Jeffrey Jones
Analyst · B. Riley
Thanks, Luis. Before I walk through the Q3 results and Q4 guidance, please note that my comments that follow, I'll refer to non-GAAP figures. Information about the non-GAAP financial measures, including the GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliations and other disclosures are included in the accompanying earnings release and investor presentation, which are located on the Investor page of our website. Now turning to the Q3 financial results. Revenue for the quarter was $95.3 million and in line with guidance. Recurring revenue, which is largely consumable-driven and more stable than systems revenue, represented 67% of total revenue in Q3. During the third quarter, one customer in the automotive market accounted for more than 10% of sales. Q3 gross margin was strong at 47.1% and higher than guidance, benefiting from some new products, the onetime utilization of previously reserved inventory as well as lower manufacturing costs in our interface or contactor business. Operating expenses for Q3 were $45.2 million and lower than guidance by approximately $1.6 million, driven by lower labor costs due to replacement and new hire delays as well as higher vacation utilization than forecasted. Third quarter non-GAAP operating income was approximately breakeven and adjusted EBITDA was 2.3%. Interest income, net of interest expense and a foreign currency loss of approximately $1.6 million was $900,000. The foreign currency loss was driven by typical balance sheet exposure to foreign currencies in conjunction with the devaluation of the U.S. dollar in Q3 after the Federal Reserve's rate cut announcement. Q3 pretax income consists of foreign profits combined with a loss in the U.S. The Q3 tax provision of $4.4 million reflects tax expense on foreign profits but no tax benefit from the U.S. loss due to our valuation allowance against deferred tax assets. Non-GAAP EPS for the third quarter was an $0.08 loss. Moving to the balance sheet. Overall, cash and investments increased by $7 million during Q3 to $269 million due mainly to positive cash flow from operations of $17 million less $8 million used to repurchase 315,000 shares of Cohu common stock and capital expenditures of $2 million related to our factories in the Philippines and Germany, supporting operations for our interface and automation businesses. Overall, Cohu's balance sheet remains strong supporting investment opportunities to expand our served markets and technology portfolio in line with our growth strategy and returning capital to shareholders through our share repurchase program. Now moving to our Q4 outlook. We're guiding Q4 revenue to be in the range of $95 million, plus or minus $7 million, essentially flat to Q3 as we bounce along the bottom of this cyclical trough. The initial order forecast for Q4 reflects a book-to-bill ratio over one, and our current view of Q1 revenue is approximately 10% higher than Q4. Fourth quarter gross margin is forecasted to be approximately 44%, lower than Q3, but higher than the financial target model at this level of revenue due in part to Cohu's differentiated products and our stable high-margin recurring business, which adds resilience to profitability and provides consistent cash flow through industry cycles. We expect gross margin to increase again when our revenue recovers with the broader semiconductor device market and with better absorption of our factories infrastructure. Operating expenses for Q4 are projected to increase about $1 million quarter-over-quarter to approximately $46 million due to an increase of labor costs as a result of the U.S. dollar weakening in Q3 against many foreign currencies. As I noted on prior calls, we've taken action throughout 2024 to reduce operating expenses without sacrificing critical new product investments while navigating through the trough of the cycle. Our main focus has been on structural changes, generating permanent cost reduction and leading to projected 2025 operating expenses to be relatively flat compared to 2024, while supporting a recovery in business and higher revenue. We're projecting Q4 interest income, net of interest expense and foreign currency impacts to be approximately $1.8 million at current interest rates. The Q4 non-GAAP tax provision is expected to be approximately $3.1 million because of tax on foreign profits without benefit from the U.S. loss. Until the markets recover, we expect a similar tax provision profile as we navigate through the cycle. The basic share count for Q4 is expected to be approximately 46.5 million shares. And that concludes our prepared remarks. And now we'll open the call to questions.