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Silicon Laboratories Inc (SLAB 0.29%)
Q4 2019 Earnings Call
Jan 29, 2020, 8:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning. My name is Keith, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Silicon Labs Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2019 Earnings Conference call. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to turn the call over to Jalene Hoover, Director of Investor Relations and International Finance. Jalene, please go ahead.

Jalene Hoover -- Director of Investor Relations & International Finance

Thank you, Keith, and good morning, everyone. Tyson Tuttle, Chief Executive Officer; and John Hollister, Chief Financial Officer, are on today's call. We will discuss our financial performance and review our business activities for the fourth quarter. After our prepared comments, we will take questions. Our earnings press release and the accompanying financial tables are available in the Investor Relations section of our website at www.silabs.com. This call is also being webcast, and a replay will be available for four weeks. Our comments today will include forward-looking statements subject to risks and uncertainties.

We base these forward-looking statements on information available to us as of the date of this conference call and assume no obligation to update these statements in the future. We encourage you to review our SEC filings, which identify important risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statements. Additionally, during our call today, we will refer to certain non-GAAP financial information. A reconciliation of our GAAP to non-GAAP results is included in the company's earnings press release and also in the Investor Relations section of Silicon Labs' website.

I would now like to turn the call over to Silicon Labs' Chief Financial Officer, John Hollister.

John Hollister -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Jalene. Revenue for the fourth quarter ended at $219 million, up 2% year-on-year and within our guidance range. For the full year, revenue was $838 million, down about 3.5% from 2018, reflecting several challenges in 2019. Weak industrial and automotive markets, combined with changes in certain trade policies, have been disruptive to customers and suppliers alike, causing a broad-based slowdown in orders from end market and channel customers. While we are disappointed that revenue declined in 2019, we believe we outperformed the broader semiconductor industry due to secular growth drivers in IoT and Infrastructure. IoT revenue for the fourth quarter was $128 million, representing 7% growth year-on-year.

This result was slightly lower than we expected, primarily due to seasonality in the smart home market following a strong Q3, partially offset by strength in broader industrial IoT end markets. For the full year, IoT revenue increased 5% to $488 million led by growth in wireless products of around 14%. For comparison, World Semiconductor Trade Statistics, or WSTS, estimates that revenue for the broader wireless industry for 2019 declined more than 16%. Infrastructure revenue for the fourth quarter was $48 million, representing 5% year-on-year growth. We saw particular strength in isolation in Q4 with some improvement in the broad industrial markets driving growth in power supplies and industrial automation as well as strength in solar. For the full year, Infrastructure revenue was $183 million or down about 8%.

Broadcast revenue for Q4 was $28 million, down about 20% year-on-year. This decline was slightly more pronounced than we had expected primarily due to weakness in automotive. Full year Broadcast revenue was $115 million or down 19%. Access revenue for the fourth quarter was $15 million, which was about flat year-on-year and slightly better than expected based on strength in communications. Access revenue for the full year was $51 million, down 19%. Looking at fourth quarter revenue by end market, we saw sequential declines in consumer and industrial offset by growth in communications. Automotive was about flat. For full year 2019, we saw declines in communications and consumer end markets. Industrial was up year-on-year due to growth in wireless IoT. Automotive was also up, primarily due to growth in electric vehicles, despite overall weakness in automotive markets.

By geography, in Q4, we saw the most significant sequential declines in the Americas, followed by Europe. We saw sequential growth in APAC due to broad-based industrial recovery. For full year 2019, we saw year-on-year declines in all geographies. Distribution sales for Q4 were approximately 74% of total revenue. Distributor inventory days declined slightly, ending at 38 days, down from 41 days in Q3. This is below target with end-of-year channel inventory management negatively impacting fourth quarter revenue. For full year 2019, revenue from our top 10 customers was 21%, and no single customer was greater than 10% of total revenue.

Non-GAAP gross margin for Q4 was slightly ahead of expectations at 60.9% based on favorable product mix with strength in Infrastructure. Non-GAAP operating expenses were higher than we expected in Q4 due to an increase in medical insurance claims and travel expenses, offset some by favorability in new product introduction costs. Non-GAAP R&D expenses were $52 million. Non-GAAP SG&A expenses were $39 million. Non-GAAP operating margin for Q4 was 19.3%. Full year operating margin was 18.7%. Our Q4 non-GAAP effective tax rate increased to 13.3% due to discrete adjustments related to our state income taxes. Non-GAAP EPS for Q4 was $0.84, which was within our guidance range.

Earnings per share for the full year ended at $3.22, down about 13% from 2018. On a GAAP basis, gross margin was 60.7% for Q4 and 60.9% for full year 2019. GAAP operating expenses were $120 million for Q4, which were higher than we expected at the beginning of the quarter due to restructuring actions taken, including the closure of several design centers and offering a voluntary early retirement plan for long-standing employees. These actions will allow us to better optimize our cost structure heading into 2020, supporting the addition of critical talent to enable simplicity and scale as we continue to drive funnel conversion and growth. GAAP R&D expenses were $69 million, and SG&A expenses were $51 million. GAAP operating margin was 6% of sales for Q4 and around 7% for the full year. The GAAP effective tax rate was 16.4%. GAAP earnings per share ended Q4 at $0.22, which was below our guidance due to the restructuring actions taken. For the full year, GAAP earnings were $0.43 per share. Turning now to the balance sheet.

We ended the year with cash and investments totaling $732 million, up 18% from $620 million at the end of 2018. Accounts receivable ended Q4 at $76 million with day sales outstanding holding at 31 days. Net inventory ended the year at $73 million or turns of 4.7x, which is in line with our expectations and down only slightly from 5x in Q3, reflecting good supply chain management. For fiscal 2019, cash flow from operations was $167 million, and capex was $16 million. For full year 2019, we executed $27 million in share repurchases, and we have $134 million in remaining authorization through the end of 2020. In summary, our balance sheet continues to be very healthy. I will now cover guidance for the first quarter.

We expect Q1 revenue to be in the range of $209 million to $219 million, with Infrastructure up, Broadcast flat and declines in IoT and Access. Based on the midpoint, this represents 14% year-on-year revenue growth. In light of the recent coronavirus outbreak, please also note that our guidance assumes a return to normal business and production activities in China following the Lunar New year celebrations with no major disruptions.

We expect non-GAAP gross margin to be between 59.5% and 60%. Please recall that our fiscal year 2020 will have 53 weeks with 14 weeks in the first quarter rather than the typical 13 weeks. Factoring in this extra week of opex, combined with our standard payroll tax reset, we expect Q1 non-GAAP operating expenses to increase to around $97.5 million. For fiscal 2020, we expect opex growth of approximately 6%. We expect our Q1 non-GAAP effective tax rate to be 11.5% and our non-GAAP earnings per share to be in the range of $0.57 to $0.67. On a GAAP basis, we expect gross margins to be approximately 59.5%. We expect GAAP operating expenses to be $127 million and GAAP results between a $0.03 loss per share to a $0.07 earnings per share result.

I will now turn the call over to Tyson.

Tyson Tuttle -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, John. 2019 was a challenging year with macro weakness in broad-based industrial and automotive markets as well as trade policy volatility and export controls on key customers impacting growth. Total 2019 revenue declined 3.5% from 2018, with wireless leading growth in IoT, offset by declines in Infrastructure, Broadcast and Access. Although these results are disappointing, we are pleased to have outperformed the market with secular growth drivers in IoT and Infrastructure providing some offset to macro weakness.

In 2019, we saw strong design win activity, which increased more than 30% year-on-year in lifetime revenue, providing a tailwind for future growth and a validation of our strategy in IoT, Infrastructure and automotive markets. As we enter 2020, we anticipate continued design win strength, backed by a large and robust opportunity pipeline as we continue to drive funnel conversion and growth. Turning now to product and market updates. IoT delivered $488 million in revenue for full year 2019, up 5% from 2018. In 2019, wireless products achieved more than one billion units shipped to date and now represent more than 65% of total IoT revenue.

Secular drivers contributed to 14% growth in wireless products for fiscal 2019, growth including ramps in smart home security and high-volume lighting customers, progress in the U.K. smart metering market, continued integration of connectivity into gateways and adoption of IoT in the broader industrial market. Growth in wireless IoT more than offset declines in MCUs, which were impacted by broad-based macro weakness. Silicon Labs is the leading provider of IoT wireless technology for the smart home market, which offers a tremendous opportunity. According to Navigant Research, global annual revenue from smart home platforms is forecast to grow from $3.2 billion in 2019 to $14.3 billion in 2028, achieving a compound annual growth rate of 18%.

We are committed to standardization in the IoT and are collaborating with leading ecosystem partners to create alignment with the goal of advancing security, reliability, interoperability and compatibility in smart home devices. Future success for the smart home industry relies on ecosystems, working seamlessly together toward a common goal. Device makers, chip makers, software providers, developers, retailers and consumers will benefit from this open collaboration, while accelerating market adoption and driving growth.

In Q4, Zigbee Alliance members joined together to promote the formation of a new working group, which plans to develop and promote the adoption of a royalty-free connectivity standard to increase compatibility among smart home products. The Connected Home over IP, or CHIP project, embodies a shared belief that smart home devices should be secure, reliable and work seamlessly together. The project's goal is to simplify smart home product development for manufacturers and increase compatibility for consumers to enable a common out-of-the-box experience.

The project aims to enable communication across smart home devices, gateways, mobile apps and cloud sources and to define a specific set of IP-based networking technologies for device certification. The industry working group will use an open source approach to accelerate the development of this new unified connectivity framework as well as to deliver time-to-market benefits to manufacturers, which will drive faster consumer adoption. The Connected Home over IP project will leverage market-proven smart home technologies, including Bluetooth, Thread and Wi-Fi to make it easier for device makers to build products compatible with smart home and voice services, such as Amazon Alexa, Apple Siri and Google Assistant.

The working group encourages device manufacturers to continue innovating using technologies available today. Silicon Labs is one of two semiconductor companies joining the working group to contribute to this project. Participating Zigbee Alliance Board members include Amazon, Apple, Google, IKEA, Legrand, NXP, Resideo, Samsung SmartThings, Schneider Electric, Signify, Silicon Labs, Somfy and Wulian. Complementing the creation of the Connected Home over IP project, during the quarter, Silicon Labs and the Z-Wave Alliance announced plans to open the Z-Wave Specification as a ratified, multisource, wireless smart home standard.

With this change, semiconductor and software suppliers will be able to join the Z-Wave ecosystem, contribute to future advancements of the standard and develop and supply subgigahertz, Z-Wave connectivity devices and software stacks. In addition to maintaining its certification program, the Z-Wave Alliance will expand to become a standards development organization, helping to solve the interoperability challenges hindering adoption of smart home devices.

Alliance members will work together to advance a single subgigahertz connectivity solution to expand the functionality needed to grow the IoT. With more than 100 million interoperable devices deployed, more than 3,200 certified products and over 700 member companies, Z-Wave offers one of the most mature and pervasive smart home ecosystems in the market. Alliance members and smart home consumers will benefit from hallmark Z-Wave features, including interoperability, backward compatibility, the S2 security framework, easy installation with SmartStart, low power functionality offering a 10-year battery life and long-range with subgigahertz mesh. Our goal is to accelerate consumer adoption of wireless products in the smart home market. Opening Z-Wave as the subgigahertz smart home standard, combined with our leading position in Zigbee, positions us well to leverage Connected Home over IP to drive interoperability and compatibility among all smart home wireless standards. To further accelerate smart home market growth, this September, we are hosting the Works With Smart Home Conference in Austin, a premier, one-of-a-kind event exclusively for industry leaders, designers and developers interested in creating products that work with the world's largest smart home ecosystems.

This groundbreaking 3-day conference, a first for the industry, will feature keynotes from Amazon, Comcast and Google executives, technical training, interactive sessions, workshops, round tables and exhibitor demonstrations. According to the Bluetooth SIG, total annual Bluetooth device shipments are forecast to grow to more than five billion units in 2023. 90% of these devices are expected to include Bluetooth Low Energy with secure connectivity and extremely low power consumption as fundamental requirements. Expanding our share in the Bluetooth market is one of our most important initiatives in 2020. To meet this goal, earlier this month at CES in Las Vegas, we announced a new low-cost Bluetooth SoC solution to meet the demand for high-volume, battery-powered IoT products.

These new BG22 Bluetooth SoCs deliver a market-leading combination of security features, wireless performance, energy efficiency, software tools and stacks. We significantly strengthened our Bluetooth offering in recent years. We are the first to market with Bluetooth mesh and Bluetooth 5.1 direction-finding, and we continue to lead the industry with new innovations now including Bluetooth 5.2. Our new SoCs give developers the right balance of features, security and performance at cost points to help drive adoption of Bluetooth across a wide array of IoT products. Targeted smart home consumer, commercial and industrial applications include low power Bluetooth mesh nodes, lighting, smart door locks, personal healthcare and fitness devices.

Asset tracking tags, beacons and indoor navigation also benefit from the SoCs' Bluetooth Angle of Arrival and Departure capabilities and sub-one meter location accuracy. Bluetooth direction-finding solutions target a wide range of indoor positioning, navigation and asset and people tracking applications for industrial IoT, commercial and retail use cases. At CES, Silicon Labs and Quuppa, the world leader in advanced location systems, announced their collaboration to deliver a highly accurate, indoor asset tracking solution, combining Quuppa's Intelligent Location System with asset tags based on our best-in-class Bluetooth products, including the new BG22 SoCs.

Turning now to Infrastructure. Full year 2019 revenue declined 8% to $183 million, with weakness in timing and isolation due to macro factors offset some by secular growth in 5G, solar and electric vehicles. Silicon Labs isolation products continue to replace traditional optocouplers and outperform competing digital isolators, enabling superior surge performance, greater reliability, higher integration and best-in-class safety for system designs requiring protection from high voltages. In 2019, we saw strength in solar and automotive applications with some rebound in industrial in the fourth quarter. We have established ourselves as the leading provider of digital isolation technology to the cloud, telecom, solar and electric vehicle markets. Traditionally, our timing products have targeted the core and metro optical networking markets.

Over the past few years, we have expanded and diversified our timing portfolio to address adjacent opportunities in industrial, data center, wireless Infrastructure and automotive markets which, combined, now represent more than 40% of our total timing revenue. four out of the top five suppliers of wireless Infrastructure equipment use Silicon Labs timing solutions in their initial 5G deployments, including a broad array of 5G wireless equipment from remote radio heads and baseband units to mobile backhaul and small cells. We are well positioned to address this large and emerging growth opportunity with current and road map products.

Timing plays a key role in the transfer of data in wireless and wireline networks, which rely on accurate clocks. Ease-of-access tools for validating timing solutions accelerates development and adoption of new technologies. To address this need, this month, we announced our collaboration with Keysight, a test and measurement solutions provider, to streamline the validation of timing solutions critical to system-level designs for wired and wireless communications, medical imaging and automotive applications. During the quarter, Silicon Labs won for the fifth year in a row the Global Semiconductor Alliance's Most Respected Public Semiconductor Company award. It is a great honor to be chosen by industry peers based on best products, vision and future opportunities.

Our commitment to empower and encourage employees to strive for excellence across all facets of the organization is reflected in the industry awards we received in 2019, including four product excellence awards, a supplier of the year recognition, four culture and community engagement awards and a Great Place to Work certification. Our dedication to integrity across product development, workplace culture and community engagement set Silicon Labs apart in the industry. Silicon Labs' leadership team has created a hard-to-beat workplace environment, resulting in market-leading products for our customers and continued growth for our company. We are pleased to see positive signs of some macro turnaround in the fourth quarter, with growth in broad-based industrial and automotive markets, some improvement in the trade environment and increasing optimism for 2020.

We believe Silicon Labs is strategically well positioned in long-term, secular growth trends. IoT and Infrastructure now represent 80% of our total revenue mix, with each offering a double-digit growth opportunity backed by our large pipeline and strong market traction. Thank you for your time and attention.

Before we take your questions, I'd like to turn the call back to Jalene. Jalene?

Jalene Hoover -- Director of Investor Relations & International Finance

Thank you, Tyson. Before we open the call for the question-and-answer session, I'm excited to announce that we are hosting an Analyst Day at our corporate headquarters in Austin, Texas on Thursday, March 12. We would now like to open the call up for your questions. [Operator Instructions]

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And the first question comes from Cody Acree with Loop Capital.

Cody Acree -- Loop Capital -- Analyst

Tyson, if you could just maybe drill down into those segments that you believe are still being impacted, if there is such a thing, still being impacted by inventory drawdown, where the turn that you expect to see this year, if that's the case, and then those that you're more shipping organically to.

Tyson Tuttle -- President and Chief Executive Officer

If you look at our inventory situation, heading into Q1, we actually came in with a very light level of inventory, and we believe that our customers -- and this is based on feedback from numerous channel partners and customers directly, that the inventory situation in the channel is actually quite healthy. We don't believe that we have significant inventory build. And actually, as we exited Q3, there was some inventory management which negatively impacted our Q4 revenue by a couple of million dollars. But overall, we came out very light on inventory, and we see as we go through the year, that actually there is going to be the need for additional inventory to be built both in the channel and at customers as demand picks up.

Cody Acree -- Loop Capital -- Analyst

And then in your Infrastructure business, with that turn that you're seeing somewhat here, do you believe that's also shipping to end demand? Or is there a bit of restocking after quite a bit of a pause?

Tyson Tuttle -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I think that overall, this is kind of across the board in the industrial space, in the automotive space and in the communication space. I think that we are in good shape in terms of channel inventory. We're certainly in a lot better shape than we were a year ago.

Operator

And the next question comes from Blayne Curtis with Barclays.

Blayne Curtis -- Barclays. -- Analyst

Just on gross margin, I feel bad asking this because usually, it's why aren't you raising the range. I guess, as you look into March guidance both sequentially and year-over-year, it's down a bit, but yet it seems like mix kind of goes in your favor. So just kind of curious the color there. And any perspective on the rest of the year?

John Hollister -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Blayne, this is John. We're pleased with the result we had in 2019 on gross margin, and the guide we're seeing for the first quarter is toward the top end of our target model range. So overall, happy with that. There are a lot of puts and takes in that, and mix within our categories is fairly dynamic from that perspective. But overall, good results in 2019, and the Q1 guide is appropriate for beginning of the year.

Blayne Curtis -- Barclays. -- Analyst

And then you probably want to leave annual guidance to the Analyst Day, but I'm just kind of curious, if you look at Access and Broadcast, particularly with a flat Q1, it's up year-over-year. You typically call those down for the year. I'm just kind of curious if that's still the right range to think about those segments.

John Hollister -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. We think the long-term trends are persisting here with the IoT and Infrastructure categories poised for continued growth in 2020 and with Broadcast and Access on a more steady decline mode. We do expect the automotive market for Broadcast to be healthier here this year in 2020 than was the case in 2019. If the forecast holds, that will be a positive change for the Broadcast business in 2020.

Operator

And the next question comes from Gary Mobley of Wells Fargo Securities.

Gary Mobley -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

I want to ask about the seasonal progression throughout 2020. And more specifically, with the extra week in the first quarter, is it unreasonable to expect the normal mid-single-digit percent sequential improvement in the second quarter on the top line?

John Hollister -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Gary, this is John. We do expect to see the 14-week quarter have an effect, where heading into second quarter, you will lose a week essentially making that transition. The other thing to think about relative to the second half is the potential for some seasonality in the fourth quarter primarily on the Broadcast consumer side. So as you're looking at the shape of 2020, those are some items to keep in mind.

Gary Mobley -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Okay. And based on your full year 2020 opex guide growth of roughly 6%, and just given where we're starting the year, is it fair to assume that we'll see some step -- sharp step-down in the second quarter in non-GAAP opex to roughly, what, $92 million and then sort of progressing flat for the balance of the year?

John Hollister -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. So of course, the additional week does have an effect on opex, which would account for about two percentage points on an annual basis of opex increase, and then the balance of our estimate is driven by hiring and merits, etc. For the first quarter to second quarter transition, we do expect that to result in a downshift in opex in Q2 to a certain extent, and then that would continue in the third quarter. We would expect third quarter to step down a bit more and then fourth quarter to be flat to up from Q3 as a rough estimate. And part of what's going on with that as well, Gary, is some of the restructuring actions we undertook in the fourth quarter are going to be fully implemented by midyear. So you've got both the combined effect of the extra week as well as final completion and closure on the restructuring actions coming into effect in the first half of this year.

Operator

And the next question comes from Alessandra Vecchi with William Blair.

Alessandra Vecchi -- William Blair. -- Analyst

I believe last quarter, you guys launched Gecko two. I was wondering if you could update us on the traction you've been seeing there? And then also, if that's been primarily targeted at the lighting segment or how we should think about the target applications.

Tyson Tuttle -- President and Chief Executive Officer

We announced the Gecko two platform last quarter or last year. The first member of that family was targeted at the high-volume lighting market. And so that product has ramped into production actually in lighting and in a number of different other applications. It includes industry-leading cost as well as security features and was a big success. We've got very strong design win traction with that first part. The BG22 part that we just announced at CES is the second member of that family that we have introduced, and that is targeted at the low-cost Bluetooth market. And that's got industry-leading power; a number of very good features, like the location services that I mentioned in the script; as well as security features and other things there.

So the BG22 is an industry-leading part. It's one of our top priorities this year to go out and take share in the Bluetooth market, and we believe that we've got both the part, the software and the cost position to do that. I would also say that on the Bluetooth side, we've already got about a $2 billion opportunity pipeline that we're actively working. So we are actively engaged out in the market, both with our Series one devices, which continue to ramp. And now our Series two devices, we are filling out the portfolio of parts and working hard on the software and the tools to make that easy to convert the large opportunity pipeline that we see in front of us.

Alessandra Vecchi -- William Blair. -- Analyst

Great. That was actually extremely helpful. And then just lastly, on the Access line, obviously trending better than expected. Is that really a function of continued share gains, a better TV market? Are you seeing less ASP degradation? Sort of what's been driving the upside there, especially in the second half?

Operator

And the next question comes from Raji Gill with Needham & Company.

Raji Gill -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

A question on the IoT business. So the growth rate decelerated this year to about to 5.5%, 6% from 17% in 2019 related to the softness in microcontrollers. Should we expect the overall IoT business to kind of reaccelerate in terms of its growth rate? You are kind of indicating that some of -- the situation in the China trade war is improving, so that could help the broad-based MCU business. And then you obviously got a strong pipeline of wireless IoT solutions. Just any help in terms of understanding IoT reaccelerating.

Tyson Tuttle -- President and Chief Executive Officer

If you look at 2019, overall, in the IoT market, the wireless business was actually up 14% in a down year, WSTS says as the wireless, and that includes a little more than IoT. It's the closest thing we can get. The overall market down, about 16% year-on-year. So we continue to see very strong traction in wireless continuing and accelerating into 2020 because of the secular growth drivers around the smart home, lighting, metering and the industrial IoT. So the opportunity in wireless is very strong, the design win traction.

We talked about Bluetooth and the new parts that we have that we just recently introduced. So we feel very good about our growth prospects in IoT wireless and especially when you look at the ecosystems and the growing momentum that is happening in the smart home. It's very exciting activity there. So the -- and that wireless business is about 65% of the overall IoT business. The MCU business is -- a portion of that in 2019 was adversely affected by the macro situation. We saw similar results to other microcontroller vendors, like ST and Microchip.

That business was down, and the overall result was about 5% overall IoT growth. As we go into 2020, we do see in the fourth quarter some resumption of strength in the MCU business, reflecting a bit of a macro recovery that is positive, but we'll see how that turns out. So we do think that, certainly, MCU should not be the headwind that it was last year in 2020 as we're looking at it right now and continued strength in IoT wireless, which there was a macro impact on the wireless portion, but we were able to grow significantly during the year despite that. So I think if you look at 2020, we're set up pretty well. We've got the Q1 seasonality that we're experiencing. Some of the consumer applications within IoT take a bit of a pause, but we feel good about how we're positioned right now for growth in IoT. Our overall growth target, long-term growth target, 20% on the IoT business, and we stand back behind that. And that is -- and by the way, that is not the forecast for 2020. That is our long-term target, but we'll see how it turns out.

Raji Gill -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

I hear you. And then last question for me. Just you mentioned that the coronavirus -- that you expect to return to normal productions in China following the Lunar New year with no major disruptions. I think I heard that correctly. Could you maybe elaborate on kind of what you've been seeing, if there's been any impact? Any kind of color there would be helpful.

Tyson Tuttle -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So we went into China -- Chinese New year kind of on a fairly regular pace. And so Chinese New year and coronavirus kind of happened almost simultaneously. And we're reading the news just like everybody else, and we are currently -- our forecast and guidance takes a normal return from Chinese New year into account. We have -- things just shut down, and we're going to see if things start back up on a normal pace. Our hope is that, that's the case. But right now, I think it's anybody's guess.

Operator

And the next question from Tore Svanberg with Stifel.

Tore Svanberg -- Stifel -- Analyst

Yes, thank you. So Tyson, I understand why you opened up Z-Wave, the standard, but I was curious on the timing. So why end of 2019? Were there any sort of industry inflection points as to why the timing? And perhaps you could talk a little bit about how the design activity has been since then.

Tyson Tuttle -- President and Chief Executive Officer

So we have been looking at opening up Z-Wave for quite some time. It's -- we are big believers in open standards and -- to be able to drive broad adoption, and there was some feedback from customers. I mean, the adoption has actually been quite strong. Z-Wave performed very well. In 2019, it was one of our fastest-growing product lines within wireless. So it has very strong market traction. We saw an opening, and it wasn't specifically the timing but it all kind of came together at the same time. So the Connected Home over IP project and that going into the Zigbee Alliance and a number of customers and companies looking for the right solution for a subgigahertz standard. So if you think Zigbee is on -- Zigbee, Thread, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi are all on 2.4 gigahertz, which is a higher frequency. Z-Wave is the standard down at the subgigahertz band, which has longer range and less interference.

And so it's a very robust standard and it's widely deployed. You've got 100-plus million units -- devices -- units of devices deployed out in the market. And as companies are looking for a subgigahertz standard, it was our belief that we have an opportunity to make subgigahertz the wireless standard for the IoT. And in order to do that, it needs to be an open standard, and we felt like the right thing to do, both to drive consumer adoption and for the industry, was to put that out there with us being certainly the leading provider of those solutions today and standing to benefit from the adoption of that as the standard around subgigahertz. So that's going to be a big topic of discussion within the Zigbee Alliance this year. It's certainly going to be a big topic of discussion at our Works With Conference that we hold later in Q3. And we're really excited about being able to unify the smart home market with all the ecosystem players coming in and the growth in consumer adoption that we're seeing.

Tore Svanberg -- Stifel -- Analyst

That's very helpful. And as my follow-up on the CHIP project, you mentioned there's two semiconductor companies, yourselves and NXP. Should I read into that as that you guys are being exclusive there? Or can any other semiconductor company join that working group to define products?

Tyson Tuttle -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So this was just -- these were the founding members of the working group. So these were the CHIP companies, and you also have Apple, Google and Amazon and IKEA and a number of other companies that I mentioned in the earnings -- in our prepared remarks. So you have a lot of leading companies that have been working on this within the Zigbee Alliance and coming together to figure out exactly how devices will talk to one another. It is an open standard. And actually, the layer that sits on top of the wireless standards is going to be developed as an open source framework.

Think about that as basically the language that devices talk to one another regardless of the wireless protocol. That is actually going to be based primarily on the Zigbee application profiles. So think about a door lock, each door lock has to talk the same language or a light bulb has to talk the same language so that when something tries to control a light bulb, they know exactly what to say. And everyone realized that, that was a major obstacle to the adoption and interoperability within the smart home. So this is going to be done in an open framework, and I anticipate multiple other companies jumping into this as the big companies really drive the standard and start driving the market.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And the next question comes from Suji Desilva with Roth Capital.

Suji Desilva -- Roth Capital -- Analyst

First question on the Infrastructure side, the timing and wireless Infrastructure. Those four customers, I was curious, are they all 5G? Or is there some 4G there? And is there a quarter or time frame in which there'd be an inflection in the order patterns from your perspective? Or would it be steady, more '21 versus '20 benefit? Any color there would be helpful.

Tyson Tuttle -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, we have quite a bit or a number of wins on the 4G side. The four customers that we -- or the four out of five that we mentioned, those are 5G applications, and those are beginning ramps right now. So that will be a continued ramp as we go through 2020.

Suji Desilva -- Roth Capital -- Analyst

Okay, great. And I know you might cover this at the Analyst Day, but you talked about opex being up 6% year-over-year. I know you're not guiding '20 revenues, but I just want to get a sense how you're managing -- are you managing toward an operating margin target? You're at 19%. Now you target 20% to 25%. Is that the way to think about it? And would the opex flex depending on the revenue? Just some color there would be helpful.

John Hollister -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Suji, this is John. So our operating margins are going to be below model here in the first quarter. We do see an opportunity to get closer to model, if not at model, in the second half as the opex can tail off according to the factors we talked about earlier in the call, but our goal is to return to model operating margin profitability as soon as we can, taking into account that we are coming off of a downturn here and need to continue to invest for success for the long term.

Operator

And the next question comes from Matt Ramsay with Cowen.

Matt Ramsay -- Cowen -- Analyst

The -- Tyson, I wanted to ask, in your script, you had mentioned growth in Bluetooth and Bluetooth LE as being -- I think you called it out as being really important in 2020 as a driver of the business. Maybe you could -- has the importance there gone up? And if so, why? And maybe you could talk a little bit about the competitive position and the market dynamics there in the Bluetooth market.

Tyson Tuttle -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Let me give you a little bit of background. So our -- we entered the Bluetooth market in 2015 with our Series one devices, and our Series one devices were highly flexible. They addressed subgigahertz, they addressed Bluetooth. They addressed Zigbee, subgigahertz, a lot of different stuff. So -- but they did not have -- they were not cost-optimized. In fact, we had a number of customers that would use Zigbee and Bluetooth together in various combinations. So over that time, we were really maturing our software stacks and the interoperability and coexistence and performance of Bluetooth, but we did not have a solution that really could address the low-cost, high-volume segments of the market. So we -- with the BG22 that's coming in and actually the first member of the family, the 21, both of those support Bluetooth. But the BG22 now has the cost that's required to be able to really go after the heart of the Bluetooth market. And so we didn't chase the low-cost stuff, but now we've got a solution that the cost is about half of what we had before. So it's -- we can go after the broad market for Bluetooth devices and feel really excited about.

I mean, huge market opportunity, share gain. We've got competitors in there. Nordic Semiconductor is the leading supplier. You've got TI and others in the Bluetooth market. But we think that given the maturity of our solution, the cost, the feature set, the energy consumption, the battery life, you can get 10 years off of a coin cell, watch battery, the direction-finding capabilities. I mean, we've got a fantastic solution, and we've got channel and customers that are really pumped to be able to design those parts in. So we think, given the size of the market, given the fact we have a modest share today, that share gain there is one of our top priorities in 2020, and we're quite optimistic about our future in the Bluetooth market.

Matt Ramsay -- Cowen -- Analyst

Got it. As I guess, a follow-up question and maybe a similar type of question on your automotive business. I know there's a radio business and also the isolation business for EVs. Maybe you could just kind of tease out what you're seeing for -- you mentioned, I think, in the script about that business being stronger than 2019. There was obviously some automotive macro headwinds. But if there's any way to break out that business as to concentration in those two buckets and drivers for 2020, that would be helpful.

Tyson Tuttle -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. If you look at -- and let me break this down. We basically -- in automotive, we're targeting the automotive radio, targeting EVs with our isolation products. And we just, last year, introduced a whole set of products for timing in automotive. As you see, a lot of the higher-speed data networks and AI capabilities going in, there's a lot of need for additional electronics and timing in the cars. But the automotive radio sells into all cars, and because the automotive market was soft in 2019, in particular in Europe where we've got some designs and in China, our automotive radio business was down year-on-year. So that was a disappointing result. We landed some very good design wins for automotive radio, but those take time to ramp into the market. But we do see some return of strength in the automotive radio market as we're entering 2020.

So that's a healthy sign. On electric vehicles, we have just a fantastic solution. In electric vehicles, our isolation products go into battery monitoring systems, battery charging systems and the motor controls that convert the battery voltage to the electric to the motor. And we've been working in motor controls and a lot of these high-voltage systems for a long time. But as we see the adoption of electric vehicles increase, the Tesla and BYD, we've landed some very nice wins in future electric vehicle programs that are going to be ramping in 2020 and into the future, it's a tremendous opportunity for us. Our technology is perfectly aligned to the requirements. You've got 400-, 800-volt batteries. You need protection. You need high reliability, and you need a high level of functionality to optimize the efficiency of these systems. So the isolation products going to EV is a big opportunity for us. It was one of the reasons why we were able to offset some of the macro weakness in our Infrastructure business this year. I'd say, on the timing side, the automotive, those are -- it's fairly nascent. We do have some revenue in there, but that would be the third largest category within automotive.

Operator

And that does clear our question-and-answer session. So I would now like to return the floor to management for any closing comments.

Jalene Hoover -- Director of Investor Relations & International Finance

Thank you, Keith, and thank you all for joining us this morning. This concludes today's call.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 52 minutes

Call participants:

Jalene Hoover -- Director of Investor Relations & International Finance

John Hollister -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Tyson Tuttle -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Cody Acree -- Loop Capital -- Analyst

Blayne Curtis -- Barclays. -- Analyst

Gary Mobley -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Alessandra Vecchi -- William Blair. -- Analyst

Raji Gill -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

Tore Svanberg -- Stifel -- Analyst

Suji Desilva -- Roth Capital -- Analyst

Matt Ramsay -- Cowen -- Analyst

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