Vincent Mattera
Analyst · James Ricchiuti with Needham & Company. You line is now open. Please proceed with your question
Thanks, Fran. In the II-VI Laser Solutions segment, Q2 bookings of $67.5 million were up 9% over last year’s second quarter and down 4% sequentially, while Q2 revenues of $67.7 million were up 6% from last year’s same quarter and down 7% sequentially. The revenue decrease quarter-over-quarter is typical of Q2 which has been historically Laser Solution’s lowest quarter. Laser utilization in the North American market driven by a steadier U.S. economy was strong during the quarter. We exited the quarter with strong bookings from both the OEMs and the aftermarket. We have also seen an increase in demand for fiber laser wielding heads to auto-assembly plants. The overall demand for our industry leading high-power products for automotive and EUV applications, as well as to our low power products resulted in a 20% increase in North American shipments over Q1 and 30% increase compared to Q2 of FY 2014. As it’s typical in Europe, bookings and revenue were seasonally lower in Q2 compared to Q1 due to the expected slowdown over the holidays. Our EUV shipments in the region were at record levels and our customer continues to take as much product as we can currently produce. Although at the end of the quarter we saw no unusual signs of slowing demand in the near-term, we are concerned about Europe. Experts point to early warning signs that the economy is slowing as well as the uncertainty around euro currency evaluations and the impact of Swiss monetary policies on our business. Mary Jane will discuss this later in her overview. Turning to Asia, the material processing market continues to be a growth area for us in Japan, Korea and in China. China is moving more rapidly towards adoption of fiber laser technology than any other country. Our low cost fiber laser cutting head is getting strong interest in this market and we continue to field enquiries around related low-cost and low-power objects. We are experiencing strong pricing competition and see many players buying for position in the China market. We are adding resources in the region to better service our customers by enhancing executive relationships and providing quick responses to RFQs and RFIs. Laser diode shipments continue to be strong for both our high power laser diode assemblies as well as our high volume components. Several next generation laser diode products are in qualification that target growth opportunities. As we look forward to areas we can further improve upon. We will focus on our epitaxial growth in wafer fabrication platforms and contract manufacturing assembly yields. Retooling these manufacturing steps with increases in automation and process control as well as beginning to bring them in-house and under our strict quality and cost controls will be a key initiative over the next 12 months to 24 months for Laser Enterprise. Across all markets and regions our one-micron and related product revenues from this segment reflects sequentially what we’re up 40% compared to Q2 FY 2014. Capacity has been added and we have built inventory in all locations to improve our customer service. We initiated a campaign to increase market share through close cooperation with our leading customers to develop a new portfolio of products. Our II-VI Photonics segment consists of two market focus groups. The first is our Optical Communications Group, where it designs, manufactures and markets a broad range of optical components, modules and subsystems. We are a leading supplier to customers in the traditional undersea long-haul and metro-telecom markets, and are targeting increased intersection with the emerging growth market segments stemming from datacenters, enterprise networks and Web 2.0 applications. The second, the Photop Group is also a vertically integrated business which provides crystals, advanced optics, display products and precision optical assemblies for industrial fiber laser, life sciences and consumer display applications. Photonics bookings of $66 million were up 27% over last year’s second quarter and flat sequentially while revenues of $60.9 million were up 11% to last year’s same quarter and down 4% sequentially. The increases relative to last year are mainly attributable to the timing of acquisitions compared to Q2 of FY 2014. The sequential revenue decline can mostly be attributed to a weaker demand for our optical amplifiers for optical transmission systems, as customers work through inventory issues and confront the delayed network deployments. We cooperated with our customers to help them manage on forecasted demand changes during December. We also experienced weaker demand than we had forecasted for our products associated with new network deployments, and understand that this was partly affected by constrained wireline investment and project delays the two awards North American carries. Other products such as pump lasers and optical components for telecom, crystals and laser optics for fiber lasers and optical coating filters for fiber to the X broadband network architectures, as well as data center application showed growth over the prior quarter. In particular, the fiber laser market, which has been growing rapidly in China and also in Japan continues to show a strong demand for fiber laser optics, including our micro optics fiber laser pump combiners and filters for a high-power isolators. The overall market remains strong for QSFP+ and other transceiver products for data centers and enterprise networks, as well as EDFAs and WDM components for cable optical networks. We’re in the final stage of product qualification and are initiating the volume production ramp up of our 40G QSFP+ transceiver products. We are able to leverage our internal technology in micro-optic platform advantages to deliver differentiated solutions, and we’ll continue to invest in QSFP+ transceiver products for 40G and 100G client-side transceivers that will support bandwidth growth, opportunities, in which we will further our ability to serve our data center customers and their cloud applications. Customer engagements and feedback continue to be positive. We have experienced the significant increase in the number of design in projects with customers across multiple applications and have achieved several design wins associated with new product sales expected to phase in, in the coming 6 to 12 months. Additionally, we were awarded share allocation increases from key customers during the annual share negotiations that concluded this quarter. Finally, in our II-VI Performance Products segment, Q2 bookings of $53.2 million were flat year-over-year and up 17% sequentially. Revenues of $48.2 million were down 9% year-over-year and down 2% sequentially. Bookings were up significantly in our silicon carbide semiconductor device substrate and thermoelectric businesses, both year-over-year and sequentially. Increases were driven by our new Air Force Research Labs contract focused on the development of 150 millimeter and larger diameter silicon carbide semiconductor device substrates and the continued growth and demand for our semi-insulating products enabling the cost effective deployment of 4G wireless base stations around the world. We closed the major follow-on order for our first betting customer that employees are differentiated thermoelectric solution at the core of its product and experienced increased demand for our thermoelectric products from multiple life science customers who placed significant replacement orders. Bookings in our Military business increased sequentially. We are pleased to announce that a significant long-term contract was received in the quarter for sapphire windows. The initial sapphire window order for $11 million is the first release against this multi-year contract valued at approximately $36 million. The revenue decrease year-over-year and sequentially was driven by a combination of factors. These include lower defense spending in our Military business, lower rare-earth element sales and significantly reduced shipments in our ceramic silicon carbide semiconductor equipment business. However, we continue to be very encouraged by the strong growth and demand for our 150 millimeter silicon carbide products, which we believe will be a key driver to enable market share growth in major commercial markets for a silicon carbide-based electronic devices. To address the growth in the semiconductor substrate demand, we are nearing completion of a major infrastructure expansion of our fiscal growth capacity. In an effort to offset the impact of the slowdown in the semiconductor equipment business, we have diversified our silicon carbide ceramics business and achieved several new product design wins among back-end semiconductor tool suppliers, where precision motion control applications are increasing. We are now servicing customers in the back-end of the semiconductor fab with robotic end effectors, vacuum trucks and thermal transfer components. In addition, we continue to see increased demand in our silicon carbide display business driven by GA-LCD television production in Korea and China. In our Military business, we continue to execute a plan to consolidate our California and Florida operations due to lower market demand, and we are on track to complete these activities in our fiscal fourth quarter. While Military bookings were up from the prior quarter, the outlook for the Military market still remains uncertain and continued program delays are expected. Lastly, in our Performance Metals division, the core business remains stable under the new operating model and has a solid order backlog for the next several quarters. I will now turn it over to Mary Jane, to walk us through a review of our overall financial performance. Mary Jane?