Pierre-Yves Lesaicherre
Analyst · D.A. Davidson. Your line is now open
Thank you, Claire, and good afternoon everyone. Today in my prepared remarks, I will briefly review our second quarter results, share our views on the current business environment, and give our perspective looking forward. Greg will then review the financial details of our recent results before opening up the call for Q&A. Our second quarter results set new records for both revenue and earnings. Revenues of $88.6 million were at the upper end of our guidance range and increased 8% from our record first quarter and 38% from the same period last year. Our strong results were again driven by the robust spending environment for memory devices in the first half and our leading market share in those segments. For the first half of 2018 in total, $171 million in revenue is an increase of 38% over the first half of last year and 27% higher than the second half of last year. Clearly, we have scaled to an unprecedented revenue level for Nanometrics and have been making increased investments in R&D and our global sales organization to support this increased level of business. Gross margin performance again came in favorable to our long-term target at 57.5% for the second quarter. The continued strong gross margin performance for the last few quarters is evidence of our improved operations and certainly some favorable product mix as we scale to these revenue volumes. The strong gross margin in the second quarter drove our record earnings per share, which also benefited from a lower tax rate, as Greg will detail shortly. We continued to deliver strong free cash flow generation in the quarter, adding $25 million in cash to the balance sheet, to a record $149 million at quarter end. Year-to-date we have generated over $57 million in free cash flow, equal to 33% of first-half revenues. In total, the first half set new records in both product and service revenues, as well as gross margins, earnings per share, and cash flows. While our first half results demonstrate that the ramp in investment in both NAND and DRAM technology and capacity has grown to historic levels, our relative outperformance in terms of revenue growth this year is also indicative of our market share gains in both NAND and DRAM. While most industry expectations are for flat to down spending here for NAND, our continued share gains and market leadership position are driving another strong year of growth in our revenues from the NAND segment in 2018. During the second quarter, we won qualification by a fifth major 3D-NAND manufacturer for our Atlas III flagship system and began shipping tools. We also reported a new 10% customer for Nanometrics, with the largest domestic China 3D-NAND manufacturer installing our full suite of process control metrology solution into their new fab. This sixth major 3D-NAND manufacturer helped drive significant quarter over quarter growth in our NAND revenues, which also benefited from some acceleration of 3D-NAND project spending by multiple key customers. This acceleration of multiple 3D-NAND project in the second quarter was partially offset by a modest decline in our DRAM revenues, off a record first quarter. The good news is, the deferrals in some DRAM project spending into the second half have resulted in DRAM revenues this year being more balanced than we previously forecast. So, while there have certainly been shifts in spending between NAND and DRAM, and among our largest customers, our forecast for revenues from the memory segment this year are consistent with our last earnings call. The fact that our memory forecast is consistent with our last call, in spite of reported push-outs in spending, warrant some further discussion. First of all, we've been consistent in our expectations that revenues from the total memory segment would be front-half weighted for this year. This has not changed. The change is that NAND became front-half weighted and DRAM is more balanced than we previously forecast. Secondly, we reported two major market share wins earlier this year, one with a major DRAM manufacturer and one with a sixth major 3D-NAND manufacturer. While we believe our 2018 memory revenues will increase year-over-year even without these two wins, these market share gains are suddenly helping drive our significant year on year revenue growth in both memory segments. And lastly, it's important to remember that we have strong positions with all six of the largest 3D-NAND manufacturers, and if one of the largest customer decides to defer some wafer capacity additions into next year, we still have five others customers who drive their own plans. So even with the recent shift, pushes and pulls in customer spending plans for NAND and DRAM, we continue to forecast total memory revenues for Nanometrics will be up significantly thus year. We also continue to expect our foundry and IDM revenues to be second-half weighted, off of a small base of revenues in the first half. This will result in an overall decline in foundry and IDM revenues compared to 2017 levels, given the major shift in Korea-based foundry spending towards memory this year and that the timing of other foundry and IDM investments in process control continues to push into 2019. Our revenue outlook for the year continues to be balanced in the low 50s in the first half and high 40s in the second half. With our current visibility, we continue to forecast 2018 revenue growth of at least 20% year-over-year. This would clearly result in revenue growth outperformance versus the overall industry. It's also worthwhile to note that as we look towards 2019, the push-outs in some of this year's project spending across DRAM, NAND, foundry, and logic, are all expected to resume in 2019, giving us increasing confidence that the industry could see a sixth year of CapEx growth next year. Along with expectations for positive year-over-year revenue growth, our gross margin profile is strengthening, which has enabled us to step up our investments in R&D and our global sales organization to support higher levels of business. This means that along with revenue outperformance, we have expanding gross margin and expanding operating margin this year along with significant free cash flow generation. I'll make a few more points before turning the call over to Greg. One is to highlight the expanding adoption of our Atlas III system. I mentioned earlier that our newest flagship system was qualified by a fifth major 3D-NAND manufacturer during the quarter and we began shipping tools. This means that our Atlas III has now been adopted by each of the five 3D-NAND manufacturers and both of the two largest DRAM manufacturers. As testament to the rapid and successful introduction of the Atlas III, we shipped our 100th system earlier this month. I also wanted to reiterate the multiple revenue drivers for our growth this year, which is expected to be a record year for both our automated and integrated metrology platforms, a year of increased contribution from software and analytics, a growth year for our optical critical dimension solutions, as well as a growth year for our thin film and material characterization product, and a year with new records set for our service business. Finally, I will summarize the call with some of the early indications of drivers for continued growth in 2019. First, the push-outs referenced earlier are expected to become 2019 revenue events. Second, we expect a continued robust spending environment for memory, both in 3D-NAND as well as DRAM. Third, we expect our foundry and IDM revenues will grow year-over-year in 2019 due to the timing of project spend on 10-nanometer and below devices. Fourth, we have a growing pipeline of new products and new customers that are incremental to our current level of business. And finally, we see opportunities for additional market share gains and further growth in our software and services businesses. Each of these aspects of revenue growth we expect to complement with continued strong operational execution, with expanding margins, and strong cash flows, and we're firmly committed to creating shareholder value as we drive towards our revenue growth and profitability targets. Turning to our guidance for the third quarter, we continue to expect the second half will moderate from the first half record rates. Our Q3 guidance is for revenues of $70 million to $78 million; gross margin of approximately 57%, plus or minus 1%; operating expenses of approximately $29 million, plus or minus $0.5 million; and earnings per share of $0.36 to $0.52. I'll now turn the call over to Greg to discuss our financial results and guidance in more detail. Greg?