Steve Sanghi
Analyst · Wolfe Research. Please proceed with your questions, Chris
So I think there are two things. There is a direct impact of tariffs like the tariffs on our products as they ship anywhere into China or U.S. and then there is the indirect effect which is the effect on global economy and global GDP. The second one impact on global GDP is below my -- is above my pay grade. The customers that I have met in the last couple of weeks personally, when I ask them how you're thinking about tariffs, they turn around and asking me how do I think about tariffs? And nobody knows because as we speak today there are really no tariffs on the semiconductors. So leaving that impact on the global GDP aside and I'll comment a little more on that afterwards, if you look at the direct impact on us, it's basically nothing. In Donald Trump's first term, he implemented 25% tariffs on semiconductors made in China coming into U.S. At that time, about 10% or 11% of our parts were made in China, and we moved aggressively to move that production assembly essentially from China to Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, others. And Today, less than 4% of our parts are made in China, and those don't come to U.S. They go to Europe, they go to Japan, they go to Southeast Asia. A handful of orders that made in China that might come to U.S. which may become subject to tariff, basically, we passed that tariff to the customers, but it was negligible because it was really very small. Now, the other thing is, if there is a tariff for U.S. made product going to China, and we're looking at it all, parsing it together very carefully, many of our technologies run in U.S. and they also run in Taiwan, and we'll try to portion our production so that the parts that are going into China are made in Taiwan or Europe or elsewhere and are not made in U.S. and I'm sure we'll find that it's not 100%, it's a very small amount. So I'm really not that concerned about the direct tariffs because of that setup. Now, when it comes to indirect tariff, really nobody knows what the overall impact on the economy would be. So what we did for a modeling purpose inside is we took a hypothetical haircut on our revenue and we wanted to make sure that if that kind of impact were to happen, what would happen to the inventory? What would happen to our manufacturing? Would we have to take additional actions? And the result of that very stressed case analysis is that we have already cut back our manufacturing so much that with this haircut, our inventory is still declining slower than in the normal plan but inventory is declining because the production rate today would still be lower than the worst case scenario that we have modeled. Therefore, there will be no other actions required. We simply would ramp our factories later because the inventory is dropping slower. That's the answer to your question.