Thomas T. Edman
Analyst · Stifel
Thank you, Ellen. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us for our first quarter 2014 conference call. I will begin with a review of our business, and Todd Schull, our CFO, will follow with his discussion of our financial performance. Then we will open the call to your questions. Let's start with the review of highlights from the first quarter. Net sales in the first quarter were $291.9 million. Gross margin was 13.2%. Non-GAAP net income was $1.2 million or $0.01 per diluted share. Both revenue and our non-GAAP earnings excluding an unrealized -- excluded an unrealized noncash foreign exchange loss were within our guidance range. In the first quarter, we experienced more than normal seasonality in our cellular phone end market as sell-through was lower in the quarter, following a strong fourth quarter. However, we were encouraged to see better-than-expected demand in the networking end market as activities related to the LTE 4G buildout in China accelerated. First quarter revenue was down sequentially and on a year-over-year basis. After adjusting the year-earlier period to remove revenue associated with the SYE facility that we sold, revenue decreased 4% year-over-year. The seasonal decline in demand for our advance HDI and rigid-flex PCBs used in smartphones, tablets and eReaders drove our product mix shift away from advanced technology PCBs. The lower mix of advanced technology products and decreased volumes resulted in reduced factory utilization levels and the decline in gross margins. During the first quarter, our advanced technology work, HDI, rigid-flex and substrate, accounted for approximately 54% of our Asia Pacific segment revenue. This compares to approximately 68% in the fourth quarter. Our blended capacity utilization in Asia Pacific was 62% compared to 90% last quarter, reflecting decreased utilization at most of our AP plants and the impact of the Chinese New Year holiday. We experienced a slight improvement in utilization levels in North America, which operated at 61% during the first quarter compared to 59% in Q4. Now moving on to our end markets. Sales in our largest end market, networking/communications, grew to 34% of total sales compared to 27% in the fourth quarter of 2013. On a dollar basis, networking sales were flat sequentially. As mentioned, performance in this end market exceeded our expectations, primarily due to accelerated activity surrounding China's 4G LTE network buildout. Excluding the impact from the sale of the SYE plant, networking sales were up about 9% year-over-year. In the second quarter, we anticipate sales to increase, and for this end market to represent about 37% of sales as the 4G buildout in China continues to accelerate. After a seasonally robust fourth quarter, sales in the computing storage peripherals end market moderated in the first quarter. Sales declined to 18% of total sales from 23% in the previous quarter as we experienced softer demand for PCBs used in touchpad tablets and servers. In the second quarter, we expect sales in computing to decline slightly and represent 17% of sales. The cellular phone end market declined more than expected as total sales accounted for 15% of revenue in the first quarter compared to 24% in the fourth quarter. Following the seasonal strength experienced in the prior quarter, demand for smartphone products softened due to lower-than-expected sell-through, particularly in China, among other factors. We expect sales in this end market to decrease further in the second quarter to 13% of total sales. Both the cellphone and tablet markets will be affected by seasonal lulls in the second quarter as our customers prepare for new product rollouts in the fall. The aerospace defense end market represented 17% of total sales, up from 14% in the fourth quarter. Sales were down slightly due to lower defense-related bookings in late 2013. However, we have seen a positive booking trend emerge in the A&D space as our customers are finally moving forward with the critical programs in which we are well positioned. We remain encouraged by the diversity of the programs we are involved in. We expect second quarter sales to be up slightly and represent about 17% of total sales. The medical/industrial/instrumentation end market contributed 10% of total sales, up from 8% in the fourth quarter. As we anticipated, sales on a dollar basis grew modestly due to increases from a broad base of customers, particularly in the Medical segment. We expect second quarter sales to be stable and represent 10% of sales. Sales in the Other end market were 6% of total sales compared to 4% in the fourth quarter, as we experienced increased sales from automotive and gaming customers during the quarter. We expect this end market to be stable and represent 6% of total sales in the second quarter. Our top 5 customers contributed 39% of total sales in the first quarter of 2014 compared with 47% in the fourth quarter. In alphabetical order, our top 5 OEM customers were Apple, Cisco, Ericsson, Huawei and Juniper. We had one customer account for 16% of sales during the quarter. Our book to bill and backlog has been improving since the first of the year. The increases have primarily come from our networking/communications and A&D end markets. At the end of Q1, our backlog, which is subject to cancellations, was $188 million, and our book-to-bill rate for PCBs was 1.03. As a result of unfavorable product mix, ASPs declined in the first quarter. In Asia Pacific, ASPs decreased 11% from the fourth quarter. And in North America, ASPs declined by 3% from the fourth quarter. In summary, we are encouraged to see solid demand in the networking/communications end market and improving business levels in A&D. That said, we expect the lower demand levels in cellular phones and computing to continue into the second quarter. Additionally, in April, we implemented an annual pay increase, similar to last year's level, of 8% in our Asia-Pacific facilities in order to remain competitive in the labor market in China. With these factors, our outlook for the second quarter is for moderate improvement in sales and a similar gross margin level to Q1. Consistent with the priorities I outlined on the Q4 call, we will continue to leverage our global capability to strengthen our position in the key end markets of networking/communications, mobility and aerospace and defense. We remain focused on increasing our long-term factory utilization and yields through operational initiatives and a mixed shift towards advanced technologies, while improving our cycle time and yields for new products through improved prototyping practices and by reducing costs. Looking towards the second half of the year, our scale and advanced technology capabilities position TTM well for customer product ramps. With these ramps, we expect to see the benefit from higher volumes and leverage from our operational initiatives. Now, Todd will review our financial performance for the first quarter.