James Simms
Analyst · Don McKenna. Please go ahead, you're live in the call
Thank you Mark. Good afternoon everyone, and welcome to Vicor Corporation's earnings call for the third quarter of 2018. I'm Jamie Simms, CFO, and with me here in Andover are Patrizio Vinciarelli, CEO, and Dick Nagel, Chief Accounting Officer. After the markets closed on Tuesday October 16, 2018 we issued a press release summarizing our financial results for the three and nine months period ended September 30, 2018. This press release is posted on the Investor Relations page of our website, www.vicorpower.com. We also filed a Form 8-K on Tuesday related to the issuance of that press release. As we had completed the process of closing the quarter' financial statements we released results on Tuesday, but because we had already scheduled this conference call, we left its timing unchanged. As always I remind listeners this conference call is being recorded and this is the copyrighted property of Vicor Corporation. I also remind you various remarks we make during this call may constitute forward-looking statements for purposes of the Safe Harbor Provisions under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Except for historical information contained in this call, the matters discussed on the call, including any statements regarding current and planned products, current and potential customers, potential market opportunities, expected events and announcements as well as forecasts sales growth, spending and profitability are forward-looking statements, involving risks and uncertainties. In light of these risks and uncertainties, we can offer no assurance that any forward-looking statement will, in fact, proved to be correct. Actual results may differ materially from those explicitly set forth or implied by any of our remarks today. The risks and uncertainties we face are discussed in Item 1A of our 2017 Form 10-K which we filed with the SEC on March 9, 2018. Please note the information provided during this conference call is accurate only as of today Thursday, October 18, 2018. Vicor undertakes no obligation to update any statements including forward-looking statements made during this call and you should not rely upon such statements after the conclusion of this call. A replay of today's call will be available beginning at midnight tonight through November 2, 2018. The replay dialing number is 888-286-8010 followed by the passcode 77605130. In addition a webcast replay of today's call will be available shortly on the Investor Relations page of our website. I will start this afternoon's discussion with a review of our financial performance for the third quarter and Patrizio will follow with a few comments and take your questions. Beginning with consolidated results, as stated in Tuesday afternoon's press release, Vicor recorded total revenue for the third quarter of $78 million, which represented a sequential quarterly increase of 5.2% from the $74.2 million recorded for Q2 and an increase of 37.2% over revenue recorded for the third quarter of the prior year, 2017. On a year-to-date basis total revenue for the first nine months of this year was 28.7% higher than the level recorded for the first nine months of 2017. Quarterly international revenue increased 2% sequentially and represented 62% of total revenue. Turns volume, that is orders received and shipped within the quarter, was approximately 18% of third quarter revenue. Lower turns volume has been a reflection of extended lead times. With this quarter's call we will begin providing a breakdown of revenue and bookings by legacy and advanced products. We've been working to increase the efficiency of our organization and are planning to begin reporting, with our 2018 10-K, our activities as one business segment, rather than the three businesses (BBU, VI Chip, and Picor) we have reported to date. Going forward, we will present results only on a consolidated basis, and product and marketing details will be provided pursuant to ASC 606, the new revenue recognition standard, in our discussion of the sources and characteristics of our revenue and through footnote disclosures. For some time, in our filings we have characterized our products as either a “legacy” or “advanced”. Legacy products are those associated with our brick business unit, historically representing the majority of our revenue, while advanced products are more recently introduced products, reflecting advanced power conversion engines, advanced power distribution architectures, advanced control ASICs, and advanced packaging technology. For the third quarter, legacy product revenue rose 5.5% sequentially and as a percentage of consolidated revenue was 65%, the same level as the prior quarter. Advanced product revenue increased 4.6% sequentially and on a relative basis represented 35% of total revenue. Consolidated bookings rose 4.1% for the quarter, exceeding $91 million and bringing total one-year backlog to $116.1 million, a sequential increase of 12.6%. Bookings for legacy products declined 6.1% sequentially. In contrast, bookings for advanced products increased 20.6% sequentially, reflecting expansion of demand for Power-on- Package solutions, notably for AI acceleration and supercomputing applications. We also saw incremental growth of demand for a variety of advanced ChiPs across a range of other applications. The shift in the mix of legacy and advanced product bookings over the last year highlights the impending transition in our business. For the third quarter of 2017, a year ago, the percentages of total bookings for legacy and advanced products were 64% and 36%, respectively, but for the third quarter of 2018, these percentages were 56% and 44%, an indicator of further shift in revenue mix from legacy to advanced products for the coming quarters. Also, listeners should keep in mind booking and delivery patterns can differ for legacy and advanced products. Legacy products generally are high mix / low volume, serving a statistical customer base of nearly 10,000 customers. Orders are generally smaller and scheduled over weeks and months, contributing to a smooth booking pattern. In contrast, advanced products are, thus far, low mix / high volume, serving a more concentrated customer base. Individual orders are generally much larger and deliveries can be scheduled over quarters. Since we are in the early stages of market penetration with many of our advanced products, particularly those ordered by OEMs and shipped to their contract manufacturers, advanced product booking patterns at any given time may be less smooth or, as I've said before, lumpy. I'll now turn to product profitability. We achieved a milestone for Q3 in that our consolidated gross profit rose to 50% for the quarter, up from the second quarter’s 48.4% and the Q3 2017 gross margin of 44.2%. This is a reflection of the scalability of our business model and, more specifically, the improving performance of the manufacturing process associated with our advanced ChiP components, which are expanding as a percentage of our total unit volume. During the quarter, we were successful in meeting our needs for raw material inventories, despite ongoing supply chain uncertainties and long lead times. Overall, we believe our visibility has improved, but we continue to pay close attention to assuring availability of components. The recently implemented Section 301 tariffs on Chinese imports did not have a material impact on our cost during the quarter. However, the costs going forward may not be inconsequential, given the volume of components currently sourced from China. We are seeking non-Chinese alternate vendors. In addition, we have filed requests with the U.S. government for exclusions from tariffs on a limited number of components for which no alternative vendor exists. As tariffs on Chinese imports are becoming a material percentage of our material costs, we will add a tariff surcharge to the selling price of our products until these tariffs are no longer an issue. Turning to operating expenses, Q3's total declined sequentially 4.6%, in part because of non-recurring severance expenses incurred in Q2. On a relative basis, operating expenses again declined sequentially as a percentage of revenue, the seventh such quarterly decline, falling to 33.3% of revenue for Q3 from 36.7% for Q2 and 40.6% for Q1. R&D expenses declined 6.2% sequentially, largely reflecting improved efficiency in the development of new products, and fell to 13.7% from 15.4% of revenue. Sales and marketing expenses were essentially unchanged, but declined to 13.6% from 14.3% of revenue. G&A expenses declined 10.2% largely related to lower stock compensation and personnel-related expenses and fell 6% from 7% of revenue. Operating income rose to 16.7% of revenue for Q3, up from 11.2% of revenue for Q2. These results are in line with the statements I made last quarter regarding spending trends. As stated then, we expect operating expenses to continue their relative decline as a percentage of revenue, while expanding on an absolute basis at low single digit percentages largely driven by compensation costs. Our long-term model is to reduce total operating expenses to 30% of revenues, as we drive gross margins towards 60%. I'll now turn to Dick Nagel for a quick overview of our tax position. Dick?