract, such as sales commissions, which 

are eligible for capitalization on contracts to the extent that such costs are expected to be recovered (see Note 3 “Revenues”). 

Investments relate to certain investment funds in which we are a limited partner. Our interests in each of these investees 

range from 4% to below 20%. These investments are accounted for using the equity method. Our share of net income or losses 
based on our interest in these investments, which approximates fair value and subject to volatility based on market trends and 
business conditions, is recorded as a component of Other income (expense), net in our Consolidated Statements of Income (see 
Note 23 “Other Income (Expense), Net”).

 During the year ended June 30, 2022, our share of income (loss) from these investments was $58.7 million (year ended 

June 30, 2021 and 2020 — $62.9 million and $8.7 million, respectively).

Prepaid expenses and other assets, both short-term and long-term, include advance payments on licenses that are being 

amortized over the applicable terms of the licenses and other miscellaneous assets.

151

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NOTE 10—ACCOUNTS PAYABLE AND ACCRUED LIABILITIES

Accounts payable and accrued liabilities:

Accounts payable—trade

Accrued salaries, incentives and commissions

Accrued liabilities

Accrued sales and other tax liabilities

Accrued interest on Senior Notes

Amounts payable in respect of restructuring and other special charges

Asset retirement obligations

Total

Long-term accrued liabilities: 

Amounts payable in respect of restructuring and other special charges

Other accrued liabilities
Asset retirement obligations
Total

Asset retirement obligations

As of June 30, 2022

As of June 30, 2021

113,978  $ 

193,421 

81,564 

20,423 

31,813 

3,589 

3,819 

57,500 

214,884 

82,204 

31,583 

31,161 

4,396 

1,864 

448,607  $ 

423,592 

As of June 30, 2022

As of June 30, 2021

5,702  $ 
563 
11,943 
18,208  $ 

4,359 
10,681 
13,790 
28,830 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

We are required to return certain of our leased facilities to their original state at the conclusion of our lease. As of June 30, 

2022, the present value of this obligation was $15.8 million (June 30, 2021—$15.7 million), with an undiscounted value of 
$16.4 million (June 30, 2021—$16.4 million).

NOTE 11—LONG-TERM DEBT

Total debt

Senior Notes 2031
Senior Notes 2030
Senior Notes 2029
Senior Notes 2028
Senior Notes 2026
Term Loan B

Total principal payments due

Premium on Senior Notes 2026 (1)
Debt issuance costs (1)
Total amount outstanding
Less:
Current portion of long-term debt

Term Loan B

Total current portion of long-term debt

Non-current portion of long-term debt

___________________________

As of June 30, 2022

As of June 30, 2021

$ 

650,000  $ 
900,000 
850,000 
900,000 
— 
957,500 
4,257,500 

— 

(37,933)   

4,219,567 

— 
900,000 
— 
900,000 
850,000 
967,500 
3,617,500 

4,070 
(32,711) 
3,588,859 

10,000 
10,000 

10,000 
10,000 

$ 

4,209,567  $ 

3,578,859 

(1) During the year ended June 30, 2022, we recorded $17.2 million of debt issuance costs relating to the issuance of 

Senior Notes 2031 and Senior Notes 2029 (both defined below). Additionally, upon redemption of Senior Notes 2026 

152

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(defined below), $6.2 million of unamortized debt issuance costs and ($3.8) million of the unamortized premium were 
included in the loss on debt extinguishment. See Note 23 “Other Income (Expense), Net.”

Senior Unsecured Fixed Rate Notes 

Senior Notes 2031

On November 24, 2021, OpenText Holdings, Inc. a wholly-owned indirect subsidiary of the Company, issued 

$650 million in aggregate principal amount of 4.125% Senior Notes due 2031 guaranteed by the Company (Senior Notes 2031) 
in an unregistered offering to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act, and to certain non-
U.S. persons in offshore transactions pursuant to Regulation S under the Securities Act. Senior Notes 2031 bear interest at a rate 
of 4.125% per annum, payable semi-annually in arrears on June 1 and December 1, commencing on June 1, 2022. Senior Notes 
2031 will mature on December 1, 2031, unless earlier redeemed, in accordance with their terms, or repurchased.

For the year ended June 30, 2022, we recorded interest expense of $16.1 million relating to Senior Notes 2031.

Senior Notes 2030

On February 18, 2020, OpenText Holdings, Inc. a wholly-owned indirect subsidiary of the Company, issued $900 million 

in aggregate principal amount of 4.125% Senior Notes due 2030 guaranteed by the Company (Senior Notes 2030) in an 
unregistered offering to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act and to certain non-U.S. 
persons in offshore transactions pursuant to Regulation S under the Securities Act. Senior Notes 2030 bear interest at a rate of 
4.125% per annum, payable semi-annually in arrears on February 15 and August 15, commencing on August 15, 2020. Senior 
Notes 2030 will mature on February 15, 2030, unless earlier redeemed, in accordance with their terms, or repurchased.

For the year ended June 30, 2022, we recorded interest expense of $37.1 million relating to Senior Notes 2030 (year ended 

June 30, 2021 and 2020—$37.0 million and $13.7 million, respectively).

Senior Notes 2029

On November 24, 2021, we issued $850 million in aggregate principal amount of 3.875% Senior Notes due 2029 (Senior 
Notes 2029) in an unregistered offering to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act and to 
certain non-U.S. persons in offshore transactions pursuant to Regulation S under the Securities Act. Senior Notes 2029 bear 
interest at a rate of 3.875% per annum, payable semi-annually in arrears on June 1 and December 1, commencing on June 1, 
2022. Senior Notes 2029 will mature on December 1, 2029, unless earlier redeemed, in accordance with their terms, or 
repurchased.

For the year ended June 30, 2022, we recorded interest expense of $19.8 million relating to Senior Notes 2029.

Senior Notes 2028

On February 18, 2020, we issued $900 million in aggregate principal amount of 3.875% Senior Notes due 2028 (Senior 
Notes 2028) in an unregistered offering to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act and to 
certain non-U.S. persons in offshore transactions pursuant to Regulation S under the Securities Act. Senior Notes 2028 bear 
interest at a rate of 3.875% per annum, payable semi-annually in arrears on February 15 and August 15, commencing on August 
15, 2020. Senior Notes 2028 will mature on February 15, 2028, unless earlier redeemed, in accordance with their terms, or 
repurchased.

For the year ended June 30, 2022, we recorded interest expense of $34.9 million relating to Senior Notes 2028 (year ended 

June 30, 2021 and 2020—$34.8 million and $12.9 million, respectively).

Senior Notes 2026

On May 31, 2016, we issued $600 million in aggregate principal amount of 5.875% Senior Notes due 2026 (Senior Notes 
2026) in an unregistered offering to qualified institutional buyers pursuant to Rule 144A under the Securities Act, and to certain 
non-U.S. persons in offshore transactions pursuant to Regulation S under the Securities Act. Senior Notes 2026 had interest at a 
rate of 5.875% per annum, payable semi-annually in arrears on June 1 and December 1, commencing on December 1, 2016. 
Senior Notes 2026 would have matured on June 1, 2026.

On December 20, 2016, we issued an additional $250 million in aggregate principal amount by reopening our Senior 
Notes 2026 at an issue price of 102.75%. The additional notes have identical terms, are fungible with and are a part of a single 
series with the previously issued $600 million aggregate principal amount of Senior Notes 2026. The outstanding aggregate 
principal amount of Senior Notes 2026, after taking into consideration the additional issuance, was $850 million as of 
December 9, 2021.

153

 
On December 9, 2021, we redeemed Senior Notes 2026 in full at a price equal to 102.9375% of the principal amount plus 

accrued and unpaid interest to, but excluding, the redemption date. A portion of the net proceeds from the offerings of Senior 
Notes 2029 and Senior Notes 2031 was used to redeem Senior Notes 2026. Upon redemption, Senior Notes 2026 were 
cancelled and any obligation thereunder was extinguished. The resulting loss of $27.4 million, consisting of $25.0 million 
relating to the early termination call premium, $6.2 million relating to unamortized debt issuance costs and ($3.8) million 
relating to unamortized premium, has been recorded as a component of Other income (expense), net in our Consolidated 
Statements of Income. See Note 23 “Other Income (Expense), Net.”

For the year ended June 30, 2022, we recorded interest expense of $21.9 million relating to Senior Notes 2026 (year ended 

June 30, 2021 and 2020—$49.9 million, respectively).

Term Loan B

On May 30, 2018, we refinanced our existing term loan facility, by entering into a new $1 billion term loan facility (Term 
Loan B), whereby we borrowed $1 billion on that day and repaid in full the loans under our prior $800 million term loan facility 
originally entered into on January 16, 2014. Borrowings under Term Loan B are secured by a first charge over substantially all 
of our assets on a pari passu basis with the Revolver (defined below).

Term Loan B has a seven-year term, maturing in May 2025, and repayments made under Term Loan B are equal to 0.25% 

of the principal amount in equal quarterly installments for the life of Term Loan B, with the remainder due at maturity. 
Borrowings under Term Loan B currently bear a floating rate of interest equal to 1.75% plus LIBOR. As of June 30, 2022, the 
outstanding balance on the Term Loan B bears an interest rate of 2.81%. For more information regarding the impact and 
discontinuance of LIBOR, see “Stress in the global financial system may adversely affect our finances and operations in ways 
that may be hard to predict or to defend against” included within Part I, Item 1A, “Risk Factors” in our Annual Report on Form 
10-K for Fiscal 2022.

Under Term Loan B, we must maintain a “consolidated net leverage” ratio of no more than 4:1 at the end of each financial 

quarter. Consolidated net leverage ratio is defined for this purpose as the proportion of our total debt reduced by unrestricted 
cash, including guarantees and letters of credit, over our trailing twelve months net income before interest, taxes, depreciation, 
amortization, restructuring, share-based compensation and other miscellaneous charges. As of June 30, 2022, our consolidated 
net leverage ratio was 2.0:1.

For the year ended June 30, 2022, we recorded interest expense of $19.7 million relating to Term Loan B (year ended 

June 30, 2021 and 2020—$18.6 million and $33.3 million, respectively).

Revolver

On October 31, 2019, we amended our committed revolving credit facility (the Revolver) to increase the total 
commitments under the Revolver from $450 million to $750 million as well as to extend the maturity from May 5, 2022 to 
October 31, 2024. Borrowings under the Revolver are secured by a first charge over substantially all of our assets, on a pari 
passu basis with Term Loan B. The Revolver has no fixed repayment date prior to the end of the term. Borrowings under the 
Revolver bear interest per annum at a floating rate of LIBOR plus a fixed margin dependent on our consolidated net leverage 
ratio ranging from 1.25% to 1.75%. For more information regarding the impact and discontinuance of LIBOR, see “Stress in 
the global financial system may adversely affect our finances and operations in ways that may be hard to predict or to defend 
against” included within Part I, Item 1A, “Risk Factors” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for Fiscal 2022.

As of June 30, 2022, we had no outstanding balance under the Revolver (June 30, 2021—nil). For the year ended June 30, 

2022 we did not record any interest expense relating to the Revolver (year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020—$3.6 million and 
$7.7 million, respectively, relating to amounts previously drawn).

Debt Issuance Costs and Premium on Senior Notes

Debt issuance costs relate primarily to costs incurred for the purpose of obtaining our credit facilities and issuing our 
Senior Notes 2026, Senior Notes 2028, Senior Notes 2029, Senior Notes 2030 and Senior Notes 2031 (collectively referred to 
as the Senior Notes) and are being amortized through interest expense over the respective terms of the Senior Notes and Term 
Loan B and the Revolver using the effective interest method.

The premium on Senior Notes 2026 represented the excess of the proceeds received over the face value of Senior Notes 
2026. This premium was amortized as a reduction to interest expense over the term of Senior Notes 2026 using the effective 
interest method. The unamortized debt issuance costs and unamortized premium on Senior Notes 2026 were included in the loss 
on debt extinguishment recognized during our second quarter of Fiscal 2022. See Note 23 “Other Income (Expense), Net.”

154

NOTE 12—PENSION PLANS AND OTHER POST RETIREMENT BENEFITS

The following table provides details of our defined benefit pension plans and long-term employee benefit obligations for 

Open Text Document Technologies GmbH (CDT), GXS GmbH (GXS GER), GXS Philippines, Inc. (GXS PHP) and other 
plans as of June 30, 2022 and 2021:

CDT defined benefit plan
GXS GER defined benefit plan
GXS PHP defined benefit plan
Other plans
Total 

CDT defined benefit plan
GXS GER defined benefit plan
GXS PHP defined benefit plan
Other plans
Total

____________________________

Total benefit
obligation

As of June 30, 2022

Current portion of
benefit obligation(1)

Non-current portion of
benefit obligation

24,562  $ 
15,927 
9,802 
13,189 
63,480  $ 

907  $ 
915 
85 
622 
2,529  $ 

23,655 
15,012 
9,717 
12,567 
60,951 

Total benefit
obligation

As of June 30, 2021

Current portion of
benefit obligation(1)

Non-current portion of
benefit obligation

32,865  $ 
23,861 
10,973 
9,594 
77,293  $ 

880  $ 

1,058 
42 
802 
2,782  $ 

31,985 
22,803 
10,931 
8,792 
74,511 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

(1)

 The current portion of the benefit obligation has been included within “Accrued salaries, incentives and commissions”, all within 
“Accounts payable and accrued liabilities” in the Consolidated Balance Sheets (see Note 10 “Accounts Payable and Accrued 
Liabilities”).

Defined Benefit Plans

CDT Plan

CDT sponsors an unfunded defined benefit pension plan covering substantially all CDT employees (CDT plan) which 

provides for old age, disability and survivors’ benefits. Benefits under the CDT plan are generally based on age at retirement, 
years of service and the employee’s annual earnings. The net periodic cost of this pension plan is determined using the 
projected unit credit method and several actuarial assumptions, the most significant of which are the discount rate and estimated 
service costs. No contributions have been made since the inception of the plan. 

GXS GER Plan

As part of our acquisition of GXS Group, Inc. (GXS) in Fiscal 2014, we assumed an unfunded defined benefit pension 
plan covering certain German employees which provides for old age, disability and survivors' benefits. The GXS GER plan has 
been closed to new participants since 2006. Benefits under the GXS GER plan are generally based on a participant’s 
remuneration, date of hire, years of eligible service and age at retirement. The net periodic cost of this pension plan is 
determined using the projected unit credit method and several actuarial assumptions, the most significant of which are the 
discount rate and estimated service costs. No contributions have been made since the inception of the plan.

GXS PHP Plan

As part of our acquisition of GXS in Fiscal 2014, we assumed a primarily unfunded defined benefit pension plan covering 

substantially all of the GXS Philippines employees which provides for retirement, disability and survivors' benefits. Benefits 
under the GXS PHP plan are generally based on a participant’s remuneration, years of eligible service and age at retirement. 
The net periodic cost of this pension plan is determined using the projected unit credit method and several actuarial 
assumptions, the most significant of which are the discount rate and estimated service costs. Aside from an initial contribution 
which has a fair value of $0.03 million as of June 30, 2022, no additional contributions have been made since the inception of 
the plan. 

155

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Pension 
expense:
Service cost
Interest cost
Amortization 
of actuarial 
(gains) losses  
Net pension 
expense

The following are the details of the change in the benefit obligation for each of the above-mentioned pension plans for the 

periods indicated: 

As of June 30, 2022

As of June 30, 2021

CDT

GXS GER GXS PHP

Total

CDT

GXS GER GXS PHP

Total

Benefit obligation—beginning of 

fiscal year
Service cost
Interest cost
Benefits paid
Actuarial (gain) loss
Foreign exchange (gain) loss

$ 32,865  $ 23,861  $ 10,973  $ 67,699  $ 32,851  $ 24,105  $ 10,270  $ 67,226 
2,501 
1,338 
(1,846) 
(4,947) 
3,427 

2,391 
  1,869 
1,347 
616 
(2,052)   
(253)   
(4,718)    (2,026)    (11,241)   
(7,853)   
(2,716)    (1,377)   

473 
505 
(800)   
(1,976)   
1,812 

1,822 
469 
(19)   
(1,853)   
284 

206 
364 
(1,027)   
(1,118)   
1,331 

357 
427 
(830)   
(4,497)   
(3,760)   

165 
304 
(969)   

Benefit obligation—end of period

  24,562 

  15,927 

  9,802 

  50,291 

  32,865 

  23,861 

  10,973 

  67,699 

Less: Current portion
Non-current portion of benefit 

obligation

(907)   

(915)   

(85)   

(1,907)   

(880)   

(1,058)   

(42)   

(1,980) 

$ 23,655  $ 15,012  $  9,717  $ 48,384  $ 31,985  $ 22,803  $ 10,931  $ 65,719 

The following are details of net pension expense relating to the following pension plans:

2022

CDT

GXS 
GER

GXS 
PHP

Total

CDT

Year Ended June 30,

2021

GXS 
GER

GXS 
PHP

2020

Total

CDT

GXS 
GER

GXS 
PHP

Total

$  357  $  165  $ 1,869  $ 2,391  $  473  $  206  $ 1,822  $ 2,501  $  572  $  319  $ 1,247  $ 2,138 
  1,164 

  1,338 

  1,347 

  364 

505 

304 

469 

337 

616 

459 

427 

368 

475 

24 

(89)   

410 

705 

  113 

(1)   

817 

939 

244 

(288)   

895 

$ 1,259  $  493  $ 2,396  $ 4,148  $ 1,683  $  683  $ 2,290  $ 4,656  $ 1,970  $  900  $ 1,327  $ 4,197 

Service-related net periodic pension costs are recorded within operating expense and all other non-service related net 
periodic pension costs are classified under “Interest and other related expense, net” on our Consolidated Statements of Income.

In determining the fair value of the pension plan benefit obligations as of June 30, 2022 and 2021, respectively, we used 

the following weighted-average key assumptions:

As of June 30, 2022

As of June 30, 2021

CDT

GXS GER

GXS PHP

CDT

GXS GER

GXS PHP

Assumptions:
Salary increases
Pension increases
Discount rate
Normal retirement age
Employee fluctuation rate:

to age 20
to age 25
to age 30
to age 35
to age 40
to age 45
to age 50
from age 51

6.00%
N/A
6.50%
60

13.98%
7.10%
3.00%
2.44%
2.59%
1.15%
—%
—%

1.50%
1.50%
1.39%
65-67

—%
—%
1.00%
0.50%
—%
0.50%
0.50%
1.00%

1.50%
1.50%
1.39%
65-67

—%
—%
—%
—%
—%
—%
—%
—%

5.00%
N/A
5.00%
60

13.98%
7.10%
3.00%
2.44%
2.59%
1.15%
—%
—%

2.20%
2.20%
3.39%
65-67

—%
—%
1.00%
0.50%
—%
0.50%
0.50%
1.00%

1.50%
1.50%
3.29%
65-67

—%
—%
—%
—%
—%
—%
—%
—%

156

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Anticipated pension payments under the pension plans for the fiscal years indicated below are as follows:

2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028 to 2032

Total

Other Plans

Fiscal years ending June 30,

CDT

GXS GER

GXS PHP

$ 

907  $ 
942 
990 
1,030 
1,078 
6,464 

$ 

11,411  $ 

915  $ 
937 
926 
920 
911 
22,047 

26,656  $ 

85 
122 
170 
179 
544 
2,740 

3,840 

Other plans include defined benefit pension plans that are offered or statutorily required by certain of our foreign 
subsidiaries. Many of these plans were assumed through our acquisitions or are required by local regulatory requirements. 
These other plans are primarily unfunded, with the aggregate projected benefit obligation included in our pension liability. The 
net periodic costs of these plans are determined using the projected unit credit method and several actuarial assumptions, the 
most significant of which are the discount rate and estimated service costs.

NOTE 13—SHARE CAPITAL, OPTION PLANS AND SHARE-BASED PAYMENTS

Cash Dividends

For the year ended June 30, 2022, pursuant to the Company’s dividend policy, we declared total non-cumulative 
dividends of $0.8836 per Common Share in the aggregate amount of $237.7 million, which we paid during the same period 
(year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020—$0.7770 and $0.6984 per Common Share, respectively, in the aggregate amount of 
$210.7 million and $188.7 million, respectively). 

Share Capital

Our authorized share capital includes an unlimited number of Common Shares and an unlimited number of Preference 

Shares. No Preference Shares have been issued.

Treasury Stock

From time to time we may provide funds to an independent agent to facilitate repurchases of our Common Shares in 

connection with the settlement of awards under the Long-Term Incentive Plans (LTIP) or other plans.

During the year ended June 30, 2022, we repurchased 2,630,000 Common Shares on the open market at a cost of $111.6 

million for potential settlement of awards under “Long-Term Incentive Plans” and “Restricted Share Units” or other plans as 
described below (year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020—1,455,088 and 300,000 Common Shares, respectively, at a cost of $64.8 
million and $12.4 million, respectively).

During the year ended June 30, 2022, we delivered to eligible participants 491,244 Common Shares that were purchased 
in the open market in connection with the settlement of awards and other plans (year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020—509,721 
and 480,574 Common Shares, respectively).

Share Repurchase Plan

On November 5, 2020, the Board authorized a share repurchase plan (Fiscal 2021 Repurchase Plan), pursuant to which we 

were authorized to purchase in open market transactions, from time to time over the 12-month period commencing November 
12, 2020, up to an aggregate of $350 million of our Common Shares. 

On November 4, 2021, the Board authorized a share repurchase plan (Fiscal 2022 Repurchase Plan), pursuant to which we 
may purchase in open market transactions, from time to time over the 12-month period commencing November 12, 2021, up to 
an aggregate of $350 million of our Common Shares. 

During the year ended June 30, 2022, we repurchased and cancelled 3,809,559 Common Shares for $177.0 million (year 
ended June 30, 2021—2,500,000 Common Shares for $119.1 million). Share repurchases during the year ended June 30, 2022 
were completed under our share repurchase plans authorized on both November 5, 2020 and November 4, 2021.

157

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Share-Based Payments

Total share-based compensation expense for the periods indicated below is detailed as follows: 

Stock options

Performance Share Units (issued under LTIP)

Restricted Share Units (issued under LTIP)

Restricted Share Units (other)

Deferred Share Units (directors)

Employee Stock Purchase Plan

Total share-based compensation expense

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 

17,091  $ 

15,639  $ 

13,844 

7,799 

20,859 

3,993 

5,970 

9,898 

7,358 

10,561 

3,396 

5,117 

9,779 

5,997 

5,943 

174 

3,345 

4,294 

$ 

69,556  $ 

51,969  $ 

29,532 

No cash was used by us to settle equity instruments granted under share-based compensation arrangements in any of the 

periods presented. We have not capitalized any share-based compensation costs as part of the cost of an asset in any of the 
periods presented.

Stock Option Plans

A summary of stock options outstanding under our 2004 Stock Option Plan is set forth below. All numbers shown in the 

chart below have been adjusted, where applicable, to account for the two-for-one stock splits that occurred on October 22, 
2003, February 18, 2014 and January 24, 2017.

Date of inception
Eligibility
Options granted to date
Options exercised to date
Options cancelled to date
Options outstanding
Termination grace periods
Vesting schedule
Exercise price range
Expiration dates

2004 Stock Option Plan
Oct-04
Eligible employees, as determined by the Board of Directors
40,901,917
(21,747,774)
(10,333,481)
8,820,662
Immediately “for cause”; 90 days for any other reason; 180 days due to death
25% per year, unless otherwise specified
$22.87 - $52.62
7/31/2022 - 5/06/2029

158

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Summary of Outstanding Stock Options

The following table summarizes information regarding stock options outstanding at June 30, 2022:

Range of Exercise Prices

Options Outstanding

Options Exercisable

Number of options 
Outstanding as of 
June 30, 2022

Weighted
Average
Remaining
Contractual
Life (years)

Weighted
Average
Exercise
Price 

Number of options
Exercisable as of
June 30, 2022

Weighted
Average
Exercise
Price 

$ 

$ 

22.87  — $ 
34.49  —  
38.31  —  
39.52  —  
42.96  —  
44.73  —  
45.41  —  
46.89  —  
52.12  —  
22.87  — $ 

34.48 
38.30 
39.51 
42.95 
44.72 
45.40 
46.88 
52.11 
52.62 
52.62 

922,957 
1,008,083 
1,172,130 
695,603 
1,037,000 
307,375 
2,177,724 
579,750 
920,040 
8,820,662 

1.77 $ 
3.42  
3.98  
4.29  
6.61  
4.60  
5.11  
6.08  
6.11  
4.68 $ 

32.04 
36.10 
38.97 
40.64 
44.45 
44.99 
45.81 
50.03 
52.62 
42.74 

874,366  $ 
787,583   
595,272   
286,359   
—   
156,375   
124,809   
68,125   
—   
2,892,889  $ 

31.92 
35.65 
39.06 
40.52 
— 
44.99 
45.81 
48.24 
— 
36.94 

As of June 30, 2022, an aggregate of 8,820,662 options to purchase Common Shares were outstanding and an additional 

9,594,844 options to purchase Common Shares were available for issuance under our stock option plans. Our stock options 
generally vest over four years and expire between seven and ten years from the date of the grant. Currently we also have 
options outstanding that vest over five years, as well as options outstanding that vest based on meeting certain market 
conditions. The exercise price of all our options is set at an amount that is not less than the closing price of our Common Shares 
on the NASDAQ on the trading day immediately preceding the applicable grant date. 

A summary of activity under our stock option plans for the year ended June 30, 2022 is as follows:

Outstanding at June 30, 2021

Granted

Exercised

Forfeited or expired

Outstanding at June 30, 2022

Exercisable at June 30, 2022

Options

Weighted-
Average Exercise
Price

8,113,574  $ 

2,553,060 

(949,645)   

(896,327)   

8,820,662  $ 
2,892,889  $ 

40.16 

48.20 

34.45 

43.75 

42.74 
36.94 

Weighted-
Average
Remaining
Contractual Term
(years)

Aggregate Intrinsic 
Value
($’000's)

4.88 $ 

86,297 

4.68 $ 
3.10 $ 

7,111 
6,902 

We estimate the fair value of stock options using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model or, where appropriate, the 
Monte Carlo pricing model, consistent with the provisions of ASC Topic 718, “Compensation—Stock Compensation” (Topic 
718) and SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 107. The option-pricing models require input of subjective assumptions, including 
the estimated life of the option and the expected volatility of the underlying stock over the estimated life of the option. We use 
historical volatility as a basis for projecting the expected volatility of the underlying stock and estimate the expected life of our 
stock options based upon historical data.

We believe that the valuation techniques and the approach utilized to develop the underlying assumptions are appropriate 
in calculating the fair value of our stock option grants. Estimates of fair value are not intended, however, to predict actual future 
events or the value ultimately realized by employees who receive equity awards.

159

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
For the periods indicated, the weighted-average fair value of options and weighted-average assumptions estimated under 

the Black-Scholes option-pricing model were as follows:

Weighted–average fair value of options granted
Weighted-average assumptions used:

Expected volatility

Risk–free interest rate

Expected dividend yield

Expected life (in years)

Forfeiture rate (based on historical rates)

Average exercise share price

Performance Options

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 

9.02 

$ 

8.45 

$ 

6.88 

 26.39 %

 1.15 %

 1.78 %

4.15

 7 %

 26.26 %

 0.24 %

 1.55 %

4.59

 7 %

 22.63 %

 1.30 %

 1.64 %

4.12

 7 %

$ 

48.20 

$ 

45.76 

$ 

41.81 

During the year ended June 30, 2022, we granted no performance options (during the year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020, 

750,000 and nil performance options, respectively).

For the periods in which performance options were granted, as indicated, the weighted-average fair value of performance 

options and weighted-average assumptions estimated under the Monte Carlo pricing model were as follows:

Weighted–average fair value of options granted
Derived service period (in years)
Weighted-average assumptions used:

Expected volatility
Risk–free interest rate
Expected dividend yield
Average exercise share price

Year Ended June 30,

2021

10.18 
1.80

 28.00 %
 0.42 %
 1.70 %

45.81 

$ 

$ 

Summary of Stock Options and Performance Options

As of June 30, 2022, the total compensation cost related to the unvested stock option awards not yet recognized was $40.1 

million, which will be recognized over a weighted-average period of 2.8 years.

The aggregate intrinsic value of options exercised during the year ended June 30, 2022 was $17.0 million (year ended 

June 30, 2021 and 2020—$25.0 million and $26.6 million, respectively). 

For the year ended June 30, 2022, cash in the amount of $32.7 million was received as the result of the exercise of options 

granted under share-based payment arrangements (year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020—$49.6 million and $41.3 million, 
respectively). 

The tax benefit realized by us during the year ended June 30, 2022 from the exercise of options eligible for a tax 

deduction was $2.8 million (year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020—$2.3 million and $1.9 million, respectively).

Long-Term Incentive Plans

We incentivize certain eligible employees, in part, with long-term compensation pursuant to our LTIP. The LTIP is a 

rolling three-year program that grants eligible employees a certain number of target Performance Share Units (PSUs) and/or 
Restricted Share Units (RSUs). Target PSUs become vested upon the achievement of certain financial and/or operational 
performance criteria (the Performance Conditions) that are determined at the time of the grant. RSUs become vested when an 
eligible employee remains employed throughout the vesting period.

PSUs and RSUs granted under the LTIP have been measured at fair value as of the effective date, consistent with ASC 
Topic 718, and will be charged to share-based compensation expense over the remaining life of the plan. We estimate the fair 
value of PSUs using the Monte Carlo pricing model and RSUs have been valued based upon their grant date fair value. Stock 
options granted under the LTIP have been measured using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model, consistent with ASC Topic 
718. 

160

 
 
 
As of June 30, 2022, the total expected compensation cost related to the unvested LTIP awards not yet recognized was 

$35.0 million, which is expected to be recognized over a weighted average period of 1.9 years.

LTIP grants that have recently vested, or have yet to vest, are described below. LTIP grants are referred to in this Annual 

Report on Form 10-K based upon the year in which the grants are expected to vest.

LTIP 2021

Grants made in Fiscal 2019 under the LTIP (collectively referred to as LTIP 2021), consisting of PSUs and RSUs, took 
effect in Fiscal 2019 starting on August 6, 2018. The Performance Conditions for vesting of the PSUs are based solely upon 
market conditions. The RSUs are employee service-based awards and vest over the life of the LTIP 2021. We settled the LTIP 
2021 awards by delivering to eligible participants 349,792 Common Shares that were purchased in the open market at a cost of 
$15.1 million.

LTIP 2022

Grants made in Fiscal 2020 under the LTIP (collectively referred to as LTIP 2022), consisting of PSUs and RSUs, took 
effect in Fiscal 2020 starting on August 5, 2019. The Performance Conditions for vesting of the PSUs are based solely upon 
market conditions. The RSUs are employee service-based awards and vest over the life of the LTIP 2022. We expect to settle 
the LTIP 2022 awards in stock.

LTIP 2023

Grants made in Fiscal 2021 under the LTIP (collectively referred to as LTIP 2023), consisting of PSUs and RSUs, took 
effect in Fiscal 2021 starting on August 10, 2020. The Performance Conditions for vesting of the PSUs are based solely upon 
market conditions. The RSUs are employee service-based awards and vest over the life of the LTIP 2023. We expect to settle 
the LTIP 2023 awards in stock.

LTIP 2024

Grants made in Fiscal 2022 under the LTIP (collectively referred to as LTIP 2024), consisting of PSUs and RSUs, took 
effect in Fiscal 2022 starting on August 9, 2021. The Performance Conditions for vesting of the PSUs are based solely upon 
market conditions. The RSUs are employee service-based awards and vest over the life of the LTIP 2024. We expect to settle 
the LTIP 2024 awards in stock.

Performance Share Units (Issued Under LTIP)

A summary of activity under our performance share units issued under long-term incentive plans for the year ended June 

30, 2022 is as follows:

Outstanding at June 30, 2021
Granted (1)
Vested (1)
Forfeited or expired

Outstanding at June 30, 2022

__________________________

Units

Weighted-Average
Grant Date Fair 
Value

688,462  $ 
349,210 

(145,134)   

(79,601)   

812,937  $ 

47.96 
71.84 

30.39 

63.02 

61.29 

Weighted-
Average
Remaining
Contractual Term
(years)

Aggregate Intrinsic 
Value
($’000's)

1.73 $ 

34,974 

1.89 $ 

30,762 

(1) Performance share units are earned based on market conditions and the actual number of performance units earned, if any, is 

dependent upon performance and may range from 0 to 200 percent. Performance share units granted and vested excludes 27,576 
shares related to the performance unit payout under the LTIP 2021 plan. 

161

 
 
 
 
 
 
For the periods indicated, the weighted-average fair value of PSUs issued under LTIP, and weighted-average assumptions 

estimated under the Monte Carlo pricing model were as follows:

Weighted–average fair value of performance share units granted
Weighted-average assumptions used:

Expected volatility

Risk–free interest rate

Expected dividend yield

Expected life (in years)

Forfeiture rate (based on historical rates)

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$69.78 - $75.15

$44.56 - $61.67

$41.55 - $54.47

 28.00 %

 28.00 %

 21.00 %

0.45% - 0.71% 

0.15% - 0.24% 1.35% - 1.59%

1.70% - 1.80%

3.10

 7 %

 1.70 %

3.09

 7 %

 1.70 %

3.08

 7 %

23.88 
2,685 

Weighted–average fair value of performance share units vested
$ 
Aggregate intrinsic value of performance share units vested ($ in ‘000’s) $ 

30.39 
10,370 

$ 
$ 

25.76 
4,286 

$ 
$ 

As of June 30, 2022, the total expected compensation cost related to the unvested PSU awards not yet recognized was 
$23.0 million, which is expected to be recognized over a weighted average period of 1.9 years. We expect to settle PSU awards 
in stock.

Restricted Share Units (Issued Under LTIP)

A summary of activity under our restricted share units issued under long-term incentive plans for the year ended June 30, 

2022 is as follows:

Outstanding at June 30, 2021

Granted

Vested

Forfeited or expired

Outstanding at June 30, 2022

Units

Weighted-Average
Grant Date Fair 
Value

615,160  $ 

246,980 

(177,082)   

(73,315)   

611,743  $ 

39.93 

49.91 

37.36 

44.59 

44.14 

Weighted-
Average
Remaining
Contractual Term
(years)

Aggregate Intrinsic 
Value
($’000's)

1.67 $ 

31,250 

1.62 $ 

23,148 

For the periods indicated, the weighted-average fair value and aggregate intrinsic value of RSUs (issued under LTIP) were 

as follows:

Weighted–average fair value of restricted share units granted

Weighted–average fair value of restricted share units vested

Aggregate intrinsic value of restricted share units vested ($ in 000’s)

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 

$ 

$ 

49.91  $ 

37.36  $ 

9,139  $ 

43.39  $ 

32.93  $ 

7,832  $ 

37.34 

29.98 

8,184 

As of June 30, 2022, the total expected compensation cost related to the unvested RSU awards not yet recognized was 
$11.9 million, which is expected to be recognized over a weighted average period of 1.3 years. We expect to settle RSU awards 
in stock.

Restricted Share Units (Other)

In addition to the grants made in connection with the LTIP plans discussed above, from time to time, we may grant RSUs 

to certain employees in accordance with employment and other non-LTIP related agreements. During the year ended June 30, 
2022, we granted RSUs through a special one-time grant for development, engagement and long-term retention to certain of our 
non-executive employees. RSUs (other) vest in tranches over a specified contract date, typically two or three years from the 
respective date of grants.

162

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
A summary of activity under our restricted share units (other) issued for the year ended June 30, 2022 is as follows:

Outstanding at June 30, 2021

Granted

Vested

Forfeited or expired

Outstanding at June 30, 2022

Units

Weighted-Average
Grant Date Fair 
Value

430,358  $ 

2,470,302 

(141,452)   

(165,501)   

2,593,707  $ 

45.73 

44.81 

45.73 

45.05 

44.90 

Weighted-
Average
Remaining
Contractual Term
(years)

Aggregate Intrinsic 
Value
($’000's)

2.50 $ 

21,862 

2.86 $ 

98,146 

For the periods indicated, the weighted-average fair value and intrinsic value of RSUs (other) were as follows:

Weighted–average fair value of restricted share units granted

Weighted–average fair value of restricted share units vested

Aggregate intrinsic value of restricted share units vested ($ in 000’s)

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 

$ 

$ 

44.81  $ 

45.73  $ 

7,406  $ 

45.73  $ 

—  $ 

—  $ 

46.29 

34.31 

132 

As of June 30, 2022, the total expected compensation cost related to the unvested RSU awards not yet recognized was 
$91.3 million, which is expected to be recognized over a weighted average period of 2.0 years. We expect to settle RSU awards 
in stock.

During the year ended June 30, 2022, we delivered to eligible participants 141,452 Common Shares that were purchased 

in the open market in connection with the settlement of vested RSUs, at a cost of $5.9 million (year ended June 30, 2021 and 
2020—nil and 3,334 Common Shares, respectively, with a cost of nil and $0.1 million).

Deferred Share Units (DSUs)

The deferred share units are granted to certain non-employee directors. DSUs are issued under our Deferred Share Unit 

Plan. DSUs granted as compensation for director fees vest immediately, whereas all other DSUs granted vest at our next annual 
general meeting following the granting of the DSUs. No DSUs are payable by us until the director ceases to be a member of the 
Board. 

A summary of activity under our deferred share units issued for the year ended June 30, 2022 is as follows:

Units

Weighted-Average
Price

806,363  $ 

79,338 
885,701  $ 

29.49 

50.04 
31.49 

Weighted-
Average
Remaining
Contractual Term
(years)

Aggregate Intrinsic 
Value
($’000's)

0.36 $ 

40,963 

0.36 $ 

33,515 

Outstanding at June 30, 2021 (1)
Granted (2)
Outstanding at June 30, 2022 (2)

______________________

(1)  Includes 60,011 unvested DSUs.
(2)  Includes 55,520 unvested DSUs.

For the periods indicated, the weighted-average fair value and intrinsic value of DSUs were as follows:

Weighted–average fair value of deferred share units granted

Weighted–average fair value of deferred share units vested

Aggregate intrinsic value of deferred share units vested ($ in 000’s)

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 

$ 

$ 

50.04  $ 

41.24  $ 

4,133  $ 

40.15  $ 

41.48  $ 

3,109  $ 

40.41 

35.17 

3,929 

163

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
During the year ended June 30, 2022, we did not deliver to any eligible participants any of our Common Shares that were 

purchased in the open market in connection with the settlement of vested DSUs (year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020—23,640 
and nil Common Shares, respectively, with a cost of $1.1 million and nil, respectively).

Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP)

Our ESPP offers employees the opportunity to purchase our Common Shares at a purchase price discount of 15%.

During the year ended June 30, 2022, 931,036 Common Shares were eligible for issuance to employees enrolled in the 

ESPP (year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020—769,031 and 742,961 Common Shares, respectively).

During the year ended June 30, 2022, cash in the amount of $34.5 million was received from employees relating to the 

ESPP (year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020—$30.5 million and $25.3 million, respectively). 

NOTE 14—GUARANTEES AND CONTINGENCIES

We have entered into the following contractual obligations with minimum payments for the indicated fiscal periods as 

follows:

Long-term debt obligations (1) $ 
Purchase obligations for 

contracts not accounted for 
as lease obligations (2)

Payments due between

Total

July 1, 2022 - 
June 30, 2023

July 1, 2023 -  
June 30, 2025

July 1, 2025 -
June 30, 2027

July 1, 2027
 and beyond

5,344,048  $ 

168,919  $ 

1,262,379  $ 

263,500  $ 

3,649,250 

124,095 

68,143 

43,273 

12,679 

— 

$ 

5,468,143  $ 

237,062  $ 

1,305,652  $ 

276,179  $ 

3,649,250 

_________________________

Includes interest up to maturity and principal payments. Please see Note 11 “Long-Term Debt” for more details.

(1)
(2) For contractual obligations relating to leases and purchase obligations accounted for under ASC Topic 842, please see Note 6 

“Leases.”

Guarantees and Indemnifications

We have entered into customer agreements which may include provisions to indemnify our customers against third party 
claims that our software products or services infringe certain third-party intellectual property rights and for liabilities related to 
a breach of our confidentiality obligations. We have not made any material payments in relation to such indemnification 
provisions and have not accrued any liabilities related to these indemnification provisions in our Consolidated Financial 
Statements. 

Occasionally, we enter into financial guarantees with third parties in the ordinary course of our business, including, 
among others, guarantees relating to taxes and letters of credit on behalf of parties with whom we conduct business. Such 
agreements have not had a material effect on our results of operations, financial position or cash flows. 

Litigation 

We are currently involved in various claims and legal proceedings.

Quarterly, we review the status of each significant legal matter and evaluate such matters to determine how they should be 

treated for accounting and disclosure purposes in accordance with the requirements of ASC Topic 450-20 “Loss 
Contingencies” (Topic 450-20). Specifically, this evaluation process includes the centralized tracking and itemization of the 
status of all our disputes and litigation items, discussing the nature of any litigation and claim, including any dispute or claim 
that is reasonably likely to result in litigation, with relevant internal and external counsel, and assessing the progress of each 
matter in light of its merits and our experience with similar proceedings under similar circumstances.

If the potential loss from any claim or legal proceeding is considered probable and the amount can be reasonably 

estimated, we accrue a liability for the estimated loss in accordance with Topic 450-20. As of the date of this Annual Report on 
Form 10-K, the aggregate of such accrued liabilities was not material to our consolidated financial position or results of 
operations and we do not believe as of the date of this filing that it is reasonably possible that a loss exceeding the amounts 
already recognized will be incurred that would be material to our consolidated financial position or results of operations. As 
described more fully below, we are unable at this time to estimate a possible loss or range of losses in respect of certain 
disclosed matters.

164

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Contingencies

CRA Matter

As part of its ongoing audit of our Canadian tax returns, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has disputed our transfer 
pricing methodology used for certain intercompany transactions with our international subsidiaries and has issued notices of 
reassessment for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016. Assuming the utilization of available tax 
attributes (further described below), we estimate our potential aggregate liability, as of June 30, 2022, in connection with the 
CRA's reassessments for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016, to be limited to penalties, interest 
and provincial taxes that may be due of approximately $75 million. As of June 30, 2022, we have provisionally paid 
approximately $34 million in order to fully preserve our rights to object to the CRA's audit positions, being the minimum 
payment required under Canadian legislation while the matter is in dispute. This amount is recorded within “Long-term income 
taxes recoverable” on the Consolidated Balance Sheets as of June 30, 2022.

The notices of reassessment for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016 would, as drafted, 
increase our taxable income by approximately $90 million to $100 million for each of those years, as well as impose a 10% 
penalty on the proposed adjustment to income. Audits by the CRA of our tax returns for fiscal years prior to Fiscal 2012 have 
been completed with no reassessment of our income tax liability.

We strongly disagree with the CRA's positions and believe the reassessments of Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 2013, Fiscal 2014, 

Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016 (including any penalties) are without merit, and we are continuing to contest these reassessments. 
On June 30, 2022, we filed a notice of appeal with the Tax Court of Canada seeking to reverse all such reassessments (including 
any penalties) in full.

Even if we are unsuccessful in challenging the CRA's reassessments to increase our taxable income for Fiscal 2012, Fiscal 

2013, Fiscal 2014, Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016, we have elective deductions available for those years (including carry-backs 
from later years) that would offset such increased amounts so that no additional cash tax would be payable, exclusive of any 
assessed penalties and interest, as described above.

The CRA has also audited Fiscal 2017 on a basis that we strongly disagree with and are contesting. The focus of the CRA 

audit has been the valuation of certain intellectual property and goodwill when one of our subsidiaries continued into Canada 
from Luxembourg in July 2016. In accordance with applicable rules, these assets were recognized for tax purposes at fair 
market value as of that time, which value was supported by an expert valuation prepared by an independent leading accounting 
and advisory firm. In conjunction with the Fiscal 2017 audit, the CRA issued a proposal letter dated April 7, 2021 (Proposal 
Letter) indicating to us that it proposes to reassess our Fiscal 2017 tax year to reduce the depreciable basis of these assets. We 
have made extensive submissions in support of our position. CRA’s position for Fiscal 2017 relies in significant part on the 
application of its positions regarding our transfer pricing methodology that are the basis for its reassessment of our fiscal years 
2012 to 2016 described above, and that we believe are without merit. Other aspects of CRA’s position for Fiscal 2017 conflict 
with the expert valuation prepared by the independent leading accounting and advisory firm that was used to support our 
original filing position. On January 27, 2022, the CRA issued a notice of reassessment in respect of Fiscal 2017 on the basis of 
its position set forth in the Proposal Letter. On April 19, 2022, we filed our notice of objection regarding the reassessment in 
respect of Fiscal 2017. If we are ultimately unsuccessful in defending our position, the estimated impact of the proposed 
adjustment could result in us recording an income tax expense, with no immediate cash payment, to reduce the stated value of 
our deferred tax assets of up to approximately $470 million. Any such income tax expense could also have a corresponding 
cash tax impact that would primarily occur over a period of several future years based upon annual income realization in 
Canada. We strongly disagree with the CRA’s position for Fiscal 2017 and intend to vigorously defend our original filing 
position, We are not required to provisionally pay any cash amounts to the CRA as a result of the reassessment in respect of 
Fiscal 2017 due to the utilization of available tax attributes; however, to the extent the CRA reassesses subsequent fiscal years 
on a similar basis, we expect to make certain minimum payments required under Canadian legislation, which may need to be 
provisionally made starting in Fiscal 2024 while the matter is in dispute. 

We will continue to vigorously contest the adjustments to our taxable income and any penalty and interest assessments, as 

well as any reduction to the basis of our depreciable property. We are confident that our original tax filing positions were 
appropriate. Accordingly, as of the date of this Annual Report on Form 10-K, we have not recorded any accruals in respect of 
these reassessments or proposed reassessment in our Consolidated Financial Statements. The CRA is currently in preliminary 
stages of auditing Fiscal 2018 and Fiscal 2019.

Carbonite Class Action Complaint

On August 1, 2019, prior to our acquisition of Carbonite, a purported stockholder of Carbonite filed a putative class action 

complaint against Carbonite, its former Chief Executive Officer, Mohamad S. Ali, and its former Chief Financial Officer, 
Anthony Folger, in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts captioned Ruben A. Luna, Individually 

165

and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated v. Carbonite, Inc., Mohamad S. Ali, and Anthony Folger (No. 1:19-cv-11662-
LTS). The complaint alleges violations of the federal securities laws under Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange 
Act of 1934, as amended, and Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder. The complaint generally alleges that the defendants made 
materially false and misleading statements in connection with Carbonite’s Server Backup VM Edition, and seeks, among other 
things, the designation of the action as a class action, an award of unspecified compensatory damages, costs and expenses, 
including counsel fees and expert fees, and other relief as the court deems appropriate. On August 23, 2019, a nearly identical 
complaint was filed in the same court captioned William Feng, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated v. 
Carbonite, Inc., Mohamad S. Ali, and Anthony Folger (No. 1:19- cv-11808-LTS) (together with the Luna Complaint, the 
“Securities Actions”). On November 21, 2019, the district court consolidated the Securities Actions, appointed a lead plaintiff, 
and designated a lead counsel. On January 15, 2020, the lead plaintiff filed a consolidated amended complaint generally making 
the same allegations and seeking the same relief as the complaint filed on August 1, 2019. The defendants moved to dismiss the 
Securities Actions on March 10, 2020. The motion was fully briefed in June 2020 and a hearing on the motion to dismiss the 
Securities Actions was held on October 15, 2020. Following the hearing, on October 22, 2020, the district court granted with 
prejudice the defendants’ motion to dismiss the Securities Actions. On November 20, 2020, the lead plaintiff filed a notice of 
appeal to the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. On December 21, 2021, the First Circuit issued a decision reversing and 
remanding the Securities Actions to the district court for further proceedings. The defendants remain confident in their position, 
believe the Securities Actions are without merit and will continue to vigorously defend the matter.

Carbonite vs Realtime Data

On February 27, 2017, before our acquisition of Carbonite, a non-practicing entity named Realtime Data LLC (Realtime 

Data) filed a lawsuit against Carbonite in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas “Realtime Data LLC v. 
Carbonite, Inc. et al (No 6:17-cv-00121-RWS-JDL).” Therein, it alleged that certain of Carbonite’s cloud storage services 
infringe upon certain patents held by Realtime Data. Realtime Data’s complaint against Carbonite sought damages in an 
unspecified amount and injunctive relief. On December 19, 2017, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas 
transferred the case to the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts (No. 1:17-cv-12499). Realtime Data has also 
filed numerous other patent suits on the same asserted patents against other companies. After a stay pending appeal in one of 
those suits, on January 21, 2021, the district court held a hearing to construe the claims of the asserted patents. As to the fourth 
patent asserted against Carbonite, on September 24, 2019, the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office Patent Trial and Appeal Board 
invalidated certain claims of that patent, including certain claims that had been asserted against Carbonite. The parties then 
jointly stipulated to dismiss that patent from this action. On August 23, 2021, in one of the suits against other companies, the 
District of Delaware (No. 1:17-cv-800), held all of the patents asserted against Carbonite to be invalid. Realtime Data has 
appealed that decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. We continue to vigorously defend the matter, and 
the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts has issued a claim construction order. We anticipate motion practice 
based upon the result of that order. We have not accrued a loss contingency related to this matter because litigation related to a 
non-practicing entity is inherently unpredictable. Although a loss is reasonably possible, an unfavorable outcome is not 
considered by management to be probable at this time and we remain unable to reasonably estimate a possible loss or range of 
loss associated with this litigation.

Please also see Part I, Item 1A, “Risk Factors” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for Fiscal 2022.

NOTE 15—INCOME TAXES

Our effective tax rate represents the net effect of the mix of income earned in various tax jurisdictions that are subject to a 

wide range of income tax rates. 

The effective tax rate decreased to a provision of 23.0% for the year ended June 30, 2022, compared to a provision of 

52.2% for the year ended June 30, 2021. Tax expense decreased from $339.9 million during the year ended June 30, 2021 to 
$118.8 million during the year ended June 30, 2022. This was primarily due to (i) a decrease of $300.6 million related to IRS 
settlements in Fiscal 2021, (ii) a decrease of $37.5 million related to lower net income before taxes, (iii) a decrease of 
$10.8 million related to passive income from foreign subsidiaries, (iv) a decrease of $9.6 million related to tax accruals on 
unremitted earnings and (v) a decrease of $8.0 million for BEAT. These were partially offset by (i) an increase of $94.3 million 
for changes in unrecognized tax benefits, (ii) a net increase of $46.8 million related to internal reorganizations and (iii) an 
increase of $3.5 million for change in valuation allowance. The remainder of the difference was due to normal course 
movements and non-material items.

166

A reconciliation of the combined Canadian federal and provincial income tax rate with our effective income tax rate is as 

follows:

Expected statutory rate

Expected provision for income taxes

Effect of foreign tax rate differences

Change in valuation allowance

Effect of permanent differences

Effect of changes in unrecognized tax benefits

Effect of withholding taxes

Effect of tax credits for research and development

Effect of accrual for undistributed earnings

Effect of US BEAT
Effect of CARES Act

Effect of IRS Settlement

Impact of internal reorganization of subsidiaries

Other Items

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

 26.50 %

 26.50 %

 26.50 %

$ 

136,743 

$ 

172,454 

$ 

91,479 

(4,578) 

(2,444) 

(12,710) 

8,130 

6,617 

(12,330) 

(6,343) 

— 
— 

— 

13,077 

(7,410) 

(4,309) 

(5,900) 

(1,885) 

(86,170) 

8,500 

(16,086) 

3,209 

7,967 
— 

300,460 

(33,676) 

(4,658) 

218 

(222) 

1,215 

(19,284) 

8,036 

(14,947) 

4,233 

41,207 
(7,009) 

— 

451 

5,460 

$ 

118,752 

$ 

339,906 

$ 

110,837 

The following is a geographical breakdown of income before the provision for income taxes: 

Domestic income (loss)

Foreign income

Income before income taxes

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

435,355 

80,656 

462,315 

188,455 

$ 

516,011  $ 

650,770  $ 

241,862 

103,343 

345,205 

The provision for (recovery of) income taxes consisted of the following: 

Current income taxes (recoveries):
Domestic

Foreign

Deferred income taxes (recoveries):

Domestic

Foreign

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

17,428 

137,412 
154,840 

54,867 

(90,955)   

(36,088)   

310,615 

(43,748)   
266,867 

111,232 

(38,193)   

73,039 

12,547 

46,902 
59,449 

68,580 

(17,192) 

51,388 

Provision for (recovery of) income taxes

$ 

118,752  $ 

339,906  $ 

110,837 

As of June 30, 2022, we have $325.1 million of domestic non-capital loss carryforwards. In addition, we have 
$746.0 million of foreign non-capital loss carryforwards, which includes $230.4 million of U.S. state loss carryforwards. 
$104.4 million of the foreign non-capital loss carryforwards have no expiry date, which includes $14.3 million of U.S. state loss 
carryforwards. The remainder of the domestic and foreign losses expire between 2023 and 2042. In addition, investment tax 
credits of $66 million will expire between 2028 and 2042. 

167

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The primary components of the deferred tax assets and liabilities are as follows, for the periods indicated below:

Deferred tax assets

Non-capital loss carryforwards

Capital loss carryforwards

Capitalized scientific research and development expenses

Depreciation and amortization

Restructuring costs and other reserves

Capitalized inventory and intangible expenses

Research and development and investment tax credits

Lease liabilities

Deferred revenue

Other

Total deferred tax asset

Valuation allowance

Deferred tax liabilities

Right of use asset

Other

Deferred tax liabilities

Net deferred tax asset

Comprised of:

Long-term assets

Long-term liabilities

As of June 30,

2022

2021

207,631 

— 

121,771 

314,168 

19,561 

43,129 

104,183 

40,486 

9,288 

82,516 

942,733  $ 

(73,965)   

(31,452)   

(93,049)   

(124,501)  $ 

744,267  $ 

810,154 

(65,887)   

744,267  $ 

174,486 

5,570 

85,553 

391,974 

24,919 

— 

97,157 

40,598 

11,388 

67,677 

899,322 

(72,888) 

(35,038) 

(102,882) 

(137,920) 

688,514 

796,738 

(108,224) 

688,514 

$ 

$ 

$ 

$ 

We believe that sufficient uncertainty exists regarding the realization of certain deferred tax assets that a valuation 
allowance is required. We continue to evaluate our taxable position quarterly and consider factors by taxing jurisdiction, 
including but not limited to factors such as estimated taxable income, any historical experience of losses for tax purposes and 
the future growth of OpenText.

The aggregate changes in the balance of our gross unrecognized tax benefits (including interest and penalties) were as 

follows:

Unrecognized tax benefits as of June 30, 2020

Increases on account of current year positions
Increases on account of prior year positions

Decreases due to settlements with tax authorities

Decreases due to lapses of statutes of limitations

Unrecognized tax benefits as of June 30, 2021

Increases on account of current year positions

Increases on account of prior year positions

Decreases on account of prior year positions

Decreases due to settlements with tax authorities

Decreases due to lapses of statutes of limitations

Unrecognized tax benefits as of June 30, 2022

195,081 

1,279 
773 

(158,070) 

(2,314) 

36,749 

206 

27,398 

(694) 

(3,830) 

(5,703) 

54,126 

$ 

$ 

Included in the above tabular reconciliation are unrecognized tax benefits of $23.4 million relating to tax attributes in 
which the unrecognized tax benefit has been recorded as a reduction to the deferred tax asset. The net unrecognized tax benefit 
excluding these deferred tax assets is $30.7 million as of June 30, 2022 (June 30, 2021—$29.9 million).

168

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
We recognize interest expense and penalties related to income tax matters in income tax expense. For the year ended June 

30, 2022, 2021 and 2020, respectively, we recognized the following amounts as income tax-related interest expense and 
penalties:

Interest expense

Penalties expense

Total

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 

$ 

419  $ 

44,657  $ 

1,739 

1,125 

2,158  $ 

45,782  $ 

5,764 

327 

6,091 

The following amounts have been accrued on account of income tax-related interest expense and penalties:

Interest expense accrued (1)
Penalties accrued (1)

___________________________________________

As of June 30, 2022

As of June 30, 2021

$ 

$ 

4,821  $ 

3,569  $ 

5,166 

2,605 

(1) These balances are primarily included within “Long-term income taxes payable” within the Consolidated Balance Sheets.

We believe that it is reasonably possible that the gross unrecognized tax benefits, as of June 30, 2022, could decrease tax 

expense in the next 12 months by $4.8 million, relating primarily to the expiration of competent authority relief and tax years 
becoming statute barred for purposes of future tax examinations by local taxing jurisdictions.

Our four most significant tax jurisdictions are Canada, the United States, Luxembourg and Germany. Our tax filings 

remain subject to audits by applicable tax authorities for a certain length of time following the tax year to which those filings 
relate. The earliest fiscal years open for examination are 2012 for Canada, 2016 for the United States and 2012 for Germany. As 
of December 31, 2021, the Fiscal 2015 and Fiscal 2016 tax years for Luxembourg became statute barred.

We are subject to income tax audits in all major taxing jurisdictions in which we operate and currently have income tax 
audits open in Canada, the United States, Germany, India France, South Africa, Switzerland, and the Philippines. On a quarterly 
basis we assess the status of these examinations and the potential for adverse outcomes to determine the adequacy of the 
provision for income and other taxes. Statements regarding the Canada audits are included in Note 14 “Guarantees and 
Contingencies.”

The timing of the resolution of income tax audits is highly uncertain, and the amounts ultimately paid, if any, upon 

resolution of the issues raised by the taxing authorities may differ from the amounts accrued. It is reasonably possible that 
within the next 12 months we will receive additional assessments by various tax authorities or possibly reach resolution of 
income tax audits in one or more jurisdictions. These assessments or settlements may or may not result in changes to our 
contingencies related to positions on tax filings. The actual amount of any change could vary significantly depending on the 
ultimate timing and nature of any settlements. We cannot currently provide an estimate of the range of possible outcomes. For 
more information relating to certain income tax audits, please refer to Note 14 “Guarantees and Contingencies.”

As of June 30, 2022, we have recognized a provision of $19.9 million (June 30, 2021—$27.5 million) in respect of both 

additional foreign taxes or deferred income tax liabilities for temporary differences related to the undistributed earnings of 
certain non-United States subsidiaries and planned periodic repatriations from certain German subsidiaries, that will be subject 
to withholding taxes upon distribution. We have not provided for additional foreign withholding taxes or deferred income tax 
liabilities related to undistributed earnings of all other non-Canadian subsidiaries, since such earnings are considered 
permanently invested in those subsidiaries or are not subject to withholding taxes. It is not practicable to reasonably estimate 
the amount of additional deferred income tax liabilities or foreign withholding taxes that may be payable should these earnings 
be distributed in the future.

On December 21, 2020, we entered into a closing agreement with the IRS resolving all of the proposed adjustments to our 
taxable income for Fiscal 2010 and Fiscal 2012. As a result, we recorded charges of $300.5 million during the year ended June 
30, 2021 to “Provision for (recovery of) income taxes.” We believe the IRS Settlement to be in the best interest of all 
stakeholders, as it closes all past, present and future items related to this matter. The IRS Settlement provides finality to this 
longstanding matter. 

169

 
 
 
NOTE 16—FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENT

ASC Topic 820 “Fair Value Measurement” (Topic 820) defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair 

value, and addresses disclosure requirements for fair value measurements. Fair value is the price that would be received upon 
sale of an asset or paid upon transfer of a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date 
and in the principal or most advantageous market for that asset or liability. The fair value, in this context, should be calculated 
based on assumptions that market participants would use in pricing the asset or liability, not on assumptions specific to the 
entity. In addition, the fair value of liabilities should include consideration of non-performance risk, including our own credit 
risk.

In addition to defining fair value and addressing disclosure requirements, Topic 820 establishes a fair value hierarchy for 
valuation inputs. The hierarchy prioritizes the inputs into three levels based on the extent to which inputs used in measuring fair 
value are observable in the market. Each fair value measurement is reported in one of the three levels which are determined by 
the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement in its entirety. These levels are: 

•

•

•

Level 1—inputs are based upon unadjusted quoted prices for identical instruments traded in active markets.

Level 2—inputs are based upon quoted prices for similar instruments in active markets, quoted prices for identical or 
similar instruments in markets that are not active, and model-based valuation techniques for which all significant 
assumptions are observable in the market or can be corroborated by observable market data for substantially the full 
term of the assets or liabilities.

Level 3—inputs are generally unobservable and typically reflect management’s estimates of assumptions that market 
participants would use in pricing the asset or liability. The fair values are therefore determined using model-based 
techniques that include option pricing models, discounted cash flow models and similar techniques.

Financial Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Recurring Basis: 

Our financial assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis consisted of the following types of 

instruments as of June 30, 2022 and 2021:

June 30, 2022

June 30, 2021

Fair Market Measurements using:

Fair Market Measurements using:

Quoted prices
in active
markets for
identical
assets/
(liabilities)

Significant
other
observable
inputs

Significant
unobservable
inputs

Quoted prices
in active
markets for
identical
assets/
(liabilities)

Significant
other
observable
inputs

Significant
unobservable
inputs

(Level 1)

(Level 2)

(Level 3)

(Level 1)

(Level 2)

(Level 3)

Financial Assets (Liabilities):
Foreign currency 

forward contracts 
designated as cash 
flow hedges 
(Note 17) 
Total

$ 
$ 

(892)  $ 
(892)  $ 

—  $ 
—  $ 

(892)  $ 
(892)  $ 

—  $  1,131  $ 
—  $  1,131  $ 

—  $  1,131  $ 
—  $  1,131  $ 

— 
— 

Our valuation techniques used to measure the fair values of the derivative instruments, the counterparty to which has high 
credit ratings, were derived from pricing models including discounted cash flow techniques, with all significant inputs derived 
from or corroborated by observable market data, as no quoted market prices exist for these instruments. Our discounted cash 
flow techniques use observable market inputs, such as, where applicable, foreign currency spot and forward rates.

Our cash and cash equivalents, along with our accounts receivable and accounts payable and accrued liabilities balances, 
are measured and recognized in our Consolidated Financial Statements at an amount that approximates the fair value (a Level 2 
measurement) due to their short maturities. 

The fair value of our Senior Notes is determined based on observable market prices and categorized as a Level 2 
measurement. As of June 30, 2022, the fair value was $2.8 billion (June 30, 2021—$2.7 billion). The carrying value of our 
other long-term debt facilities approximates the fair value since the interest rate is at market. Please see Note 11 “Long-Term 
Debt” for further details.

170

 
 
 
 
If applicable, we will recognize transfers between levels within the fair value hierarchy at the end of the reporting period 

in which the actual event or change in circumstance occurs. During the year ended June 30, 2022 and 2021, respectively, we did 
not have any transfers between Level 1, Level 2 or Level 3.

Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Nonrecurring Basis

We measure certain assets and liabilities at fair value on a nonrecurring basis. These assets and liabilities are recognized at 

fair value when they are deemed to be other-than-temporarily impaired. During the year ended June 30, 2022 and 2021, 
respectively, no indications of impairments were identified and therefore no fair value measurements were required. 

NOTE 17—DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS AND HEDGING ACTIVITIES

Foreign Currency Forward Contracts

We are engaged in hedging programs with various banks to limit the potential foreign exchange fluctuations incurred on 

future cash flows relating to a portion of our Canadian dollar payroll expenses. We operate internationally and are therefore 
exposed to foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations in the normal course of our business, in particular to changes in the 
Canadian dollar on account of large costs that are incurred from our centralized Canadian operations, which are denominated in 
Canadian dollars. As part of our risk management strategy, we use foreign currency forward contracts to hedge portions of our 
payroll exposure with typical maturities of between one and twelve months. We do not use foreign currency forward contracts 
for speculative purposes.

We have designated these transactions as cash flow hedges of forecasted transactions under ASC Topic 815 “Derivatives 

and Hedging” (Topic 815). As the critical terms of the hedging instrument and of the entire hedged forecasted transaction are 
the same, in accordance with Topic 815, we have been able to conclude that changes in fair value or cash flows attributable to 
the risk being hedged are expected to completely offset at inception and on an ongoing basis. Accordingly, quarterly unrealized 
gains or losses on the effective portion of these forward contracts have been included within “Other Comprehensive Income 
(Loss) - net.” The fair value of the contracts, as of June 30, 2022, is recorded within “Accounts payable and accrued liabilities” 
and represents the net loss before tax effect that is expected to be reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income 
(loss) into earnings with the next twelve months.

As of June 30, 2022, the notional amount of forward contracts we held to sell U.S. dollars in exchange for Canadian 

dollars was $66.5 million (June 30, 2021—$66.9 million).

Fair Value of Derivative Instruments and Effect of Derivative Instruments on Financial Performance

The effect of these derivative instruments on our Consolidated Financial Statements for the periods indicated below were 

as follows (amounts presented do not include any income tax effects).

Fair Value of Derivative Instruments in the Consolidated Balance Sheets (see Note 16 “Fair Value Measurement”)

Derivatives

Foreign currency forward contracts 
designated as cash flow hedges

Balance Sheet Location
Prepaid expenses and other current 
assets (Accounts payable and accrued 
liabilities) 

As of June 30, 2022

As of June 30, 2021

Fair Value
Asset (Liability)

Fair Value
Asset (Liability)

$ 

(892)  $ 

1,131 

171

Effects of Derivative Instruments on Income and Other Comprehensive Income (OCI) (Loss)

Derivatives in Cash Flow Hedging 
Relationship

Year Ended June 30, 2022

Amount of Gain or (Loss) 
Recognized in OCI on 
Derivatives (Effective 
Portion)

Location of Gain or (Loss)
Reclassified from Accumulated OCI into 
Income 
(Effective Portion)

Amount of Gain or (Loss) 
Reclassified from 
Accumulated OCI into 
Income
(Effective Portion)

Foreign currency forward contracts

$ 

(2,530) 

Operating expenses

$ 

(507) 

Derivatives in Cash Flow Hedging 
Relationship

Year Ended June 30, 2021

Amount of Gain or (Loss) 
Recognized in OCI on 
Derivatives (Effective 
Portion)

Location of Gain or (Loss)
Reclassified from Accumulated OCI into 
Income 
(Effective Portion)

Amount of Gain or (Loss) 
Reclassified from 
Accumulated OCI into 
Income
(Effective Portion)

Foreign currency forward contracts

$ 

5,778 

Operating expenses

$ 

4,462 

Derivatives in Cash Flow Hedging 
Relationship

Year Ended June 30, 2020

Amount of Gain or (Loss) 
Recognized in OCI on 
Derivatives (Effective 
Portion)

Location of Gain or (Loss)
Reclassified from Accumulated OCI into 
Income 
(Effective Portion)

Amount of Gain or (Loss) 
Reclassified from 
Accumulated OCI into 
Income
(Effective Portion)

Foreign currency forward contracts

$ 

(2,261) 

Operating expenses

$ 

(1,340) 

NOTE 18—SPECIAL CHARGES (RECOVERIES)

Special charges (recoveries) include costs and recoveries that relate to certain restructuring initiatives that we have 

undertaken from time to time under our various restructuring plans, as well as acquisition-related costs and other charges. 

Fiscal 2022 Restructuring Plan
COVID-19 Restructuring Plan
Fiscal 2020 Restructuring Plan
Restructuring Plans prior to Fiscal 2020 Restructuring Plan
Acquisition-related costs
Other charges (recoveries)
Total

Fiscal 2022 Restructuring Plan

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 

$ 

25,778  $ 
(3,625)   
(128)   
(139)   
6,872 
18,115 
46,873  $ 

—  $ 
(8,929)   
3,669 

(53)   

5,906 
1,155 
1,748  $ 

— 
53,616 
26,680 
1,371 
13,750 
5,011 
100,428 

During the third quarter of Fiscal 2022, as part of our return to office planning, we made a strategic decision to implement 

restructuring activities to streamline our operations and further reduce our real estate footprint around the world (Fiscal 2022 
Restructuring Plan). The Fiscal 2022 Restructuring Plan charges will relate to facility costs and workforce reductions. Facility 
costs will include the accelerated amortization associated with the abandonment of ROU assets, the write-off of fixed assets and 
other related variable lease and exit costs. These charges require management to make certain judgments and estimates 
regarding the amount and timing of restructuring charges or recoveries. Our estimated liability could change subsequent to its 
recognition, requiring adjustments to the expense and the liability recorded. On a quarterly basis, we conduct an evaluation of 
the related liabilities and expenses and revise our assumptions and estimates as appropriate.

During the year ended June 30, 2022, we recognized cost of $23.5 million related to abandoned office space that have 

been early terminated or assigned to a third party, of which $17.8 million was related to the write-off of right of use assets.

As of June 30, 2022, we expect total costs to be incurred in connection with the Fiscal 2022 Restructuring Plan to be 
approximately $32.0 million to $37.0 million, of which $25.8 million has been recorded within “Special charges (recoveries)” 
to date.

172

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
A reconciliation of the beginning and ending restructuring liability, which is included within “Accounts payable and 

accrued liabilities” in our Consolidated Balance Sheets, for the year ended June 30, 2022 is shown below.

Fiscal 2022 Restructuring Plan
Balance payable as of June 30, 2021
Accruals and adjustments
Cash payments
Foreign exchange and other non-cash adjustments
Balance payable as of June 30, 2022

Workforce reduction
$ 

—  $ 

2,138 
(1,117)   
(32)   
989  $ 

$ 

Facility charges

Total

—  $ 

5,690 
(219)   
(61)   
5,410  $ 

— 
7,828 
(1,336) 
(93) 
6,399 

COVID-19 Restructuring Plan

During the fourth quarter of Fiscal 2020, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we made a strategic decision to move 
towards a significant work from home model. We began to implement restructuring activities to streamline our operations and 
significantly reduce our real estate footprint around the world (COVID-19 Restructuring Plan). The COVID-19 Restructuring 
Plan charges relate to workforce reductions and facility costs, including the accelerated amortization associated with the 
abandonment of ROU assets, the write-off of fixed assets and other related variable lease and exit costs. These charges require 
management to make certain judgments and estimates regarding the amount and timing of restructuring charges or recoveries. 
Our estimated liability could change subsequent to its recognition, requiring adjustments to the expense and the liability 
recorded. On a quarterly basis, we conduct an evaluation of the related liabilities and expenses and revise our assumptions and 
estimates as appropriate. With respect to the COVID-19 Restructuring Plan, at the time of initial abandonment we assumed 
there would be no additional sublease income, lease assignments or early terminations from vacated facilities.

During the year ended June 30, 2022, we recorded net recoveries of $3.6 million, related primarily to abandoned facilities.

During the year ended June 30, 2021, we recorded net recoveries of $16.0 million, related to office space that was 
abandoned during the fourth quarter of Fiscal 2020 and has since been early terminated or assigned to a third party. Included in 
these recoveries are $12.5 million, related to the reversal of lease liabilities (see Note 6 “Leases”), with the remainder related to 
other facility charges and recoveries. Additionally, during the year ended June 30, 2021, we incurred $7.1 million of charges 
related to abandoned facilities, workforce reductions and the write-off of fixed assets.

Since the inception of the COVID-19 Restructuring Plan, $41.1 million has been recorded within “Special charges 
(recoveries)” to date. We do not expect to incur any further significant charges relating to the COVID-19 Restructuring Plan.

A reconciliation of the beginning and ending restructuring liability, which is included within “Accounts payable and 
accrued liabilities” and “Long-term accrued liabilities” in our Consolidated Balance Sheets, for the year ended June 30, 2022 is 
shown below.

COVID-19 Restructuring Plan
Balance payable as of June 30, 2020
Accruals and adjustments
Cash payments
Foreign exchange and other non-cash adjustments
Balance payable as of June 30, 2021
Accruals and adjustments
Cash payments
Foreign exchange and other non-cash adjustments
Balance payable as of June 30, 2022

Fiscal 2020 Restructuring Plan 

Workforce reduction
$ 

5,172  $ 
1,983 
(7,172)   
272 
255  $ 
(101)   
(144)   
(10)   
—  $ 

Facility charges

Total

12,276  $ 
(2,224)   
(6,142)   
100 
4,010  $ 
(2,254)   
(877)   
130 
1,009  $ 

17,448 
(241) 
(13,314) 
372 
4,265 
(2,355) 
(1,021) 
120 
1,009 

$ 

$ 

During Fiscal 2020, we began to implement restructuring activities to streamline our operations (Fiscal 2020 

Restructuring Plan), including in connection with our acquisitions of Carbonite and XMedius, to take further steps to improve 
our operational efficiency. The Fiscal 2020 Restructuring Plan charges relate to workforce reductions and facility costs, 
including the accelerated amortization associated with the abandonment of ROU assets, the write-off of fixed assets and other 
related variable lease and exit costs. These charges require management to make certain judgments and estimates regarding the 
amount and timing of restructuring charges or recoveries. Our estimated liability could change subsequent to its recognition, 
requiring adjustments to the expense and the liability recorded. On a quarterly basis, we conduct an evaluation of the related 
liabilities and expenses and revise our assumptions and estimates as appropriate. With respect to the Fiscal 2020 Restructuring 

173

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Plan, at the time of the initial abandonment we assumed there would be no additional sublease income, lease assignments or 
early terminations from vacated facilities.

During the year ended June 30, 2022, we recorded immaterial charges and net recoveries of $0.1 million related to 

abandoned facilities and workforce reductions. 

During the year ended June 30, 2021, we recorded net recoveries of $13.5 million related to office space that was 

abandoned during the fourth quarter of Fiscal 2020 and has since been early terminated or assigned to a third party. Included in 
these recoveries are $10.1 million related to the reversal of lease liabilities (see note 6 “Leases”), with the remainder related to 
other facility charges and recoveries. Additionally, during the year ended June 30, 2021, we recognized a net recovery of 
$17.2 million related to abandoned facilities, workforce reductions and the write-off of fixed assets.

Since the inception of the Fiscal 2020 Restructuring Plan, $30.2 million has been recorded within “Special charges 
(recoveries)” to date. We do not expect to incur any further significant charges relating to the Fiscal 2020 Restructuring Plan.

A reconciliation of the beginning and ending restructuring liability, which is included within “Accounts payable and 
accrued liabilities” and “Long-term accrued liabilities” in our Consolidated Balance Sheets, for the year ended June 30, 2022 is 
shown below.

Fiscal 2020 Restructuring Plan
Balance payable as of June 30, 2020
Accruals and adjustments
Cash payments
Foreign exchange and other non-cash adjustments
Balance payable as of June 30, 2021
Accruals and adjustments
Cash payments
Foreign exchange and other non-cash adjustments
Balance payable as of June 30, 2022

Acquisition-related costs

Workforce reduction
$ 

1,576  $ 
11,444 
(10,828)   

$ 

$ 

25 
2,217  $ 
(226)   
(1,864)   
(127)   
—  $ 

Facility charges

Total

6,442  $ 
(869)   
(3,369)   
(338)   
1,866  $ 
44 
(318)   
9 
1,601  $ 

8,018 
10,575 
(14,197) 
(313) 
4,083 
(182) 
(2,182) 
(118) 
1,601 

Acquisition-related costs, recorded within “Special charges (recoveries)” include direct costs of potential and completed 
acquisitions. Acquisition-related costs for the year ended June 30, 2022 were $6.9 million (year ended June 30, 2021 and 2020
—$5.9 million and $13.8 million, respectively).

Other charges (recoveries)

For the year ended June 30, 2022, “Other charges” includes $15.4 million related to pre-acquisition equity incentives, 
which upon acquisition were replaced by equivalent value cash settlements (see Note 19 “Acquisitions”) and $2.7 million, 
respectively, related to other miscellaneous charges.

For the year ended June 30, 2021, “Other charges” includes $1.2 million related to other miscellaneous charges. 

For the year ended June 30, 2020, "Other charges" includes $0.7 million relating to accelerated amortization associated 

with the abandonment of ROU assets and $4.3 million relating to other miscellaneous charges.

174

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NOTE 19—ACQUISITIONS

Fiscal 2022 Acquisitions

Acquisition of Zix Corporation

On December 23, 2021, we acquired all of the equity interest in Zix Corporation (Zix), a leader in software as a service 

(SaaS) based email encryption, threat protection and compliance cloud solutions for small and medium-sized businesses 
(SMB). Total consideration for Zix was $894.5 million paid in cash, inclusive of cash acquired and $18.6 million relating to the 
cash settlement of pre-acquisition vested share-based compensation that was previously accrued but since paid as of June 30, 
2022. In accordance with Topic 805, this acquisition was accounted for as a business combination. We believe the acquisition 
increases our position in the data protection, threat management, email security and compliance solutions spaces.

The results of operations of Zix have been consolidated with those of OpenText beginning December 23, 2021.

Preliminary Purchase Price Allocation

The recognized amounts of identifiable assets acquired, and liabilities assumed, based on their preliminary fair values as 

of December 23, 2021, are set forth below:

Current assets (inclusive of cash acquired of $38.3 million)
Non-current tangible assets
Intangible customer assets
Intangible technology assets
Liabilities assumed
Total identifiable net assets
Goodwill
Net assets acquired

$ 

$ 

74,443 
13,557 
212,400 
92,650 
(79,621) 
313,429 
581,032 
894,461 

The goodwill of $581.0 million is primarily attributable to the synergies expected to arise after the acquisition. There is 

$103.7 million of goodwill that is deductible for tax purposes.

The fair value of current assets acquired includes accounts receivable with a fair value of $28.4 million. The gross amount 

receivable was $32.7 million, of which $4.3 million is expected to be uncollectible.

Acquisition-related costs for Zix included in “Special charges (recoveries)” in the Consolidated Financial Statements for 

the year ended June 30, 2022 were $2.9 million.

Pre-acquisition equity incentives of $26.3 million were replaced upon acquisition by equivalent value cash settlements to 

be settled in accordance with the original vesting dates, primarily over the next two years. Of these equity incentives, $15.4 
million for the year ended June 30, 2022 were included in “Special charges (recoveries).” 

The finalization of the above purchase price allocation is pending the finalization of the valuation of fair value for the 

assets acquired and liabilities assumed, including intangible assets and taxation-related balances as well as for potential 
unrecorded liabilities. We expect to finalize this determination on or before our quarter ending December 31, 2022.

Since the date of acquisition, the acquisition had no significant impact on revenues and net earnings for the year ended 

June 30, 2022. Pro forma results of operations for this acquisition have not been presented because they are not material to our 
consolidated results of operations.

175

 
 
 
 
 
 
Acquisition of Bricata Inc.

On November 24, 2021, we acquired all of the equity interest in Bricata Inc. (Bricata) for $17.8 million. In accordance 

with Topic 805, this acquisition was accounted for as a business combination. We believe the acquisition strengthens our 
OpenText Security and Protection Cloud with Network Detection and Response technologies.

The results of operations of Bricata have been consolidated with those of OpenText beginning November 24, 2021. 

Since the date of acquisition, the acquisition had no significant impact on revenues and net earnings for the year ended 

June 30, 2022. Pro forma results of operations for this acquisition have not been presented because they are not material to our 
consolidated results of operations.

Fiscal 2020 Acquisitions

Acquisition of XMedius

On March 9, 2020, we acquired all of the equity interest in XMedius, a provider of secure information exchange and 
unified communication solutions, for $73.5 million, of which $0.7 million is currently unpaid in accordance with the terms of 
the purchase agreement. In accordance with Topic 805, this acquisition was accounted for as a business combination. We 
believe the acquisition complements our Customer Experience Management (CEM) and Business Network (BN) platforms.

The results of operations of this acquisition have been consolidated with those of OpenText beginning March 9, 2020.

 Purchase Price Allocation

The recognized amounts of identifiable assets acquired, and liabilities assumed, based upon their fair values as of 

March 9, 2020, are set forth below:

Current assets
Non-current tangible assets
Intangible customer assets
Intangible technology assets
Liabilities assumed
Total identifiable net assets
Goodwill
Net assets acquired

$ 

$ 

8,479 
3,792 
35,910 
11,143 
(34,602) 
24,722 
48,823 
73,545 

The goodwill of $48.8 million is primarily attributable to the synergies expected to arise after the acquisition. Of this 

goodwill, $0.1 million was expected to be deductible for tax purposes. 

Included in total identifiable net assets is acquired deferred revenue with a fair value of $18.5 million, which represents 

our estimate of the fair value of the contractual obligations assumed based on a valuation. In arriving at this fair value, we 
reduced the acquired company’s original carrying value by $2.7 million. 

The fair value of current assets acquired includes accounts receivable with a fair value of $6.3 million. The gross amount 

receivable was $6.6 million, of which $0.3 million was expected to be uncollectible.

The finalization of the above purchase price allocation during the year ended June 30, 2021 did not result in any 

significant changes to the preliminary amounts previously disclosed.

Acquisition of Carbonite

On December 24, 2019, we acquired all of the equity interest in Carbonite, a leading provider of cloud-based subscription 

backup, disaster recovery and endpoint security to SMB, consumers, and a wide variety of partners. Total consideration for 
Carbonite was $1.4 billion paid in cash (inclusive of cash acquired). In accordance with Topic 805, this acquisition was 
accounted for as a business combination. We believe the acquisition increases our position in the data protection and endpoint 
security space, further strengthens our cloud capabilities and opens a new route to connect with customers through Carbonite's 
marquee SMB and consumer channels and products. 

The results of operations of Carbonite have been consolidated with those of OpenText beginning December 24, 2019.

176

 
 
 
 
 
 
Purchase Price Allocation

The recognized amounts of identifiable assets acquired, and liabilities assumed, based upon their fair values as of 

December 24, 2019, are set forth below:

Current assets (inclusive of cash acquired of $62.9 million)
Non-current tangible assets (inclusive of restricted cash acquired of $2.4 million)
Intangible customer assets
Intangible technology assets
Liabilities assumed
Total identifiable net assets
Goodwill
Net assets acquired

$ 

$ 

127,532 
105,742 
549,500 
290,000 
(554,320) 
518,454 
851,970 
1,370,424 

The goodwill of $852.0 million is primarily attributable to the synergies expected to arise after the acquisition. Of this 

goodwill, $6.9 million is expected to be deductible for tax purposes.

Included in total identifiable net assets is acquired deferred revenue with a fair value of $171.0 million, which represents 

our estimate of the fair value of the contractual obligations assumed. In arriving at this fair value, we reduced the acquired 
company’s original carrying value by $74.7 million.

The fair value of current assets acquired includes accounts receivable with a fair value of $45.7 million. The gross amount 

receivable was $47.1 million of which $1.4 million of this receivable was expected to be uncollectible.

The finalization of the purchase price allocation completed during the year ended June 30, 2021 did not result in any 

significant changes to the preliminary amounts previously disclosed.

Acquisition of Dynamic Solutions Group Inc. (The Fax Guys)

On December 2, 2019, we acquired certain assets and assumed certain liabilities of The Fax Guys, for $5.1 million. 
During the year ended June 30, 2021, we paid consideration of $1.0 million which was previously accrued. In accordance with 
Topic 805, this acquisition was accounted for as a business combination. We believe this acquisition complements our 
Information Management portfolio.

The results of operations of The Fax Guys have been consolidated with those of OpenText beginning December 2, 2019.

NOTE 20—SEGMENT INFORMATION

ASC Topic 280, “Segment Reporting” (Topic 280), establishes standards for reporting, by public business enterprises, 

information about operating segments, products and services, geographic areas and major customers. The method of 
determining what information, under Topic 280, to report is based on the way that an entity organizes operating segments for 
making operational decisions and how the entity’s management and CODM assess an entity’s financial performance. Our 
operations are analyzed by management and our CODM as being part of a single industry segment: the design, development, 
marketing and sale of Information Management software and solutions.

The following table sets forth the distribution of revenues, by significant geographic area, for the periods indicated:

Revenues (1):
Canada
United States
United Kingdom
Germany
Rest of EMEA (2)
All other countries

Total revenues

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 

186,213  $ 

166,430  $ 

1,968,597 
198,459 
241,506 
586,236 
312,833 
3,493,844  $ 

1,870,620 
195,721 
212,014 
623,872 
317,458 
3,386,115  $ 

$ 

149,457 
1,719,877 
186,756 
195,286 
560,239 
298,121 
3,109,736 

________________________________

 Total revenues by geographic area are determined based on the location of our direct customer.

(1)
(2) EMEA primarily consists of countries in Europe, the Middle East and Africa. 

177

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The following table sets forth the distribution of long-lived assets, representing property and equipment, ROU assets and 

intangible assets, by significant geographic area, as of the periods indicated below. 

Long-lived assets:
Canada
United States
United Kingdom
Germany
Rest of EMEA (1)
All other countries

Total

As of June 30, 2022

As of June 30, 2021

$ 

$ 

339,793  $ 

1,003,803 
13,359 
39,554 
76,440 
45,100 
1,518,049  $ 

530,830 
868,376 
14,629 
60,470 
116,429 
64,653 
1,655,387 

_______________________________

(1)

 EMEA primarily consists of countries in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

NOTE 21—ACCUMULATED OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)

Foreign Currency 
Translation 
Adjustments

Cash Flow Hedges

Defined Benefit 
Pension Plans

Accumulated Other 
Comprehensive 
Income (Loss)

Balance as of June 30, 2019

$ 

40,752  $ 

541  $ 

(17,169)  $ 

Other comprehensive income (loss) before 
reclassifications, net of tax
Amounts reclassified into net income, net of tax

Total other comprehensive income (loss) net

Balance as of June 30, 2020

Other comprehensive income (loss) before 
reclassifications, net of tax
Amounts reclassified into net income, net of tax

Total other comprehensive income (loss) net

Balance as of June 30, 2021

Other comprehensive income (loss) before 
reclassifications, net of tax
Amounts reclassified into net income, net of tax

(7,784)   

(1,662)   

— 

(7,784)   

32,968 

42,440 

— 

42,440 

75,408 

985 

(677)   

(136)   

4,246 

(3,280)   

966 

830 

(78,724)   

(1,859)   

— 

373 

Total other comprehensive income (loss) net

(78,724)   

(1,486)   

1,245 

917 

2,162 

(15,007)   

3,987 

1,020 

5,007 

(10,000)   

5,595 

718 

6,313 

24,124 

(8,201) 

1,902 

(6,299) 

17,825 

50,673 

(2,260) 

48,413 

66,238 

(74,988) 

1,091 

(73,897) 

Balance as of June 30, 2022

$ 

(3,316)  $ 

(656)  $ 

(3,687)  $ 

(7,659) 

NOTE 22—SUPPLEMENTAL CASH FLOW DISCLOSURES

Cash paid during the period for interest
Cash received during the period for interest
Cash paid during the period for income taxes (1)

_____________________________

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 
$ 
$ 

152,750  $ 
4,637  $ 
116,583  $ 

147,996  $ 
3,856  $ 
400,137  $ 

146,698 
11,768 
94,733 

(1) Included for the year ended June 30, 2021 is cash paid of $299.6 million relating to settlements with the IRS. Please 

see Note 15 “Income Taxes” for additional details.

178

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NOTE 23—OTHER INCOME (EXPENSE), NET

Foreign exchange gains (losses)
OpenText share in net income of equity investees (1)
Loss on debt extinguishment (2)
Other miscellaneous income (expense)
Total other income (expense), net

____________________________

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 

$ 

(2,670)  $ 
58,702 
(27,413)   
499 
29,118  $ 

(1,273)  $ 
62,897 
— 
(190)   
61,434  $ 

(4,184) 
8,700 
(17,854) 
1,392 
(11,946) 

(1)  Represents our share in net income of equity investees, which approximates fair value and subject to volatility based 
on market trends and business conditions, based on our interest in certain investment funds in which we are a limited 
partner. Our interests in each of these investees range from 4% to below 20% and these investments are accounted for 
using the equity method (see Note 9 “Prepaid Expenses and Other Assets” for more details).

(2) On December 9, 2021, we redeemed Senior Notes 2026 in full, which resulted in a loss on debt extinguishment of 

$27.4 million. Of this, $25.0 million related to the early termination call premium, $6.2 million related to unamortized 
debt issuance costs and ($3.8) million related to unamortized premium (see Note 11 “Long-Term Debt” for more 
details).

NOTE 24—EARNINGS PER SHARE

Basic earnings per share are computed by dividing net income, attributable to OpenText, by the weighted average number 
of Common Shares outstanding during the period. Diluted earnings per share are computed by dividing net income, attributable 
to OpenText, by the shares used in the calculation of basic earnings per share plus the dilutive effect of Common Share 
equivalents, such as stock options, using the treasury stock method. Common Share equivalents are excluded from the 
computation of diluted earnings per share if their effect is anti-dilutive.

Basic earnings per share
Net income attributable to OpenText
Basic earnings per share attributable to OpenText
Diluted earnings per share
Net income attributable to OpenText
Diluted earnings per share attributable to OpenText
Weighted-average number of shares outstanding 
(in '000's)
Basic
Effect of dilutive securities
Diluted
Excluded as anti-dilutive (1)

____________________________________

Year Ended June 30,

2022

2021

2020

$ 
$ 

$ 
$ 

397,090  $ 
1.46  $ 

310,672  $ 
1.14  $ 

234,225 
0.86 

397,090  $ 
1.46  $ 

310,672  $ 
1.14  $ 

234,225 
0.86 

271,271 
638 
271,909 
4,927 

272,533 
946 
273,479 
4,147 

270,847 
970 
271,817 
3,001 

(1) Represents options to purchase Common Shares excluded from the calculation of diluted earnings per share because the exercise 

price of the stock options was greater than or equal to the average price of the Common Shares during the period.

179

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NOTE 25—RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

Our procedure regarding the approval of any related party transaction requires that the material facts of such transaction 

be reviewed by the independent members of the Audit Committee and the transaction be approved by a majority of the 
independent members of the Audit Committee. The Audit Committee reviews all transactions in which we are, or will be, a 
participant and any related party has or will have a direct or indirect interest in the transaction. In determining whether to 
approve a related party transaction, the Audit Committee generally takes into account, among other facts it deems appropriate, 
whether the transaction is on terms no less favorable than terms generally available to an unaffiliated third party under the same 
or similar circumstances; the extent and nature of the related person’s interest in the transaction; the benefits to the Company of 
the proposed transaction; if applicable, the effects on a director’s independence; and if applicable, the availability of other 
sources of comparable services or products.

During the year ended June 30, 2022, Mr. Stephen Sadler, a member of the Board of Directors, earned $0.4 million (year 

ended June 30, 2021 and 2020—$37 thousand and $0.7 million) in consulting fees from OpenText for assistance with 
acquisition-related business activities. Mr. Sadler abstained from voting on all transactions from which he would potentially 
derive consulting fees.

NOTE 26—SUBSEQUENT EVENTS 

Cash Dividends

As part of our quarterly, non-cumulative cash dividend program, we declared, on August 3, 2022, a dividend of $0.24299 
per Common Share. The record date for this dividend is September 2, 2022 and the payment date is September 23, 2022. Future 
declarations of dividends and the establishment of future record and payment dates are subject to the final determination and 
discretion of our Board.

Item 16.  Form 10-K Summary

None.

180

SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the registrant has duly caused this report to 
be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized. 

OPEN TEXT CORPORATION

Date: August 4, 2022 

By:

/s/ MARK J. BARRENECHEA

Mark J. Barrenechea
Vice Chair, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Technology Officer
(Principal Executive Officer)

/s/ MADHU RANGANATHAN

Madhu Ranganathan
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)

/s/ HOWARD ROSEN

Howard Rosen
Senior Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer
(Principal Accounting Officer)

181

DIRECTORS

Signature

Title

Date

/s/  MARK J. BARRENECHEA

 Mark J. Barrenechea

/S/  P. THOMAS JENKINS

P. Thomas Jenkins

/S/  RANDY FOWLIE

Randy Fowlie

/S/  DAVID FRASER

David Fraser

/S/  GAIL E. HAMILTON

Gail E. Hamilton

/S/  ROBERT HAU

Robert Hau

/S/  ANN M. POWELL

Ann M. Powell

/S/  STEPHEN J. SADLER

Stephen J. Sadler

/S/  HARMIT SINGH

Harmit Singh

/S/  MICHAEL SLAUNWHITE

Michael Slaunwhite

/S/  KATHARINE B. STEVENSON

Katharine B. Stevenson

/S/  DEBORAH WEINSTEIN

Deborah Weinstein

Vice Chair, Chief Executive Officer and 
Chief Technology Officer
 (Principal Executive Officer)

August 4, 2022

Chairman of the Board

August 4, 2022

Director

August 4, 2022

Director

August 4, 2022

Director

August 4, 2022

Director

August 4, 2022

Director

August 4, 2022

Director

August 4, 2022

Director

August 4, 2022

Director

August 4, 2022

Director

August 4, 2022

Director

August 4, 2022

182

Subsidiaries of Open Text Corporation as of June 30, 2022

Exhibit 21.1

Corporation Name

Open Text Pty Limited

Webroot Pty Ltd.

Open Text Software Austria GmbH

Open Text Tecnologia Da Informação (Brasil) Ltda.

8493642 Canada Inc.

Open Text Canada Ltd.

Carbonite (China) Co., Ltd

Covisint Software Services (Shanghai) Co., Ltd.

GXS (Shanghai) Software Development Limited

Open Text Software Technology (Shanghai) Co., Ltd

Open Text s.r.o.

AppRiver Parent, LLC

Carbonite China Holdings, LLC

Carbonite India Holdings, LLC

Carbonite, Inc.

GXS International, Inc.

GXS, Inc.

Mozy, Inc.

Open Text Holdings, Inc.

Open Text Inc.

Total Defense, LLC

Vignette Partnership, LP

Webroot Inc.

ZixCorp Global, Inc.

ZixCorp Systems, Inc.

Open Text A/S

Acquisition U.K. Limited

AppRiver UK Limited

Carbonite (UK) Limited

EasyLink Services International Limited

GXS Limited

GXS UK Holding Limited

ICCM Professional Services Limited

Open Text UK Limited

Resonate KT Limited

Sysgenics Limited

Webroot Services Limited

Zix Corporation Limited

Open Text Oy

AppRiver, LLC

Arm Research Labs, LLC

Jurisdiction

Australia

Australia

Austria

Brazil

Canada

Canada

China

China

China

China

Czech Republic

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Delaware, United States

Denmark

England & Wales

England & Wales

England & Wales

England & Wales

England & Wales

England & Wales

England & Wales

England & Wales

England & Wales

England & Wales

England & Wales

England & Wales

Finland

Florida, United States

Florida, United States

Open Text SARL

Mailstore Software GmbH

Open Text Document Technologies GmbH

Open Text Software GmbH

Open Text Unterstützungskasse e.V.

RecomMind GmbH

Zix Germany GmbH

Open Text (Hong Kong) Limited

GXS India Technology Centre Private Limited

Open Text Corporation India Private Limited

Open Text Technologies India Private Limited

Vignette India Private Limited

Open Text Ireland Limited

Webroot Global Holdings Limited

Webroot International Limited

Chameleon Holdings Ltd.

CloudAlly Ltd.

Open Text S.r.l.

Open Text K.K.

Webroot K.K.

France

Germany

Germany

Germany

Germany

Germany

Germany

Hong Kong

India

India

India

India

Ireland

Ireland

Ireland

Israel

Israel

Italy

Japan

Japan

Open Text Software Technology (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd

Malaysia

Metastorm Inc.

Open Text, S. de R.L. de C.V.

GreenView Data, Inc.

Carbonite Operations B.V.

Open Text Coöperatief U.A.

Open Text New Zealand Limited

3304709 Nova Scotia Limited

AppRiver Canada ULC

Open Text SA ULC

Open Text ULC

Open Text Venture Capital Investment Limited Partnership

Open Text (Philippines), Inc.

Open Text Sp.z.o.o.

Nstein Technologies Inc.

XMedius Solutions Inc.

GXS Inc.

Open Text Korea Co., Ltd.

Open Text Saudi Arabia LLC

Open Text (Asia) Pte Limited

Open Text South Africa (Pty) Limited

AppRiver AG Spain S.L.

Open Text Software, S.L.U.

Open Text AB

Maryland, United States

Mexico

Michigan, United States

Netherlands

Netherlands

New Zealand

Nova Scotia, Canada

Nova Scotia, Canada

Nova Scotia, Canada

Nova Scotia, Canada

Ontario, Canada

Philippines

Poland

Quebec, Canada

Quebec, Canada

Republic of Korea

Republic of Korea

Saudi Arabia

Singapore

South Africa

Spain

Spain

Sweden

Carbonite GmbH

Open Text AG

Zix International AG

Zix Corporation

GXS Ltd.

Open Text Public Sector Solutions, Inc.

CM2.COM, Inc.

*Excludes entities that are in liquidation or dissolution

Switzerland

Switzerland

Switzerland

Texas, United States

Thailand

Virginia, United States

Washington, United States

Exhibit 23.1

Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

The Board of Directors of Open Text Corporation

We consent to the use of:

•

our report dated August 3, 2022, on the consolidated financial statements of Open Text Corporation (the “Company”), 
which comprise the consolidated balance sheets as at June 30, 2022 and June 30, 2021, the related consolidated 
statements of income, comprehensive income, shareholders’ equity and cash flows for each of the years in the three-
year period ended June 30, 2022, and the related notes (collectively, the “consolidated financial statements”) and

•

our report dated August 3, 2022 on the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting as of June 30, 2022 

which are included in this annual report on Form 10-K of the Company for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2022. 

We also consent to the incorporation by reference of such reports in Registration Statement Nos. 333-249181, 333-214427, 
333-184670, 333-146351, 333-146350, 333-121377, 333-109505 and 333-87024 on Form S-8 and No. 333-261510 on Form 
S-3  of the Company.

/s/ KPMG LLP

Chartered Professional Accountants, Licensed Public Accountants

August 4, 2022

Toronto, Canada

Exhibit 31.1 

I, Mark J. Barrenechea, certify that: 

1. 

I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of Open Text Corporation; 

CERTIFICATIONS 

2.  Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material 
fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not 
misleading with respect to the period covered by this report; 

3.  Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in 
all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the 
periods presented in this report; 

4. 

The registrant's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and 
procedures (as defined in Securities Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial 
reporting (as defined in Securities Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have: 

a)  Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed 
under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated 
subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report 
is being prepared; 

b)  Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to 
be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting 
and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting 
principles; 

c) 

Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our 
conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by 
this report based on such evaluation; and 

d)  Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during 
the registrant's most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant's fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that 
has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial 
reporting; and 

5. 

The registrant's other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over 
financial reporting, to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons 
performing the equivalent functions): 

a)  All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial 

reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize and 
report financial information; and 

b)  Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the 

registrant's internal control over financial reporting. 

Date: August 4, 2022

By:

/s/ MARK J. BARRENECHEA

Mark J. Barrenechea
Vice Chair, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Technology Officer

 
 
Exhibit 31.2 

I, Madhu Ranganathan, certify that: 

1. 

I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of Open Text Corporation; 

CERTIFICATIONS 

2.  Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material 
fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not 
misleading with respect to the period covered by this report; 

3.  Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in 
all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the 
periods presented in this report; 

4. 

The registrant's other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and 
procedures (as defined in Securities Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial 
reporting (as defined in Securities Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the registrant and have: 

a)  Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed 
under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated 
subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report 
is being prepared; 

b)  Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to 
be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting 
and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting 
principles; 

c) 

Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our 
conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by 
this report based on such evaluation; and 

d)  Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant's internal control over financial reporting that occurred during 
the registrant's most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant's fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that 
has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant's internal control over financial 
reporting; and 

5. 

The registrant's other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over 
financial reporting, to the registrant's auditors and the audit committee of the registrant's board of directors (or persons 
performing the equivalent functions): 

a)  All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial 

reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant's ability to record, process, summarize and 
report financial information; and 

b)  Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the 

registrant's internal control over financial reporting. 

Date: August 4, 2022

By:

/s/ MADHU RANGANATHAN

Madhu Ranganathan
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

 
 
CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO 
18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350, AS ADOPTED 
PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 
OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002 

Exhibit 32.1 

In connection with the Annual Report on Form 10-K of Open Text Corporation (the “Company”) for the year ended 
June 30, 2022 as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Report”), I, Mark J. Barrenechea, Vice Chair, Chief 
Executive Officer and Chief Technology Officer of the Company, certify, as of the date hereof, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 
Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that: 

(1) The Report fully complies with the requirements of section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 

1934, as amended; and 

(2) The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and 

results of operations of the Company. 

Date:  August 4, 2022

By:

/s/ MARK J. BARRENECHEA

Mark J. Barrenechea
Vice Chair, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Technology Officer

 
 
CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO 
18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350, AS ADOPTED 
PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 
OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002 

Exhibit 32.2 

In connection with the Annual Report on Form 10-K of Open Text Corporation (the “Company”) for the year ended 

June 30, 2022 as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Report”), I, Madhu Ranganathan, Executive Vice 
President and Chief Financial Officer of the Company, certify, as of the date hereof, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as 
adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that: 

(1) The Report fully complies with the requirements of section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 

1934, as amended; and 

(2) The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and 

results of operations of the Company. 

Date: August 4, 2022

By:

/s/ MADHU RANGANATHAN

Madhu Ranganathan
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

 
 
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Executive Leadership Team

Mark J. Barrenechea
Vice Chair, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Technology Officer

Madhu Ranganathan
Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

Michael F. Acedo
Senior Vice President, Chief Legal Officer  
& Corporate Secretary

Gordon A. Davies
Executive Vice President, Special Advisor to the  
Chief Executive Officer

Prentiss Donohue
Executive Vice President, SMB/C Sales

Paul Duggan
Executive Vice President, Worldwide Renewals

Simon Harrison
Executive Vice President, Enterprise Sales

Kristina Lengyel
Executive Vice President, Customer Solutions

Muhi Majzoub
Executive Vice President & Chief Product Officer

James McGourlay
Executive Vice President, International Sales

Renee McKenzie
Senior Vice President, Chief Information Officer

Sandy Ono
Executive Vice President, Chief Marketing Officer

Douglas M. Parker
Executive Vice President, Corporate Development

Brian Sweeney
Executive Vice President, Chief Human Resources Officer

Board of Directors

P. Thomas Jenkins, Chair

Mark J. Barrenechea, Vice Chair

Randy Fowlie

Major General David Fraser

Gail E. Hamilton 

Robert (Bob) Hau 

Ann M. Powell 

Stephen J. Sadler 

Harmit Singh 

Michael Slaunwhite 

Katharine B. Stevenson 

Deborah Weinstein

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