NXP Semiconductors Q1 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

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Operator

day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the NXP First Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Please be advised that today's conference call is being recorded.

Operator

I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker today, Jeff Palmer, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Jeff Palmer
Jeff Palmer
Senior Vice President, Investor Relations at NXP Semiconductors

Thank you, Tonya, and good morning, Welcome to NXP Semiconductors first quarter earnings call. With me on the call today is Kurt Sievers, NXP's President and CEO and Bill Betts, our CFO. The call today is being recorded and will be available for replay from our corporate website. Today's call will include forward looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties that could cause NXP's results to differ materially from management's current expectations. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, statements regarding the macroeconomic impact on the specific end markets in which we operate, the sale of new and existing products, and our expectations for the financial results for the second quarter of twenty twenty five.

Jeff Palmer
Jeff Palmer
Senior Vice President, Investor Relations at NXP Semiconductors

NSP undertakes no obligation to revise or update publicly any forward looking statements. For a full disclosure on forward looking statements, please refer to our press release. Additionally, we will refer to certain non GAAP financial measures, which are driven primarily by discrete events that management does not consider to be directly related to NSP's underlying core operating performance. Pursuant to Regulation G, NXP has provided reconciliations of the non GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures in our first quarter twenty twenty five earnings press release, which will be furnished to the SEC on Form eight ks and available on ISP's website in the Investor Relations section. Now I'd like

Jeff Palmer
Jeff Palmer
Senior Vice President, Investor Relations at NXP Semiconductors

to pass the call to Curt.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Thank you, Jeff, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining our call today. I will review our quarter one performance and then discuss our guidance for quarter two. Beginning with quarter one, our revenue was $10,000,000 better than the midpoint of our guidance. The revenue trends in the mobile and communication infrastructure markets were slightly above expectations, while performance in the automotive and industrial and IoT markets were slightly below our expectations.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Taken together, NXP delivered Q1 revenue of 2,840,000,000, a decrease of 9% year on year. Non GAAP operating margin in quarter one was 31.9%, two sixty basis points below the year ago period and about 40 basis points above the midpoint of our guidance. Year on year performance was a result of the lower revenue and related gross profit fall through, partially offset by lower operating expenses. From a channel perspective, distribution inventory was in line with our guidance at nine weeks, below our long term target of eleven weeks. From a direct sales perspective, we continue to support Western Tier one auto customers with their ongoing digestion of on hand inventory against the backdrop of a cloudy automotive demand environment.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Now let me turn to our expectations for the second quarter. We are operating in a very uncertain environment influenced by tariffs with volatile direct and indirect effects. As of today, the direct impact of the current tariffs is immaterial to our financials. However, the indirect impact of current tariffs related to future end demand and supply chain remains unknown. As of now, we are not seeing any abnormal customer order pull ins or push outs, which could be associated with the tariffs.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

And other than the potential indirect impacts of tariffs, we are seeing some positive trends. These trends include improving distribution customer backlog levels, as well as stabilized order signals from our direct customers. Additionally, we are experiencing an increase in short cycle orders, as well as some spot product shortages leading to customer escalations. Taken together, these trends have historically been indicative of the early innings of improving cycle dynamics. Therefore, our guidance reflects these improving cycle trends and the immaterial direct tariff impact, but we have not incorporated any judgment of indirect impact from tariffs.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Given the uncertain macro environment, we are only providing guidance for the second quarter. We are guiding Q2 revenue to $2,900,000,000 down 7% versus the second quarter of twenty twenty four and up 2% sequentially. At the midpoint, we expect the following trends in our business during quarter two. Automotive is expected to be flat versus quarter two twenty twenty four and up in the low single digit percent range versus quarter one twenty five. Industrial and IoT is expected to be down in the mid teens percent range year on year and up in the mid single digit percent range versus quarter one twenty twenty five.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Mobile is expected to be down in the mid single digit percent range on both the year on year and the sequential basis. And finally, communication infrastructure and other is expected to be down in the high 20% range versus quarter two twenty four, flat versus quarter one twenty five. Our outlook assumes that we will continue to undership end demand in automotive, and we expect channel inventory to be flattish at nine weeks against our long term target of eleven weeks. Before turning to your questions, I would like to review a strategic acquisition, which we announced in the first quarter. On February 10, we announced the intention to acquire Kinara for $3.00 $7,000,000 an industry leader in high performance, energy efficient and programmable neural processes.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

This acquisition provides a scalable platform for AI powered edge based systems combining NXP's broad portfolio of processing, connectivity, security, and advanced analog solutions with Pinara's AI NPU hardware and software. We believe there is an inflection point in the industrial and IoT markets, which is creating demand for intelligent edge AI compute solutions. Customers need high performance, secure low power processing, which takes place locally at the edge. This eliminates the requirement to connect to the cloud for the execution of AI models in order to meet the critical latency, security, and real time edge requirements. KINARO already has meaningful customer engagements within the factory automation, building and energy management, healthcare,

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

and smart home end markets.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

We expect the regulatory approval should be complete by the end of second quarter. The transaction will not have a material impact on the financial model shared at our Investor Day in November. We expect Kinara to be accretive to our current financial model by 2028, and it will accelerate our overall position in the industrial and IoT markets. In summary, NXP's first quarter results and guidance for the second quarter underpin a cautious optimism that NXP continues to effectively navigate through a challenging set of market conditions. We are operating in a very uncertain environment influenced by tariffs with volatile direct and indirect effects.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Considering these external factors, we are redoubling our efforts to manage what is in our direct control, enabling NXP to drive solid profitability and earnings. Now finally, on a more personal note, after deep reflection, I have decided to retire from NXP at the end of twenty twenty five. My past thirty proud years with NXP, including seven years as president and five years as CEO, have been hugely fulfilling. I am incredibly thankful for the invaluable privilege to work with so many amazing people and having the opportunity to co create NXP's future and drive technological leadership for a better world. For three decades, I've passionately prioritized and dedicated my energy to NXP and all of our stakeholders.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Now the time has come to start planning for a shift and focus on my personal journey. I am looking forward to entering the next chapter of my life in good health, taking more time for family, friends, and personal passions. And I would like

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

to

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

congratulate Rafael on his promotion to President of NXP. I look much forward to the next six months of transition period before Rafael assumes the Chief Executive Officer role for NXP in October. Rafael will work very closely together with all of you in the upcoming period. Building on more than ten years of experience in NXP, Rafael will be an excellent leader to execute on NXP's strategy to bring intelligent systems to the edge in the automotive and industrial IoT end markets. And with that, I would like to pass the call over to you, Bill, for a review of our financial performance.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Thank you, Kurt, and good morning to everyone on today's call. As Kurt has already covered the drivers of the revenue during Q1 and provided our revenue outlook for Q2, I will move to the financial highlights. Overall, our Q1 financial performance was good. Revenue was slightly above the midpoint of our guidance range, while gross profit was in line. And operating expenses were below the midpoint of our guidance.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Taken together, we delivered non GAAP earnings per share of $2.64 or $05 better than the midpoint of our guidance. We continue to manage sales into the distribution channel, consistent with our guidance of nine weeks. Now moving to the details of Q1. Total revenue was $2,840,000,000 down 9% year on year, slightly above the midpoint of our guidance range. We generated $1,590,000,000 in non GAAP gross profit and reported a non GAAP gross margin of 56.1%, down two ten basis points year on year and 20 basis points below the midpoint of our guidance range due to product and channel mix.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Total non GAAP operating expenses, dollars $686,000,000 or 24.2% of revenue, down 50,000,000 year on year and $14,000,000 below the midpoint of our guidance range. From a total operating profit perspective, non GAAP operating profit was $9.00 4,000,000 and non GAAP operating margin was 31.9%, down two sixty basis points year on year and 40 basis points above the midpoint of our guidance. Non GAAP interest expense was $80,000,000 while taxes for ongoing operations were $143,000,000 or a 17.4% non GAAP effective tax rate. Non controlling interest was $7,000,000 and results from equity account investees associated with our joint venture manufacturing partnerships was 1,000,000 Taken together, below the line items were $3,000,000 unfavorable, which is our guidance. Stock based compensation, which is not included in our non GAAP earnings, was $127,000,000 Now, I would like to turn to the changes in our cash and debt.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Our total debt at the end of Q1 was 11,730,000,000.00 up $871,000,000 sequentially due to a combination of a second tranche of the European investment bank loan and the initial results of our new commercial paper program. Our ending cash balance was $3,990,000,000 up $696,000,000 sequentially due to the cumulative effect of additional liquidity, capital returns, CapEx investments, and cash generation during the quarter. The resulting net debt was $7,740,000,000 And we exited the quarter with a trailing twelve month adjusted EBITDA of $4,890,000,000 Our ratio of net debt to trailing twelve month adjusted EBITDA at the end of Q1 was 1.6 times, and our twelve month adjusted EBITDA interest coverage ratio was 19.2 times. During Q1, we repurchased $3.00 $3,000,000 of our shares and paid $258,000,000 in cash dividends. After the end of the quarter and through April 25, we bought an additional $90,000,000 of our shares under an established 10b5-one program.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Turning to working capital metrics, days of inventory was one hundred and sixty nine days, an increase of eighteen days sequentially and flattish on a dollar basis. Days receivable were thirty four days, up four days sequentially, and days payable were sixty two days, down three days sequentially. Taken together, our cash conversion cycle was one hundred and forty one days. Cash flow from operations was $565,000,000 and net CapEx was $138,000,000 or 5% of revenue, resulting in non GAAP free cash flow of $427,000,000 or 15% of revenue. During Q1, we paid a $125,000,000 capacity access fee related to VSMC, which is included in our cash flow from operations.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Additionally, we paid $16,000,000 into ESMC, our equity accounting foundry joint venture under construction in Germany, and a $20,000,000 into the SMC, our equity accounted foundry joint venture under construction in cinema, both of which are included in our cash flow from investing. Now turning to our expectations for the second quarter. As Kurt mentioned, we anticipate Q2 revenue to be $2,900,000,000 plus or minus about 100,000,000 At the midpoint, this is down about 7% year on year and up about 2% sequentially. We expect non GAAP gross margin to be 56.3% plus or minus 50 basis points. Operating expenses are expected to be about $710,000,000 plus or minus about $10,000,000 The sequential increase is driven by our normal annual merit increases and the previously disclosed annual license payment modestly offset by our ongoing restructuring to make room for the three pending acquisitions.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Taken together, we see non GAAP operating margin to be 31.8% at the midpoint. Please note our second quarter guidance does not incorporate the three pending acquisitions. We estimate non GAAP financial expense to be about 88,000,000 We expect the non GAAP tax rate to be 17.4% of profit before tax. Non controlling interest will be about $9,000,000 and results from equity account investees about 2,000,000 For Q2, we suggest for modeling purposes, you use an average share count of $255,000,000 shares. We expect stock based compensation, which is not included in our non GAAP guidance to be $115,000,000 Taken together at the midpoint, this implies a non GAAP earnings per share of $2.66 Furthermore, we continue to operate our internal fabs in the low 70% range, and we expect our days of inventory to be flattish into Q2.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Turning to uses of cash, we expect capital expenditures to be around 4% of that. We will pay a $35,000,000 capacity access fee to BSMC. Additionally, we will make a $16,000,000 equity investment into ESMC and a $50,000,000 equity investment into VSMC, our two equity accounted foundry joint ventures under construction. Pending the regulatory approval of the three acquisitions, it will result in a cash payment of 1,100,000,000.0 and we will redeem the $500,000,000 tranche of debt due in May from our current cash balance of $4,000,000,000 After closing these acquisitions, our ongoing restructuring actions are intended to enable NXP to get into its stated long term operating expense model of 23% in the second half of twenty twenty five. In closing, I would like to highlight a few focus areas for NXP.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

First, as Kurt mentioned in his prepared remarks, our outlook does not consider unknown indirect end market demand impacts because of global tariffs. While the direct impact of the current tariffs are immaterial to our financial guidance. Second, with the upcoming CEO transition, there is no change to our long term financial model and capital allocation strategy. And lastly, we are operating in a very uncertain environment influenced by global tariffs. Considering these external factors on the end markets we operate, we are redoubling our efforts to manage what is in direct control, enabling NXP to drive solid profitability and earnings while executing our growth strategy.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

With that, I would like to now turn it back to the operator for your questions.

Operator

Certainly. Our first question will be coming from Christopher Muse of Cantor Fitzgerald. Your line is open, Christopher.

CJ Muse
Senior Managing Director at Cantor Fitzgerald

Yeah. Well, good morning. Good afternoon. Thank you for taking the question and Kurt, you will clearly be very missed. Thank you for everything that you've done over the last five years obviously before that as president.

CJ Muse
Senior Managing Director at Cantor Fitzgerald

I guess maybe first question, highlighted in your prepared remarks the Canara acquisition, but you've also made acquisitions with Aviva and TT Tech. And I guess my question is this, as you think about competition from China in the MCU world, how much of these acquisitions are defensive in terms of a world where MCU discrete purchases probably decrease and focus on software is more important or conversely more offensive in terms of true differentiation both in the auto and in the industrial side of things where you look to really separate yourselves?

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Many thanks, and good morning, C. J. Indeed. We have had three acquisitions now, Kinara, Aviva, and TT Tech Auto. Kinara is the AI edge compute, which I just discussed briefly on the call.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Aviva is about asynchronous connectivity in the car between displays and cameras and for very high data rates in one direction versus not in the other. So clearly beating what Ethernet can do. And TTTEK Auto is indeed a very strong software complement to our CoreRite platform. And to answer your question in brief, this is clearly an offensive addition complement to our product strategy as we have it today to make us more differentiated with our compute portfolio. I was a little bit hesitant in T.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

J. Because it's not just the compute portfolio, because especially the AVEVA and TTTEC Auto is the whole offering with our core right platform for the software defined vehicle. Clearly, this will come to good play in China, but I have to emphasize C chain not only in China. I mean, this is a global offering, but it will certainly also further help our China for China strategy.

CJ Muse
Senior Managing Director at Cantor Fitzgerald

Very helpful. Then as a quick follow-up, could you give us a kind of level set where we are in the auto correction? You talked about undershipping end demand. I guess when do you now expect excess inventory to be digested? And how are you thinking from a geographic perspective?

CJ Muse
Senior Managing Director at Cantor Fitzgerald

I think three months ago, you talked about China strong, America's kind of slowly recovering and Europe weak. Is that kind of consistent with where we are again today? Thanks so much.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Yeah. Actually, two guidance is a bit of a turning point. Above and beyond the comments I made in my prepared remarks about better backlog with some distribution customers, about stabilization of order patterns from direct customers, some early innings of escalations because of supply shortages with very short term orders. But the turning point of auto in the second quarter is actually, in my view, that second quarter we are flat year on year. And that's the first time after five quarters.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

So we look now back to five quarters of year on year declines in automotive, and this second quarter of calendar twenty twenty five is the first time that we are flat. It is indeed, CJ, a combination of a stabilizing order pattern from the direct customers with somewhat slower digestion of above inventory in the Western Tier 1s. I say somewhat slower because some of them are done and we still have a few left which are still absorbing over inventory. So this is still under shipping to their end demand. At the same time, we see a pretty nice pickup in order pace, especially from Asia for the second quarter automotive.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

And Asia here is a combination of China and Japan. Admittedly, that also has seasonal components. China automotive is always seasonally weak in Q1 and then picks up the pace in Q2, and that's exactly what we see. And in Japan, is another element which makes Q2 always stronger than Q1, which has to do with the price adjustment. I talked about global pricing in the last earnings call, and I hope I made a clear comment that most of the Western customers, settle pricing for the full year by January 1.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

For Japan, that is by April 1. And natural customer behavior is that they hesitate to buy before they have the new prices. So Japan was waiting, and that's why we see now an uptick in Japan into the second quarter. Since it will be one of the next questions for sure, I say it upfront. With having all the price negotiations with the large customers now settled for the year, I can reconfirm with confidence what I said last earnings, which is we will have for this year a low single digit price erosion for the whole company for the year.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

So no change to what we said last year. It's just that now the confidence is fully in place since we also closed and operate and execute in Japan. Thanks so much.

Operator

Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question will be coming from Ross Seymore of Deutsche Bank. Ross, your line is open.

Ross Seymore
Ross Seymore
Managing Director at Deutsche Bank

Hi, guys. Thanks for letting me ask a couple of questions. And Curt, I want to echo what CJ said. Thank you so much for all your help over the years and congrats and best of luck in retirement. So I guess my first question is, I know you talked about the direct and indirect not really having an impact on the tariff front.

Ross Seymore
Ross Seymore
Managing Director at Deutsche Bank

But can you just talk a little bit about how NXT is viewed by the customers and by the various governments? I know where you're technically headquartered, but are you a US company to China or a US China for China play? Does The US consider you a European company? Just trying to talk through the manufacturing footprints you have and the flexibility that might provide.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Yeah, thanks. Thanks, Ross, and good morning. Let me first reiterate indeed what I said about direct and indirect impact. The direct impact of the current tariffs we consider immaterial to our financial guidance. So there is a tiny little bit, but it is immaterial, therefore considered zero.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

What I did say about the indirect impact is that it is completely confusing because things are changing by the day. I think today is another reiteration planned for the 25% auto. So that keeps changing, and we don't see a consistent pattern. But I would also clearly say we have been very busy talking to all of our customers across the world, asking them what they plan to do, what they have possibly done. And there is neither pull in or push out effects at this point in time.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

And we also don't we didn't really foresee anything for the second quarter from an indirect perspective. So that's why the comment in my prepared remarks. The second part of your question is indeed yielding something we essentially see as an opportunity. Especially in China, Ross, we are seeing, and of course we position ourselves that way, as a European company. Very clearly as a European company with a lot of our manufacturing operations given our hybrid manufacturing strategy outside of The US.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

So that makes us, I'd say, a pretty much appreciated partner for the industry and our customers in China. Now tariffs have been accepted and coming and going over the last couple of weeks. But clearly, we've seen an opportunity with our China For China strategy from these tariffs because our manufacturing structure and our hybrid manufacturing network, which I think I've discussed over the past couple of quarters already, which is very much emphasizing and strongly building a local manufacturing network is a positive of this. So it's not just how we are seen, Ross, but it's also factually such that I think more than a third of our China For China business today is already manufactured in China. So we already have made a lot of progress in leveraging this advantage.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Now you also asked for, are we seen in The US? Well, in The US, we are seen as a US company, which means we are complying with anything that is being asked from us. But I think that the part which gives us potentially a boost and we try to leverage is that the Chinese are seeing us as European, and we have already spent, I'd say, two years of changing our supply network to be a better partner from a China for China manufacturing perspective.

Ross Seymore
Ross Seymore
Managing Director at Deutsche Bank

Thanks for that.

Ross Seymore
Ross Seymore
Managing Director at Deutsche Bank

I guess for my follow-up, I just want to pivot over to the industrial side of things. You gave a lot of color about the order patterns, etcetera, in automotive channel versus direct, etcetera. We've heard from other companies that they're seeing some of the green shoots, And I know those are dangerous words these days, but nonetheless, in the industrial business. I just wondered what you're seeing on that side of things, both direct or geographically, and then, of course, via the channel.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Yeah. As a precursor to this, I'm a little bit humble when it comes to looking at NXP as a bellwether for the industrial sector. I mean, we are comparably small, so I'm a little bit careful in taking my commentary now as a strong direction for the whole industry. What we are seeing is that actually in Q1 from a performance perspective, actual performance, but also for the guidance of the second quarter, which is up mid single digit, It is more or less by the consumer IoT part than the core industrial part. The ratio is still about the same as we discussed earlier, Ross, which is that sixty-forty between core industrial and consumer IoT.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

But directionally, both in Q1 but also now into Q2, it is the consumer IoT part which is stronger on a relative basis. However, I do believe, Ross, that also has to do with company specific design wins. We just have a number of really strong design wins. And again, they are specifically in China, which are now playing out nicely in the first half of this year. So I don't know we can take this as a proxy for the industry.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

It's probably pretty specific to NXP. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question will be coming from Chris Caso of Wolfe Research. Your line is open, Chris.

Chris Caso
Managing Director at Wolfe Research LLC

Yes, thank you. Good morning. I wonder if you could expand a little bit on some of the comments you made on your China for China strategy. I guess, how far that progresses? And I guess, ultimately, within China, how much of your China revenue do you expect to be able to supply domestically and under which time?

Chris Caso
Managing Director at Wolfe Research LLC

And then maybe you could speak a little bit to The US obviously, because that's something we're awaiting the regulations. And, you know, how much of The U. S. You'd be able to satisfy from a U. S.

Chris Caso
Managing Director at Wolfe Research LLC

VAP?

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Yeah. So good morning, Chris. First of all, the China for China strategy has two legs. One is the manufacturing leg, which I will expand on in a second. The other one, I think structurally or strategically even more important, is the road mapping and product generation dedicated for Chinese customers with a consideration of them as lead customers, given that they are really setting the pace now in the automotive and industrial sector when it comes to innovation.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

And I might have talked last fall about the fact that I even changed the management team of NXP to the extent that I have a leader now directly reporting to me who runs the China business to make sure we have full visibility on the highest level in the company on the specific product needs. So the product road mapping is a very important strategic element. Now back to your question on the manufacturing side. We have currently about by the way, everything I say now is wafer manufacturing. There is different considerations when you think about back end test and assembly versus front end wafer manufacturing.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

I speak now about wafer manufacturing, where we have about 30% capability at the moment to supply or not only capability, it's actually what we do to supply for our China for China business. So from the revenues which we currently ship China for China, Thirty Percent are actually sourced in China. And of course, we work hard to expand this. Now don't assume that the rest is in The US. You know that we have 60% of our overall wafers coming from foundries, which are typically not in The US.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

So we have a much higher number, which is non US sourced, which is then from Europe and other places in Asia serving China. So it's a much higher number than the 30%, which is already in China. But again, we want to work this as high as possible, as soon as possible to have maximum independence here relative to possible tariffs to that end. I would actually say, Chris, the tariffs, of course, are now adding uncertainty and complexity. But the China for China strategy, which I can speak about here, is not something we now suddenly did because of the tariffs.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

We've had that actually in place for probably more than two years. Given the revenue opportunity which we see for our core markets, automotive and industrial in China, where we should see that the industry in China is leading the pack now from a global perspective, which is why we've been leaning into this already for a longer time.

Chris Caso
Managing Director at Wolfe Research LLC

Thank you. As a follow-up, a question for Bill, and I think you made a comment that you would get to your 23% expenses percentage of revenue target in the second half of the year after accounting for the acquisitions. Could you go into a little more detail on that and what assumptions you're making to get to those numbers?

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Yeah, sure. So on operating expenses, we're not guiding in the second half. You can see in Q1, we were favorable against our guidance. So that means we're ahead of the plan of the restructuring activities. And we're going to continue that into Q2 and Q3 because it's time phased.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Think about at the June '30, we will have probably twelve fifty extra employees joining us for a full quarter effect starting Q3 and Q4. And you're right in my prepared remarks. Basically, we're doing is continue making space for those acquisitions so that we can absorb and hit our model at 23%. Obviously, we're not guiding the second half, but we have scenarios on what revenue we think we want to go do and different levers to go pull against that. But we feel pretty confident we'll land sometime in 2020, the second half of twenty twenty five at the model.

Chris Caso
Managing Director at Wolfe Research LLC

Got it. Thank you.

Jeff Palmer
Jeff Palmer
Senior Vice President, Investor Relations at NXP Semiconductors

Tony, we'll take the next caller.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question will be coming from Francois Bouvenis of UBS. Your line is open, Francois.

Francois Xavier Bouvignies
Executive Director - Equity Research at UBS Investment Bank

Thank you very much. And again, Kurt, thank you very much for your help, and you will be missed. Sad to see you leaving, but well deserved, I have to say, well. Two questions I had is on firstly, on you said, Kurt, that you don't see much pull in so far and not much impact there in terms of order behavior. Obviously, you managed very well during COVID the inventories in the channel.

Francois Xavier Bouvignies
Executive Director - Equity Research at UBS Investment Bank

So my question is, if you were seeing some pull in at some point, would you allow your customer to increase their inventories? Or would you control it the way you did during COVID? I mean, how do you want to play this dynamic here given, I mean, your customers maybe they would like to increase the buffer and inventories maybe above some level that you used to you would like to see?

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Yeah. Thanks, and good afternoon, Francois. And by the way, I'm still around for full half year. So this is not a full slide for us. On the pull ins, so yes, I first of all reconfirmed through Q1 and through quarter to date Q2, we have not seen pull ins.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

I say that very explicitly. We checked it very carefully customer by customer, because we wanted to be sure that this is clean of that. If it was to happen, I think the underlying policy, Francois, continues to be we don't want this. We don't like that. Now there could be specific reasons and specific cases with specific customers where they can explain us why it makes sense and we might want to do it.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

But I would say, especially on the distribution side, is more than 50% of NXP, I think I said in my prepared remarks, we want to stay flat to the nine weeks inventory into the second quarter. There again, we wouldn't want to allow it. And I also said, and I don't know, CJ or Ross asked earlier, we are still busy with some tier one automotive customers to digest inventory. And for that same reason, we don't have a hell lot of appetite to consider pull ins. So I'd say with possible exceptions always in the range of the moment, we don't want that.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

We would not want to support.

Francois Xavier Bouvignies
Executive Director - Equity Research at UBS Investment Bank

Great. Thank you, Kurt. And maybe my follow-up would be for Bill on the gross margin side. I mean, your inventory days are relatively high. When you look at the history, you said you will you think it will be flat.

Francois Xavier Bouvignies
Executive Director - Equity Research at UBS Investment Bank

And then when I look at the gross margin, you are around 56 low 56% in H1. I look at the consensus, it has more than 57% gross margin in the second half of the year. So how should we think about the gross margin here? Because it seems tricky to get a big improvement of gross margin with inventories having to come down on your balance sheet, maybe not in Q2, but in Q3, Q4. So can you help us reassure us on the gross margin side trajectory in the second half of the year?

Francois Xavier Bouvignies
Executive Director - Equity Research at UBS Investment Bank

Can it go up despite inventories coming down on your balance sheet? And maybe you can remind us the mix effect.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Sure. Absolutely. Very fair question. So let me just repeat. In Q1, we had a slight miss driven by our product and channel mix.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

And if we hold everything equally and going into Q2, we're just saying, okay, right now our order book's pretty full. We actually see the mix and it says similar mix as Q1 and we're getting the follow through on the higher revenues over fixed costs. That's why we guided the 56.3%. Now without providing guidance for the second half of twenty twenty five, the best way to think about our gross margin is a function of revenue levels before any of our company specific drivers to influence it. So, for example, at a 13,000,000,000 revenue annual number level, we will feel very confident at 58% plus or minus, 12 point zero $57,000,000,000 11 point 0 5 6 billion dollars And again, that's that plus or minus 50 basis points.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

And we demonstrate those levels in the past. Now from an upside perspective, we obviously have these additional levers to drive gross margin much higher. And they include increasing of our internal utilization, again, that's 70%. And it's staying at 70% because of our inventory, as you said, is at the higher volumes. The consolidation of our 200 millimeter factories, we will be talking more about that in the second half.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

We're increasing our industrial and IoT go to market through our channel. So we want to focus on addressing that mass market. We also have, and by the way, our company specific accelerate growth drivers are tracking to our growth plans versus Investor Day. I know we're only one quarter in, but everything is good there. We have the normal operational efficiency of our projects to offset just these annual pricing low single digit that we occur.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

So, those two offset each other and a bit longer term, which we've shared all of last year. We will leverage our DSMC three hundred millimeter joint venture with Vanguard, which is tracking slightly ahead of schedule. So we feel pretty good about that. So overall, stepping back with the revenue numbers I just gave you, we feel very confident to deliver our long term gross margin range of 57% to 63%. It really is where revenue comes from is the influence at the starting point.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

And then you have these levers. On inventory. Again, you're right.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

One hundred and sixty nine

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

days is probably the upper bounds in my liking for sure related to it. Now, you have to think we're we manage Q4 going into Q1. We had to manage the absolute dollars because it was the variable orders with our suppliers and we kept utilizations internally. So going into Q2 and also Q3, again, hundred 69 because we have a backlog that we see actually is okay so far for Q3. And so we have to make sure we take that into account to make sure we build the proper product.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

But as you all know, with the uncertainty around the macro effects related global tariffs and more importantly, the number of potential disruptions from a supply chain perspective that could occur and we're starting to read about. We believe holding a bit more inventory is important from the lessons learned from the past. But again, I agree with you. The 169 is the upper balance and we're going to probably adjust this once we learn a little bit more about second half and confidence of second, half revenue.

Francois Xavier Bouvignies
Executive Director - Equity Research at UBS Investment Bank

Very clear. You for answers.

Operator

One moment for our next question, which is coming from Stacy Rasgon of Bernstein's research. Your line is open Stacy.

Stacy Rasgon
Analyst at Bernstein

Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Bill, first, a

Stacy Rasgon
Analyst at Bernstein

question for you. So I

Stacy Rasgon
Analyst at Bernstein

know you said you weren't guiding the second half. That being said, the OpEx targets, I mean, you're running $710,000,000 a quarter in OpEx. 23% of that would be like 3,100,000,000.0 at some point in the second half. You got close to $50,000,000 a quarter in OpEx coming in Q3. So I mean, dollars $7.50 a quarter would be like 3,300,000,000.0 at some point in the second half.

Stacy Rasgon
Analyst at Bernstein

I mean, are these the kinds of revenue targets into the second half that you have in mind when you give those OpEx targets? How do we think about that in the context of everything else that you're

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Well, let me remind you about the Q2 OpEx number. There is a one time payment from reoccurring license that occurs each year. That's about $16,000,000 to one of our peers, and I've had that in my prepared remarks. I also mentioned that we continue to restructure the company to make space for these new acquisitions, which I have not disclosed the size from an operating expense standpoint related to it. So we feel pretty confident under the different types of revenue scenarios that we can model because we have other levers to make sure.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

And remember what I said and what our whole message is, we are redoubling our efforts on the areas that we can control. And as you know, Stacy, the two things that we like to control is our spend because that we can do, as well as to some extent the inventory time based on what we're building and not building and taking and placing bets with those orders with the unknown macro environment. Hopefully that helps provide additional color.

Stacy Rasgon
Analyst at Bernstein

That is helpful. And I guess my follow-up, I guess I'm going to try it. So I know again, you said you didn't want to give color on the backup. But, I mean, any just even soft commentary on how you guys are seeing q three right now? Like, I mean, what's typical seasonality in q three?

Stacy Rasgon
Analyst at Bernstein

Is there any reason to expect you could be above or below that typical seasonality? I'm sympathetic to the idea that nobody knows what the hell is going on at all right now. But any color you can give us at all, even a little bit farther out would be helpful if you're so inclined.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Yeah. Good morning, Stacie. This is Kurt. Look, last year we did this, and you know that we were wrong. We called the cycle which didn't happen.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

And one of the learnings from that was that we would not want to repeat this. Now this year, the situation is even more complex, because as I said in my prepared remarks, on the one hand, we do see now what has been always good early innings of the cycle recovery. I mean, that's very positive what we see there. At the same time, we have this pretty material uncertainty of the indirect impacts from the tariff, which we just cannot figure out what they would possibly mean for the second half. Therefore, we wanted to draw here a clear line, not even for a soft cut for the second half.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

We just can't. It would be really irresponsible to do it, so we stick to quarter two.

Stacy Rasgon
Analyst at Bernstein

I mean, how do you even tell the difference between like a cycle recovery or green shoots and pull forwards and short term orders and things like that?

Stacy Rasgon
Analyst at Bernstein

Wouldn't they look the same?

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Oh, we can clearly see this, because as I gave you a couple of elements, one of them was that the backlog of our distribution end customers, which we see by product, is starting to grow after a long, long period of absolutely no growth or even decline. And that is different customers, new customers, new products. That is totally different to a pull in. Absolutely not pull in. I also talked about a nicely stabilized order pattern from our direct customers, which has been in decline for a long, long, long period and has now stabilized across the board, which is not a pull in because it's far too even to be a pull in.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

So we think we can clearly differentiate between those because, as I said earlier to our things Francois, we want to avoid to entertain pull ins and increase inventories again. So Stathie, that's for us a pretty focal point. So therefore, no, let's stick to the second quarter and see how that plays out with the uncertainty which is provided to us from the tariff landscape to our customers. Know, Stacie, what we do is we speak to our customers, and that's where that uncertainty comes from. I mean, it's not us inventing it, but we have no better source than speaking to our customers, big and small across the different segments, and they have no idea what the second half should look like.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

So how should we make it up?

Stacy Rasgon
Analyst at Bernstein

Yeah. No, I get it. That's helpful.

Stacy Rasgon
Analyst at Bernstein

Thank you so much. Appreciate it.

Operator

And one moment for our next question. Our next question will be coming from Vivek Arya of Bank of America Securities. Your line is open.

Vivek Arya
Vivek Arya
Managing Director at Bank of America

Thanks for taking my question. Kurt, I just wanted to go back to these, you know, the green shoots that were discussed. Because when I look at your Q1 results, auto and industrial sales, industrial IoT sales were actually modestly below expectations. I think the upside came from mobile and the comm segment. And Q2, you're largely guiding to, you know, kind of seasonal trends.

Vivek Arya
Vivek Arya
Managing Director at Bank of America

So if there are green shoots, is it fair to say they have not yet shown up in this first half and they could show up in the second half? I'm just trying to get a sense for where are these green shoots showing up, if any.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Vivek, you don't know what we thought it was earlier, because you prepped us already in Q1 to do a soft guide for Q2, where I don't know, I think I said it's maybe flat or very, very slightly up. No, but I think there was something very relevant in your question, which is in Q1 indeed, auto and industrial and IoT were a touch light against guidance, while the other two segments were a touch richer. That has a reason, and it is actually Japan and China. So it is the seasonal weakness of China Automotive, which was a little bit stronger than what we had anticipated. Again, we know that that was to happen, so it was forecasted, but not to the full extent it came.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

And in Japan, I think I talked about this earlier, it is the price change which is leading customers to finally, and mind you that for several years we have either increased prices or kept them flat. Now it was the first time that we offered a low single digit price decline for customers also in Japan. So they were eagerly waiting and held actually back to purchase until they could enjoy the quarter two prices. So it's a bit of a it's kind of specific. And for quarter two, we see things coming up.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

What you don't see, Vivek, is of course what underneath is still at work from an inventory digestion perspective with the Tier one automotive customers, which is kind of fogging some of the optimized uptake which we are seeing. But again, you didn't call me you didn't hear me calling the psycholivics. I said we see now trends which are or have been in the past, and I would say also now, indicative of early innings of the cycle recovery. But it's certainly not at the stage that we would say with belts in business, everything is jumping up. That alone would not be given simply given the uncertainty which our customers face from tariffs.

Vivek Arya
Vivek Arya
Managing Director at Bank of America

Got it. And for my follow-up, the last, I think, forecast that we saw from IHS or S and P was for light vehicle production to be down, I think, kind of low single digit. So let's assume that that is the case, right, including all the effects of, you know, tariffs and whatnot. So if that is the industry backdrop, what does that tell us about what NXP's automotive business could do this year, given all your company specific growth drivers? Thank you.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Well, let me confirm, Vivek, that indeed S and P just published their latest forecast for the year, which says the SAAR is going to be down by almost 2% this year, which compares to a flat line last quarter. So it has degraded, which maybe or maybe not is a consequence of the tariff fears. It could be. But the matter of the fact is indeed, it is now a 2% decline in the forecast versus a flat line before. As we said earlier, we are not guiding the year, and we are also not guiding the year for automotive, Vivek.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

However, the much bigger role it continues to play the content increases. All of the growth drivers which we had laid out at the last Investor Day in November, think about STDs, think about radar, think about electrification, are nicely at work. So we are on track on those. And I think it is those content increases which should continue to make us very optimistic about automotive, not as much the SAAR.

Vivek Arya
Vivek Arya
Managing Director at Bank of America

So does that suggest they can offset the SAAR decline, or are we not willing to say that Rebecca,

Jeff Palmer
Jeff Palmer
Senior Vice President, Investor Relations at NXP Semiconductors

I'll take that. I really think we're going to hold off giving any real color on where the second half could be revenue wise. And you also have to remember our revenue does not synchronize the global production quarter per quarter. There's always a six month or so lag between when we recognize revenue and when a car comes out of the factory somewhere in the world as counted and so on. But we really do want to respectfully not address revenue targets or potentials in the second half.

Vivek Arya
Vivek Arya
Managing Director at Bank of America

Understood. Thank you. Good luck.

Jeff Palmer
Jeff Palmer
Senior Vice President, Investor Relations at NXP Semiconductors

Tony, this would probably be our last analyst question, if you would.

Operator

Certainly. And our last question will come from Mark Lipacis of Evercore ISI. Mark, your line is open.

Mark Lipacis
Senior Managing Director at Evercore ISI

Great. Thanks for taking my question. Kurt, congrats on your retirement. Really appreciate all your great insights and help over the years and wish you luck. The question Kurt is for you.

Mark Lipacis
Senior Managing Director at Evercore ISI

Every two to three years, there's like a new theory on inventory stocking that gets proposed. Before COVID, it was just in time and then during COVID, it became just in case and now it's just in time. I think our own checks are consistent with your own that some of the Tier 1s are well below normal for their inventory stocking on semis at least. And my question is about like, what would you expect on a restocking cycle? Are you of the view that something has foundationally changed like you and your semiconductor peers keep inventories well above normal and your lead times, you know, lower than they were they had been historically or and then downstream your, your supply chain feels comfortable with the idea of just keeping things very low, and then you don't really benefit from a restocking cycle?

Mark Lipacis
Senior Managing Director at Evercore ISI

Or are you of the view that really nothing has changed and is all driven by lead times? When lead times stretch, everybody's just going to restock again?

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Fear, Mark. I have a bit of a frustrating answer. It's more the latter than the first. I'd say more than because there are multiple exceptions to this. I don't think that semiconductor companies in general will hold more inventory, because it would be just the wrong inventory.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

That always creates a mix issue. What has got better in several cases is the communication and the alignment between customers and us on understanding the future, on understanding where could be bottlenecks. Of course, given the whole geopolitical turmoil, there is also a more sophisticated, diversified supply chain in place now across the world, which eventually has going forward. But fundamentally, Mark,

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

I

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

fear as an industry in total, intellectually, we've all learned a lot. Practically not much of that is actually happening as we speak. The working capital pressure across the supply chain is just too high to allow that to happen. With that, I guess, Jeff, that was the last question. Let

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

me Mark, have a follow-up.

Bill Betz
Bill Betz
Executive VP & CFO at NXP Semiconductors

Yeah. Oh, yeah, sure.

Mark Lipacis
Senior Managing Director at Evercore ISI

No, that's all I had.

Mark Lipacis
Senior Managing Director at Evercore ISI

It was simple as that. Thanks so much, Kurt. Appreciate it. Thanks, Jeff.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Thanks, Mark. Very much, Markus. Let me go to make just a couple of closing comments. We have now a very interesting crosshair situation between what I would call a significant macro uncertainty offered by tariffs, with the current tariffs more the indirect impact of them rather than the direct, which is immaterial for us. Standing against the clear early innings of a cycle recovery.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Mind you that, for example, automotive turns to a flat year on year already now in the second quarter. So those two are competing forces which are not easy to forecast into the rest of the year. With that, we continue to, I hope, show pretty strong resilience through the trough cycle and at the same time offer excellent exposure to the secular growth drivers, especially in the automotive and industrial sectors. So when we zoom out from this, we see us nicely on track to doubling our EPS by 02/1930 plus, as we had laid out in our Investor Day last year in November. Of course, lot of turmoil short term, but seeing the cycle coming back now, of course, overshadowed by that uncertainty in the macro from tariffs, but fundamentally seeing the cycle coming back, we consider as a pretty nice positive.

Kurt Sievers
Kurt Sievers
President and CEO at NXP Semiconductors

Thanks for your attention today, and see you soon. Thank you.

Operator

And ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

Executives
    • Jeff Palmer
      Jeff Palmer
      Senior Vice President, Investor Relations
    • Kurt Sievers
      Kurt Sievers
      President and CEO
    • Bill Betz
      Bill Betz
      Executive VP & CFO
Analysts
Earnings Conference Call
NXP Semiconductors Q1 2025
00:00 / 00:00

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