Bill Betz
Analyst · Wolfe Research
Thank you, Kurt, and good morning to everyone on today's call. As Kurt has already covered the drivers of the revenue during Q1 and provided our revenue outlook for Q2, I will move to the financial highlights. Overall, our Q1 financial performance was good. Revenue was slightly above the midpoint of our guidance range, while gross profit was in line and operating expenses were below the midpoint of our guidance. Taken together, we delivered non-GAAP earnings per share of $2.64 or $0.05, better than the midpoint of our guidance. We continue to manage sales into the distribution channel consistent with our guidance of 9 weeks. Now, moving to the details of Q1. Total revenue was $2.84 billion, down 9% year-on-year, slightly above the midpoint of our guidance range. We generated $1.59 billion in non-GAAP gross profit and reported a non-GAAP gross margin of 56.1%, down 210 basis points a year-on-year, and 20 basis points below the midpoint of our guidance range due to product and channel mix. Total non-GAAP operating expenses $686 million, or 24.2% of revenue, down $50 million year-on-year, and $14 million below the midpoint of our guidance range. From a total operating profit perspective, non-GAAP operating profit was $904 million, and non-GAAP operating margin was 31.9%, down 260 basis points year on year, and 40 basis points above the midpoint of our guidance range. Non-GAAP interest expense was $80 million, while taxes for ongoing operations were $143 million, or a 17.4% non-GAAP effective tax rate. Non-controlling interest was $7 million, and results from equity account investees associated with our joint venture manufacturing partnerships was $1 million. Taken together, below the line items were $3 million unfavorable, which is our guidance. Stock based compensation, which is not included in our non-GAAP earnings was $127 million. Now, I would like to turn to the changes in our cash in debt. Our total debt at the end of Q1 was $11.73 billion, up $871 million sequentially due to a combination of a second tranche of the European investment bank loan and the initial results of our new commercial paper program. Our ending cash balance was $3.99 billion, up $696 million sequentially due to the cumulative effect of additional liquidity, capital returns, CapEx investments and cash generation during the quarter. The resulting net debt was $7.74 billion and we exited the quarter with a trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA of $4.89 billion. Our ratio of net debt to trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA at the end of Q1 was 1.6x, and our 12-month adjusted EBITDA interest coverage ratio was 19.2x. During Q1, we repurchased $303 million of our shares and paid $258 million in cash dividends. After the end of the quarter and through April 25th, we bought an additional $90 million of our shares under an established 10b5-1 program. Turning to working capital metrics, days of inventory was 169 days, an increase of 18 days sequentially and slavish on a dollar basis. Days receivable were 34 days, up 4 days sequentially and days payable were 62 days, down 3 days sequentially. Taken together, our cash conversion cycle was 141 days. Cash flow from operations was $565 million, and net CapEx was $138 million or 5% of revenue, resulting in non-GAAP free cash flow of $427 million or 15% of revenue. During Q1, we paid a $125 million capacity access fee related to VSMC, which is included in our cash flow from operations. Additionally, we paid $16 million into ESMC, our equity accounting foundry joint venture under construction in Germany and a $20 million into VSMC, our equity accounted Foundry joint venture under construction in Sinaloa, both of which are included in our cash flow from investing. Now, turning to our expectations for the second quarter. As Kurt mentioned, we anticipate Q2 revenue to be $2.9 billion plus or minus about $100 million. At the midpoint, this is down about 7% year-on-year and up about 2% sequentially. We expect non-GAAP gross margin to be 56.3%, plus or minus 50 basis points. Operating expenses are expected to be about $710 million plus or minus about $10 million. The sequential increase is driven by the normal annual merit increases and the previously disclosed annual license payment modestly offset by our ongoing restructuring to make room for the three pending acquisitions. Taken together, we see non-GAAP operating margin to be 31.8% at the midpoint. Please note our second quarter guidance does not incorporate the three pending acquisitions. We estimate non-GAAP financial expense to be about $88 million. We expect the non-GAAP tax rate to be 17.4% of profit before tax. Non-controlling interest will be about $9 million and results from equity account investees about $2 million. For Q2, we suggest for modeling purposes, you use an average share count of 255 million shares. We expect stock-based compensation, which is not included in our non-GAAP guidance to be $115 million. Taken together at the midpoint, this implies a non-GAAP earnings per share of $2.66. Furthermore, we continue to operate our internal fabs in the low 70% range, and we expect our days of inventory to be flattish into Q2. Turning to uses of cash, we expect capital expenditures to be around 4% of that. We will pay a $35 million capacity access fee to VSMC. Additionally, we will make a $60 million equity investment into ESMC and a $50 million equity investment into VSMC, our two equity accounted foundry joint ventures under construction. Pending the regulatory approval of the three acquisitions, it will result in a cash payment of $1.1 billion and we will redeem the $500 million tranche of debt due in May from our current cash balance of $4 billion. After closing these acquisitions, our ongoing restructuring actions are intended to enable NXP to get into its stated long-term operating expense model of 23% in the second half of 2025. In closing, I would like to highlight a few focus areas for NXP. First, as Kurt mentioned in his prepared remarks, our outlook does not consider unknown indirect and market demand impacts because of global tariffs, while the direct impact of the current tariffs are immaterial to our financial guidance. Second, with the upcoming CEO transition, there is no change to our long-term financial model and capital allocation strategy, and lastly, we are operating in a very uncertain environment influenced by global tariffs. Considering these external factors on the end markets we operate, we are redoubling our efforts to manage what is in our direct control, enabling NXP to drive solid profitability and earnings while executing our growth strategy. With that, I would like to now turn it back to the operator for your question.