NYSE:ONTO Onto Innovation Q1 2024 Earnings Report $91.99 -3.05 (-3.21%) Closing price 05/30/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$91.28 -0.71 (-0.78%) As of 05/30/2025 08:00 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Onto Innovation EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.18Consensus EPS $1.10Beat/MissBeat by +$0.08One Year Ago EPS$0.92Onto Innovation Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$228.80 millionExpected Revenue$222.60 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$6.20 millionYoY Revenue Growth+14.90%Onto Innovation Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date5/9/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, May 9, 2024Conference Call Time4:30PM ETUpcoming EarningsOnto Innovation's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, August 14, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, August 7, 2025 at 4:30 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Onto Innovation Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 9, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Today's conference is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Mike Schafer, Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:11Thank you, Rachel, and good afternoon, everyone. ON2 Innovation issued its 2024 Q1 financial results this afternoon shortly after the market closed. If you did not receive a copy of the release, please refer to the company's website where a copy of the release is posted. Joining us on the call today are Michael Plisinski, Chief Executive Officer and Mark Slicer, Chief Financial Officer. I'd like to remind you that the statements made by management on this call will contain forward looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Speaker 100:00:39Those statements are subject to a range of changes, risks and uncertainties that can cause actual results to vary materially. For more information regarding the risk factors that may impact Onto Innovation's results, I would encourage you to review our earnings release and our SEC filings. Onto Innovation does not undertake the obligation to update these forward looking statements in light of new information or future events. Today's discussion of our financial results will be presented on a non GAAP financial basis unless otherwise specified. As a reminder, a detailed reconciliation between GAAP and non GAAP results can be found in today's earnings release. Speaker 100:01:13I'll now go ahead and turn the call over to our CEO, Mike Placzynski. Mike? Speaker 200:01:18Thanks, Mike. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining our earnings call this afternoon. Strong and anticipated demand for high bandwidth memory and logic packaging for AI devices resulted in 1st quarter revenue at the very high end of our guidance range, 15% over the same period a year ago. Margins came in within guidance and as Mark will soon outline, we expect to increase gross margin next quarter and improve further in the second half of the year. Before Mark begins, we'll now review the Q1 highlights starting with the specialty and advanced packaging customers, we delivered our 3rd consecutive quarterly revenue record, a solid 64% increase over the same period a year ago. Speaker 200:02:01In the Q1, revenue for our DragonFly systems jumped 30% over the prior quarter, almost exclusively to support packaging capacity growth for AI devices. In addition to volume, we also project demand to increase to address new and emerging critical defects. For example, wafers that are being stacked for high bandwidth memory or used in 2.5D logic packaging may be as thin as 50 to 100 microns. These ultrathin wafers are then prone to the formation of small embedded micro cracks, which may propagate through the silicon, making it more susceptible to breakage. Responding to our customers' needs, our DragonFly platform has been enhanced with a new sensor to detect these subsurface defects at production capable speeds with orders from several customers and shipments starting in the Q2. Speaker 200:02:57After a record year in 2023, revenue from power device manufacturers declined in the Q1, but we continue to add new customers and expand our footprint at existing customers. We expect to see growth return in the second quarter and carrying through to the second half of the year. Much of this demand is to improve yield to increase the factory output without increasing the number of wafer starts. Now turning to our Advanced Nodes business. Revenue did incrementally improve as expected, but remains at quite low levels. Speaker 200:03:30Orders to support Advanced Logic Devices represented the largest growth and was roughly half of the revenue from the Advanced Nodes customers in the quarter and included both Atlas OCD and Iris Planer Films. Now I'll turn the call over to Mark to review our financial highlights and the Q2 guidance. Speaker 300:03:50Thanks, Mike, and good afternoon, everyone. Before I get into the details, as Mike highlighted, we achieved 1st quarter revenue and EPS at the high end of our guidance, and we generated strong operating cash flow of $57,000,000 representing 25 percent of revenue. 1st quarter revenue of $229,000,000 was up 5% versus the 4th quarter and up 15% versus the prior year. 1st quarter EPS increased 11% sequentially to $1.18 and up 28% versus the prior year. Both revenue and EPS at the high end of our guidance ranges is due to the continued strength of our DragonFly system to support the demand for advanced packaging of AI Compute devices. Speaker 300:04:36Looking at the quarterly revenue by markets, advanced nodes, which had revenue of $27,000,000 increased 45% over Q4 and represents 12% of revenue. Specialty device and advanced packaging with quarterly revenue of $158,000,000 up slightly over Q4 represents 69% of revenue. Software and services with revenue of 44,000,000 increased 4% over Q4 while representing 19% of revenue. We achieved 52% gross margin for the Q1 in line with our guidance range of 51% to 53%. 1st quarter operating expenses were 62,000,000 dollars above our guidance range as we made additional investments in applications engineering within the quarter, extending our product and technology differentiation in fast emerging applications like ultrathinwafer process control that Mike mentioned as well as process tools and inspection for the litho panel packaging for the emerging glass panels. Speaker 300:05:37Our operating income of $57,000,000 was 25 percent of revenue for the Q1 compared to 26% from the 4th quarter. Our higher net income performance of 26% came from favorable investment income resulting from our increased cash balance, while our operating income was impacted by the higher operating expenses within the quarter. Now moving to the balance sheet. We ended the 4th quarter with cash and short term investments of $741,000,000 achieving operating cash flow of $57,000,000 within the quarter, converting 100% of our operating income into cash. Inventory ended the quarter at $330,000,000 up only $2,000,000 versus Q4, while we continue to ramp Dragonfly production requiring us to procure longer lead time components. Speaker 300:06:25We do expect further reduction in inventory as we remain focused on inventory optimization to drive consistent operating cash flow performance levels exceeding 20% of revenue. Now turning to our outlook for the Q2. We currently expect revenue for the Q2 to be between $230,000,000 240,000,000 dollars We expect gross margins will improve to 52% to 54%, reflecting the improvements in the supply chain initiatives discussed in prior quarters. For operating expenses, we expect to be between $62,000,000 $64,000,000 as our annual compensation elements occur within the Q2 each year. Consistent with the prior year, we do expect a decline in operating expenses in the second half as we move past these annual compensation events. Speaker 300:07:13For the full year 'twenty four, we expect our effective tax rate to be between 14% to 16%, which does not assume any impact for potential tax legislative changes that may occur during the year. We expect our diluted share count for the Q2 to be approximately 49,900,000 shares. Based upon these assumptions, we anticipate our non GAAP earnings for the Q2 to be between $1.14 per share to $1.26 per share. Our focus in 2024 remains on our targeted programs for quarterly operating improvements. We have several planned productivity improvements that will take effect in the 3rd and 4th quarters and that we expect to provide continued margin improvement. Speaker 300:07:57In addition, we expect stronger metrology sales and an improving gross margin from our lithography systems as we work out the last of the very low margin initial orders. And with that, I will turn it back to Mike for additional insights into Q1 and the remainder of 2024. Mike? Speaker 200:08:15Thank you, Mark. For the Q2, we project demand for AI Compute will maintain the record levels of quarterly revenue for Dragonfly Systems. As mentioned earlier, we expect Power Semiconductor revenue to grow in the 2nd quarter returning to near record levels by led by strong Iris S metrology adoption for planar films applications. In the advanced nodes, expect revenue to increase in both logic and NAND, while DRAM revenues remain soft. The newly projected NAND demand is driven by the need for enterprise solid state drives and high density AI servers. Speaker 200:08:53These enterprise drives have NAND stacks of over 200 layers where our Atlas and Aspect metrology have established tool of record positions at several of the top NAND suppliers. Also in the quarter, we are on track to ship our 1st JetStep system to support lithography on glass panels. We believe glass panels will be critical to realize high volume and high performance chiplet architectures over the next 2 to 3 years. This new system will allow customers to maximize capital investment by supporting both panel production and glass substrate R and D. Through our PACE lab, we are demonstrating the process and process control solutions required for this technology. Speaker 200:09:38In addition, we have nearly 20 companies spanning across process chemistry, substrate manufacturing and process equipment engaging in discussions on potential areas of research and development important to our manufacturing partners. This new era of AI is revealing many exciting opportunities for ON2 innovation in both packaging and advanced nodes. Based on the traction we see with our products and the current demand drivers, our outlook for the year is improving and we maintain our expectation for the second half of the year will be incrementally higher, providing nice momentum going into what is widely believed to be a stronger year for capital equipment in 2025. And now we would like to open the call for questions from our covering analysts. Rachel, please open the lines. Operator00:10:30Thank Your first question comes from the line of Craig Ellis with B. Riley Securities. Speaker 400:10:57Thank you for taking the question and congratulations on the very strong execution. Mike, I wanted to start just by following up on advanced notes because it's been so quiet for so long and now we're starting to see a nice recovery. So I wanted to understand what you and the team are seeing with respect to the breadth of the logic gains that you talked about? And then the same question for the breadth of the NAND gains. Speaker 200:11:30So for NAND, we'll start there. I mean, we've always been extremely strong and well adopted in NAND customers. I think from a customer penetration perspective, every NAND customer that we're aware, every NAND supplier is using our Atlas OCD and several that are working on high stack 3 d NAND, which we were talking about 2, 3 years ago with the introduction of our Aspect were adopting Aspect, but the ramp just wasn't there. So now we're starting to see the market demand or the market pull for these high stack devices where the Aspect and the Atlas OCD, we expect to have some benefit from the work we did several years back. And if you recall, that's all tied to measuring multiple parameters around these elevator shafts that run up and down the stacks, sidewall angles, tilts, all of that. Speaker 200:12:39Going to the logic, I think you asked about, I wouldn't say we're not seeing a ramp as much as we're seeing just continued adoption and continued proliferation of the market position that we carved out when we first started talking about how important Gate All Around was. I mentioned in my prepared remarks that the expansions are involving both that orders are involving both the Atlas OCD and the Iris Planer films. So it's nice to see both establishing a position and getting repeat business as the pilot lines start to move to low volume and then eventually high volume. Speaker 400:13:26That's very helpful. And then the follow-up question relates to advanced packaging and specialty. Clearly, DragonFly is very, very strong in AI related, high bandwidth memory and other applications. But you talked about a new opportunity. It sounded like it was related to wafer thinness and a product customization that starts to ship in 2Q. Speaker 400:13:51I was wondering if you could help size that opportunity and how that factors into your view for a stronger second half and potential for greater strength in 2025? Thank you. Speaker 200:14:07Yes. Every time we bring up a metrology item, the question is on the sizing. And the challenge with sizing is always sampling rates. So there's a couple of knobs they can turn. Right now, we know it's a high value problem, and we know that these thin wafers are becoming more they're still very low relatively low compared to total number of wafers but high value. Speaker 200:14:33So they're tied to high bandwidth memory. They're tied to the advanced logic we just talked about. So a lot of value in them that will justify the process control. So for us, we're trying to understand, okay, is this we're seeing several customers, not just memory and logic, but also some other specialty device manufacturers adopting this technology, particularly automotive. So is this going to be more widely like a must have for every thin wafer application? Speaker 200:15:09Is it going to be 2 or 3 per factory? Or is it going to be 100% at certain process steps? These are all this is hot technology just coming out to solve an emerging critical challenge. And I think sizing it would be a little bit premature. But compared to when I look at the interest from the customers and the risk of not capturing these defects and having entire wafers break inside a tool, which obviously losing a $50,000 wafer is bad enough, but then having to stop the line, clean out the tool, requalify that tool and bring it up into production, that's also an impact. Speaker 200:15:52So we'll see. But I think towards the end of the year, we'll have much better understanding of where the size of this new sensor technology could bring it could be. Speaker 400:16:07Yes, that's helpful color even without specific quantification, Mike. But just following up with my maybe go at it another way as we think about the year. You clearly see a stronger second half than first half. Are we talking about low single digit, half on half growth mid, high single digit? Any color on the magnitude of gains half on half that you can help us with? Speaker 200:16:37Single digits, so when I use the word incremental, you can think 3% to 6% kind of numbers, 3% to 7%, something like this, land in the middle 5% ish. Speaker 400:16:50Really appreciate your help, Mike. Thank you so much. Speaker 500:16:54Yes. My pleasure. Operator00:16:57Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Brian Chin with Stifel. Speaker 500:17:04Hi there. Good afternoon. Thanks for letting us ask a few questions. So it sounds Mike like your expectation for second half improvement in WSE has somewhat strengthened. And just to clarify, I guess first, you also expect packaging to be higher in second half versus first half? Speaker 200:17:27I expect it to be better than I was indicating in prior quarters. So I've always talked about what I expect to be a digestion period. Based on the velocity of orders and discussions and things like this, it could be a more muted digestion period, could be no digestion period. But right now, I'd say that I think it's still some level of digestion, probably in a quarter and then reigniting a quarter later. Speaker 500:18:05Got it. So you're saying when you say the quarter, are you talking about Q2 or Q3? Speaker 200:18:12No. No, Q2, I mentioned in my remarks that we expect to be maintaining these record levels. So continuing to be very strong in the Q2, which is an improvement over the past. I thought we'd be slightly down, but we won't be. Then the 3rd Q4, there's a lot of discussions going on, but timing is not clear. Speaker 200:18:35Is it going to be in the Q4? Is some of it going to come in? There's been a trend towards pulling stuff in. We just don't know yet. Okay. Speaker 500:18:44Got it. Speaker 200:18:45Exactly where it all shakes out. Yes. Speaker 500:18:49And just I don't know if you are or not including specialty in that, but it did sound like that was a little bit softer than maybe you anticipated in Q1. Was that broad based? And is your expected improvement in 2Q onwards tied to maybe catch up in some of those delays that maybe happened in Q1? And how does that impact your outlook Speaker 200:19:09for the year for specialty? I think by specialty, you might mean Power Semi because specialty, of course, is very strong because it includes the specialty and AP is one category we talked to. But if you mean power semiconductors Yes. Yes. So Power Semiconductors was weak. Speaker 200:19:29We projected it to be weak in the Q1, but it's reaccelerating. And in the Q2, we mentioned it will be near peak levels. And we have talked about in prior comments, I'm not sure if I mentioned it today, but we have talked to being relatively flattish to the record we set last year. So might pull down single digits or will end up being flat, maybe slightly up, but still relatively flattish to the record we set last year in Power Semi. So we're expecting a much stronger second half for Power Semiconductors. Speaker 500:20:08Okay. Got it. And if I could just sneak one last one in. I know obviously it's pretty early to talk about 2025, but even qualitatively, what sorts of indications are you receiving from your advanced packaging customers about their demand in 'twenty five? And I know you're already sort of lapping record levels now in terms of like peak production for Dragonfly and for that tool. Speaker 500:20:32And so, I imagine these discussions need to happen kind of earlier to make sure you can prepare the capacity in advance. Speaker 200:20:40You'd imagine that. I wish the customers would think that way too. We are having discussions about 2025. So we're already having those discussions, in particular for customers supplying packaging for AI, right? So I would say it's still too early to say where what that means for the entire year though. Speaker 200:21:08I would just say it's positive that they're seeing demand and already we're only just starting this year and they're already talking about what's going into next year. So I'd say that's a positive indication for 2025. And then, of course, you've got the advanced nodes that we expect to improve more meaningfully in 2025. So there's some optimism for hitting on all cylinders in 2025. Speaker 500:21:39Okay, great. Thank you. Operator00:21:43Your next question comes from the line of Charles Hsie with Needham. Speaker 600:21:49Hey, Mike and Mark. Thanks for getting me to ask a couple of questions. So I think the first one, 60% 30% higher in terms of the DragonFly revenue supporting the AI chip ramp. If my math is right, I think last year, you probably talked about the total of 230 $1,000,000 of the orders starting from Q2 last year to first half this year. And if Q2 is kind of flattish, sounds like you're saying it's at the similar level, maintain the strength, you're going to deliver the entire $230,000,000 worth of orders by the end of next quarter. Speaker 600:22:39I did notice you talked about a little bit of potential digestion ahead, but I also recall you said that there are orders you already received that will deliver in second half this year, but just not at the same level. So could you kind of help us understand this particular part of the DragonFly revenue? What's the run rate into second half compared with the first half levels that you're currently seeing? Thanks. Speaker 200:23:12So I don't know exactly the math, but I would say your general conclusion is more or less correct. We would have burned through nearly all of the $240,000,000 in Q2 if that was all we ever received for orders. Of course, we've received many other orders since then such that, a, my confidence has improved, as I mentioned to Brian earlier, I believe it's Brian, that where I talked about digestion period before, now I'm seeing less of that. There may be a slight dip, but not significant. So yes, so I can't really say with specificity on timing, Q3, Q4 and all that because we just don't know yet. Speaker 200:24:06But I can say that the orders have continued to come in. They're coming in from all of the 3 HBM suppliers. They're coming in from logic, AI packaging, logic providers. And yes, and they've strengthened since our last call, since the last time we spoke. Speaker 600:24:30Got it. So Mike, obviously, seeing second half potentially mid single digit higher than first half, especially consider maybe a little bit of digestion of AI related to Dragonfly. I think a few things you mentioned that was kind of interesting. You're seeing maybe a little bit of early data all around related demand. And you also mentioned something really interesting is the NAND that you're seeing some increased demand already. Speaker 600:25:07So everybody is focusing on NAND recovery because it's probably the worst performing part of the WFE right now. So kind of wonder what's the nature of this, if I call it, the green shoots you are seeing right now? Is it technology upgrades going on or some of the product penetration going on or there is a capacity addition that's about to start? So any color on NAND will be helpful. Thanks. Speaker 200:25:44Yes. I believe it's more of a technology transition demand. So it's going into these AI servers that require higher performing solid state drives, so NAND drives. And I believe, because I don't think there's been a lot of factory expansions, I believe it's a repurposing of lines and tooling that was existing to support prior generations. So what they're doing is they're repurposing, revamping. Speaker 200:26:20And this particular why we're seeing orders in business is because to measure this was very, very difficult. And to my knowledge, we're one of the only tools that can measure these high stack channel holes, over 200 stacks of NAND. And that's a critical parameter for yield. So that's driving that part. I think you asked about Gate All Around also. Speaker 200:26:52I wouldn't say I mean, it's not new like we've been gaining orders to support gate all around from multiple manufacturers of gate all around of that transistor process technology for over a year, probably 18 months now. This is just kind of a continuation of that. It's nice that it includes some ARRIS films as well. So we're seeing still a reaffirmation of our position and of our layer share or share opportunities within this important node transition. Speaker 600:27:39But you Speaker 200:27:39shouldn't take from my comment that there's a ramp coming. I don't think there's a ramp coming. People are still preparing for a ramp. Speaker 600:27:48Got it. But we are all looking forward to that ramp. But maybe one last thing, a quick clarification, maybe this is for Mark. Mark, in the press release, it says the advanced packaging and the specialty devices revenue was 1.6 $61,000,000 last quarter, but I think I heard you saying it's $158,000,000 So wonder between those two numbers, which one is the final one? Thanks. Speaker 200:28:24Yes, it would be the 158. Yes, 158. Speaker 600:28:30Thank you. I'll hop back into the queue. Thanks. Operator00:28:36Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of David Duley with Steelhead Securities. Speaker 700:28:44Good afternoon. Congratulations on nice results. My questions are going to have to do with lithography for advanced packaging. I guess, first of all, there's just been a big push by foundrylogic customers and now further push by the OSATs to expand their capacity. And I'm just wondering if you've seen your lithography tools broaden out in either applications or customers at this point? Speaker 700:29:13And then I have a follow on about glass substrates, but I'll let you answer that one first. Speaker 200:29:19Okay. Applications, I don't believe so, but we don't often know exactly what the applications are and which customers some of our customers are serving. So some serve multiple customers and some are vertical. So that I don't know if that's expanded. It's been high performance compute. Speaker 200:29:43I would be willing to bet 80% or 100% of it is remaining high performance compute applications. We haven't we've added customers that we've talked about through the different earnings calls. For instance, the step where we talked about on the prepared remarks for glass that can do glass and traditional IC substrates is a new customer. And we've also had customer existing customers open up new lines and expand new factories and new lines with our JetStep. So that's also a nice positive for us. Speaker 200:30:22We as we look ahead, we're obviously expecting to start adding additional customers as the market starts to recover. And high performance compute server, that really that's the server market starts to get healthy again. Speaker 700:30:41Now as far as the adoption of glass substrates, I thought that was something that was beneficial to your technology. And I guess I thought that might help some of the major GPU guys start to move to more of a chiplet or advanced packaging structures. Could you just kind of talk about what the roadmap is with collapsed substrates and which parts of the market are going to adopt it first and will the big GPU customers start to adopt some sort of more advanced packaging for that GPU? Thank you. Speaker 200:31:20Yes. So I think it's a couple of things. So first, volume. So if you have high volume or a complicated chiplet architecture, we are going to be connecting multiple die and this package ends up being quite large. To process that efficiently and productively, I think everything is going to move towards panel that fits in that frame. Speaker 200:31:48Why glass is because in addition to that, as you drive these interconnects smaller and smaller going from, let's say, 8 to 10 microns of RDL down to maybe 5, maybe 3, you can push IC substrate, we're not quite sure. But for sure below that, like for instance, 1 micron type RDL, something more stable has to be used. Right now on a wafer basis, you can use silicon and that's what's happening for some of the GPU applications you mentioned. But for going to much broader scale, something else on a panel will be more efficient and that we believe is going to be glass. So glass will allow 1 micron RDL, it's stable. Speaker 200:32:42There's some heat dissipation advantages with it as well. And so but there's a lot of processing challenges, including with etching. And we're that's part of our case application centers working with a lot of the overall ecosystem to identify and develop solutions for these challenges so that we can usher it not usher in, but help to speed the adoption of the glass substrate in a panel form for the market. And we this is involving developing the not just the lithography capability, but also the process control capability. And then with through our partners, some of the other solutions, laser drilling, etching, etcetera, like chemistries, resist chemistries, things like this. Speaker 700:33:38So just to summarize, glass substrates are way better for, as you mentioned, I guess, high density interconnects. Is that an enabling feature for GPUs to start to use that type of architecture Speaker 200:33:54technology? That would be an enabling feature, yes, but they'd also have to have then the volumes to justify moving from wafer to panel because it's significant what is it. Operator00:34:15Thank you. And your next question comes from the line of Vedwadi Choudhary with Evercore. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:34:24Hi, thanks for taking my question. I wanted to double click on the advanced packaging trajectory that you talked about in terms of orders. Could you remind us like what's going on with the lead times? Are they the same 3 to 6 months kind of lead times for your Dragonfly inspection products? Speaker 200:34:44Yes, I would say that it's the same lead times. Yes. I mean lead times is interesting because we build to a forecast. So we work with our customers, work on forecasting and then so it's not like a lead time is going from order to ordering parts to bringing it in and that kind of thing. That would be a year of a lead time. Speaker 200:35:10But what we work with our customers on is about a 3 to 6 month window and that hasn't changed. Even as we've ramped, we've maintained that. Speaker 800:35:20Got it. So when you talk about the second half and some kind of a digestion in 3Q, is that primarily based on what's in your order book right now? Or Speaker 700:35:33is there could like I'm just trying to understand like is this kind of conservatism where Speaker 800:35:38you're going off the order book right now and there could be more that could be added or Speaker 700:35:45if you could provide more color on that? Speaker 200:35:49So I try to be as accurate as possible. So it's not just the order books. It's what we project will occur, and we don't have perfect knowledge. So could some things move so we shouldn't get too hung up on the Q3, Q4 because things could move around and they have been moving around as customers' ramp plans get more aggressive or they struggle in other areas. And actually nothing's pushed out. Speaker 200:36:17To be honest, everything's been pulled in. So that could still happen. But I do think well, at least based on our knowledge right now, we will see we will not see the second half be, let's say, there will be a digestion. There will be a dip. Let's put it that way. Speaker 200:36:43That's what we think right now. Could it change? Could customers add more orders? Absolutely. And discussions are happening now and that could happen. Speaker 200:36:52But my best most accurate view is what I'm sharing with you. Speaker 700:36:58Got it. Thank you. That's helpful. And is Speaker 800:37:00there a bucket between or is there a different order trend between HBM versus non HBM customers? Speaker 200:37:13I wouldn't say there's a different ordering trend, but for sure, HBM is driving a ton of our business. I mean, DRAM is still pretty slow. We get incremental orders here and there, but high bandwidth memory is driving a lot of business. The advanced logic or the logic packaging is driving a lot as well. Speaker 700:37:36So the digestion is pretty well spread between HBM and non HBM products? Speaker 200:37:43I would say it's tied to AI. So it's actually, it's tied to AI very specifically. So we see power semiconductor in the second half growing, advanced nodes is growing. I think the AI is the question because it's been so strong, it's ramped so much. And I think is Q3 going to be a little down and then a big surge in Q4 possible? Speaker 200:38:12Is that going to get spread around and we see less? These are all the things that customers are working with us on. Speaker 800:38:19Got it. Okay. And then I think shifting gears to specialty devices. So most of the power semi companies have started to take down their CapEx this year. What's sort of giving you the confidence that this continues to grow through, I mean, remainder of the year? Speaker 200:38:40Well, that's the interesting dynamic with process control is that companies, if they don't have really, really high yields, they can focus on driving more they can focus on output either by driving more capital spend or in a time like this, they can focus on driving the yields up. And generally, driving the yields up means bringing in more sophisticated tools to help identify in the process where yield loss is occurring and then go and address that. So that's what we're seeing right now and our confidence comes from our backlog and the conversations that we're having with the customers. So pretty confidence right now in the Power Semi remaining strong. Speaker 800:39:36And then on the advanced nodes, what how is your visibility into the back half of this year? Speaker 200:39:47I'd say it's the visibility is good. It's as good as what the customers have. The customers are opening new factories and ramping new lines. And as long as those stay on track, we will see what we see. They yes, but that those things have moved. Speaker 200:40:13So we've seen delays announced by some of the our large customers. And we're optimistic that those delays are all baked in and that there won't be any more, but I can't guarantee that. But I can tell you we're in close contact. We are meeting with them frequently, working with them frequently. And so at least as soon as they know, I think they're sharing it with us. Speaker 700:40:42Got it. And so is it Speaker 800:40:44fair to assume that it will be kind of a sequential growth every quarter here onwards? Speaker 200:40:51Yes. For advanced nodes, I think that's pretty fair to say. Yes. Speaker 800:40:55Right. And then maybe one last one that I'll squeeze in. On the margin side, you mentioned productivity gains coming around in the back half of this year. Could you kind of help us quantify that like what kind of OpEx operating expenses and gross margins are we should be looking Speaker 300:41:17at? Yes. No, I mean, I think from the gross margin standpoint, I mean, we're projecting to have quarter over quarter sequential gross margin improvement. I think as we stated before, our goal is to exit the 2024 back at levels that we've seen historically at that that would be that revenue level. As we said before, plans that we have in place, it's working with our suppliers, it's working with the plants and driving through efficiencies. Speaker 300:41:50So I would say a thoughtful way to do it would be to plan margin improvement quarter over quarter. Operating expenses, the first half of the year is always tends to be higher for us with some of the compensation elements hitting. But again, we do see a decline slight decline in expenses to be above the peak of Q2. Speaker 700:42:14Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. Operator00:42:20Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Mark Miller with The Benchmark Company. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:42:31Hello. I'm back. Just was wondering, you mentioned that certainly high bandwidth memory has been playing a major role. Can you estimate in terms of your current backlog, what percentage the backlog is related to high bandwidth memory or AI applications? Speaker 200:42:55Of the backlog. Speaker 900:42:58And extrapolating, it's always dangerous to do this, but extrapolating the next year, do you think that will be also a significant the most one of the most significant constituents of your backlog? And what about gate all around? How will that will that be increasing as a percent of your backlog? Speaker 200:43:18I don't worry so much about the back log because of our turn the 3 to 6 months in the build to forecast and that kind of thing. So backlog during COVID was powerful, but prior 20 years, backlog for us wasn't so interesting or ever that big or a good indicator of where our business was going to go. But to answer your question, I'd say HBM is, I would say, interesting. So the concern is there a bubble happening. There's a lot of ramping of capacity for HBM. Speaker 200:44:00I think several players are trying to gain share and gain position. And the current leader is trying to maintain. So there's a lot of extra there's a lot of capacity coming on and it remains to be seen is that excess capacity or does AI continue to really outstrip projections and other players come in and that HBM memory gets all used up such that we'd see another big ramp. That part, I don't know so much. So with that, I would say gate all around would be a larger I would expect gate all around especially towards the second half would be a larger part of our revenue or backlog for next year. Speaker 900:44:51And then finally, you mentioned an improving margin picture. Is that being driven by newer tools having higher margin profiles such as your dragonfly with the new sensor? Speaker 200:45:06That's part of it. It's also about the supply chain initiatives that we've talked about and a lot of those were expected to start adding cutting in this year, quarter by quarter, even starting last year, quarter by quarter. So we're seeing improvements from that too. So it's twofold. The new products and the new product adoptions and that's where advanced nodes growth will start to really have another impact, but we're taking control of our own destiny. Speaker 200:45:39We're also addressing some of the supply chain opportunities we have through the merger. Thank you. You're welcome. Operator00:45:53This concludes today's question and answer session. I would now like to turn the call back to Mike Schafer for any additional or closing remarks. Speaker 100:46:04Thanks again for joining us today. Just a quick reminder for everybody about 3 upcoming events. First, onto management will be participating in the B. Riley Annual Institutional Investor Conference in Beverly Hills on May 22 23. Next, we'll be participating in the Stifel Cross Sector Insight Conference being held in Boston on June 4 5. Speaker 100:46:27And finally, we'll be at the Wolfe Research Small and MidCap Conference in New York on June 6th. A replay of the call today is going to be available on our website approximately 7:30 Eastern Time this evening. I would like to thank you for your continued interest in Onto Innovation. Rachel, please conclude the call. Operator00:46:46Thank you. This does conclude today's call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Key Takeaways Onto Innovation reported Q1 revenue of $229 million, up 15% year-over-year and 5% sequential, with non-GAAP EPS of $1.18 at the high end of guidance; Q2 guidance is for $230–240 million revenue, 52–54% gross margin, and $1.14–1.26 EPS. Specialty and advanced packaging revenue hit a quarterly record, up 64% yoy, as DragonFly system sales rose 30% qoq to support AI-device packaging, and a new subsurface-defect sensor for ultrathin wafers begins Q2 shipments. Revenue from power device manufacturers dipped in Q1 after a record 2023 but is projected to rebound in Q2 and strengthen further in the second half, driven by new customer wins and footprint expansions to boost factory yield. Advanced Nodes revenue increased 45% qoq to $27 million (12% of Q1 revenue), led by Atlas OCD and Iris Planer Films for logic devices, with further growth expected in logic and NAND while DRAM remains soft. The first JetStep lithography system for glass panels is on track to ship in Q2, targeting high-volume, high-performance chiplet architectures, and Onto is collaborating with ~20 partners on related process and control R&D. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallOnto Innovation Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Onto Innovation Earnings HeadlinesJefferies Downgrades Onto Innovation (ONTO)May 21, 2025 | msn.comJim Cramer Did Not Back Onto Innovation (ONTO)May 18, 2025 | msn.comThink NVDA’s run was epic? You ain’t seen nothin’ yetAsk most investors and they’ll probably tell you Nvidia is the undisputed AI stock of the decade. In 2023, it surged 239%. And in 2024, it soared another 171% on the year… But what if I told you there was a way to target those types of “peak Nvidia” profit opportunities in 24 hours or less?May 31, 2025 | Timothy Sykes (Ad)Onto Innovation to Participate in Upcoming Investor EventsMay 15, 2025 | businesswire.comOnto Innovation: Soft Guidance, Attractively RepricedMay 11, 2025 | seekingalpha.comOnto Innovation Inc. (NYSE:ONTO) Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 10, 2025 | msn.comSee More Onto Innovation Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Onto Innovation? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Onto Innovation and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Onto InnovationOnto Innovation (NYSE:ONTO) engages in the design, development, manufacture, and support of process control tools that performs optical metrology. The company offers lithography systems and process control analytical software. It also offers process and yield management solutions, and device packaging and test facilities through standalone systems for optical metrology, macro-defect inspection, packaging lithography, and transparent and opaque thin film measurements. In addition, the company provides process control software portfolio that includes solutions for standalone tools, groups of tools, and enterprise-or factory-wide suites. Further, it engages in systems software, spare parts, and other services, as well as offers software licensing services. The company's products are used in semiconductor and advanced packaging device manufacturers; silicon wafer; light emitting diode; vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser; micro-electromechanical system; CMOS image sensor; power device; analog device; RF filter; data storage; and various industrial and scientific applications. Onto Innovation Inc. was founded in 1940 and is headquartered in Wilmington, Massachusetts.View Onto Innovation ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles e.l.f. 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There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Today's conference is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Mike Schafer, Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:11Thank you, Rachel, and good afternoon, everyone. ON2 Innovation issued its 2024 Q1 financial results this afternoon shortly after the market closed. If you did not receive a copy of the release, please refer to the company's website where a copy of the release is posted. Joining us on the call today are Michael Plisinski, Chief Executive Officer and Mark Slicer, Chief Financial Officer. I'd like to remind you that the statements made by management on this call will contain forward looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Speaker 100:00:39Those statements are subject to a range of changes, risks and uncertainties that can cause actual results to vary materially. For more information regarding the risk factors that may impact Onto Innovation's results, I would encourage you to review our earnings release and our SEC filings. Onto Innovation does not undertake the obligation to update these forward looking statements in light of new information or future events. Today's discussion of our financial results will be presented on a non GAAP financial basis unless otherwise specified. As a reminder, a detailed reconciliation between GAAP and non GAAP results can be found in today's earnings release. Speaker 100:01:13I'll now go ahead and turn the call over to our CEO, Mike Placzynski. Mike? Speaker 200:01:18Thanks, Mike. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining our earnings call this afternoon. Strong and anticipated demand for high bandwidth memory and logic packaging for AI devices resulted in 1st quarter revenue at the very high end of our guidance range, 15% over the same period a year ago. Margins came in within guidance and as Mark will soon outline, we expect to increase gross margin next quarter and improve further in the second half of the year. Before Mark begins, we'll now review the Q1 highlights starting with the specialty and advanced packaging customers, we delivered our 3rd consecutive quarterly revenue record, a solid 64% increase over the same period a year ago. Speaker 200:02:01In the Q1, revenue for our DragonFly systems jumped 30% over the prior quarter, almost exclusively to support packaging capacity growth for AI devices. In addition to volume, we also project demand to increase to address new and emerging critical defects. For example, wafers that are being stacked for high bandwidth memory or used in 2.5D logic packaging may be as thin as 50 to 100 microns. These ultrathin wafers are then prone to the formation of small embedded micro cracks, which may propagate through the silicon, making it more susceptible to breakage. Responding to our customers' needs, our DragonFly platform has been enhanced with a new sensor to detect these subsurface defects at production capable speeds with orders from several customers and shipments starting in the Q2. Speaker 200:02:57After a record year in 2023, revenue from power device manufacturers declined in the Q1, but we continue to add new customers and expand our footprint at existing customers. We expect to see growth return in the second quarter and carrying through to the second half of the year. Much of this demand is to improve yield to increase the factory output without increasing the number of wafer starts. Now turning to our Advanced Nodes business. Revenue did incrementally improve as expected, but remains at quite low levels. Speaker 200:03:30Orders to support Advanced Logic Devices represented the largest growth and was roughly half of the revenue from the Advanced Nodes customers in the quarter and included both Atlas OCD and Iris Planer Films. Now I'll turn the call over to Mark to review our financial highlights and the Q2 guidance. Speaker 300:03:50Thanks, Mike, and good afternoon, everyone. Before I get into the details, as Mike highlighted, we achieved 1st quarter revenue and EPS at the high end of our guidance, and we generated strong operating cash flow of $57,000,000 representing 25 percent of revenue. 1st quarter revenue of $229,000,000 was up 5% versus the 4th quarter and up 15% versus the prior year. 1st quarter EPS increased 11% sequentially to $1.18 and up 28% versus the prior year. Both revenue and EPS at the high end of our guidance ranges is due to the continued strength of our DragonFly system to support the demand for advanced packaging of AI Compute devices. Speaker 300:04:36Looking at the quarterly revenue by markets, advanced nodes, which had revenue of $27,000,000 increased 45% over Q4 and represents 12% of revenue. Specialty device and advanced packaging with quarterly revenue of $158,000,000 up slightly over Q4 represents 69% of revenue. Software and services with revenue of 44,000,000 increased 4% over Q4 while representing 19% of revenue. We achieved 52% gross margin for the Q1 in line with our guidance range of 51% to 53%. 1st quarter operating expenses were 62,000,000 dollars above our guidance range as we made additional investments in applications engineering within the quarter, extending our product and technology differentiation in fast emerging applications like ultrathinwafer process control that Mike mentioned as well as process tools and inspection for the litho panel packaging for the emerging glass panels. Speaker 300:05:37Our operating income of $57,000,000 was 25 percent of revenue for the Q1 compared to 26% from the 4th quarter. Our higher net income performance of 26% came from favorable investment income resulting from our increased cash balance, while our operating income was impacted by the higher operating expenses within the quarter. Now moving to the balance sheet. We ended the 4th quarter with cash and short term investments of $741,000,000 achieving operating cash flow of $57,000,000 within the quarter, converting 100% of our operating income into cash. Inventory ended the quarter at $330,000,000 up only $2,000,000 versus Q4, while we continue to ramp Dragonfly production requiring us to procure longer lead time components. Speaker 300:06:25We do expect further reduction in inventory as we remain focused on inventory optimization to drive consistent operating cash flow performance levels exceeding 20% of revenue. Now turning to our outlook for the Q2. We currently expect revenue for the Q2 to be between $230,000,000 240,000,000 dollars We expect gross margins will improve to 52% to 54%, reflecting the improvements in the supply chain initiatives discussed in prior quarters. For operating expenses, we expect to be between $62,000,000 $64,000,000 as our annual compensation elements occur within the Q2 each year. Consistent with the prior year, we do expect a decline in operating expenses in the second half as we move past these annual compensation events. Speaker 300:07:13For the full year 'twenty four, we expect our effective tax rate to be between 14% to 16%, which does not assume any impact for potential tax legislative changes that may occur during the year. We expect our diluted share count for the Q2 to be approximately 49,900,000 shares. Based upon these assumptions, we anticipate our non GAAP earnings for the Q2 to be between $1.14 per share to $1.26 per share. Our focus in 2024 remains on our targeted programs for quarterly operating improvements. We have several planned productivity improvements that will take effect in the 3rd and 4th quarters and that we expect to provide continued margin improvement. Speaker 300:07:57In addition, we expect stronger metrology sales and an improving gross margin from our lithography systems as we work out the last of the very low margin initial orders. And with that, I will turn it back to Mike for additional insights into Q1 and the remainder of 2024. Mike? Speaker 200:08:15Thank you, Mark. For the Q2, we project demand for AI Compute will maintain the record levels of quarterly revenue for Dragonfly Systems. As mentioned earlier, we expect Power Semiconductor revenue to grow in the 2nd quarter returning to near record levels by led by strong Iris S metrology adoption for planar films applications. In the advanced nodes, expect revenue to increase in both logic and NAND, while DRAM revenues remain soft. The newly projected NAND demand is driven by the need for enterprise solid state drives and high density AI servers. Speaker 200:08:53These enterprise drives have NAND stacks of over 200 layers where our Atlas and Aspect metrology have established tool of record positions at several of the top NAND suppliers. Also in the quarter, we are on track to ship our 1st JetStep system to support lithography on glass panels. We believe glass panels will be critical to realize high volume and high performance chiplet architectures over the next 2 to 3 years. This new system will allow customers to maximize capital investment by supporting both panel production and glass substrate R and D. Through our PACE lab, we are demonstrating the process and process control solutions required for this technology. Speaker 200:09:38In addition, we have nearly 20 companies spanning across process chemistry, substrate manufacturing and process equipment engaging in discussions on potential areas of research and development important to our manufacturing partners. This new era of AI is revealing many exciting opportunities for ON2 innovation in both packaging and advanced nodes. Based on the traction we see with our products and the current demand drivers, our outlook for the year is improving and we maintain our expectation for the second half of the year will be incrementally higher, providing nice momentum going into what is widely believed to be a stronger year for capital equipment in 2025. And now we would like to open the call for questions from our covering analysts. Rachel, please open the lines. Operator00:10:30Thank Your first question comes from the line of Craig Ellis with B. Riley Securities. Speaker 400:10:57Thank you for taking the question and congratulations on the very strong execution. Mike, I wanted to start just by following up on advanced notes because it's been so quiet for so long and now we're starting to see a nice recovery. So I wanted to understand what you and the team are seeing with respect to the breadth of the logic gains that you talked about? And then the same question for the breadth of the NAND gains. Speaker 200:11:30So for NAND, we'll start there. I mean, we've always been extremely strong and well adopted in NAND customers. I think from a customer penetration perspective, every NAND customer that we're aware, every NAND supplier is using our Atlas OCD and several that are working on high stack 3 d NAND, which we were talking about 2, 3 years ago with the introduction of our Aspect were adopting Aspect, but the ramp just wasn't there. So now we're starting to see the market demand or the market pull for these high stack devices where the Aspect and the Atlas OCD, we expect to have some benefit from the work we did several years back. And if you recall, that's all tied to measuring multiple parameters around these elevator shafts that run up and down the stacks, sidewall angles, tilts, all of that. Speaker 200:12:39Going to the logic, I think you asked about, I wouldn't say we're not seeing a ramp as much as we're seeing just continued adoption and continued proliferation of the market position that we carved out when we first started talking about how important Gate All Around was. I mentioned in my prepared remarks that the expansions are involving both that orders are involving both the Atlas OCD and the Iris Planer films. So it's nice to see both establishing a position and getting repeat business as the pilot lines start to move to low volume and then eventually high volume. Speaker 400:13:26That's very helpful. And then the follow-up question relates to advanced packaging and specialty. Clearly, DragonFly is very, very strong in AI related, high bandwidth memory and other applications. But you talked about a new opportunity. It sounded like it was related to wafer thinness and a product customization that starts to ship in 2Q. Speaker 400:13:51I was wondering if you could help size that opportunity and how that factors into your view for a stronger second half and potential for greater strength in 2025? Thank you. Speaker 200:14:07Yes. Every time we bring up a metrology item, the question is on the sizing. And the challenge with sizing is always sampling rates. So there's a couple of knobs they can turn. Right now, we know it's a high value problem, and we know that these thin wafers are becoming more they're still very low relatively low compared to total number of wafers but high value. Speaker 200:14:33So they're tied to high bandwidth memory. They're tied to the advanced logic we just talked about. So a lot of value in them that will justify the process control. So for us, we're trying to understand, okay, is this we're seeing several customers, not just memory and logic, but also some other specialty device manufacturers adopting this technology, particularly automotive. So is this going to be more widely like a must have for every thin wafer application? Speaker 200:15:09Is it going to be 2 or 3 per factory? Or is it going to be 100% at certain process steps? These are all this is hot technology just coming out to solve an emerging critical challenge. And I think sizing it would be a little bit premature. But compared to when I look at the interest from the customers and the risk of not capturing these defects and having entire wafers break inside a tool, which obviously losing a $50,000 wafer is bad enough, but then having to stop the line, clean out the tool, requalify that tool and bring it up into production, that's also an impact. Speaker 200:15:52So we'll see. But I think towards the end of the year, we'll have much better understanding of where the size of this new sensor technology could bring it could be. Speaker 400:16:07Yes, that's helpful color even without specific quantification, Mike. But just following up with my maybe go at it another way as we think about the year. You clearly see a stronger second half than first half. Are we talking about low single digit, half on half growth mid, high single digit? Any color on the magnitude of gains half on half that you can help us with? Speaker 200:16:37Single digits, so when I use the word incremental, you can think 3% to 6% kind of numbers, 3% to 7%, something like this, land in the middle 5% ish. Speaker 400:16:50Really appreciate your help, Mike. Thank you so much. Speaker 500:16:54Yes. My pleasure. Operator00:16:57Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Brian Chin with Stifel. Speaker 500:17:04Hi there. Good afternoon. Thanks for letting us ask a few questions. So it sounds Mike like your expectation for second half improvement in WSE has somewhat strengthened. And just to clarify, I guess first, you also expect packaging to be higher in second half versus first half? Speaker 200:17:27I expect it to be better than I was indicating in prior quarters. So I've always talked about what I expect to be a digestion period. Based on the velocity of orders and discussions and things like this, it could be a more muted digestion period, could be no digestion period. But right now, I'd say that I think it's still some level of digestion, probably in a quarter and then reigniting a quarter later. Speaker 500:18:05Got it. So you're saying when you say the quarter, are you talking about Q2 or Q3? Speaker 200:18:12No. No, Q2, I mentioned in my remarks that we expect to be maintaining these record levels. So continuing to be very strong in the Q2, which is an improvement over the past. I thought we'd be slightly down, but we won't be. Then the 3rd Q4, there's a lot of discussions going on, but timing is not clear. Speaker 200:18:35Is it going to be in the Q4? Is some of it going to come in? There's been a trend towards pulling stuff in. We just don't know yet. Okay. Speaker 500:18:44Got it. Speaker 200:18:45Exactly where it all shakes out. Yes. Speaker 500:18:49And just I don't know if you are or not including specialty in that, but it did sound like that was a little bit softer than maybe you anticipated in Q1. Was that broad based? And is your expected improvement in 2Q onwards tied to maybe catch up in some of those delays that maybe happened in Q1? And how does that impact your outlook Speaker 200:19:09for the year for specialty? I think by specialty, you might mean Power Semi because specialty, of course, is very strong because it includes the specialty and AP is one category we talked to. But if you mean power semiconductors Yes. Yes. So Power Semiconductors was weak. Speaker 200:19:29We projected it to be weak in the Q1, but it's reaccelerating. And in the Q2, we mentioned it will be near peak levels. And we have talked about in prior comments, I'm not sure if I mentioned it today, but we have talked to being relatively flattish to the record we set last year. So might pull down single digits or will end up being flat, maybe slightly up, but still relatively flattish to the record we set last year in Power Semi. So we're expecting a much stronger second half for Power Semiconductors. Speaker 500:20:08Okay. Got it. And if I could just sneak one last one in. I know obviously it's pretty early to talk about 2025, but even qualitatively, what sorts of indications are you receiving from your advanced packaging customers about their demand in 'twenty five? And I know you're already sort of lapping record levels now in terms of like peak production for Dragonfly and for that tool. Speaker 500:20:32And so, I imagine these discussions need to happen kind of earlier to make sure you can prepare the capacity in advance. Speaker 200:20:40You'd imagine that. I wish the customers would think that way too. We are having discussions about 2025. So we're already having those discussions, in particular for customers supplying packaging for AI, right? So I would say it's still too early to say where what that means for the entire year though. Speaker 200:21:08I would just say it's positive that they're seeing demand and already we're only just starting this year and they're already talking about what's going into next year. So I'd say that's a positive indication for 2025. And then, of course, you've got the advanced nodes that we expect to improve more meaningfully in 2025. So there's some optimism for hitting on all cylinders in 2025. Speaker 500:21:39Okay, great. Thank you. Operator00:21:43Your next question comes from the line of Charles Hsie with Needham. Speaker 600:21:49Hey, Mike and Mark. Thanks for getting me to ask a couple of questions. So I think the first one, 60% 30% higher in terms of the DragonFly revenue supporting the AI chip ramp. If my math is right, I think last year, you probably talked about the total of 230 $1,000,000 of the orders starting from Q2 last year to first half this year. And if Q2 is kind of flattish, sounds like you're saying it's at the similar level, maintain the strength, you're going to deliver the entire $230,000,000 worth of orders by the end of next quarter. Speaker 600:22:39I did notice you talked about a little bit of potential digestion ahead, but I also recall you said that there are orders you already received that will deliver in second half this year, but just not at the same level. So could you kind of help us understand this particular part of the DragonFly revenue? What's the run rate into second half compared with the first half levels that you're currently seeing? Thanks. Speaker 200:23:12So I don't know exactly the math, but I would say your general conclusion is more or less correct. We would have burned through nearly all of the $240,000,000 in Q2 if that was all we ever received for orders. Of course, we've received many other orders since then such that, a, my confidence has improved, as I mentioned to Brian earlier, I believe it's Brian, that where I talked about digestion period before, now I'm seeing less of that. There may be a slight dip, but not significant. So yes, so I can't really say with specificity on timing, Q3, Q4 and all that because we just don't know yet. Speaker 200:24:06But I can say that the orders have continued to come in. They're coming in from all of the 3 HBM suppliers. They're coming in from logic, AI packaging, logic providers. And yes, and they've strengthened since our last call, since the last time we spoke. Speaker 600:24:30Got it. So Mike, obviously, seeing second half potentially mid single digit higher than first half, especially consider maybe a little bit of digestion of AI related to Dragonfly. I think a few things you mentioned that was kind of interesting. You're seeing maybe a little bit of early data all around related demand. And you also mentioned something really interesting is the NAND that you're seeing some increased demand already. Speaker 600:25:07So everybody is focusing on NAND recovery because it's probably the worst performing part of the WFE right now. So kind of wonder what's the nature of this, if I call it, the green shoots you are seeing right now? Is it technology upgrades going on or some of the product penetration going on or there is a capacity addition that's about to start? So any color on NAND will be helpful. Thanks. Speaker 200:25:44Yes. I believe it's more of a technology transition demand. So it's going into these AI servers that require higher performing solid state drives, so NAND drives. And I believe, because I don't think there's been a lot of factory expansions, I believe it's a repurposing of lines and tooling that was existing to support prior generations. So what they're doing is they're repurposing, revamping. Speaker 200:26:20And this particular why we're seeing orders in business is because to measure this was very, very difficult. And to my knowledge, we're one of the only tools that can measure these high stack channel holes, over 200 stacks of NAND. And that's a critical parameter for yield. So that's driving that part. I think you asked about Gate All Around also. Speaker 200:26:52I wouldn't say I mean, it's not new like we've been gaining orders to support gate all around from multiple manufacturers of gate all around of that transistor process technology for over a year, probably 18 months now. This is just kind of a continuation of that. It's nice that it includes some ARRIS films as well. So we're seeing still a reaffirmation of our position and of our layer share or share opportunities within this important node transition. Speaker 600:27:39But you Speaker 200:27:39shouldn't take from my comment that there's a ramp coming. I don't think there's a ramp coming. People are still preparing for a ramp. Speaker 600:27:48Got it. But we are all looking forward to that ramp. But maybe one last thing, a quick clarification, maybe this is for Mark. Mark, in the press release, it says the advanced packaging and the specialty devices revenue was 1.6 $61,000,000 last quarter, but I think I heard you saying it's $158,000,000 So wonder between those two numbers, which one is the final one? Thanks. Speaker 200:28:24Yes, it would be the 158. Yes, 158. Speaker 600:28:30Thank you. I'll hop back into the queue. Thanks. Operator00:28:36Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of David Duley with Steelhead Securities. Speaker 700:28:44Good afternoon. Congratulations on nice results. My questions are going to have to do with lithography for advanced packaging. I guess, first of all, there's just been a big push by foundrylogic customers and now further push by the OSATs to expand their capacity. And I'm just wondering if you've seen your lithography tools broaden out in either applications or customers at this point? Speaker 700:29:13And then I have a follow on about glass substrates, but I'll let you answer that one first. Speaker 200:29:19Okay. Applications, I don't believe so, but we don't often know exactly what the applications are and which customers some of our customers are serving. So some serve multiple customers and some are vertical. So that I don't know if that's expanded. It's been high performance compute. Speaker 200:29:43I would be willing to bet 80% or 100% of it is remaining high performance compute applications. We haven't we've added customers that we've talked about through the different earnings calls. For instance, the step where we talked about on the prepared remarks for glass that can do glass and traditional IC substrates is a new customer. And we've also had customer existing customers open up new lines and expand new factories and new lines with our JetStep. So that's also a nice positive for us. Speaker 200:30:22We as we look ahead, we're obviously expecting to start adding additional customers as the market starts to recover. And high performance compute server, that really that's the server market starts to get healthy again. Speaker 700:30:41Now as far as the adoption of glass substrates, I thought that was something that was beneficial to your technology. And I guess I thought that might help some of the major GPU guys start to move to more of a chiplet or advanced packaging structures. Could you just kind of talk about what the roadmap is with collapsed substrates and which parts of the market are going to adopt it first and will the big GPU customers start to adopt some sort of more advanced packaging for that GPU? Thank you. Speaker 200:31:20Yes. So I think it's a couple of things. So first, volume. So if you have high volume or a complicated chiplet architecture, we are going to be connecting multiple die and this package ends up being quite large. To process that efficiently and productively, I think everything is going to move towards panel that fits in that frame. Speaker 200:31:48Why glass is because in addition to that, as you drive these interconnects smaller and smaller going from, let's say, 8 to 10 microns of RDL down to maybe 5, maybe 3, you can push IC substrate, we're not quite sure. But for sure below that, like for instance, 1 micron type RDL, something more stable has to be used. Right now on a wafer basis, you can use silicon and that's what's happening for some of the GPU applications you mentioned. But for going to much broader scale, something else on a panel will be more efficient and that we believe is going to be glass. So glass will allow 1 micron RDL, it's stable. Speaker 200:32:42There's some heat dissipation advantages with it as well. And so but there's a lot of processing challenges, including with etching. And we're that's part of our case application centers working with a lot of the overall ecosystem to identify and develop solutions for these challenges so that we can usher it not usher in, but help to speed the adoption of the glass substrate in a panel form for the market. And we this is involving developing the not just the lithography capability, but also the process control capability. And then with through our partners, some of the other solutions, laser drilling, etching, etcetera, like chemistries, resist chemistries, things like this. Speaker 700:33:38So just to summarize, glass substrates are way better for, as you mentioned, I guess, high density interconnects. Is that an enabling feature for GPUs to start to use that type of architecture Speaker 200:33:54technology? That would be an enabling feature, yes, but they'd also have to have then the volumes to justify moving from wafer to panel because it's significant what is it. Operator00:34:15Thank you. And your next question comes from the line of Vedwadi Choudhary with Evercore. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:34:24Hi, thanks for taking my question. I wanted to double click on the advanced packaging trajectory that you talked about in terms of orders. Could you remind us like what's going on with the lead times? Are they the same 3 to 6 months kind of lead times for your Dragonfly inspection products? Speaker 200:34:44Yes, I would say that it's the same lead times. Yes. I mean lead times is interesting because we build to a forecast. So we work with our customers, work on forecasting and then so it's not like a lead time is going from order to ordering parts to bringing it in and that kind of thing. That would be a year of a lead time. Speaker 200:35:10But what we work with our customers on is about a 3 to 6 month window and that hasn't changed. Even as we've ramped, we've maintained that. Speaker 800:35:20Got it. So when you talk about the second half and some kind of a digestion in 3Q, is that primarily based on what's in your order book right now? Or Speaker 700:35:33is there could like I'm just trying to understand like is this kind of conservatism where Speaker 800:35:38you're going off the order book right now and there could be more that could be added or Speaker 700:35:45if you could provide more color on that? Speaker 200:35:49So I try to be as accurate as possible. So it's not just the order books. It's what we project will occur, and we don't have perfect knowledge. So could some things move so we shouldn't get too hung up on the Q3, Q4 because things could move around and they have been moving around as customers' ramp plans get more aggressive or they struggle in other areas. And actually nothing's pushed out. Speaker 200:36:17To be honest, everything's been pulled in. So that could still happen. But I do think well, at least based on our knowledge right now, we will see we will not see the second half be, let's say, there will be a digestion. There will be a dip. Let's put it that way. Speaker 200:36:43That's what we think right now. Could it change? Could customers add more orders? Absolutely. And discussions are happening now and that could happen. Speaker 200:36:52But my best most accurate view is what I'm sharing with you. Speaker 700:36:58Got it. Thank you. That's helpful. And is Speaker 800:37:00there a bucket between or is there a different order trend between HBM versus non HBM customers? Speaker 200:37:13I wouldn't say there's a different ordering trend, but for sure, HBM is driving a ton of our business. I mean, DRAM is still pretty slow. We get incremental orders here and there, but high bandwidth memory is driving a lot of business. The advanced logic or the logic packaging is driving a lot as well. Speaker 700:37:36So the digestion is pretty well spread between HBM and non HBM products? Speaker 200:37:43I would say it's tied to AI. So it's actually, it's tied to AI very specifically. So we see power semiconductor in the second half growing, advanced nodes is growing. I think the AI is the question because it's been so strong, it's ramped so much. And I think is Q3 going to be a little down and then a big surge in Q4 possible? Speaker 200:38:12Is that going to get spread around and we see less? These are all the things that customers are working with us on. Speaker 800:38:19Got it. Okay. And then I think shifting gears to specialty devices. So most of the power semi companies have started to take down their CapEx this year. What's sort of giving you the confidence that this continues to grow through, I mean, remainder of the year? Speaker 200:38:40Well, that's the interesting dynamic with process control is that companies, if they don't have really, really high yields, they can focus on driving more they can focus on output either by driving more capital spend or in a time like this, they can focus on driving the yields up. And generally, driving the yields up means bringing in more sophisticated tools to help identify in the process where yield loss is occurring and then go and address that. So that's what we're seeing right now and our confidence comes from our backlog and the conversations that we're having with the customers. So pretty confidence right now in the Power Semi remaining strong. Speaker 800:39:36And then on the advanced nodes, what how is your visibility into the back half of this year? Speaker 200:39:47I'd say it's the visibility is good. It's as good as what the customers have. The customers are opening new factories and ramping new lines. And as long as those stay on track, we will see what we see. They yes, but that those things have moved. Speaker 200:40:13So we've seen delays announced by some of the our large customers. And we're optimistic that those delays are all baked in and that there won't be any more, but I can't guarantee that. But I can tell you we're in close contact. We are meeting with them frequently, working with them frequently. And so at least as soon as they know, I think they're sharing it with us. Speaker 700:40:42Got it. And so is it Speaker 800:40:44fair to assume that it will be kind of a sequential growth every quarter here onwards? Speaker 200:40:51Yes. For advanced nodes, I think that's pretty fair to say. Yes. Speaker 800:40:55Right. And then maybe one last one that I'll squeeze in. On the margin side, you mentioned productivity gains coming around in the back half of this year. Could you kind of help us quantify that like what kind of OpEx operating expenses and gross margins are we should be looking Speaker 300:41:17at? Yes. No, I mean, I think from the gross margin standpoint, I mean, we're projecting to have quarter over quarter sequential gross margin improvement. I think as we stated before, our goal is to exit the 2024 back at levels that we've seen historically at that that would be that revenue level. As we said before, plans that we have in place, it's working with our suppliers, it's working with the plants and driving through efficiencies. Speaker 300:41:50So I would say a thoughtful way to do it would be to plan margin improvement quarter over quarter. Operating expenses, the first half of the year is always tends to be higher for us with some of the compensation elements hitting. But again, we do see a decline slight decline in expenses to be above the peak of Q2. Speaker 700:42:14Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. Operator00:42:20Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Mark Miller with The Benchmark Company. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:42:31Hello. I'm back. Just was wondering, you mentioned that certainly high bandwidth memory has been playing a major role. Can you estimate in terms of your current backlog, what percentage the backlog is related to high bandwidth memory or AI applications? Speaker 200:42:55Of the backlog. Speaker 900:42:58And extrapolating, it's always dangerous to do this, but extrapolating the next year, do you think that will be also a significant the most one of the most significant constituents of your backlog? And what about gate all around? How will that will that be increasing as a percent of your backlog? Speaker 200:43:18I don't worry so much about the back log because of our turn the 3 to 6 months in the build to forecast and that kind of thing. So backlog during COVID was powerful, but prior 20 years, backlog for us wasn't so interesting or ever that big or a good indicator of where our business was going to go. But to answer your question, I'd say HBM is, I would say, interesting. So the concern is there a bubble happening. There's a lot of ramping of capacity for HBM. Speaker 200:44:00I think several players are trying to gain share and gain position. And the current leader is trying to maintain. So there's a lot of extra there's a lot of capacity coming on and it remains to be seen is that excess capacity or does AI continue to really outstrip projections and other players come in and that HBM memory gets all used up such that we'd see another big ramp. That part, I don't know so much. So with that, I would say gate all around would be a larger I would expect gate all around especially towards the second half would be a larger part of our revenue or backlog for next year. Speaker 900:44:51And then finally, you mentioned an improving margin picture. Is that being driven by newer tools having higher margin profiles such as your dragonfly with the new sensor? Speaker 200:45:06That's part of it. It's also about the supply chain initiatives that we've talked about and a lot of those were expected to start adding cutting in this year, quarter by quarter, even starting last year, quarter by quarter. So we're seeing improvements from that too. So it's twofold. The new products and the new product adoptions and that's where advanced nodes growth will start to really have another impact, but we're taking control of our own destiny. Speaker 200:45:39We're also addressing some of the supply chain opportunities we have through the merger. Thank you. You're welcome. Operator00:45:53This concludes today's question and answer session. I would now like to turn the call back to Mike Schafer for any additional or closing remarks. Speaker 100:46:04Thanks again for joining us today. Just a quick reminder for everybody about 3 upcoming events. First, onto management will be participating in the B. Riley Annual Institutional Investor Conference in Beverly Hills on May 22 23. Next, we'll be participating in the Stifel Cross Sector Insight Conference being held in Boston on June 4 5. Speaker 100:46:27And finally, we'll be at the Wolfe Research Small and MidCap Conference in New York on June 6th. A replay of the call today is going to be available on our website approximately 7:30 Eastern Time this evening. I would like to thank you for your continued interest in Onto Innovation. Rachel, please conclude the call. Operator00:46:46Thank you. This does conclude today's call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by