
Smart Parking Ltd (ASX: SPZ) is not the kind of technology company that usually dominates market chatter.
It does not have the sparkle of artificial intelligence. It is not selling futuristic consumer hardware. And its core business — parking management — is hardly glamorous.
But that was part of the appeal when Smart Parking was described as one of the ASX's unflashy success stories powering life behind the scenes. The company had built a simple, scalable model helping property owners monitor, manage, and monetise car parks using sensors, cameras, and software.
Six months later, the story looks different.
Not because the business has gone backwards. Far from it. Smart Parking has since delivered a strong 1H FY26 result. But the share price has now fallen around 42% from recent all-time highs reached near the beginning of 2026.
For investors willing to look at smaller companies, that kind of pullback can be uncomfortable. It can also be where opportunity starts to reappear.
Smart Parking's 1H FY26 numbers were impressive on the surface.
Revenue increased 96% to $62.6 million. Operating earnings (adjusted EBITDA) rose 85% to $15.6 million. Operating profits (underlying NPATA) jumped 163% to $6.5 million, while statutory net profit after tax rose 10% to $4.3 million.
Adjusted free cash flow also increased 89% to $10.4 million, and the company finished the half with $15.3 million of cash, excluding client funds.
That matters. Many small-cap growth companies can talk about revenue expansion. Fewer can translate growth into meaningful cash generation while still investing for the future.
Operationally, Smart Parking had close to 2000 sites under management, including US managed sites, and 1,852 global automatic number plate recognition sites, up 19% on the prior corresponding period.
However, investors need to be careful with the headline growth rate.
Smart Parking acquired US-based Peak Parking in February 2025, meaning the latest half included a full six-month contribution from that business. Peak Parking contributed $13.5 million of revenue and $4 million of earnings (adjusted EBITDA).
So, this was not a pure organic doubling story.
That said, Peak Parking appears to be performing well. Its earn-out target was achieved, with the maximum payable in shares, and the acquisition was reported as 30% earnings per share accretive, ahead of the 25% investment case.
The US opportunity is arguably the most exciting part of the Smart Parking story.
Broker Shaw and Partners recently highlighted Smart Parking as an ASX small-cap technology company that could have meaningful upside. The broker noted that the company's share price had fallen more than 40% since February despite what it viewed as solid trading performance.
The broker's positive view appears to centre on Smart Parking's ability to roll out its low-cost parking technology into a large and relatively untapped segment of unmanaged small surface lots attached to retailers, hotels, fast-food chains, and transport hubs.
Smart Parking now has a US platform through Peak Parking. If it can successfully expand its technology-led model across that market, the company could have a much larger runway than its current size suggests.
This is still a small-cap company, and the risks are real.
The UK remains a key profit engine, but parking breach notice volumes were flat in the half. Revenue per parking breach notice rose materially, helped by yield optimisation and improved debt recovery, but margins came under pressure.
Denmark is also a drag, with regulatory changes requiring notices to be physically placed on vehicles, forcing a shift toward manual enforcement. Germany remains in investment mode, and Switzerland is still very early stage.
The US opportunity is exciting, but execution is not guaranteed. Scaling in a new market takes time, people, capital, and discipline.
Smart Parking looks like a better business than its recent share price performance suggests.
The company is growing, generating cash, expanding internationally, and now has a potential platform for US growth. But expectations need to be grounded. The latest result was boosted by Peak Parking, and regulatory and execution risks remain.
Still, after a fall of around 42% from recent highs, Smart Parking looks worth a closer look as a small-cap opportunity for investors comfortable with volatility and patient enough to let the growth story play out.
The post Is this beaten down ASX small cap a smart opportunity? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
Motley Fool contributor Leigh Gant has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.
The Motley Fool's purpose is to help the world invest, better. Click here now for your free subscription to Take Stock, The Motley Fool's free investing newsletter. Packed with stock ideas and investing advice, it is essential reading for anyone looking to build and grow their wealth in the years ahead. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Bruce Jackson. 2026