Operator
Operator
Welcome to the March quarter 2007 financial results conference call. (Operator Instructions) I would now like to turn the conference over to Julie Cimino, Investor Relations. Please go ahead, ma'am. Julie Cimino: Thank you, Mary. Good afternoon and thank you for joining us to discuss the financial results for the quarter ending March 25, 2007 and the business outlook for the June 2007 quarter. By now you should have received a copy of today's press release which was distributed by Business Wire at approximately 1:10 p.m. We are webcasting a slide presentation in conjunction with today's commentary. The presentation can be accessed through the investor section of our website at www.LamResearch.com and will also be available as a podcast following today's call. Here today are Steve Newberry, President and Chief Executive Officer and Martin Anstice, Chief Financial Officer. Except for historical information, the information Lam is about to provide and the questions Lam answers during the call may contain certain forward-looking statements including, but not limited to: statements that relate to the company's future revenue, margins, and operating expenses, management's plans and objectives for future operations and product development, management's plans for continuing the company's stock repurchase program, global economic conditions including consumer sentiment and customer spending and the demand acceptance and competitiveness of the company's products. These statements are subject to various risks, uncertainties, and changes in conditions, significance, value, and effect that could cause results to differ materially and in ways not readily foreseeable and which are detailed in the company's SEC reports. We encourage you to read those reports in their entirety. Lam would also like to disclaim any obligation to correct or update any of the information we are about to provide. This call is scheduled to last until 3 p.m., and we ask that you please limit your questions to one per firm. I will now turn the call over to Martin for a review of the financial results. Martin Anstice: Thank you, Julie. This afternoon we will discuss our March 2007 quarter financial results. Highlights of today's reported earnings include shipments of $620 million -- slightly stronger than anticipated -- revenues of $650 million at the high end of our guidance range with a gross margin of 50.2%; compelling operating income performance of 29.1% of revenues supporting our investments in long-term profitable growth opportunities; cash from operations of approximately $151 million in the quarter, contributing to a free cash flow yield of approximately 7.7% at today's closing share price level and March ending diluted share counts. Diluted EPS of $1.15 compared to our $1.05 guidance mid-point, $0.05 of the improvement from operating performance, and $0.05 from our tax strategy and corporate finance agenda combined. Share repurchase resulting in a reduction of share counts of 5.2 million shares absolute and 1.8 million shares weighted in the quarter. As we have explained for some time now and reinforced through the quarter, we are refocusing our disclosure going forward on what we consider higher quality content. Accordingly, actual and guidance commentary today is focused on shipments and revenues and not orders and backlog. Of course, consistent with our fiscal year reporting obligations, we will report backlog in the 10-K. Shipments at $620 million were marginally stronger than we had anticipated representing a sequential decrease of 4% from the December 2006 quarter. Our leading edge application strength continues to be illustrated by 300mm applications, representing approximately 85% of total systems shipments and applications at less than or equal to the 90-nanometer technology node representing 95%. Memory segment customers in the quarter represented 78% of total systems shipments with the NAND component accounting for approximately 25% of total memory. Logic other was 12%, and foundry was 10% of the total system shipments. This shipment segmentation is generally consistent with the profile reported in January for our December quarter orders. Revenue of $650 million was at the high point of our guidance range with gross margin for the quarter slightly exceeding expectations at 50.2%. As previously communicated, we have generally concluded our targeted consumable spare parts pricing reductions in the quarter. We continue to target a regional sourcing strategy to leverage cost in consumer service improvement opportunities going forward. For more complete details on the geographic breakdown of our shipments and revenues, please see today's press release and our website for a reconciliation of shipments, revenues, deferred revenues, and the free cash flow yield previously spoken to. Operating expenses for the company of $137 million increased as planned by approximately $9 million, the majority concentrated in R&D reflecting additional headcounts, the impact of merit, seasonally high payroll taxes and the recent all-employee RSU focal round. To clarify classifications of our income statements, all the costs associated with our investment in new products are expensed to R&D in the period incurred including materials, labor, and overhead for evaluation units shipped to customers. Products released and the realization of certain markets and commercial thresholds are the triggering events for more traditional accounts and presentation that includes inventory valuation, deferred costs on shipments, and ultimately costs of goods sold on revenues. We have entered this inventory versus expense accounting regime for the bevel, patterning, and MEMs products which, as noted in our press release today were released this quarter. Taken together, our market share driven revenue expansion and operational execution drive operating income performance of 29.1% of revenues, again stronger than anticipated. Our total net cash balance including restricted cash was $1.2 billion at the end of March. We generated cash from operations of $151 million, inventory performance was 5.7 turns, accounts receivable day sales outstanding was 65 days. Deferred revenue and deferred profit balances are $277 million and $166 million respectively. In addition, there is approximately $49 million of anticipated future revenue value for previously made shipments to Japanese customers. We repaid $50 million of our long-term debt; consequently restricted cash balance is reduced. In the quarter, we used $239 million to repurchase slightly more than 5.2 million shares at an average price of $45.78. We have $768 million remaining in our board-approved stock repurchase authorization at the end of the quarter. Compared to our guidance assumption of 144.5 million shares, the earnings per share benefit of the repurchase activity was approximately $0.01. Our efficient tax strategy facilitated a number of discreet tax items that contributed to the quarterly rate of 19.1% compared to the guidance assumption of 22%, again driving EPS benefit of approximately $0.04 when compared to our guidance. In the quarter, capital expenditures were $19 million, depreciation and amortization was $12 million. We received $11 million from the exercise of employee equity plans. Equity compensation expense was $11 million, including $2 million cost of goods sold, $5 million R&D, $4 million SG&A. As we invest in our organization to support our expanding Etch market share and multi-product growth opportunities, employment levels increased by about 100 in the quarter to approximately 2,900. These additions were concentrated in R&D, field service and operations. Now to Steve's comments. Steve Newberry: Thank you, Martin. Good afternoon, everyone and thank you for joining us for our March quarter conference call. To start with I want to state how pleased I am with how the company executed in the March quarter both financially and operationally. We had a number of key accomplishments in the quarter highlighted by the release to market of three new products: our 2300 Bevel-Clean system, our 2300 Motif patterning system, and our deep silicon Etch MEMs product. In addition, we were successful in winning a number of key 45-nanometer applications for both dielectronic and silicone Etch applications in memory as well as logic. These decisions support our objective of continued market share consolidation and gains while validating the competitiveness of our next generation Etch products as well as the trust our customers have in the capability of our integrated global organization. Looking at the big picture, progress remains well in line with our multi-year strategic plan. As we have communicated over the past year, this plan is built around three central themes: First, strong growth in IC unit demand driven largely by consumer electronics applications that increasingly require more semiconductor content, leading to the need for approximately $150 billion in wafer fab equipment investment over the 2007 through 2010 timeframe. Second, Lam's development of new products adjacent to the Etch market that provide the opportunity to double our served available market and potentially grow the company 2.5 times faster than the overall total growth in wafer fab equipment spending through 2010. Third, continuing to leverage our business model to generate best in class financial performance while consolidating and growing our current Etch market share position. With that as a context, I will provide some color around each of these key strategic elements starting with the industry environment. As we have progressed through the year-to-date, customer plans for capacity additions in calendar year 2007 remained essentially on track with what we laid out for you on our January conference call. We continue to expect an increase of wafer fab equipment spending of about 5% in 2007 and IC unit growth is expected to be about 10%. as we progress through a period of adjustment in the rate of expansion for additional wafer start capacity and long-term unit demand trends remain firmly in place. Memory is the obvious dominant factor driving IC unit growth. Relative to the outlook presented in January, it has become clear in recent weeks that there will be a smoothing of memory-related shipments this year from what we previously saw as a roughly 65% to 35% split between first and second half shipments to what looks more like a 55% to 45% slit today. All told, this smoothing of memory deliveries does not materially change our view of the disciplined spending growth in memory this year or of Lam's overall shipment expectation for 2007. More specifically relative to the memory market, we continue to expect approximately $17 billion of spending for wafer fab equipment with about two-thirds of that targeted towards DRAM capacity expansion and one-third toward NAND Flash which represents approximately a 20% increase in DRAM investment and a 15% decline in NAND Flash investment year over year. The current pricing environment for DRAM and NAND Flash is generally consistent with our expectations of how industry supply/demand dynamics will play out over the calendar year. We expect that as we move forward through the year we will see deceleration of the current price declines in DRAM, resulting in an anticipated average year-over-year price decline of 30% to 35% while NAND Flash pricing will be in a stable to upward environment resulting in an anticipated average year-over-year price decline of 60% to 65%. Going forward, we expect that increasing demand will utilize the available supply output. This outlook supports that forecasted wafer fab equipment spending growth in total memory of about 8% this calendar year is reasonably aligned to the expected demand. Spending activity in the foundry segment is increasing as we go forward relative to March as fabs begin to move more aggressively to the 65-nanometer node. Lam, with greater than 50% market share in this segment, is well positioned to benefit from the increasing investment in foundry capacity. In fact, this segment represents the single biggest market share expansion for Lam in the migration from 90-nanometers to 65-nanometers. Meanwhile, spending by IDMs for logic, microprocessors and analog is currently tracking within the range of plus or minus 5% that was discussed in January. With our outlook for wafer fab equipment spending remaining relatively unchanged, let me comment now on our progress relative to our adjacent market expansion initiative. As mentioned, three new products were released to market as planned in the March quarter. These three releases in addition to our previously released productivity enhancing software tools support our ability to deliver the new product shipment and revenue targets we laid out for 2007. We also continue to make excellent progress toward release of our new clean system later this year with four to six new evaluation units scheduled for delivery this quarter. This product continues to show differentiated results on the wafer at the 45-nanometer node, and we're pleased with the positive customer feedback on the product. As we've discussed over the last quarter, we have accelerated development of the product's front end aligned cleaning capability on so that our offering will address both front end and back end applications. This pulls forward by approximately one year our ability to address an expanded served available market at the time of product release. Our development activities are in sync with the timing of our customer's needs for production worthy technically enabling solutions for the 45-nanometer node. I will now turn to the third key strategic element, leveraging our business model to deliver superior financial performance while consolidating and building on our Etch market share gains. As previously discussed, Lam gained about 9 percentage points in shift market share in 2006. We have consistently grown market share at each succeeding technology node, achieving a 50% market share position at the 65-nanometer node. Looking forward, we are well positioned as we start to see customer decisions being made at the 45-nanometer node. We are focused on reinforcing our technology leadership and productivity positions to consolidate and then grow share at 45-nanometer and below. While few decisions have been made to date at 45-nanometer, we did win five key technical decisions that were made in the quarter, and we expect to win many more over the next 12 to 18 months. Let me comment now on our financial performance expectations. Revenue is expected to come in at $655 million to $675 million in the June quarter. We see sequential June quarter over March quarter shipment growth of 10% to 15%. With the lower than expected decline in March quarter shipments and the general smoothing of delivery timing in memory discussed earlier, we are now targeting 2% to 4% shipment growth for the first half of 2007 versus the second half of 2006, and we continue to anticipate 5% to 10% calendar year sequential shipments growth now biased to the high end of that range. Additionally, we expect that revenue for calendar year 2007 based on the 5% increase in wafer fab equipment spending scenario for calendar year 2007 will now grow higher than previously expected to 15% to 20% over calendar 2006 with EPS in the $4.50 to $4.70 range. Revenue for the June quarter in the described range should result in a gross margin of 50% and operating margins of 29% plus or minus 1%. We anticipate EPS in a range of $1.13 to $1.17 which assumes a tax rate in the range of 21.5% and reflects a share count of 139 million shares incorporating the full quarter impact of our March quarter repurchase activity. In summary, Lam's near-term performance remains very strong, and our longer-term opportunities remain compelling. I continue to be delighted with the performance of our employees across Lam Research and want to thank them for their hard work and outstanding results. We will now open for questions.