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Qorvo Inc (QRVO -1.08%)
Q3 2021 Earnings Call
Nov 3, 2021, 5:00 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the Qorvo, Inc. Q2 2022 Conference Call. Today's conference is being recorded.

At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Douglas DeLieto, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

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Douglas DeLieto -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Thanks very much, Todd. Hello, everybody, and welcome to Qorvo's fiscal 2022 second quarter earnings conference call. This call will include forward-looking statements that involve risk factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from management's current expectations. We encourage you to review the Safe Harbor statement contained in the earnings release published today as well as the risk factors associated with our business in our annual report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission because these risk factors may affect our operations and financial results. In today's release and on today's call, we provide both GAAP and non-GAAP financial results. We provide this supplemental information to enable investors to perform additional comparisons of operating results and to analyze financial performance without the impact of certain non-cash expenses or other items that may obscure trends in our underlying performance.

During our call, our comments and comparisons to income statement items will be based primarily on non-GAAP results. For a complete reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures, please refer to our earnings release issued earlier today available on our website at qorvo.com under Investors. Joining us today are Bob Bruggeworth, President and CEO; Mark Murphy, Chief Financial Officer; Eric Creviston, President of Qorvo's Mobile Products Group; Philip Chesley, incoming President of Qorvo's Infrastructure and Defense Products Group; and James Klein, outgoing President of Qorvo's Infrastructure and Defense Products Group; as well as other members of Qorvo's management team.

And with that, I'll turn the call over to Bob.

Robert Bruggeworth -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Doug, and welcome, everyone, to our call. The Qorvo team delivered an exceptional September quarter with revenue and EPS at all-time highs. Strength during the quarter was broad-based, across customers and supported by new product launches. In Mobile Products, the multiyear migration of 5G continues to drive RF content and integration trends. What began in top-tier flagship phones is now playing out in the mass market, where the RF content increase is greater on a percent basis than in flagship devices. Qorvo enjoys broad exposure to mass market designs at customers like Honor, OPPO, Pixel, Samsung, Vivo and Xiaomi as a preferred supplier with leading products and a robust technology road map, Qorvo is well-positioned as 5G devices and Android ecosystem contribute increasingly to the growth in the RF TAM.

In other connectivity markets, ultra wideband adoption in smartphones is serving as the infrastructure for a growing ecosystem of ultrawideband-enabled devices. The opportunity set spans mobile, automotive and IoT markets, creating a strong foundation for growth over the coming years. In WiFi, the adoption of WiFi 6E and the performance limitations of smaller node CMOS-integrated PAs are driving the migration to chip onboard FEMs and iFEMs like ours. In WiFi and other markets, Qorvo's products and technologies are at the forefront of multiyear upgrade cycles, enabling new ecosystems and use cases and transforming the user experience. Now let's look at some of the quarterly highlights in our end markets, starting with mobile. For Guru [Phonetic], we commenced shipments of mid-high and ultrahigh band PADs, antenna tuners and multiple connectivity solutions to support the ramp of their recently announced Pixel 6 for an upcoming Korea-based 5G mass market smartphone platform, we received the first production orders for our mid-high and ultrahigh band PADs, WiFi FEMs and multiple high-performance discrete solutions. In mobile WiFi, we secured a WiFi 6 FEM design wins with multiple top-tier smartphone OEMs and began sampling WiFi 7 FEMs enabling higher data rates and improved performance. In Ultra-Wideband, Qorvo is advancing technologies for a diverse ecosystem of proximity aware connected devices.

We secured an ultra wideband design win to enable real-time device tracking and other location-aware applications in home mesh networks, and we were selected to supply ultrawideband solutions for enterprise access points as well. We also expanded our engagement with a leading provider of consumer IoT products across a broad set of connected home devices, including smart speakers, point control fans and air conditioners. In automotive manufacturing, Qorvo was selected to supply ultrawideband and Zigbee solutions with ConcurrentConnect technology to an automaker in Korea, streamlining automation and manufacturing. In other connectivity markets, we began sampling a WiFi 6 iFEM covering 5.2 gigahertz and 5.6 gigahertz and featuring an integrated BAW filter. Qorvo's 5 gigahertz iFEMs enable higher capacity and improved efficiency and reduced form factor. In broadband, we begin sampling a triple output DOCSIS 3.1 amplifier module supporting network upgrades for major cable operators in the US and in Europe.

In infrastructure, design win activity was strong across OEMs, including small cells and base stations. Wins included all of the RF transmit and receive path content, including BAW filters for 5G small cells at a major base station OEM. We see infrastructure markets picking up in 2022 with Qorvo SAM growing year-over-year. The SAM for Qorvo outside of China will post significant growth next year and support a strong double-digit CAGR through 2025. In Aerospace and Defense, we expanded our product portfolio with an industry-leading 125-watt S-band power amplifier module and a 1.8-kilowatt L-band radar pallet for commercial and defense radar applications. In RF-based biotechnology testing, we received our first commercial orders and commenced shipments of our Omnia antigen test platform.

During the quarter, the NIH RADx Variant Task Force conducted an external study that demonstrated the performance of our Omnia antigen test platform in effectively detecting COVID variants, including the Delta variant. Although this is a new market for us, we believe we bring a novel technology that offers unique and real value as the world moves to more testing protocols, including for flu AB and other seasonal pathogens. Our platform offers a unique combination of accuracy and speed at the point of care with improved process flow, including real-time wireless delivery of results. We have seen its benefits in our own operations as part of our protocol for our own internal testing. After the quarter closed, Qorvo acquired United Silicon Carbide, an innovator in silicon carbide power devices and a pioneer in silicon carbide JFETs. The combination will further differentiate Qorvo's power portfolio, enabling more highly integrated power device solutions and expand our addressable market to include higher voltage applications that demand maximum power efficiency such as electric vehicles, charging stations and renewable energy systems. We welcome Chris Sri [Phonetic] and his team and look forward to helping them accelerate the growth in their business.

For Qorvo, our ability to deliver more power, more efficiently and using less current helped put us at the center of the digital transformation. We are eager to expand these competencies as global markets move to electrification and renewable energy. Qorvo's technology portfolio is best in class. Our product position is strong. Our end market exposure is expanding and we are operating very well. Yes, we are seeing constraints, and we are working closely with our customers and our partners. Mark will have more comments about the operating environment, and we look forward to discussions during your question and answers. Big picture, we see the industry working through this as it always has. For Qorvo, we see a business with unique competencies and expanding set of growth drivers, and we expect a continuation of double-digit growth over several years. Before handing the call over to Mark, I'm pleased to welcome Philip Chesley, as President of Qorvo's Infrastructure and Defense Products Group. Philip has a proven track record, growing global semiconductor businesses with experience in RF, power, data communications, automotive, industrial, aerospace and defense. We are very pleased Philip has joined Qorvo to lead our IDP team. I also want to thank James Klein. Since the formation of Qorvo, James and the team have more than doubled IDP revenue, while creating a recognized industry leader. We thank James for his many contributions to Qorvo and wish him the very best. James will remain with us through November to help ensure a smooth transition with the change in the IDP leadership.

And with that, I'll hand the call over to Mark.

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Bob, and good afternoon, everyone. In the September quarter, Qorvo delivered the strongest quarterly revenue and earnings in the company's history. Qorvo's revenue for the fiscal year 2022 second quarter was $1.255 billion, $5 million above the midpoint of our guidance and $195 million or 18% higher than last year's September quarter. When comparing September quarter numbers, recall that our fiscal year 2021 was a 53-week fiscal year, and the September quarter last year was a 14-week quarter versus this fiscal year's more typical 13-week quarter. Mobile Products revenue of $996 million was up 32% year-over-year on the continued growth of higher content 5G smartphones. Infrastructure and Defense Products revenue of $260 million was slightly below expectations due to reduced supply from outsourced assembly and test operations in Malaysia and elsewhere. As expected, IDP was down year-over-year due primarily to last year's strong infrastructure build-out and the 14-week quarter.

We expect IDP to return to year-over-year growth in the December quarter and growth to accelerate in the March quarter. Non-GAAP gross margin in the September quarter was 52.4%, above the midpoint of our guidance despite supply chain disruptions that worsened through the quarter. Non-GAAP operating expenses in the second quarter were less than expected at $222 million or 17.7% of sales. The sequential and year-over-year increases in opex were driven by technology and product development expenses associated with key growth programs and recent acquisitions Non-GAAP operating income in the September quarter was $435 million and 34.7% of sales. This was the fourth consecutive quarter of operating margin over 33%. Non-GAAP net income in the second quarter was $385 million, and diluted earnings per share of $3.42 was $0.18 above the midpoint of our guidance.

Cash flow from operations in the second quarter was $245 million. Our working capital includes an increase in payables associated with a long-term silicon supply agreement. The largest of these pads is a deposit, which we expect to recoup by the end of the agreement in calendar 2025. This agreement is structured -- this agreement is a structured way to advance our differentiated technology position and simplify our long-term planning. Furthermore, it's only one of a number of examples whereby Qorvo is building longer-term and more collaborative partnerships to provide our customers supply assurance and meet their product and technology needs. Concurrently, our customer relationships are broadening and strengthening allowing us to invest with more certainty. As we have indicated previously, the challenges the industry is currently experiencing are driving more constructive and longer-term relationships that we see enhancing the overall durability and value of the business.

Capital expenditures in the September quarter were $47 million, lower than expected on spend timing and an earlier-than-expected reimbursement for a portion of our government-funded work on advanced packaging. Free cash flow was $198 million, and we repurchased $223 million of shares. Over the last two quarters, we've purchased $523 million of shares, which was 110% of our free cash flow. We continue to repurchase shares as our outlook is positive. Our free cash flow and ability to sustain investment in technology and growth is strong and our leverage remains low. On the balance sheet, cash and debt remained largely unchanged from the prior quarter at $1.2 billion and $1.7 billion, respectively. In the December quarter, our cash is projected to decline following payments associated with the previously mentioned agreement and with our acquisition of United Silicon Carbide. Now turning to our current quarter outlook. We expect revenue between $1.090 million and $1.120 million, non-GAAP gross margin between 52% and 52.5%, non-GAAP diluted earnings per share of $2.75 at the midpoint of our guidance.

Our December quarter revenue outlook reflects broadbased challenges in supply impacting mobile and IDP and near-term weakness in demand, principally in Asia. Starting with supply, we have several areas of constraint. Our external supply chain is still recovering from disruptions in September, including shutdowns in Southeast Asia. Beyond that, select materials, products and production capacity remain tight. These are industrywide issues affecting all suppliers, and our customers are challenged in producing matched sets for products. For example, in smartphones even where channel inventory for certain parts is healthy, customers lack silicon chips to produce phones. This, in turn, creates tech changes in demand that add to constraints on our own production as we work to adjust mix. Mix changes are part of our business, but in a normal environment, Qorvo can move swiftly to respond and capture demand. These supply driven gaps are making recent demand softness in select areas such as our Asia smartphone customers harder to quantify.

We see the industry working through this situation with some supply effects beginning to moderate this quarter and supply/demand alignment improving more broadly through the March quarter. Given these supply and demand effects, we now see 5G smartphone volumes coming in below $550 million in calendar 2021. Qorvo's December forecasted revenue of $1.105 billion at the midpoint is down 12% sequentially and up slightly year-over-year. We forecast mobile revenue in the current quarter to be approximately $830 million at the midpoint, down 17% sequentially and flat year-over-year. In the March quarter, we expect mobile to be up slightly sequentially as the typical seasonal decline is offset by improved supply and demand. In IDP, we project revenue to increase in the December quarter to $275 million and the segment to return to year-over-year growth. We expect IEP to be over $300 million in the March quarter.

Our December quarter gross margin guide of 52.25% at the midpoint is up versus the view we provided last quarter despite a more challenging supply demand environment than expected. We see our technology and product mix and operating and capital efficiency yielding a gross margin above 52% for the fiscal year. We expect the March quarter to be around 52%. We project non-GAAP operating expenses to increase slightly in the December quarter to approximately $224 million reflecting higher investments in core technologies and expanding capabilities in new businesses, including the addition of the United Silicon Carbide team. We now project our current quarter and full year non-GAAP tax rate to be between 8.5% and 9%. Capital expenditures are projected to exceed $70 million in the December quarter as we work to intersect demand and support long-term supply agreements with multiple customers. Currently, we are supply constrained and project to remain so through our fiscal year end.

We continue to expand BAW and gaps capacity as well as biosensor production capacity to support our growth projections for fiscal 2023. In summary, we expect year-over-year revenue growth in the December quarter, though less than we had expected previously. The current supply challenges and near-term demand weaknesses -- weakness are acute but more temporary than durable. We expect supply effects to moderate starting this quarter and improved supply demand alignment early next calendar year. For full fiscal year 2022, we expect revenue growth over 15%, gross margin over 52 -- excuse me, we expect revenue growth over 15% and gross margin over 52% and operating margin of approximately 33%. Looking beyond this fiscal year, we expect double-digit growth to continue as Qorvo's premium technology, product portfolio and operating capability support 5G, WiFi, IoT, defense, power and other growth markets. Overall, we are investing to grow mobile and IPE at or above market.

Looking at our business by end markets instead of operating segments helps highlight the strength of our portfolio and market position. On advanced cellular RF front ends for smartphones, Qorvo's technology and product breadth is world class. We expect this part of Qorvo's business near $3.3 billion this fiscal year to deliver high single-digit to low double-digit growth as increasing RF complexity and integration trends support years of content expansion. Next, looking at other connectivity beyond cellular solutions for smartphones, Qorvo enjoys exposure across multiple wireless protocols and serves industrial automation, connected home, automotive and other high-growth IoT markets. This fiscal year, connectivity solutions spread across our mobile and IDP segments combined to approximately $700 million and can grow in the strong double digits. Finally, defense, infrastructure and power solutions support multiple long-term secular growth drivers. These include the multiyear build-out of 5G infrastructure, increasing semiconductor spend in defense and worldwide demand for power semis driven by mega trends like electrification. We expect to sustain long-term double-digit growth in this business from a base of over $600 million this fiscal year.

Our December quarter is off what we expected previously but still guided up year-over-year as is our view of the March quarter. We expect the business to strengthen through the second half of our fiscal year and contribute to a record full year performance, including earnings growth over 20%. Longer term, the outlook is bright. Qorvo is exceptionally well-positioned to deliver earnings and free cash flow growth, serving the large and growing need for more efficient power and greater connectivity.

Now Todd, would please open the line for questions?

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] We'll take our first question from Toshiya Hari with Goldman Sachs.

Toshiya Hari -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Hi, guys. Good afternoon. Thanks so much for taking the question. I have two if I may. My first one is probably for Mark. The 17% sequential decline you're guiding to in your mobile business for December, probably hard. But can you sort of break that down into supply factors and demand factors to the extent possible? And then on the demand side, you talked about weakness in Asia, but if you can elaborate on that, that would be super helpful? And then I got a quick follow-up.

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

Sure. So Toshiya, we decreased our December number about $150 million, as you can see, and about $135 million of that was in mobile, where we went from roughly 9.65 to 8.30 in the December quarter. The balance of the decrease was IDP. IDP is the most straightforward. It's all supply in IDP. So just keep that in mind.

Of the $135 million roughly in mobile, as we characterize supply constraints, which is our suppliers not having supply for us, our customers not having the chipsets, thus not able to build their product and use our product, and then finally, our own internal constraints, we see up to $100 million that we would characterize as supply related of that $135 million.

The balance, so $35 million we would view as net demand. Some demand is up and we're able to intersect that. But some demand is clearly down, and I think that's well-publicized, particularly in parts of Asia. So broad brush strokes were three quarters or less down on supply in mobile and one quarter or more related to demand. Now if you add in IDP, which is all supply, then that proportion is stronger. So that's our view, Toshiya.

Toshiya Hari -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Great. Thanks for the color. And then as my follow-up, you guys talked quite a bit about having constructive longer-term conversations with your customers. You also talked about your long-term silicon supply agreement. As you kind of compare and contrast the visibility you have today versus three years ago, five years ago, I mean, how would you characterize the key differences? I'm sure you've had long-term agreements in the past. But how much bigger are they as a percentage of your backlog? And how enforceable are they going forward relative to history? Thank you.

Steven "Eric" Creviston -- President of Mobile Products

Toshiya, this is Eric. I'll take that. I think one of the overlyings in this environment is how constructive the conversations have gotten in terms of much longer term. So not just one or even two years, but in some cases, up to three years of discussions about how we're going to outline both our technology and supply road map to our customers' product road maps, their markets and what they expect to ship.

And first, there's no crystal ball. It's not perfect, but at least we have ranges of alignment and sort of volume bars, share windows and things like this that we can talk both to our customers and to our suppliers. And I think for suppliers, it's a great benefit to them and us to have more stability. And for our customers, of course, supply assurance is paramount and for us to have more confidence in our growth of the businesses is, of course, very important as well. So it's a very different environment driven by all the factors we've talked about already on this call.

Toshiya Hari -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

We'll take our next question from Vivek Arya of Bank of America.

Vivek Arya -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Thank you for taking my question. For the first one, I'm curious, given the supply constraints in the industry, does that change the competitive landscape in the RF side in some way as we look at next year? So for example, one of your competitors can bundle their apps processors and modems along with the RF side. Do you think that gives them perhaps an advantage from a competitive perspective as we look at next year?

Steven "Eric" Creviston -- President of Mobile Products

This is Eric. I don't think so. Technology decisions are still critical to enable next-generation phones and best-in-class RF is still going to win in the front-end section. So I don't think we're competing against people that have advantages of bundling across the boundary, if you will, from the apps and modem side to the RF side really.

And I think, again, just as in the last question with Toshiya, I think the long-term visibility we have and kind of planning our technology road maps, we're getting no signs that there's any change, if you will, in terms of the bundling or the architectures that would change that.

Robert Bruggeworth -- Chief Executive Officer

Vivek, this is Bob. Thanks for your question. I think the other point that's interesting is that a lot of the things that our customers are waiting on are from some of those very people you mentioned. So I think we need to keep that in primary reason is we have the parts. We can get the parts for them. They've been saying, as we've mentioned many times through last quarter as well as this quarter, the challenges our customers have with max set or kitting, whatever vocabulary you want to use, that's been their bigger problem, is in SoCs, not with RF front ends, at least not from us.

Vivek Arya -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Got it. And then on the acquisition that was announced, I was hoping you could give us some more color in terms of what is the right way to reflect that in the model. And our sense of the silicon carbide and the power semi space is, of course, it's in front of a very large growth opportunity in autos and industrial and so forth, but it's a very capital-intensive space, right? And a number of the established players have margins well below your corporate average. So what's the right way to think about the strategy? And is it going to be accretive over time for you?

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Let me take some of the financial elements. Vivek, and I'll turn it over to James. First of all, we're not in the capital-intensive part. We're in a device manufacturing parts. So that's the expertise, and we're leveraging our silicon carbide, again, carbide knowledge and which will be an advantage here. So that's maybe the first thing is realizing that this is -- these are things that we can foundry and source the material. There'll be more disclosure in our Q tomorrow, but it will be over $200 million that we're paying for United Silicon Carbide and it is dilutive initially, but we expect that to be accretive maybe at the end of next fiscal year, and we expect it to be a significant business for us several years out. James?

James Klein -- President of Infrastructure and Defense Products

Yes, this is James. So as you stated, we like the aspect that it gets us into several fast-growing markets like electric vehicles, industrial power and data centers, maybe longer term, even in things like circuit protection. We see it in current year, expanding our addressable market by almost $1 billion. And we think that, that certainly continues to grow at a high growth rate as we go over the next several years.

We do believe that we have industry-leading performance in efficiency and in die size. So we think when we compare those differentiated type capabilities with our existing power management capabilities, we really do believe we have the ability to continue to grow and scale the business.

Vivek Arya -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Blayne Curtis of Barclays.

Blayne Curtis -- Barclays -- Analyst

Hi. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. I just want to go back on the supply issues. If you look at the shipments from the two major modem companies, I guess, they're up and you're seeing a correction, so I'm just kind of curious, there's a couple of ways that could happen. Just kind of curious if now in retrospect, did you ship more RF than maybe modems in the first half of the year and that has to correct? Or just kind of curious to your thoughts on that. I know you probably haven't seen Qualcomm Sky, but at MediaTek, they're not seeing a sharp of a decline in December. Just kind of thoughts between the disconnect there.

Steven "Eric" Creviston -- President of Mobile Products

Hi, Blaine, this is Eric. Yes, it's a good question. And I think to a certain extent, there's some of that, and I think a lot of it comes down to mix as well. I think we did a good job of responding to customer demand. Now we still have several parts where we're on allocation as well and chasing and behind, of course, as we talked about.

But for the most part, we did a pretty good job of satisfying customer demand -- customer demand. But what happens is as the mix shifts, I mean, they're essentially taking every base band they can get regardless of which our RF it's on. So yes, it could be that net-net, we shifted a bit ahead up to this point.

Blayne Curtis -- Barclays -- Analyst

Okay. And then just your perspective on -- go ahead.

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

Well, I was just going to add, Blayne, that, listen, we're disappointed with the December guide, but I think it's also to reinforce our commitment to keep the channel healthy and give you a guide best we see on the supply/demand fronts. But it's never easy, but admittedly, it's more difficult than usual environment right now.

I do think it's important with this adjustment to step back, not lose sight of how good a business we've got. For this fiscal year, we called down, but that was -- and we missed, but there was an aged consensus that, clearly, the supply environment worsened through the quarter, particularly in mid to late September and then these publicized weakness and demand emerged.

We see things improving. We think December is as bad as it gets for us, and we see improving in March and broadly. We had given a guidance range of 15% to 20%. And with this 2.5% adjustment for the year, we're down at the lower end of that range. So we're still in the range that we had provided.

Yes. Listen, our gross margin outlook is intact around 52%. Opex is in control, and we're investing in the future of the business. That's both traditional parts of the business and newer parts of the business. And in the end, we're taking EPS roughly a dime above $12 to roughly a dime below $12. And so there is a bit of a correction there, but I would say it's the right thing for us to do.

If we look into next year and beyond, we're just -- feel great about our position. Premium technology and products, serving attractive end markets growing double-digits, and we expect to grow double digits. We're operating well, sustained margins over 52%, expanding operating margins. So a lot of talk about the positive beyond this quarter.

Blayne Curtis -- Barclays -- Analyst

And I guess when you look at your supply constraints on the constraints on your business, you did grow inventory in September with that level of sales. So I guess I'm looking at our sales down teens. So I guess I'm kind of wondering, I guess, the supply situation get that bad between September, December? Or is there another factor there? I'm just trying to understand those moving pieces.

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

No, we're -- it did get worse in mid- to late September, Blayne, for sure. And that's what we've tried to explain. And first, it was the supply environment, which has been tough for 1.5 years, almost two years now. The supply environment got worse. And then demand over the past three weeks or so has deteriorated. But our work -- and some of that inventory is just, again, it's mix match of sets and so forth like that. But having said that, our inventories are OK. I mean our turns are at the high end of historical range. And even with the slowdown, the turns will be within the normal historical range. So we -- yes, this is why we're dealing with this now. And again, we think work through and are in better shape in the March quarter.

Blayne Curtis -- Barclays -- Analyst

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take our next question from Karl Ackerman with Cowen & Company.

Karl Ackerman -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Yes. Thank you. For your December quarter outlook, are the bottlenecks you described, at least for mobile, are they concentrated in the Android ecosystem? And then if I may, just as a follow-up, if you could highlight whether the growth trajectory of Android into December, is it better or worse than your guide of down 17% for mobile? That would be very helpful. Thank you.

Steven "Eric" Creviston -- President of Mobile Products

Yes, Karl, this is Eric. I don't think we can break them up between ecosystems like that and give any more color given the concentration of the ecosystem. So...

Karl Ackerman -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Okay. If I may then, just going back to this acquisition you've made in silicon carbide, I understand that most of United 6 products are aimed at high-voltage server and general industrial power supplies where you have some pretty good customer overlap today. But could you discuss your plan to go to market for United 6 and whether they have existing relationships with Tier 1 automotive OEMs? Thank you.

Steven "Eric" Creviston -- President of Mobile Products

Yes. So today, you're right, I mean it's predominantly -- it's, I would say, on the lower voltage scale, and it's in power supplies around automotive and data center applications. If you look at how we plan to take the business on a go-forward basis, certainly, we'll use our channels to expand substantially.

As you know, we've got a broad base into the automotive and many other places like the defense market, we'll be able to take this technology over the long-term. We'll also be scaling the technology up in voltage, which will allow us to enter other parts of the automotive space, motor controls and things like that on a go-forward basis.

Karl Ackerman -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take our next question from Gary Mobley with Wells Fargo Securities.

Gary Mobley -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to pick up with some line of questioning on the acquisition. James, your core competency historically in wide band gap semiconductor materials, correct me if wrong, has been in GaN power or I'm sorry, GaN RF. And so United Silicon Carbide's core competency, of course, is in silicon carbide and the company has always outsourced manufacturing to X-FAB.

And so my question is, is the plan to eventually bring in the manufacturing internally, leveraging some of the Qorvo's historical wideband gap processing capabilities. And then related to trying to penetrate the automotive market, it has been important so far for car OEMs to align with silicon carbide providers that are vertically stacked with BAWs, materials and power devices for supply chain security. And so my question is, as a matter of strategy, is that the intent long term for this business.

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

Let me take the second one first. Certainly, we'll use our very large and strong supply chain to make sure we supply that. And of course, we have expertise also in very high power packaging. So we'll combine that with the power control that we have from the active semiconductor acquisition that's been a couple of years ago now, and we really intend to take this business much more into a module play where we'll have that integrated capability. And of course, we'll use our supply chain to make sure we've got a stable supply of raw material and the ability to manufacture the wafers and things like that.

As far as moving inside, we'll certainly, as we go over the period of scale in the business, we're going to take a hard look at what makes sense and what doesn't make sense. I think there's parts of that process that maybe we'll adapt well to some of our internal capabilities and some that may be a bit more of a challenge. And I think we'll just look at that as we go through the next several years as we scale to see what makes the most economic sense go-forward basis.

Gary Mobley -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Yeah. Thank you. And correct me if I'm reason a wrong term here, but the prepayment of wafer.

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

Sorry, Gary, the question?

Operator

We lost Mr. Mobley. I'd like to go to the next question..

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

Sure.

Operator

Next question comes from Edward Snyder with Charter Equity Research.

Edward Snyder -- Charter Equity Research -- Analyst

Thanks very much Eric, it's clear that Qualcomm is gaining some share in the low and mid, high in the loan China and Samsung's mass market. How can you be sure that some of your demand weaknesses in share loss in a few slots in that area? I know they don't participate as much tuning, but just trying to figure out how you figure that out given some of their gains.

And then Mark, I'm really puzzled by the Sick [Phonetic] Power acquisition buying wafers from premium foundry through X-Fab will work it would seem if it's like the industrial market or more of a diversified analog, but you face a huge disadvantage in scale against ST, Infineon and especially Wolfspeed's new foundry in New York. So I'm just curious, where do you see this going? What levers do you think you can pull or lever do you have for this new acquisition to get you into EV because it isn't going to be cost. And given the size of the fab and the fact that they'll be fabbing on wafers, you came and get the 200-millimeter wafers, you're going to be facing a big issue in terms of scale too. So I'm just trying to get a little bit more clarity on what markets you're addressing you might think. And then I have one final question for James before he leaves.

Steven "Eric" Creviston -- President of Mobile Products

Okay. I'll start with the question about share and how we can be certain about our share gains or losses and it's fairly straightforward for us. I don't think there's a phone platform of any significance that we don't have content on. So we know exactly how many phones every model are being built, and so we know exactly what our share is. We do all the teardowns and figure out what all the other slots are if we don't really know. And it's easily trackable. And I can assure you that it's not a share issue at all.

In fact, we're excited, as we exit December quarter and go into March, I think we've got some very nice content pickups with Samsung in particular, new platforms that we're really happy about that tailwind. But right now, to your question, I think we're quite certain of our share position, especially against Qualcomm or frankly, any supplier.

James Klein -- President of Infrastructure and Defense Products

Ed, this is James. I'll take on the acquisition question. So for us, that technology benefit there is low loss and, therefore, smaller die size. We agree, competitive market, but we are sort of the high-end performance side of that side of the market. So it's going to take that customer set that's really, really looking for a high-performance part Go-forward basis, we'll take both the power management things that we have in the prior acquisition and our packaging capability, and we'll move more into a module space and again we'll do that selectively where we see parts of the market that are really going to be driven by performance. So we're not trying to take on the world.

Edward Snyder -- Charter Equity Research -- Analyst

So you're going to be high-performance application specific in the module side of it, but you did mention EVs quite a bit and all EV you've built into big modules for....

James Klein -- President of Infrastructure and Defense Products

They'll be high performance applications in that space as well.

Edward Snyder -- Charter Equity Research -- Analyst

Okay. And then I hate to see you go. I know it time to retire. Everybody's got that time, but I'll miss coming down and bugging you. But before we get off and push off into the prairie, I had a question about your 5G. You guided -- or the guide for IDP was outside of China, you're going to expect to see growth.

But given how pervasive China was for the 5G infrastructure business and how it's not coming back and the US looks to be a lot more skittish about. What's the long-term -- long term next year on 5G for IDP? Will you get back to the point where the 5G MIMO stuff is at parity where you were in China? Or do you expect that to be a longer haul? Thanks.

James Klein -- President of Infrastructure and Defense Products

Yes. I think on 5G specific, I suspect it will be a bit of a longer haul. But I will tell you that I'm really pleased with the progress we've made. We've had wins, significant wins outside of China in that MIMO space. We begin getting out our first integrated modules or what we call pans power and fire modules and really pleased with those wins and the performance that we have there.

If you do look at our -- the core -- the IDP business minus the infrastructure side, this year, we'll grow north of 20%. And so it really is the story for us. It is just the lack of deployments going on in China. If you look at that base station business outside of China, it's actually growing way up over 30%. So it really is a story for us about slowdown in China is the IDP story. The rest of the business is doing very, very well.

And on your comment about my retirement, I want to say a few words. First of all, I really wanted to thank the Qorvo team for all the work over this past decade or so. They've done just an absolutely tremendous job and we've been able to accomplish a tremendous amount. I also want to thank Bob for all of his leadership in building Qorvo. I have a lot of pride associated with the company that we've built. And I want to thank Bob for I guess, guiding us through that, maybe dragging us. But I want to thank you very much.

And third, I want to thank Philip for accepting the challenge to lead the IDP team. I'm really confident that he's going to do a great job in the future with the organization. So I want to thank him for joining us.

Edward Snyder -- Charter Equity Research -- Analyst

Thanks, James.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take our next question from Christopher Rolland of Susquehanna.

Christopher Rolland -- Susquehanna -- Analyst

Thanks for the guys. I did want to kind of go back to Blayne's earlier question. So Qualcomm did post some very impressive RFFE numbers. They're now at about $1.2 billion a quarter and probably going up from there. And they actually said that their supply constraints were lessening and had been better than initially expected. So I did want to circle back on the differences between you and them and what you're seeing here in December.

I think you guys did say it could be a timing. It could be an inventory issue. But I'd really love to flush the rest out here. Is there a difference tied to more media tech modem centric customers or different OEM customers here? Is there anything else that would mark the difference between the two?

Robert Bruggeworth -- Chief Executive Officer

Chris, this is Bob, and I'll make a few comments, and obviously let Eric add some color. But without seeing what they said or understood, it's a little bit difficult. But I believe in that number you gave, there is the millimeter wave front ends that they do sell to our mutually largest customer. And if they broke that out, that probably would be helpful. And yes, we do see them out there. We don't see them on any MediaTek platforms. That's for sure. But we sit alongside them. They don't have the entire RF at the same customers, as Eric already outlined. So I think we've got a pretty good handle on what's going on. So yes, they have more RF content, I would say, at our largest customer. That's a fact. So that could be part of it easily. But Eric, if you think there's anything that I may have missed.

Steven "Eric" Creviston -- President of Mobile Products

No, just maybe the distinction. I'm not saying Qualcomm is not doing well. They've got some drivers, of course. I think my response to add is that I know it's not at our expense. So we're not losing share to them. It was the question.

Christopher Rolland -- Susquehanna -- Analyst

Yes. Thank you for that. And indeed, the millimeter wave is a big portion for sure. And then I did want to switch to M&A for a second, and congrats on the acquisition. It's this United Silicon, sorry, and Decawave. These do appear to be somewhat niche businesses. And I guess my question is, do you guys have a desire for more broad-based businesses or even a catalog business, whether it's analog or microcontroller or mixed signal, something like that? And what is your desire to move in that direction?

Robert Bruggeworth -- Chief Executive Officer

So let me start with, Chris. I appreciate the question. And I think we've said before, we'll never telegraph the areas that we want to go after. That's for sure. I think Eric would probably take exception and I'll let him talk about it, but call ultra wideband niche is probably a different view than what we have. That's for sure. We think that is a nice growth area. And I'll let Eric speak to that because I think what we demonstrated with the bullets in our press lot greater than what most people thought. But Eric?

Steven "Eric" Creviston -- President of Mobile Products

Yes. And maybe to kind of take a step toward your question. I think we're always looking for opportunities that allow us to leverage our scale in mobile and then use that same technology at an unfair advantage everywhere else. We're in smaller markets, right? I mean that's one of the advantages we have with our corporate structure. So we fit that perfectly. The mobile phone itself, of course, is going to drive billions of units. But around that, the wave five, six, seven things that talk to those billions of units, right? So the whole connected home ecosystem and so forth, it's -- it will be a major franchise over time and continuing to expand into industrial, some of the things we talked about in the press release, there's industrial, things like auto manufacturing autos themselves. So certainly not a niche business to Bob's point, and we're thrilled with the progress that we're making with ultrawideband today.

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. And I would -- this is Mark. I would just add that we're looking at this several years out, and they're most definitely not niche businesses at that point. I mean the TAM that we see associated with the $1.6 billion or so acquisitions that we've done over the last several years. I'm including this recent $200 million plus on United Silicon Carbide. We see that TAM at about $5 billion. We see that TAM doubling to $10 billion or more over the next several years. So we expect these businesses to be material and enjoy that growth, which is significant. And that's not including biotechnologies.

Christopher Rolland -- Susquehanna -- Analyst

Very good points. Thanks a lot. And congrats on the acquisition.

Robert Bruggeworth -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Chris.

Operator

We'll take our next question from Rajvindra Gill with Needham & Company.

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

Raj?

Operator

Sorry. Our next question comes from Rajvindra Gill with Needham & Company. Hi, guys, Can you hear me?

Dennis -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

Great. This is Dennis[Phonetic] on for Raj. So I just wanted to ask you guys a question regarding the comment you made about mass market handsets and the content increases. Could you provide some more color, please, about what you're seeing? How much of a difference you're seeing in percent? I think you mentioned that it was higher versus the high end kind of 5G handsets. Can you guys please talk in a little bit more detail about that?

Robert Bruggeworth -- Chief Executive Officer

Sure. Looking at the RF content in as 5G proliferates down, we've said there's like a $5 to $7 increase from 4G Advanced Pro, for example, up to the 5G. And what we said previously is what's interesting is we see that $5 to $7 consistent as the phones go down. So on a high-tier phone, high-tier smartphone, you might be looking at $30 to $35 RF phone. You're adding 5 to 7 to that. That's a good growth.

But as you go down into the mid-tier, you're adding that 5 to 7 on top of maybe $13 or $10 in some cases, right? So I think that was like the interesting kind of content growth story as you go down. Some of the fundamental RF challenges in 5G that drive a lot of complexity around filtering and multiband, multimode operation, received diversity requirements going up, transient diversity coming and so forth.

All of that are sort of independent of tier because they're not -- a lot of them aren't driven specifically by consumer features and things that you see. It's driven just as much more sort of network infrastructure efficiency in economies driven by the provider -- the carriers. So I think that's the essence of the comments we made in the past that you're asking about.

Dennis -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

That was perfect. Thank you. And then for my follow-up, I just wanted to ask you regarding the gross margins. You mentioned that kind of gross margins are holding above this quarter despite challenges. Can you discuss the chief drivers of this resilience in the gross margins, please?

Robert Bruggeworth -- Chief Executive Officer

We've covered that at length in previous calls, and it's the same factors, which is what we had hoped would happen. So we have premium products and those allow us to price better and compete where we most want to compete. We've maintained the utilization of our factory network. We continue to drive productivity programs aggressively. And it's these and other factors that have contributed to the gross margin quantum improvement and then the consistency we're seeing.

Dennis -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

Appreciate that. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take our last question from Ambrish Srivastava of BMO Capital Markets.

Ambrish Srivastava -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

I had a question on the demand side. What are your assumptions for the Asia market in the March quarter? Are you assuming a snapback? Or what is embedded in your guide for what you think about that market? And then you made a comment on holding back to keep the channel healthy. Can you talk a little bit about -- give us some color on what the channel inventory looks like?

And for my follow-up, Mark, given all the tightness, you have kept cap intensity very low for a while. Does that change in fiscal 2023? Thank you.

Robert Bruggeworth -- Chief Executive Officer

Right, Ambrish. So first of all, looking at the mobile market, you asked about Asia, specifically in March. I mean, clearly, I think as you saw from our guide, this is not a normal year, right? We're booking seasonality in our projection in March going up. So I think that there's no normality here to the seasonality. So we're expecting that it will be roughly in line, growing a bit over December quarter most likely.

Ambrish Srivastava -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

And the channel inventory?

Steven "Eric" Creviston -- President of Mobile Products

Sorry, the channel inventory. Yes, that also varies dramatically by part numbers as we talked about. We have -- somewhat we're back up to healthy levels, for sure, others that were still actually hand them out there or even constrained on in some cases. So there's a wide range. But we've been saying, I think, over the past quarter or two that we're beginning to see channel inventories begin to get healthier. In some parts, we've definitely gotten there, and that's where we're making sure that we don't overship into the channel to Mark's point.

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

Ambrish on your...

Ambrish Srivastava -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Go ahead, Mark. Sorry, go ahead.

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

I was going to answer your capex question, but if you had a follow-up.

Ambrish Srivastava -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

I did have a follow-on. Eric, we've heard the memory guys talk about builds at the -- in the VOX complex. Is that specific to the memory guys? Or are you seeing that kind of manifest in your business as well? The business...

Steven "Eric" Creviston -- President of Mobile Products

Inventory. Did you say at VOX to be local Xiaomi, is that what you said?

Ambrish Srivastava -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Yes. Yes, because the memory guys have called that out without taking the names that they talked about and the desire to take share.

Steven "Eric" Creviston -- President of Mobile Products

Well, one thing which I don't think we've touched on this call yet, we do see very, very lean inventories in the finished goods channel. So in terms of phone inventory in the channel from both and Xiaomi, we don't -- we see pretty tight discipline there. We don't see overbuilds and phone inventory building up. I'm not sure if you're asking that or whether they're building up a stockpile of memory chips, I don't know. I can't comment on that...

Ambrish Srivastava -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Well, on the component side, if you saw anything on the component side that... No, I don't think they're intentionally doing that. They're dealing with mix shifts due to supply changes week-to-week, which baseband they can get depend and which ones they can ship. So yes, so I think that's the key factor. Got it.

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

And Ambrish, on your capex question, it's still our long-term goal to keep our capital intensity as low as we can as we grow and stay around that mid-single digits as a percent of sales. Now that will move a bit up and down as we're going through various investment cycles. But that's the long-term goal. I do think it's important to call out that our capex is staying at sustained levels and through this weaker period in December because we see on the other side of it, and it's -- we're only talking in the March quarter where we see things riding. We see next year as being a good year. And so we need to invest capacity to realize that growth potential.

Ambrish Srivastava -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. At this time, I'd like to turn the call back to management for closing remarks.

Robert Bruggeworth -- Chief Executive Officer

We want to thank everyone for joining us today. We look forward to speaking with you again at upcoming investor conferences. Thanks again, and have a good night.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 63 minutes

Call participants:

Douglas DeLieto -- Vice President of Investor Relations

Robert Bruggeworth -- Chief Executive Officer

Mark Murphy -- Chief Financial Officer

Steven "Eric" Creviston -- President of Mobile Products

James Klein -- President of Infrastructure and Defense Products

Toshiya Hari -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Vivek Arya -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Blayne Curtis -- Barclays -- Analyst

Karl Ackerman -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Gary Mobley -- Wells Fargo Securities -- Analyst

Edward Snyder -- Charter Equity Research -- Analyst

Christopher Rolland -- Susquehanna -- Analyst

Dennis -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

Ambrish Srivastava -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

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