Apple
But you know what all of these tablets have in common? Touchscreens.
That gives you an oblique way to invest in the whole tablet craze without choosing sides on the retail shelves. There are still choices to make, of course. Synaptics
Strictly speaking, Cypress only designs controller chips for touchpads and touchscreens, while Synaptics also provides the hardware you'd actually touch. Still, they are direct competitors that fight tooth and nail over every smartphone and tablet contract.
Cypress reported fourth-quarter earnings last night, showing 18% year-over-year sales growth to $194 million. A $0.08 non-GAAP loss per share in 2008 reversed into $0.16 of earnings per share, and the company announced enough new products in the quarter to grow its addressable market tenfold to more than $15 billion a year.
High-end touchscreen controllers from Cypress, along with the proper software, allow 10-finger touch gestures and more. Yeah, you could play a 10-finger piano chord on a Cypress-powered tablet screen. Gross margins are improving along with unit volumes, possibly indicating the start of a veritable gold rush. Given the rise of smartphones and tablets, that only makes sense.
When our Rule Breakers analysts picked this stock, they saw massive promise in the markets Cypress serves. It looks like that promise is turning into reality right about now. Stay tuned for one heck of a roller-coaster ride.