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Super Micro Computer Inc (SMCI -0.94%)
Q3 2021 Earnings Call
May 4, 2021, 5:00 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good day and welcome. Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Super Micro Fiscal Q3 2021 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions] Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session and instructions will follow at that time. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Ms. Nicole Noutsios.

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Nicole Noutsios -- Investor Relations

Good afternoon and thank you for attending Super Micro's call to discuss financial results for the third quarter and fiscal 2021, which ended March 31st, 2021. By now you should have received a copy of the news release from the company that was distributed at the close of regular trading and is available on the company's website. As a reminder, during today's call, the company refer to a presentation that's available to participants in the IR section of the company's website under Events and Presentations tab. We have also published management scripted commentary on our website.

Please note that some of the information you hear during the discussion today will consist of forward-looking statements including without limitation those regarding revenue, gross margin, operating expenses, other income and expenses, taxes, capital allocation and future business outlook, including the potential impact of COVID-19, to the company's business and results of operations.

There are a number of risk factors that could cause Super Micro's future results to differ materially from our expectations. You will more about these risks in the press release we issued earlier this afternoon, our most recent 10-K filing for fiscal 2020 and our other SEC filings. All of these documents are available on the IR section of Super Micro's website. We assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statements. Most of today's presentation refer to non-GAAP financial results and business outlook. For an explanation of our non-GAAP financial measures, please refer to the accompanying presentation or to our press release published earlier today.

In addition, a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP results is contained in today's press release in the supplemental information attached in today's presentation. At the end of today's prepared remarks, you will have a Q&A session for sell side analysts to ask questions.

I'll now like to turn the call over to Charles Liang, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

Thank you, Nicole, and good afternoon, everyone. Last quarter we have performed our growth strategy well by winning new key customers, expanded our global operations and introduced a whole new generation of products. Today we have released our fiscal 2021 third quarter financial results. Let's take a look at some highlights.

Our fiscal third quarter net sales totaled $896 million, up 16% year-over-year and up 8% sequentially. For the first time in our company history since IPO, the revenue from seasonally weak March quarter significantly surpassed that of the December quarter. Our fiscal third quarter non-GAAP earnings per share was $0.50, above the midpoint of our previously guided range of $0.37 to $0.57. In this quarter, we also generated record revenue from the Asia Pacific region, demonstrating our continued and expanding traction in Asia.

We continue to execute our three-year growth strategy highlighted in our recent investor update on March 4th. Our progress, judged by historical industry growth rates, has propelled us to resume the position of the fastest growing US-based server/storage manufacturer. More importantly, we achieved all this despite so much of our focus having been on growing the company's long-term foundation.

Earlier this quarter, we introduced the industry's most comprehensive server portfolio leveraging the latest processors from both Intel and AMD. Our application-optimized solutions are gaining traction among the world's most advanced datacenters and enterprises. We have several committed early ship customers that have deployed 1,000s of server units, led by our SuperBlade. We also seeded out optimized systems for many verticals such as artificial intelligence, telco, cloud and more.

One successful example is our collaboration with Osaka University with our liquid-cooled HPC solutions, which takes full advantage of the new powerful Ice Lake processors. Hundreds of other customers have already utilized our early sampling program or accessed the new systems online through our JumpStart program. These activities should accelerate the deployment ramp of this new generation of products and propel growth for this calendar year.

In addition to the system-based on the new CPUs, we released an innovative new GPU system architecture last quarter with resource savings in mind. With very strong global demand, the optimized 2U 2-node GPU solution delivers great cost savings, utilizing shared power and cooling. This 2U 2-node system supports three double-width or six single-width PCIe Gen-4 GPUs, and is the best platform for video streaming, high-end cloud gaming, and countless social networking applications.

We have been executing a robust manufacturing plan in Taiwan for a few years. With attractive new product lines and strong customer demand, we recognize the importance of optimizing operational efficiency and reducing cost, especially with a tighter supply chain. As one of the key elements of our strategy, our Taiwan campus expansion will increase our capacity and capabilities in production, operation, engineering, and sales to deliver more cost-optimized offerings. Manufacturing cost has been our painful challenge since company was founded 27-years ago.

Now with the new 1 million square feet of manufacturing and office space added to our Taiwan campus this summer, we will become more profitable by having more control over our global supply chain and manufacturing cost. The US campus expansion, which will be online shortly after the completion of the Taiwan expansion, will focus on similar operational goals, but with more emphasis on security and Made-In-USA initiatives. Again, these expansions will position us well to handle the ongoing logistics challenge and rising costs while further improving our time-to-market advantages and production scale and agility.

We are making progress in the key growth factors. As I mentioned in our recent investor event, and we are getting greater traction within the critical segment of Cloud Datacenter and Enterprise accounts. We are securing new design wins and seeing expanded orders from certain high-profile customers. These customers are choosing Supermicro based on the breadth of our portfolio and our ability to deliver the best optimized system for their 5G, Telco, AI, and both public and private cloud workloads. We have been efficiently growing our high-profile accounts worldwide, and we aim to double these accounts in the coming two years. Our high-profile customer initiative is a big portion of our organic growth strategy that has evolved and been fine-tuned over time.

We also continue our sales transformation effort by broadly launch our B2B and B2C automation with the autoconfigurator tool, which is already in use with many selective customers. This tool will make it much easier to share communication, technical data and product configurations among our sales, engineers, and customers, which I believe will accelerate revenue and reduce fulfillment time and cost.

Strong positive momentum is building again at Supermicro. I believe our Q3 growth is just the beginning of our journey to gain more market share again. We are returning to our hallmark of consistent growth. To align my interest with the company's growth strategy, the board of directors accepted the proposal of reducing my annual salary to $1 and added an equity compensation package that tied to very aggressive revenue and stock price targets. Also in our recent investor update, I talked about our path to $10 billion in annual sales in three to six years. Now I have been -- I have even stronger confidence to achieve this goal.

Over the past year, Supermicro has had successes in various market segments such as Storage, HCI, Cloud, AI, Machine Learning, 5G/Telcom and others. We have established our technology leadership through optimized server and storage solutions. I am excited that our recently booking activities, along with our capacity expansion initiative and improving COVID outlook give us the confidence to provide a strong Q4 guidance.

Our coming fiscal Q4 revenue should surpass $1 billion, in the range of $980 million to $1.08 billion. Supermicro is finally back on track for faster growth, and I am confident that our growth rate will be getting faster and faster in the coming quarters and years.

I will now pass the call to David Weigand, our Chief Financial Officer, to provide additional details on the quarter and our outlook.

David Weigand -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Charles. Since moving to the CFO role at Super Micro last quarter, I am even more excited about the future of the company than when I joined in 2018. We continued to execute in all major areas of the company this quarter and are pleased with our results and outlook.

Our fiscal third quarter revenue totaled $896 million. This reflects a 16% year-on-year increase from the same quarter of last year and an 8% increase from the second quarter of fiscal year 2021. Systems comprised 77% of total revenue and the volume of systems and nodes shipped were up sequentially and year-over-year. System ASPs also increased year-over-year and quarter-on-quarter.

Geographic performance was strong across all major geographies. On a year-on-year basis, the US increased 18%, Asia increased 29%, and Europe increased 3%, Rest of the World decreased 12%. On a sequential basis, US sales increased 8% quarter-on-quarter, Asia increased 28%, and Europe increased 5% with the Rest of World decreasing 46%. From a customer point of view, we saw increases in sales to large data center and AI customers.

From this point forward, unless otherwise noted, I will be discussing financial metrics on a non-GAAP basis. Working down the P&L, Q3 gross margin was 13.8%, down year-on-year and quarter-on-quarter. In our February earnings call, we stated that we expected gross margin to decline approximately 120 to 160 basis points sequentially, due to the lack of a Q2 discrete cost recovery event and product mix. Due to the very high demand in our supply -- for our products and in our supply chain, we incurred higher transportation and other additional costs. I will further address this in the outlook, as we do expect some of these cost headwinds to abate in the current quarter.

Turning to operating expenses, Q3 opex on a GAAP basis increased 7% quarter-over-quarter and decreased 10% year-over-year to $106 million. On a non-GAAP basis, operating expenses increased 6% quarter-over-quarter and increased 9% year-over-year to $95 million. Recall, last year's operating expenses were offset by $9.5 million related to a joint product development related settlement fee. But after removing this benefit, Q3 opex would have been down 1% year-over-year.

As outlined on the February earnings call, the sequential increase in non-GAAP opex was primarily, due to higher payroll taxes and increased R&D product development costs, due to the heightened new product activity from Ice Lake Intel, the Milan product from AMD and A100 products from NVIDIA.

Other income & expense including interest expense recorded a $1.4 million gain, as compared to a $3.1 million loss last quarter. The sequential change is mostly related to FX. This quarter our tax gain was a $0.2 million, that was $0.2 million on a GAAP basis and an expense of $2.2 million on a non-GAAP basis. Our non-GAAP tax rate was 7.6% for the quarter.

Lastly, our joint Venture incurred a loss of $0.3 million this quarter, as compared to a loss of $1.5 million last quarter. Q3 non-GAAP diluted earnings per share totaled $0.50, as compared to $0.63 in Q2 of fiscal 2021 and $0.84 in the same quarter of last year.

Cash flow used in operations totaled $124 million, compared to cash flow from operations of $63 million in Q2. Capex totaled $19 million, resulting in free cash flow used of $144 million. Key uses of cash during the quarter included increases to inventory and receivables, as well as capital return to stockholders through $43 million in share repurchases. Our closing balance sheet cash position was $179 million, while bank debt was $85 million, resulting in a net cash balance of $94 million.

Turning to working capital metrics compared to last quarter, our Q3 cash conversion cycle was 86 days, that's down from 92 days, and within our target range of 85 to 90 days. While the absolute level of our inventory increased, days of inventory at 99 decreased. Days sales outstanding was 37 days, while days payables outstanding totaled 50 days.

Now turning to the outlook for our business. We expect net sales for the fiscal fourth quarter ending June 30, 2021 in a range of $980 million to $1.89 billion or $1.08 billion. We expect gross margins to increase approximately 70 basis points sequentially, due to both product mix and improved management of our supply chain costs.

GAAP operating expenses are expected to be approximately $108 million and include $7 million in stock option compensation expenses and $2 million in other expenses not included in non-GAAP operating expenses. We expect our non-GAAP operating expenses to be up modestly quarter-over-quarter, driven by lower NRE and continued investment in our R&D with the rollout of new product activity from AMD, Intel and NVIDIA previously mentioned.

We expect a non-GAAP Q4 tax rate to be approximately 13% and approximately 16% thereafter. We expect other income and expense, including interest expense, to total roughly $1 million and expect a nominal contribution from our JV. We expect fully diluted GAAP EPS to be in the range of $0.56 to $0.77 and fully diluted non-GAAP EPS to be in the range of $0.70 to $0.90. We expect capex for the fiscal fourth quarter of 2021 to be in the range of $15 million to $20 million, inclusive of our ongoing Taiwan building project.

As Nicole, will turn it back over to you for Q&A.

Nicole Noutsios -- Investor Relations

Operator, we can start with questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your first question is from Mehdi Hosseini from SIG. Your line is open.

Mehdi Hosseini -- SIG -- Analyst

Yes. Thanks for taking my question. A couple of follow-ups. I am just trying to better understand as you look into the second half, especially given your strong revenue guide for the June quarter. How do you see momentum into September and December quarter? And how do you see some of the demand drivers like new servers, CPU and other cloud, or data center related drivers impacting your revenues into the second half and I have a follow-up?

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

Yes, I mean, as you know, we had spend a local for April to engage high profile accounts in last three months and I'd like to share we see that, we achieved a achievement. So now we grow a lot of high profile account and those account, lots of them start August and that's why we see March, we already have a strong quarter and then Q1 until our June quarter we are very strong, would it be the first time over $1 billion. In September, still we see that pipeline is strong as well. Shortage, we will soon reach our, kind of a long-term pattern very closely and the shelter in this situation continue to be very tough, but as of today, our home is -- the home is from our vendors have been praising you good. So I feel pretty comfortable, although there are strategy everywhere.

Mehdi Hosseini -- SIG -- Analyst

Okay. And in that context, how do you see increasing commodity prices for instance, storage and DRAM impacting your margin profile into the second half.

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

For most account indeed our customer happy to accept the higher price basically chip what has been healthy margin and viable pay course, we pay most of the customer happy to expect, because it's kind of surprise basically. So we were to valuable customers will negotiate, based condition, for our sale for our customer, but this year, most of the customer in Spain and we expect that close [Indecipherable]

Mehdi Hosseini -- SIG -- Analyst

Just a quick follow-up. Have you been able to build a strategic inventory so that you would benefit from lower cost, as you think about the -- as you think about the shipment over the next, let's say six months or do you have to continue to buy higher cost inventory and then you would pass on that incremental cost of the customer?

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

Well this is difficult question. Indeed we happen maturity, we have since many months ago. So yes, you are right, we had increased our inventory since I would say three months ago. So we have been lacking in that area, but still our inventory is limited, we saw growing very strong demand, very soon. I mean, we had to kind of our pay higher for our newly entered this year.

Mehdi Hosseini -- SIG -- Analyst

Got it. Thank you.

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

Thank you.

Operator

Your next question is from Ananda Baruah. Your line is open.

Ananda Baruah -- Loop Capital -- Analyst

Yes, good afternoon and thanks for taking the question and congratulations on the results and I'm putting them up just after you've done the analyst event. So and that's pretty exciting to see. I guess a couple of follow-ons to the direction that Mehdi was kind of asking questions could you give a little, a little more context, you know, in the key vertical areas where you're seeing the most pronounced order pick options and I guess kind of, off the top of my head, I'm thinking, hyperscale cloud customers versus large enterprise customers like on premise. And also the carriers for 5G and I know there's new activity going on in all of in each of the buckets. But just interested in getting context to where you're seeing the most pronounced pickup, appreciate it. And I have a further follow-up or two. Thanks.

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

Yes. Thank you. Yes, again, we have been growing well in our 5G and telco. So we saw dip in some volume in March quarter and we have a more and more telco 5G customer continued to engage or start to grow didn't have their demand, not a very good time to us. And that part of our [Indecipherable] well. Other than that, you know, kind of a mega price and the senior contact very prevalent for other medical improvement. We also again some good attraction there, and high performance cloud especially private cloud and some HPC especially, HPC with new isolate in Milan in NVIDIA new GPU that consume much more power than before and not by dip coding, had been we come out of as well. So it's cloud service is also for HPC customer with our very optimize dip coding solutions.

Ananda Baruah -- Loop Capital -- Analyst

And Charles in your prepared remarks, you imagine accelerating revenue growth, I think you said in the coming quarters. As well as kind of in the coming years. And so I guess coming quarters, I don't want to pin you down too much, but should we expect, can that occur over the next four quarters? And how much I guess, do you have, if it is a situation where you think like timeline next, let's say, four quarters do you feel like you have the account traction currently to do that or does that involve new account work or sort of new penetration conversations inside of existing accounts that have yet to occur?

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

Beneath IP, we sort our existing account are growing their demand. And that's why we have extend our capacity, especially in Asia quickly and with higher very high scale. So also we are again engaged in a lot of high-profile [Indecipherable] and those are going to start order. And we will continue to engage those high-profile accounts. We have enhanced our sales team including our B2B automation system that we are here, and all cut into sales [Indecipherable]. So our sales inputs more high-profile account now. So I do believe very strongly that there also have speeding up quarter-after-quarter and year-over-year.

Ananda Baruah -- Loop Capital -- Analyst

And last one, thanks, Charles. And last one for me, is it July -- if I am remembering accurately June, that the new Taiwan center is opening up for production?

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

June or July we do not final yet, it can be either way, it kind of depends on situation.

Ananda Baruah -- Loop Capital -- Analyst

Okay. That's great. Thanks so much.

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

Thank you.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your next question is from Jonathan Tanwanteng. Your line is open.

Jonathan Tanwanteng -- CJS Securities -- Analyst

Hi guys. Thank you for taking the questions and very nice quarter and nice to see that demand out there. My first question is what kind of gross margins do you think you can get in the September quarter and I know there's a lot of moving parts, but especially given the inflationary environment, [Indecipherable] new facility coming online, which should lower your costs. You have the new sales tools, which improve your efficiency, I think you alluded also that you're burning through your strategic inventory lower costs. So I'm just wondering with all the puts and takes, do you thinking you can improve from the quarter into the September quarter and beyond that?

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

Yeah, I can say a little bit and David you [Indecipherable] the part of detail. I mean the March quarter, we have a lot of product shipped by air, because our customer satisfaction have been our priority. So you ship some by air and a lot of by air [Indecipherable] of propulsion from our vendors. So we faced some overhead there for March quarter. And looking forward for September situation would have been much improved, David you can add something?

David Weigand -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, so as Jon, as we mentioned the ASPs are up quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year. So we were looking forward to improving our margins toward our target as we outlined back on March 4th of 14% to 17%. So I think that's our general guidance.

Jonathan Tanwanteng -- CJS Securities -- Analyst

Okay, great, thank you for that and on -- David, can you actually talk about your expected -- your expectations on cash flow, as we get through the next couple of quarters, I know you used a lot this quarter types of these buybacks as well, but as demand ramps, do you see yourself using more cash, or do you think you alone, you've collect some of that back. Just your general thoughts?

David Weigand -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure. That's a good question. We -- because we returned $43 million back to the shareholders this quarter, in addition to growing accounts receivable and inventory. And so, and also continuing our capital improvements in Taiwan. So as we complete our build-out in Taiwan, the cash demands will abate over there and also we've already grown our inventory now to over $900 million. And so, we expect that the growth rate of inventory is not going to be the same as it was during this quarter. So this quarter was especially demanding, because we had such a -- we had such high demand. And so we don't -- the rate of acceleration will not be the same.

Jonathan Tanwanteng -- CJS Securities -- Analyst

Got it. Do you think you'll be cash flow positive in the next quarter? Or after I guess some thing that there in Taiwan?

David Weigand -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, it's going to depend on our growth and so that's really what it comes down to is how is -- if we go -- if we exceed our growth targets.

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

I think -- we will stop buying that stock back for this quarter. The reason region is because our business were grow very strong and we need more cash flow to prepare inventory.

Jonathan Tanwanteng -- CJS Securities -- Analyst

Got it. Good problem to have. Last one from me, I think on Intel, Charles mentioned a bit more digestion in data center. Are you seeing that at all in your Intel product lineup, and if you are? Is it your products the AMD's, AMD videos that are driving the strength that you're seeing going forward?

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

You're are right [Indecipherable] we have a customer, kind of, require the solution for Intel CPU, AMD CPU and NVIDIA GPU. So as it is moment we feel, it's hopefully a strong demand. And also see some surprise changes as well this year.

Jonathan Tanwanteng -- CJS Securities -- Analyst

Okay, great. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question is from Nehal Choski. Your line is open.

Nehal Choski -- Northland Securities -- Analyst

Yes, thank you. Congratulations on the strong results here. It's not like the drivers of the 8% be relative to midpoint guidance was the new customers equally between cloud apps and the customers and AI? Do these new customers come with the new products? Or is it using existing products?

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

It's a combination. We have a lot of customer need new GPUs solution from NVIDIA, right? So now the NVIDIA new GPU and some is [Indecipherable], some is in Milan. So yes, most of the growth, I believe with new product, but even existing product we see a strong demand. The whole limitation is kind of a shortage, so we are working very hard to improve that situation.

Nehal Choski -- Northland Securities -- Analyst

What about demand on the storage heavy side of things. Nextgen storage and JBOF storage?

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

I would like to say not to us, not hard as AI and 5G [Indecipherable], but still we see us a strong demand.

Nehal Choski -- Northland Securities -- Analyst

Okay. And then I think there's been a lot of discussion during the call about price inputs and that's been an issue for a lot of companies out there. It sounds like you guys have been able to skirt that issue. Just to be clear, is it because of the strategic inventory reserves? Or is it because there has been a more favorable pricing environment. So you can pass on these input price increases to your customers?

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

First, I mean that we have a long-term contract and relationship with [Indecipherable] supplier that happen as people [Indecipherable] cost or kind of most or at least a stable. And yes, most of the customer also except our price through the cost. So in both situation, I feel we are in good condition.

Nehal Choski -- Northland Securities -- Analyst

And is that what underpins the confidence and gross margin will tick back up in the June quarter?

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

Now, gross margin pretty much, because of shipping charge. It's basically some shipped by air. As you know, how the COVID-19, the ship by air cost grew about got tripled, and that will [Indecipherable] but in last few quarter lot of the situation, and also because our demand strong, so we have the production and we -- in some case we have to pay extra to our vendors or to our own delivery.

Nehal Choski -- Northland Securities -- Analyst

Okay, great. Thanks, great quarter.

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

Thank you.

Operator

I'm showing no further question at this time. I would like to turn the conference back to the company for any additional or closing remarks.

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

Thank you, everyone for listening us today and have a good one. See you next time. Thank you.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 37 minutes

Call participants:

Nicole Noutsios -- Investor Relations

Charles Liang -- Founder, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board

David Weigand -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Mehdi Hosseini -- SIG -- Analyst

Ananda Baruah -- Loop Capital -- Analyst

Jonathan Tanwanteng -- CJS Securities -- Analyst

Nehal Choski -- Northland Securities -- Analyst

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