part 2:
Brett Hodess, Merrill Lynch - Analyst [2] -------------------- (inaudible). Just quickly on the operating expense line, it looks like R&D is coming down more in line as you had planned, but the SG&A seems to be looking back up here a bit. Do you think it's just a one quarter phenomenon, or is that a structural change you are looking at? -------------------- Nancy Baker, Cymer - Senior VP and CFO [3] -------------------- Actually the SG&A is relatively flat. In Q3, it is up because of the facility and tenant improvement write-off in Q3, but the SG&A is relatively flat to previous quarters. -------------------- Brett Hodess, Merrill Lynch - Analyst [4] -------------------- I was thinking more of what we are looking at for the fourth quarter? It seems like after we take out the onetime charge, it is going back up again. -------------------- Nancy Baker, Cymer - Senior VP and CFO [5] -------------------- No. It is still somewhere around that $10 million range. It is really not going up very much. There is nothing really new in that number. -------------------- Steven Pelayo, Morgan Stanley - Analyst [8] -------------------- Let me follow-up his question before I get to my question. I think what he was referring to, excluding that onetime charge, there was roughly about 8.9 million in SG&A and 12 million in R&D. If you take the middle of the range for your guidances for R&D and SG&A for the fourth quarter, it looks like they are up about another 1.5 million on each of those, $3 million or so for the fourth quarter. Can you give us a better explanation why operating expenses are going up significantly and actually increasing as a percentage of revenues? -------------------- Nancy Baker, Cymer - Senior VP and CFO [9] -------------------- It's actually more. When we actually give you those ranges, it is dependent on the types of activities that occurred in Q4 and how they impact the Q1 and Q2 of 2004. There really is not any onetime charges or anything like that in the quarter. What you also have in the Q3 timeframe was also some other onetime benefits that occurred that were pretty immaterial in the quarter that you don't have in the Q4 timeframe. But from an activity prospective, there really is not much of a difference. -------------------- Steven Pelayo, Morgan Stanley - Analyst [10] -------------------- Okay. That is fine. My questions are really relative to the bookings linearity in the quarter. One of your largest customers -- I am surprised the industry talked about receiving 50 percent of their bookings toward the last couple of weeks of the quarter. It was a very large bookings (inaudible) holdings here. I am curious about your own linearity. If you can help us qualify how your bookings came in? Maybe did any of that spill into this quarter, and have you started off this quarter on a pretty good base, if you will? -------------------- Pascal Didier, Cymer - President and COO [11] -------------------- The linearity of the quarter in the booking was about the same for us as it was for our direct customers, which was heavily toward the end of the quarter. Also, because of the cycle time reductions efforts that we have been driving with our three direct customers, there is almost no time delay between the time they receive the orders to the time we receive our others. So a lot of the last week upside that I estimated, I experienced and maybe some of the other direct customers have experienced also was exactly the same for us. It is almost as straightforward as if I (inaudible) an order on Monday, we usually get our orders on Tuesday. So most of this upside that our estimate had is already loaded into our Q3 booking. Now if you look at Q4, you can predict the same type of banana curve towards the end of the quarter. A lot of the chipmakers that I visited over the last four weeks are going to be very cautious to the last-minute. All the orders are being placed in Q3 for Q1 deliveries and Q4 deliveries. They have to make some decisions for the late Q1 '04 and early Q2 '04 deliveries, and they won't make the decisions until November and December. So at this point in time, we are in the same position as in Q4 that we were in Q3. We are not expecting a positive book-to-bill ratio, but they are going to turnout differently, and they will turnout differently again through the last two to three weeks of the quarter. -------------------- Nancy Baker, Cymer - Senior VP and CFO [12] -------------------- Actually, Steve, back to you and the previous question on the SG&A, maybe there is some confusion. As Pascal pointed out in his prepared remarks, the $1 million cost for the CSD-1 and 2 facilities starting in Q4 actually shows up on the G&A line. But outside of that, there is nothing really different from the previous quarter. So maybe that is where there was some confusion. -------------------- Steven Pelayo, Morgan Stanley - Analyst [13] -------------------- Fair enough. And just one quick product question for you. You talked about the mix, the average ASPs coming down a little bit as you start to see some more KRS going out the door. Do you still expect over the last year -- you have been talking about shipping higher XLA units every quarter -- do you still expect XLA units to grow quarter-over-quarter through the remainder of the year? -------------------- Robert Akins, Cymer - Chairman and CEO [14] -------------------- For the time being, that is what we expect. -------------------- Shakar Pramanick, Prudential Securities - Analyst [16] -------------------- Two questions if you could. You gave the OEM inventory numbers. If you could give us a breakdown, what is the ARF and what is KRF? Also, where do you think that number really bottoms? Do you think it's 196 is the bottom, or it is going to still go down here, and then I have one more? -------------------- Pascal Didier, Cymer - President and COO [17] -------------------- The inventory at our end customers, I think, last quarter I was asked the same question, and it's about 70 percent KRF and 30 percent argon fluoride, and that has not already changed. Can we go below 196 units? Yes. We could. And the main reason is as we are getting few orders in krypton fluoride, because it is (inaudible) an inventory krypton fluoride floater, direct customers could still be conservative going into Q1 and Q2 2004, especially as both sides now are starting to get the benefits of a shorter cycle time and leadtime. So, yes, the inventory could go below 196. Can it go far below that? No. Because if business really picks up in the first half of 2004 and really in the second half of 2004, the inventory will have to go back up to probably above the 200 to 220 level. -------------------- Shakar Pramanick, Prudential Securities - Analyst [18] -------------------- Okay. To answer Steve's question, you mentioned you also saw a big order bump in the last weeks of the quarter. But are the trends from there as the cycle time is now increasing by your OEM customers? -------------------- Pascal Didier, Cymer - President and COO [19] -------------------- Not really. In fact, it's probably the other way around. It is because the cycle time has been decreasing between our two companies. One reason why the cycle time reduction program works is because there is no real time delay between the time they pick up their orders to the time we got ours from them, so we can ship inside of a lead time. The main reason of this banana curve is that the chipmakers tried to make their decision as late as possible into a quarter knowing that our cycle time for (inaudible) is between five to six months maximum. They placed an order as late as possible to our direct customers, so we expect that to continue at least for the next quarters and probably more likely until Q1 2004. The chipmaker visibility is not there yet, and so they are being cautious on where there are these orders. Also, remember that every quarter, most of the booking is centralized into a very small number of projects. If you look at last quarter, it was probably three corporations having about 80 percent of the total booking for the industry because of the size of the project. This quarter it has been about the same. It is probably four or five big projects going on that are (inaudible) percent of the bookings. So unless you're going to see more chipmakers going into an investment mode, you will more likely have this kind of irregular booking pattern that will continue for a while. -------------------- Shakar Pramanick, Prudential Securities - Analyst [20] -------------------- My last question on the service revenue, it went down Q3 over Q2 as overall the utilization rates are up as well as I am sure your lead utilization rates are significantly up. Any rationale? -------------------- Robert Akins, Cymer - Chairman and CEO [21] -------------------- It came down from the historically high level that it had achieved, but remember that we are a company that has usually had our nonsystem's revenue be in the 20 to 25 percent of total revenue range. So we are experiencing some extremely high percentages of revenue right now because of the very nature of our tools in the field, and yet our revenues are really relatively contained because end demand is still moderate at best. It is down as Nancy had explained primarily because there were some upgrade revenues on some older 5000 series products that occurred in Q2 that did not reoccur in Q3. So overall that installed base is very busy and consuming a lot of spare parts, service, consumables and products. -------------------- Cristina Osmena, Needham & Company - Analyst [23] -------------------- Just a few questions here. I calculate that you shipped about 51 XLA systems so far. I am just thinking (inaudible) in the prepared comments I think you said that basically one (inaudible) so far. Is that the correct number, or maybe you could update us on the number of XLA tools that have been installed? Also, how does the mix of your revenue shift when these XLA integration designs come down? Then I have a follow-up question. -------------------- Robert Akins, Cymer - Chairman and CEO [24] -------------------- The first part we had the first installation at a DRAM manufacturer in the second quarter of this year. That has gone well, and as I mentioned in my script portion, that installation is complete and ready to support first production with that particular scanner. In Q3, we had an additional six or so installations, not only at DRAM but also system on a ship and DSP manufacturers. So there has been a significant pickup in the installation rate Q3 over Q2. We expect further pickup obviously in the current quarter in that respect. -------------------- Pascal Didier, Cymer - President and COO [25] -------------------- Now on your questions about the product shipment shift. As our direct customers decrease their cycle time for argon fluoride, you have to remember the XLA MOPA system is not a light source that is going to power single generation of argon fluoride scanners, but it is a light source that has the capability to generate the current -- power the current product but also the Next Generation product. So as our customers, as someone announced this morning, the production of the new model, the 1250, which is also a MOPA-based productline, what you are going to see is a shift of our direct customers from one generation of argon fluoride to the next. As such, there is going to be increased demand for the MOPA system. So the key decision we had made early on in the year was to not go after that small niche market of single XLA machines which has a limited number of units. It was a dead-end type of productline and focus on MOPA. One of the reasons is the MOPA is part of an architecture, and with the XLA as the first generation product allow you to power more than one generation or two or three generations. So the (inaudible) customers are making cycle time reductions, but at the same time, they are introducing new products that are MOPA required light sources. Such that the demand is going to be fueled both ways by the increasing of the market hopefully in 2004, but also at the same time by the MOPA being integrated in more than just a singular (inaudible) platform with two platforms from each one of our direct customers. -------------------- Cristina Osmena, Needham & Company - Analyst [26] -------------------- Baker: You touched on my follow-up question, Pascal. Now that ASML is shipping or actually taking orders for the 1250, should we expect ASML's mix as a percentage of revenues to start coming up again? -------------------- Pascal Didier, Cymer - President and COO [27] -------------------- It will by nature. Remember the XML assist on 2002 published numbers is the market leaders in lithography, so they are holding a larger proportion of the marketplace, and then being one of the best customers automatically as they increase their product portfolio dramatically, their shares of Cymer's revenue becomes larger. -------------------- Cristina Osmena, Needham & Company - Analyst [28] -------------------- And the 1250 is entirely MOPA-based? It uses nothing but the XLA; is that correct? -------------------- Pascal Didier, Cymer - President and COO [29] -------------------- It requires the power and the bandwidth that a MOPA-based (inaudible). -------------------- Patrick Ho, Moors & Cabot - Analyst [31] -------------------- First, just a financial related question for Nancy. As you return back to profitability, do you have an estimate what the tax rate might be next year? -------------------- Nancy Baker, Cymer - Senior VP and CFO [32] -------------------- Because I don't know exactly what all of 2004 looks like, I cannot give you a definitive number. But when we look at the portion of Cymer's foreign sales tax credit and our R&D investment tax credit, we always estimate if you are in a fairly profitable environment, your tax rate is probably a few percentage points below your statutory rate. So probably somewhere in the 30 percent range. -------------------- Patrick Ho, Moors & Cabot - Analyst [33] -------------------- That is fair enough. I guess this one can be for either Bob or Pascal. Just two questions. The first is pretty much at a high-level. Can you just characterize your customers I guess feelings and the level of confidence that this current demand trend that we are starting to see right now is sustainable? I know you mentioned that orders will likely -- could come in on the back-end of the quarter. Is there any indication their confidence is increasing that they may place it earlier than anticipated? -------------------- Pascal Didier, Cymer - President and COO [34] -------------------- I don't think so. I think our direct customers are like the chipmakers and like we are. We are all very cautious on how we are approaching what could potentially be the beginning of an upturn. I spent the last four weeks on hold visiting both our direct customers, as well as chipmakers. For every single person that you talk to is a lot more optimistic about what the future would look like, everybody is also fairly cautious, and the chipmakers more than probably anyone else. They have time. They believe that their factories utilization is reaching a point where they are maybe becoming capacity (inaudible) in some areas, but at the same time, they want to see more (inaudible). They want to see their backlog increasing before they make their long loss commitments, so I think for the foreseeable future what we are going to see is big projects coming into maturity maturity and being realized more timely than we saw in 2002, but none of us are expecting the broad large increase in business activities until there are a lot more firmer models. -------------------- Robert Akins, Cymer - Chairman and CEO [35] -------------------- It is our understanding that a few of the world's largest chipmakers, they are still operating in that cautious mode of the President or the CEO having to signoff on every single order for a new lithography tool. So even though those tools they have are very busy and in some cases some (inaudible) would like to go ahead and invest more heavily in tools, they are still overall concerned enough about the future pickup of their business and their ability to remain profitable that they are approaching each new order as an individual order and have not even gotten into the real batch order mentality yet. -------------------- Patrick Ho, Moors & Cabot - Analyst [36] -------------------- A final question. I know, Bob, you touched on it at the beginning of your presentation about motion lithography. Can you discuss how much that could affect your R&D dollars in 2004 and whether if it should need to be accelerated as I guess demand increases or things develop quicker than anticipated? Is that something that could impact the R&D dollars for Cymer in 2004? -------------------- Robert Akins, Cymer - Chairman and CEO [37] -------------------- Certainly if that were to develop in an accelerated way, then that would become a project that could be potentially funded in 2004, and it will take money and people to accomplish that. But I want to put it into perspective. We have talked in the past before that if you look at what it would take to field that tool version of our XLA productline versus an argon fluoride immersion product, certainly the argon fluoride is by far the more affordable from a development standpoint and the fastest and the faster of those two. Basically we did not know it at the time that we gave birth to the XLA platform concept. We did not know that argon fluoride immersion was going to catch on as a concept as significant as it has to date. But the XL platform and the MOPA technology just naturally lends itself toward accomplishing arbitrarily narrow bandwidth within reason at arbitrarily high alpha powers within reason. That could not be better suited than to accomplish both super narrow bandwidth high power for the high NA dry argon fluoride systems, which we know are coming; they are already coming as evidenced by Pascal early by ASML's 1250 announcement earlier today, as well as the immersion tools which we expect will require bandwidth even narrower, potentially significantly narrower, than the superhigh NA dry systems as well. So it is a relatively straightforward tweaking of the optics in the system to produce the narrower bandwidth in a relatively straightforward modification to the metrology in the laser to make sure that we can measu re and accurately stabilize that narrower bandwidth. -------------------- John Pitzer, Credit Suisse First Boston - Analyst [39] -------------------- When you look at the revenue guidance going into the December quarter, can you help differentiate between system and nonsystem revenue, or is about the same for both areas? Then I have some follow-up questions. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Nancy Baker, Cymer - Senior VP and CFO [40] -------------------- Basically right now, John, if you looked at what our Q3 run-rate has been, what it was in Q2, if the utilization rates continue like they have been, I would expect it to be at still relatively high levels. So expect the nonsystems to grow in line with the guidance for overall revenue? -------------------- Nancy Baker, Cymer - Senior VP and CFO [41] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Well, yes. That is fair. -------------------- John Pitzer, Credit Suisse First Boston - Analyst [42] -------------------- Pascal, an earlier question, you talked about order rates in the calendar fourth quarter with your expectation currently that book-to-bill is under 1. Does that imply flattish bookings quarter on quarter, or are you actually looking for bookings to come down? I know it is a little bit early and visibility is not that great. -------------------- Pascal Didier, Cymer - President and COO [43] -------------------- With the current visibility, I would expect it to come down, not to be flat. -------------------- John Pitzer, Credit Suisse First Boston - Analyst [44] -------------------- When you think about ASP trends over the next several quarters, given how rich the mix is toward the XLA 100, Nancy, as we model out next year, what would you expect ASPs to do? -------------------- Nancy Baker, Cymer - Senior VP and CFO [45] -------------------- Well, as we have actually talked about for several quarters now, is our 2004 annual ASP we expected to be somewhere in the mid 900s because you expected krypton fluoride to take on a larger role than it has in 2003 timeframe. So right now I still would expect that. -------------------- John Pitzer, Credit Suisse First Boston - Analyst [46] -------------------- Nancy, on the breakeven, if you take the midpoint of your guidance for Q4, you're not quite there. Is the goal to be at least there in Q1, and it sounds like the move from 65 to 70 down to 60 is mainly a gross margin move. Is that correct? -------------------- Nancy Baker, Cymer - Senior VP and CFO [47] -------------------- That is a portion of it, and some is also in the overall R&D spending area. If you are familiar with our financial models and over the past few years, we have been over that model in the R&D spending area, primarily because of the XLA platform. We made significant improvement in the Q3 timeframe and will continue to work that over the next couple of quarters as well. But the rest of it is really in the gross margin area. -------------------- John Pitzer, Credit Suisse First Boston - Analyst [48] -------------------- So Q4 R&D goes up a bit, but you expect Q1 to trend back down on a dollar basis? -------------------- Nancy Baker, Cymer - Senior VP and CFO [49] -------------------- That would be the intent, yes, to get us to that 60 million breakeven. -------------------- John Pitzer, Credit Suisse First Boston - Analyst [50] -------------------- Lastly, Pascal, going back to the inventory question and the idea that at some point we are going to have to see an inventory reload, can you help me understand what the cycle times are for you guys? What your maximum capacity is as far as units you can ship within a quarter, and at what point would you expect the inventories to have to build? I guess from my perspective you are sitting almost on a year's worth of installed inventory if you're installing about 50 systems a quarter. I am curious as to why you guys think that is a low-level, and why it could not go lower here, especially as you bring down cycle times on the light sources? -------------------- Pascal Didier, Cymer - President and COO [51] -------------------- Well, the cycle time that we have today with our customers went down significantly over 2003. I mean we have now about a three-month cycle time with our direct customers as a point of diminishing returns for Cymer to reduce its cycle time because of the (inaudible) cycle time and the way the integration process needs to get done and a few of the variables. I think what is also to be noted is our three direct customers their factory utilization is improving as their ordering intakes and shipments are improving, but it is way below what you would expect to be if we had an upturn. I do believe we will never get to the thousand a year anymore. Even if we get to the 500 tools a year at the peak of an upturn, you have to put a number of tooling (inaudible) on an integration process, and you need at least more than a year -- you need about a year and a half worth of shipment in the current level. So you had about 200. You will need about 250 to 260 units to sustain a 500 unit shipment a year. That is why we keep saying that as we see business picking up and the potential upturn in 2004, we expect inventories to go up. You also have to remember that three of our direct customers have now a much broader and richer product portfolio. Each one of them by the end of this year will be sitting into one or two argon fluoride products, at least three different TRS products, so there is an efficiency being built because we have a larger product portfolio than the previous upturn. So that also drives to some extent the limit of inventory because you have to be able to respond to that product mix. You factor all that in, and you say, well, if we stay at 50 to 60 units installation a quarter, can the inventory go down further? Yes, it can, as I said earlier. But if we see the trend going back up in installation rates and you get to maybe the 70 to 80 units instead of installation rate a quarter, then inventory would have to go back up to 200 to 220 units, and as such, you would see another couple of quarters a replenishment of that inventory. -------------------- John Pitzer, Credit Suisse First Boston - Analyst [52] -------------------- As a follow-on, one of your larger direct customers instituted an option plan to some of their larger customers to help reduce their cycle time in delivering tools to those customers. Does that at all change your view on the potential inventory cycle ahead for Cymer? -------------------- Pascal Didier, Cymer - President and COO [53] -------------------- Yes and remember the direct customer you are talking about is a customer of ours and in the whole food chain works together. So when they are starting to work on this, and they are starting to work with us on the same plan. So we are pretty much in sync with that customer, and that took into account the kind of ballpark figures I gave you. If I am not taking that into account, then the numbers would have been a lot bigger than that. -------------------- Robert Akins, Cymer - Chairman and CEO [54] -------------------- By the way, John, I wanted to add this as a follow-up to Pascal's answer to you that when you talk about the inventory at our direct customers being approximately a year's worth since we are installing on the order of 50 units per quarter, but, again, I want to reiterate that. Our product shipment mix, which is heavily technology-oriented and heavily bias toward the XLA, is a time advanced proxy for what the installation at chipmakers mix of products a quarter or two downstream from that point in time. So the 50 or so installations that are occurring are obviously technology-based installations, and as we pointed out earlier in this Q&A session, something like 70 percent or 3/4 of that 196 inventory at our direct customers is krypton fluoride. So, again, a portion of that inventory, especially argon fluoride, is a much more rapid turning point of inventory. |