Jim Scholhamer
Analyst · Needham & Company. Please go ahead
Thank you, Annie and good afternoon everyone. Thank you for joining us today for our third quarter conference call and webcast. Before I begin, I would like to let everyone know that I resumed my role as President and CEO on October 2 after a short medical leave. I am very happy to be back and I want to take a moment to thank Sheri and the entire UCT team for the excellent job they did executing on our strategy and maintaining momentum during my absence. We are moving forward at even better shape due to their combined efforts. Our ability to innovate, collaborate and deliver in partnership with our customers during this unprecedented ramp in semiconductor capital equipment demand led to another very strong quarter for UCT. Our expanded capabilities are enabling the manufacturing of additional major modules further increasing our critical content on our customers’ platforms. Leveraging our world-class operations to meet demand in key locations, we continue to perform at the upper end of our target model and grow faster than the markets we serve. For the third quarter, total revenue grew 66% year-over-year to $243 million. Our semiconductor revenue increased 72% and revenue from outside the U.S. rose 82% year-over-year. Non-GAAP earnings per share, was $0.62, more than 3.5 times from third quarter of 2016. The semiconductor industry continues to expand beyond traditional technologies to new computing environments like solid-state architectures, software-defined solutions, the cloud and a myriad of endpoint devices. Among the forces reshaping the industry, few are more important than the ability to keep pace with consumer demand with increased content and higher functionality. To meet the time sensitive requirements facing the semiconductor market, the equipment OEM key challenges include their ability to keep pace with the next-generation technology and major capacity additions. With all indicators pointing towards continued expansion for the coming years, OEM’s require ever increasing capacity from their partners. This is where UCT sees tremendous growth opportunities. As a specialized contract equipment manufacturer focused on the semiconductor capital equipment industry we are expanding our capabilities and offerings further into our customers platforms. The trend toward outsourcing continues. First, as technology requirements for the OEMs become increasingly sophisticated, manufacturing expertise will become even more essential. Second, product lifecycle is shortening magnifying OEMs need to focus on their manufacturing around key process technology components. By outsourcing, OEMs can meet these significantly higher levels of demand while developing the new technologies required by semiconductor devices at an accelerated pace. By expanding our content on our customers’ platforms with engineering, critical fabrication, integration and testing capabilities, we are executing on our long-term growth strategy to position UCT as the preferred outsourcing partner in the semiconductor capital equipment industry. Turning to our non-semi display business, the display equipment market has more than doubled since 2013 and capital intensity is predicted to remain high through 2020 as the flat-panel industry pursues bigger, brighter, slimmer, faster and cheaper displays. More specifically, demand is driven by ongoing TV size increases and resolution improvements, adoption of OLED and mobile devices and initial production of OLED TVs. As display manufacturers raise to get these new products to market, we expect our display revenue to remain at these healthy levels for the next few years. These are exciting times in the semiconductor capital equipment industry and early forecast indicate a very strong start to 2018. We plan to capitalize on strategic growth opportunities both organic and inorganic that we believe will take UCT to the next level. Now, I would like to turn the call over to Sheri to review our financial results in more detail and then open the call for questions. Sheri?