Shares of digital display semiconductor maker Himax Technologies (HIMX 1.02%) have resumed their gut-wrenching oscillations in the wake of its full-year 2018 earnings report. Profit margins are thin for the company's bread-and-butter components, and demand has been volatile -- a combination that has kept the stock on a rollercoaster for years now. Now, as its price is plumbing multiyear lows, investors should handle the stock with care -- if at all.

A so-so 2018

It wasn't that the last year was all bad. The high-definition TV industry and the rising use of digital displays in automobiles helped Himax notch a modest increase in sales, despite its continued weakness in the smartphone and tablet markets. However, due to an unfavorable mix of product sales, its gross profit margins fell, bringing earnings down dramatically.

Metric

 2018

2017

YOY Change

Revenue

$724 million

$685 million

6%

Gross profit margin

23.3%

24.4%

(1.1 p.p.)

Total expenses

$720 million

$677 million

6%

Earnings per share

$0.05

$0.16

(69%)

YOY = year over year. p.p. = percentage point. Data source: Himax Technologies.

As is the case with all cyclical businesses, investors are far more focused on Himax's future than its past. And that's where things really look unpromising for the company. While its two biggest growth markets -- TV and automotive -- should continue to rise in the new year, the smartphone industry remains challenging. Plus, manufacturing seasonality will bring down demand for display drivers for TVs. As a result, management expects a high single-digit-percentage decline in demand for large display drivers, and a high-teens percentage decline for small and medium display drivers, compared with the fourth quarter.

HIMX Revenue (TTM) Chart

Data by YCharts.

Back to the drawing board

To Himax's credit, given how volatile its display driver business is, it has been trying to nurture a non-driver chip business. However, the results of those efforts have been hit or miss -- and they're looking more like a miss at the moment. Non-display sales are expected to fall 30% in the first quarter of 2019.

A couple sitting on a couch watching TV.

Image source: Getty Images.

The problem is low uptake on 3D sensing chips -- the components that power features like facial recognition in smartphones and tablets. The company cited things like a lack of apps that use the tech, too high a cost for broad-based adoption in Android devices, and the long development time required to integrate the components. Thus, management says it's going back to the drawing board to help solve for those problems and make it easier to sell its new parts to smartphone makers.

Check out the latest Himax earnings call transcript.

Another area of promise is the company's work on machine vision sensors, although it has yet to disclose specifics about its progress or its financial results in the segment. That likely means Himax is still a ways out from monetizing the sensors -- at least to the degree that would move the earnings needle. Plus, machine vision sensor spending has been slowing down as of late, and the company faces well-established competition from the likes of Cognex and other aspiring chipmakers like Ambarella.

Long story short, while Himax Technologies' stock is half the price it was a year ago, there's good reason for that decline. Its outlook is dim, and its barely-there profits are likely to vanish entirely in the first quarter if the guidance proves true. It's possible chip sales will surge again later in 2019, but this company has a track record of extreme volatility that should disqualify it as an investment for those who don't want to trade frequently.