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Applied Optoelectronics (AAOI 3.35%)
Q4 2021 Earnings Call
Feb 24, 2022, 4:30 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:


Operator

Good afternoon. I will be your conference operator. And at this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Applied Optoelectronics fourth quarter and full year 2021 earnings conference call. [Operator instructions] Please note that this call is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to Cassidy Fuller, investor relations for AOI. Ms. Fuller, you may begin.

Cassidy Fuller -- Investor Relations

Thank you. I'm Cassidy Fuller, investor relations for Applied Optoelectronics. And I'm pleased to welcome you to AOI's fourth quarter and full year 2021 financial results conference call. After the market closed today, AOI issued a press release announcing its fourth quarter and full year 2021 financial results and provided its outlook for the first quarter of 2020.

The release is also available on the company's website at ao-inc.com. This call is being recorded and webcast live. A link to the recording can be found on the investor relations section of the AOI website. It will be archived for one year.

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Joining us on today's call are Dr. Thompson Lin, AOI's founder, chairman, and CEO; and Dr. Stefan Murry, AOI's chief financial officer and chief strategy officer. Thompson will give an overview of AOI's Q4 results, and Stefan will provide financial details and the outlook for the first quarter of 2022.

A question-and-answer session will follow our prepared remarks. Before we begin, I'd like to remind you to review AOI's safe harbor statement. On today's call, management will make forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, as well as assumptions and current expectations, which could cause the company's actual results to differ materially from those anticipated in such forward-looking statements.

In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terminologies such as believes, anticipates, estimates, intend, predict, expect, plan, may, should, could, would, will or things and by other similar expressions that may convey uncertainty of future events or outcomes. Forward-looking statements also include statements regarding management's beliefs and expectations related to the expansion of the reach of our products into new markets and customer responses to our innovation, as well as statements regarding the company's outlook for the first quarter of 2022. Except as required by law, we assume no obligation to update forward-looking statements for any reason after the date of this earnings call to conform these statements to actual results or to changes in the company's expectations. More information about other risks that may impact the company's business are set forth in the Risk Factors section of the company's reports and filed with the SEC, including the company's annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020.

Also, all financials discussed today are on a non-GAAP basis, unless specifically noted otherwise. Non-GAAP financial measures are not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for results prepared in accordance with GAAP. A reconciliation between our GAAP and non-GAAP measures, as well as a discussion of why we present non-GAAP financial measures are included in our earnings press release that is available on our website. I'd like to note the date of our first quarter 2022 earnings call is currently scheduled for May 5, 2022.

Now I'd like to turn the call over to Dr. Thompson Lin, Applied Optoelectronics' founder, chairman and CEO. Thompson?

Thompson Lin -- Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Cassidy, and thank you for joining our call today. Turning to the fourth quarter, we delivered revenue and non-GAAP EPS in line with our expectations and gross margin below our expectations, mostly due to unfavorable product mix and increased costs from unanticipated supply chain and logistic expenses. During the quarter, we continued to see strong demand in the CATV market and improving conditions in the data center market. We achieved total revenue for fourth quarter of $54.4 million, which increased 3.1%, compared to the fourth quarter of 2020 and increased 2.1% sequentially.

Total revenue in our CATV segment of $24.9 million was up 56.4% year over year and up 7.9%, sequentially. The overall CATV demand environment remains strong, and we currently have an unprecedented order backlog extended into Q4 of this year. We believe the condition in our CATV market are likely to remain highly unfavorable into 2023 because our products are currently being used in network upgrade project by the three largest CATV MSO in the U.S., along with other smaller operators. For the revenue for our data center product of $25.2 million decreased 23.1% year over year and increased 5.3% sequentially.

The sequential growth is encouraged as inventory level with our largest data center customer appear to have returned to normal level and delivery against new demand from this customer has resumed. In addition to our largest data center customer, we saw a significant order increase from several of our new data center customers. Some of these increases were offset and anticipated decline in 40G revenue indicating that the mix continue to shift to 100G. In addition, I'm very pleased to report that during the quarter, we received our first volume orders for 400G products from two different data center customers.

This represents the accumulation of a multi-year qualification effort with these customers, and we believe this initial order will lead to further significant order in the future as 400G gradually surpasses 100G as a dominant data rate within large data centers. During the fourth quarter, we secured four design wins among four customers. Two of these design wins were with data center customers and two were with telecom customers. One of the data center wins was with an existing data center customer for our 400G products.

This customer is currently purchasing 100G product from AOI and expressed an initial volume order for its early 400G deployments. With that, I will turn the call over to Stefan to review the details of our Q4 performance and outlook for Q1. Stefan?

Stefan Murry -- Chief Financial Officer and Chief Strategy Officer

Thank you, Thompson. As Thompson mentioned, we delivered revenue and non-GAAP EPS in line with our expectations and gross margin below our expectations, mostly due to unfavorable product mix and unanticipated supply chain and logistics costs. During the quarter, we continued to see strong demand in the CATV market and improving conditions in the data center market. As we anticipated, our results were adversely impacted by approximately $3 million due to the well-known component shortages and supply chain disruptions.

Currently, we believe that supply constraints are easing and do not anticipate revenue shortfall in the first quarter due to an inability to source necessary raw materials. We do believe, however, that pricing and shipping costs on many of these components will remain elevated for some time, and this will negatively impact margins in the quarter. Turning to our quarterly performance. We secured four new design wins among four customers.

Of the four design wins, two were with data center customers and two were with telecom customers. One of the data center design wins was our first for 400G products and was with an existing data center customer. This customer is currently purchasing 100G products from AOI and has placed an initial volume order for its earliest 400G deployments. We are pleased to report that this customer has chosen AOI as the primary supplier for its 400G data center transceiver needs.

Total fourth quarter revenue of $54.4 million, increased 3.1%, compared to the fourth quarter of 2020 and increased 2.1% sequentially. Our Q4 revenue was at the upper end of our guidance range of $51 million to $55 million. In the fourth quarter, 46% of our revenue was from our data center products, 46% from CATV products, with the remaining 8% from FTTH, telecom and other. In our CATV products segment, the overall demand environment remains exceptionally strong as MSOs, particularly in North America, continue to upgrade their networks.

We generated revenue of $24.9 million, up 56.4% year over year and up 7.9% sequentially. Looking ahead, we continue to have good visibility with CATV orders as we currently have an unprecedented order backlog extending into Q4 of this year. We believe that conditions in our CATV market are likely to remain highly favorable into 2023 because our products are currently being used in network upgrade projects by the three largest CATV MSOs in the U.S. along with other smaller operators.

In general, these network upgrades are still in their early phases, and all of the projects are currently expected to continue well into 2023 or beyond. Our Q4 data center revenue came in at $25.2 million, down 23.1% year over year and up 5.3% sequentially. In the fourth quarter, 14% of our data center revenue was from our 40G transceiver products, 79% was from our 100G products and 0.4% was from our 200G and 400G transceiver products. We are very pleased to have begun volume shipments of our 400G portfolio as these products have been under qualification by 11 different customers and the first design wins and associated volume orders give us increased confidence in our traction within the 400G data center market.

While we begin shipments of 400G, we are also preparing our first 800G samples, which we expect to deliver to the first of our interested customers at the end of next month. And we have begun concept discussions with several customers on ideas beyond 800G, including 1.6 terabits per second. So we can see a clear progression of increasing data rate products being developed by AOI and customer interest in these future product activities remains fine. Now turning to our telecom segment.

Revenue from our telecom products of $3.3 million was down 5.8% year over year and declined 36.1% sequentially. In line with our expectations, we saw continued volatility in market conditions in the China telecom market with respect to 5G rollouts. Looking ahead, we continue to expect quarter-to-quarter variability until the pace of 5G rollouts in China becomes more predictable. For the fourth quarter, our top 10 customers represented 88.4% of revenue, up from 85.1% in Q4 of the prior year.

We had three 10% or greater customers in the fourth quarter, one in the CATV market and two in the data center market. These customers contributed 36.1%, 15% and 12.4% of total revenue, respectively. For the full year, we had three 10% or greater customers, two in the CATV market and one in the data center market. These customers contributed 25.6%, 14.1% and 11.9% of revenue, respectively.

In Q4, we generated non-GAAP gross margin of 17.6%, which was below our guidance range of 18.5% to 20% and was down from 19.9% in Q3 of 2021 and 27.5% in Q4 of 2020. The decline in our gross margin was mostly due to unfavorable product mix and increased costs from component shortages. As we discussed last quarter, we have experienced price pressure on certain of our 100G data center products as these product lines have reached full maturity and 400G editions have begun. In addition, in our CATV segment, we have seen an inventory correction on some of our higher-margin products by one of our customers that has significantly reduced orders for these higher-margin products.

These product mix issues overlap with well-known supply chain challenges and increases in shipping costs that also provide a margin headwind. Finally, we've reduced production of lasers in our fab in Q4 due to slower demand from the China 5G market, as well as managing inventory ahead of the Lunar New Year. This reduction in fab output resulted in under absorption of the fixed cost of running the fab and further pressured our margins. We believe most of these impacts are transitory.

While 100G margins are likely to continue to remain pressured, we expect these products to represent a smaller contribution to data center revenue as 400G begins its ramp, and we begin to see cost reduction associated with the transition to volume production. On the CATV front, we have a number of cost reduction efforts that have been implemented to reduce raw material and production costs for our highest-volume products. In addition, we expect the unfavorable mix shift due to the inventory correction mentioned above to ease by midyear. While we expect margins in Q1 to continue to be pressured by many of the factors I've already discussed and additionally by the effects of Lunar New Year on our Asian operations, Q2 and beyond currently looks significantly more favorable in terms of gross margin as these headwinds moderate or eliminated altogether.

Total non-GAAP operating expenses in the fourth quarter were $16.9 million or 31% of revenue, compared with $20.6 million or 39% of revenue in Q4 of the prior year. The reduction in operating expenses is due to a decrease in R&D spend as some of the costs associated with our 400G development have begun to subside, along with benefits from certain cost reduction efforts we made during the quarter. Operating expenses were further improved by careful cost control, along with a significant reversal of previously accrued bonuses, especially to executives, which occurred in Q4. We anticipate continued disciplined cost control until a return to consistent profitability has been demonstrated.

While we intend to carefully control operating expenses, we continue to invest in new product development. In addition to the 800G and 1.6-terabit transceiver work I discussed earlier for our data center customers, we also have been actively developing high-power lasers intended for use in LiDAR and other sensing applications. These LiDAR lasers have applications in automotive driver assistance systems, security monitoring, augmented reality and other 3D sensing systems. These products have been under development for several years now.

And within the last few months, we have begun shipping qualification samples to eight different customers, most of which are in the automotive space. Initial feedback from these customers has been very positive, further reinforcing our conviction that AOI's laser-related R&D remains at the forefront of new technology, both in our data center market and in new markets like automotive. While meaningful revenue for these LiDAR lasers is likely a year or two away, the addition of these products continues the trend of greater diversity within our customer base. As many of you know, increasing revenue diversity has been a key element of our risk reduction strategy for more than three years.

Non-GAAP operating loss in the fourth quarter was $7.3 million, compared to an operating loss of $6.1 million in Q4 of the prior year. GAAP net loss for Q4 was $14.5 million or a loss of $0.54 per basic share, compared with a GAAP net loss of $13.4 million or a loss of $0.57 per basic share in Q4 of 2020. On a non-GAAP basis, net loss for Q4 was $5.5 million, or a loss of $0.20 per basic share, which was in line with our guidance range of a loss of $5.5 million to $6.6 million or a loss per share in the range of $0.20 to $0.24 per basic share and compares to a net loss of $4.8 million or a loss of $0.20 per basic share in Q4 of the prior year. The basic shares outstanding used for computing the net loss in Q4 were 27.1 million.

Turning now to the balance sheet. We ended the fourth quarter with $41.1 million in total cash, cash equivalents, short-term investments and restricted cash. This compares with $48.9 million at the end of the third quarter. Notably, we reduced total debt, compared with Q3 by $5.8 million by utilizing less of our revolving lines of credit at year-end.

As of December 31, we had $92.5 million in inventory, compared to $94.5 million at the end of Q3. Inventory decreased, primarily due to utilization of inventory for customer orders. We made a total of $2.3 million in capital investments in the quarter, including $2.1 million in production equipment and machinery and $0.1 million in construction and building improvements. We are still in the process of evaluating our capex plans for 2022, and we will share our expectations as soon as we complete our analysis.

Moving now to our Q1 outlook. We expect Q1 revenue to be between $51 million and $54 million and non-GAAP gross margin to be in the range of 15.5% to 17.5%. Non-GAAP net loss is expected to be in the range of $8.3 million to $9.5 million and non-GAAP loss per basic share between $0.30 and $0.35 using a weighted average basic share count of approximately 27.5 million shares. With that, I'll turn it back over to the operator for the Q&A session.

Questions & Answers:


Operator

Thank you. [Operator instructions] And our first question today will come from Sam Peterman with Craig-Hallum Capital Group. Please go ahead.

Sam Peterman -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to ask on gross margins. Obviously, with -- it seems like some of the mix issues and cable resolving by the middle of the year that the margin outlook for the back half would be better.

Do you guys think you can get into kind of the mid-20s there or what kind of as the cable issue resolves in data center, you start to ramp 400-gig, is mid-20s kind of reasonable for where you guys think you can go? Or how do you think about margins in the second half?

Stefan Murry -- Chief Financial Officer and Chief Strategy Officer

Yeah. I think, mid-20s is an achievable number for us. It's difficult to put a precise time line on that. I mean, there's a lot of moving parts as we mentioned, some of the component shortages and other things that have been affecting us.

It's a little bit difficult to provide an exact time frame for that, but it's certainly a number that we think is achievable.

Sam Peterman -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

OK. Fair enough. On data center, it sounds like that these two customers in 400-gig ramping in the second half that will provide an uplift from where you are today? Should you -- how should we think about data center revenues in the first half? And then, how should we think about what 400-gig can add? Is that in the low millions or even potentially more than that in the second half?

Stefan Murry -- Chief Financial Officer and Chief Strategy Officer

Well, I think, data center revenues probably will be reasonably consistent throughout the first half of the year with where they were in the last quarter. And then, as you mentioned, we'll start to see around. Now some of that -- there will be a little bit of a shift there, as we mentioned, in our prepared remarks from sort of the 100G to starting to see a little bit more of an increase in the 400G revenue. It's probably not going to be hugely meaningful certainly in the first half until we start to see a ramp later on in the year, hopefully.

But within that as that mix is shifting, we don't think the overall number is going to change that much in the first quarter or two or a year.

Sam Peterman -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

OK. And then, on the 400-gig customers, you kind of described one of them. Is there any way you could characterize the other one? And then, is there any way -- are you -- on the second point of your customer, are you also the primary or lead supplier there? And how would you size that one of that opportunity relative to that first 400-gig win?

Stefan Murry -- Chief Financial Officer and Chief Strategy Officer

I would say that the size of both the customers is probably, I mean, roughly similar, I don't have the total purchasing trend for each of them. I don't have a number on the customer that we didn't talk about as much. I don't have information from them about whether we're the primary or secondary source on that. Some customers will tell you that information directly, others will not.

So from that perspective, I can't give you that information. But certainly, we believe that all of the customers will have multiple sources and which are in the top one or two, you're probably going to get a pretty reasonable market share, and that's what we would expect with both of these customers.

Sam Peterman -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

OK. Fair enough. That's it from me. Thanks, guys.

Stefan Murry -- Chief Financial Officer and Chief Strategy Officer

OK.

Operator

[Operator instructions] And our next question will come from Robert Mander with Cowen. Please go ahead.

Unknown speaker

This is Bob Mander for Paul Silverstein. Guys, at one time, you were thinking that 400G could be 10% of revenue this year. Is that still in the work -- still what you would see?

Stefan Murry -- Chief Financial Officer and Chief Strategy Officer

I wouldn't say -- I don't think not. We haven't changed our outlook much on the 400G. I think, it's really positive that we're starting to see actual orders or volume orders flowing from a couple of customers now. We still have a number of qualification efforts that are underway, but we're optimistic we'll culminate here in the next few months.

And that -- all of those opportunities together should drive revenue, whether that will be 10% by the end of the year or not, it's difficult to say, but I think it's possible.

Unknown speaker

OK. In the past, I guess, last quarter, one of your principal customers for 400G was seeing their own supply chain constraints, which was limiting their ability to place orders. Did I hear correctly that that's been resolved?

Stefan Murry -- Chief Financial Officer and Chief Strategy Officer

That was more related to just the overall inventory situation. As you recall, if you go back a few quarters, we had -- that particular customer had been hit with supply chain issues that affected their overall deployment of not only 400G but also 100G technology at the time. So it wasn't a statement specifically at 400G, it was just their overall demand to be coming back.

Unknown speaker

OK. But that's been -- is that still an issue with them, or has that been addressed?

Stefan Murry -- Chief Financial Officer and Chief Strategy Officer

I think, it's largely been addressed at this point.

Unknown speaker

OK, OK. And at the moment, your data center and CATV is pretty evenly split. And it sounds like you're pretty optimistic about going forward to CATV. Do you still see an even split? Or are you going to expect to see CATV be a larger, a greater percentage than data center going forward for the year?

Stefan Murry -- Chief Financial Officer and Chief Strategy Officer

I think, they'll be fairly comparable for the year. As you recall from past experience, our first quarter in cable TV can be a little bit challenging for us just because we have the Lunar New Year shutdown, which affects most of our cable TV products are made in Asia. So by virtue of the fact that there's just less time in Q1 due to the Lunar New Year that oftentimes puts a damper on our ability to expand cable TV. So we may see cable TV not grow as much early in the year as it will in the back half of the year.

And so, from quarter to quarter, you might see some variability. But if you look at the year as a whole, I think the two will probably be fairly comfortable.

Unknown speaker

OK. All right. Well, thank you for taking my questions.

Stefan Murry -- Chief Financial Officer and Chief Strategy Officer

My pleasure.

Operator

[Operator instructions] And this will conclude the question-and-answer session. I'd like to turn the conference back over to Thompson Lin for any closing remarks.

Thompson Lin -- Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer

OK. Thank you for joining our call today. We want to extend our thanks to you, to our investors, customers and employees for your continued support. We look forward to updating you on our next earnings call.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 30 minutes

Call participants:

Cassidy Fuller -- Investor Relations

Thompson Lin -- Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer

Stefan Murry -- Chief Financial Officer and Chief Strategy Officer

Sam Peterman -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

Unknown speaker

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