Legg Mason May 2, 2005 Semiconductor Capital Equipment Still Cautious, but Bottom is Near; Reiterate Sector Overweight Recommendation ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Patrick J. Ho pjho@leggmason.com (214) 647-3509 All relevant disclosures and certifications appear at the end of this report. * We spent time last week in Silicon Valley meeting with several of our coverage companies and our contacts in the industry. * We emerged from these meetings and conversations with no dramatic change in our industry outlook. * While a cautious tone is still prevalent near term, we believe that the general sentiment is that the industry is approaching a trough. * The question still remains when a recovery will exactly occur. We believe it will be sometime in 2H05, with the December quarter likely representing the first significant uptick in orders since early 2004. * We believe that the sustainability of memory spenders throughout 2004 and a return in foundry spending will be keys in ensuring our thesis plays out. * Those companies that will outperform the industry will be ones that possess dominant market share leadership or growth in their respective markets and a favorable customer concentration. * We reiterate our Sector Overweight recommendation for the space, while our top stock selections remain Varian Semiconductor (VSEA, Buy, $37.29) in the small/mid cap space and Applied Materials (AMAt, Buy, $14.87) in the large cap segment. Summary: We spent last week visiting with company managements and speaking with our contacts in Silicon Valley following earnings season. The general consensus is that the environment has not dramatically changed since early April, although the sentiment still remains cautious in the near term. We believe that this supports our thesis that the industry is nearing a fundamental bottom, with a recovery scenario sometime in 2H05. As we have stated for some time now, we believe that the June quarter will represent an absolute trough for the industry. The question remains exactly when a recovery will occur, although we suspect it will be sometime in 2H05. Conservatively, we believe that the December quarter could be the period where the industry witnesses a large sequential uptick in orders. We continue to reiterate our Sector Overweight recommendation on the space, and we provide post-meeting updates on Applied Materials, Lam Research, and Mattson Technology in separate notes. Sustainability of Memory Spenders Remains Key: The March quarter has been heavily tilted toward memory-related spending. While there has been some feedback highlighting a slight lull in memory bookings over the past week to ten days, we suspect that this is more related to the timing of orders being placed. With many memory makers posting losses in the March quarter, we believe that this facet has pushed back the timing of some shorter lead time equipment orders and deliveries. We believe some capacity buys can be placed later in the year when the environment improves. At this time, we do not believe that memory spenders will cut capex plans. In fact, when examining the focus of memory dollars, some of our contacts estimated that approximately 80% of these dollars are targeted toward leading-edge capacity. This trend was supported by many capex plans that were either reaffirmed or actually increased as these chipmakers drive to get next-generation capacity in place as fast as possible. We do believe that a major catalyst in the March quarter orders was flash memory capex spending, particularly NAND flash capacity additions. However, we expect DRAM capacity additions to continue throughout the year, particularly by the likes of many second-tier DRAM suppliers, like Elpida, Powerchip and ProMOS. As cash flow trends improve, we believe that these orders will be placed sometime in 2H05. At this time, our feedback has been that there have been no dramatic changes in customer behavior at this time. When Does Foundry Spending Return?: The foundry group remains a big wild card to the overall industry capex outlook for the rest of the year. While the foundries have not changed any capex plans for 2005, in the near term, we believe that they still remain cautious as a whole. Our feedback from our various conversations support this near-term cautious tone. Although this sentiment was prevalent in their respective March earnings calls, we are starting to see a bottom for this group. While we had anticipated one more quarter of a decline in utilization rates, most of the foundries are forecasting flat to slightly higher percentages in the June quarter. Should the industry experience normal seasonality, we believe utilization rates could further improve in 2H05, increasing the foundries' confidence to spend capex dollars. While not discounting the possibility that the foundries could pare back spending plans, we could not garner any near-term data points on the chip front which would lead us to take a more negative view. At this time, we do not expect to see any major participation by the foundries in the June quarter and still expect a bookings ramp sometime in 2H05 (which could be very back-end- loaded this year). Market Share Gains and Customer Exposure Separate the Outperformers: As the industry continues to sort itself out over the next few months, we believe that the outperformers will be those with market share leadership or growth, and those that are favorably exposed to the biggest spenders in 2005. Varian Semiconductor, in our opinion, represents one of the best examples of this thesis, as it bucked the industry trends, delivering a positive outlook for the June quarter. While Varian clearly is experiencing the same cautious spending trends as its peers, it is benefiting from its tangible market share gains in the high current ion implant space, and its exposure to both Samsung and Intel. We expect this trend for Varian to continue in the near term and we believe there is still significant upside potential when a recovery scenario takes hold.
I, Patrick Ho, certify that the views expressed in this research report accurately reflect my personal views about the subject securities or issuers; |