| Repasted from TMF-- 
 boards.fool.com
 
 Keeping Record
 
 A record quarter.  After two quarters of disappointing chipset results, “but what if's”, a cautious outlook, and mild yet somehow not totally convincing reassurances of “continued acceleration in WCDMA and 1xEVDO”, the company delivered a record quarter, by several measures, including the most important ones.   Especially encouraging was the upbeat guidance, which is just what the doctor ordered in light of the recent irritating chicaneries by the Band of Six (aka. Bandix) in Europe.
 
 The main conclusion from this quarter's results is that QCT (the chipset business) is back on track.  We'll review those numbers in more detail later, but most significant for this quarterly number follower is that the margins for the chipset business are back up to a healthy 29%-- after flirting with barely 21% just two quarters ago. This is significant in several ways, because it signals strong pick up in the high end of the chipset market—WCDMA and EVDO, precisely the areas where the anticipated growth had been lagging the previous two quarters.  And this does not seem to be a one-time blip, as the guidance for the next quarter (Q1 06) is especially encouraging in this regard.  (QCT boss) Sanjay Jha is delivering on his promise, when he told us after the March quarter results were released that we'll start seeing results in the September quarter.
 
 The other major positive element of the conference call is the manner in which the company leaders addressed the Bandix complaint.  They dealt with it up front, almost immediately after showing the quarter's overall results—in the first five minutes, while everyone's head was still clear.  They did not try to brush it aside, they addressed it head on, very professionally, and emphatically.  They were not defensive, not combative, but they left no doubt as to who would prevail.  They addressed each and every element of the complaint very convincingly in my opinion—and evidently in the opinion of the market, judging from the stock's price response.
 
 I will attempt the usual review and discussion of the company's performance this past quarter, as reported in the earnings release (available, as always, at qualcomm.com ).  I also listened carefully to the conference call—particularly important to get a sense of three things: (1) response to the Bandix complaint, (2) confidence expressed in tone of voice and clarity of answers with regard to guidance and projections,   and (3) the kinds of concerns that analysis might have, judging from their questions and the tone in which they raise them.
 
 Before getting into the numbers, one motivation for listening to the CC was to hear how new CEO Paul Jacobs is handling this part of the job—I was not thrilled with the “succession” process, and had some doubts that Paul could fill the shoes of a giant like the father.  This CC has alleviated most of the concerns I had in this regard.
 
 Guidance Update
 
 Over the time I have been following this company, Qualcomm has characteristically been conservative with guidance.  They rarely miss their mid-quarter updates; they rarely miss, period, and they rarely backpedal; they typically beat by a penny or two, or hit the high end of their range. Three quarters ago, I started tracking actual performance against previous-quarter company guidance, going back to Q1 03.  Here are the updated tables.
 
 First is the record for the next quarter guidance—sequential revenue growth, EPS, and MSM shipped for the quarter, against the guidance provided at earnings release time in the immediately preceding quarter.  Note that the EPS results are excluding QSI (pro-forma).
 
 While the improvement in actual performance is striking, albeit only slightly above the previously guided numbers, the company seems to be on a tear according to the new guidance for Q1 06.   Let's look at tangibles—MSM chipsets shipped.  The 40M just shipped this past quarter is a record, reflecting the initial effect of WCDMA demand, but the 46~48 Million chipsets guided for Q1 06 provide very tangible evidence of the traction that QCOM is gaining in WCDMA chipsets.  This would be 15 to 20% increase sequentially in MSM chips shipped.  It is notable that the number of quarterly chipsets shipped has more than doubled in less than two years.
 
 In the CC, Sanjay was asked more than once about visibility into the next quarter, and whether there were any channel inventory issues.  The answer was unequivocal—that he is very confident in the projections and was already close to achieving those goals.
 
 Next Quarter
 Revenues      EPS	        MSM (mil. Chips)
 (seq. % growth)
 Q4 02 Guidance	15-22	     0.35-0.38	        25-27
 Actual	        27	     0.42	        29
 
 Q1 03 Guidance	-7	     0.34-0.35	        27
 Actual	        -5	     0.38	        28
 
 Q2 03 Guidance	27 (y-o-y)   0.30-0.31	        23
 Actual	        24	     0.33	        23
 
 Q3 03 Guidance	2-6(y-o-y)   0.27-0.29	        19-21
 Actual	        4	     0.29	        20
 
 Q4 03 Guidance	16-22	     0.37-0.40	        27-28
 Actual Q1 04	39	     0.51	        32
 
 Q1 04 Guidance	6-13	     0.38-0.41	        29-31
 Actual Q2 04	6	     0.53	        32
 
 Q2 04 Guidance	4-7	     0.48-0.50	        33-35
 Actual Q3 04	9	     0.57	        35
 
 Q3 04 Guidance	2-7	     0.54-0.57	        36-38
 Actual Q4 04	2	     0.58	        39
 
 Q4 04 Guidance	0	     0.24-0.26 	        38-39
 (note: split)
 Actual Q1 05	1	     0.28	        39
 
 Q1 05 Guidance	14-22(y-o-y) 0.25-0.27	        35-37
 Actual Q2 05	15	     0.29	        37
 
 Q2 05 Guidance (-6)-1(y-o-y) 0.24-0.26	        34-36
 Actual Q3 05	2	     0.28	        36
 
 Q3 05 Guidance	4-12(y-o-y)  0.29-0.31	        38-40
 Actual Q4 05	14	     0.32	        40
 
 Q4 05 Guidance	20-27(y-o-y) 0.36-0.38	        46-48
 Actual Q1 06
 
 Growth in MSM shipped, coupled with growing royalty stream from WCDMA, are expected to drive growth in revenue for the quarter by 20 to 27% year-on-year, a level we have not seen in a long string of quarters. Associated EPS is expected to grow 30~35% year-on-year, and 13~19% sequentially—
 
 Turning to the guidance given for the fiscal year (again, EPS excluding QSI), below are the four quarterly guidance numbers given for a given fiscal year's results. Starting with the guidance given at the Q4 02 earnings release time for performance in fiscal 03 (revenues growth, EPS, handsets shipped in calendar year, and handset ASP),  the sequentially updated guidance numbers for the same fiscal year are then compared to actual performance reported for the fiscal year.  Note that the handset and ASP numbers are for the coming calendar year, as opposed to fiscal year (unlike the revenue and EPS numbers).  The handset numbers are of course only for handsets on which the company collects royalties, i.e. CDMA and WCDMA.
 
 Revenues 	EPS	        Handsets	ASP
 (seq. annual
 % growth)
 Q4 02 Guidance	19-23	1.15-1.20	100-105	        -10%
 Q1 03 Guidance	28-33	1.34-1.39	105-112	        -10%
 Q2 03 Guidance	30-33	1.38-1.41	103-110	        -10%
 Q3 03 Guidance	31-33	1.40-1.42	103-110	         -5%
 Actual 03	32	1.42	        117	         -2%
 
 Q4 03 Guidance	5-9	1.37-1.43	131-136	         -8%
 Q1 04 Guidance	8-12	1.56-1.61	138-146	         -7%
 Q2 04 Guidance	26-29	1.93-1.98	152-160	          0%
 Q3 04 Guidance	33-35	2.15-2.18	161-168	          5%
 Actual 04	33	2.18	        166	          5%
 
 Q4 04 Guidance	16-26	1.15-1.19       218-228	          5%
 (note: split)
 Q1 05 Guidance	16-26	1.16-1.20	218-228	          5%
 Q2 05 Guidance	9-13	1.10-1.14	208-218	          3%
 Q3 05 Guidance	10-12	1.13-1.15	198-208	          5%
 Actual 05	13	1.16	        200-205
 
 Q4 05 Guidance	18-25	1.43-1.47	255-270	         -2%
 
 Handset numbers are those for which we had some back-pedaling in the preceding quarter (Q3 05); the year started with about 223 Million, but it looks like we're ending the year at about 203M (though these are still estimates, and will need to wait until after the holiday season for final numbers).  The company had been too optimistic about take-up of WCDMA, though again we will only know this after December.  Still, looking at the evolving EPS guidance from Q4 04 through Q3 05 for Fiscal 05, we find that the actual performance is within the original range, interim back-pedaling notwithstanding.
 
 For the coming (calendar) year, the company predicts near 30% growth in handsets shipped. Predicted EPS growth for fiscal 06 is 25% (at the midpoint of the EPS guidance range).  Given the strength evident on the chipset side of the business, I would consider this guidance to be conservative, and we may well see a replay of 03 and 04 where guidance kept inching up.
 
 Non-marginal Chips
 
 Quarterly QCT earnings and revenues are pasted below going back to the first quarter of fiscal 2000. This indeed was a record quarter for QCT revenues; the $1B quarterly mark is well in sight.  However we have seen higher earnings, during the heydays of Don Shrock's tenure (early 03), when QCT margins had hit the 40% mark, before the big spending push on R&D to more effectively support WCDMA.
 
 QCT
 Revenues	Earnings	margin (%)
 Q100	352,395	         127,690	36
 Q200	279,186	          89,977	32
 Q300	338,132	         109,573	32
 Q400	268,989	          64,281	24
 Q101	330,632	          84,180	25
 Q201	364,059	          84,866	23
 Q301	333,115	          70,582	21
 Q401	336,881	          65,917	20
 Q102	359,144	          86,941	24
 Q202	343,815	          77,724	23
 Q302	404,253	         117,524	29
 Q402	483,617	         158,334	33
 Q103	709,681	         288,282	41
 Q203	652,873	         223,520	34
 Q303	557,240	         163,114	29
 Q403	504,500	         121,808	24
 Q104	751,818	         260,661	35
 Q204	711,257	         257,956	36
 Q304	789,978	         254,160	32
 Q404	845,000	         271,000	32
 Q105	865,000	         242,000	28
 Q205	746,000	         158,000	21
 Q305	766,000	         186,000	24
 Q405	912,000	         266,000	29
 
 In previous conference calls, QCT boss Sanjay had indicated he was managing the unit to reach profitability levels of about 26%.  It looks like he has met and exceeded this goal, as this quarter's performance shows.  This is reassuring, suggesting that the mix is shifting back to the higher end—both WCDMA and EVDO.
 
 This is further seen in the (crudely) estimated average selling price for chipsets, obtained by taking the ratio of QCT revenues to the number of chipsets shipped in that quarter, recognizing that it does not break down the numbers by type of chipset.  The numbers are shown below for the current and previous three quarters, as well as Q1 04 and FY 04.  After dipping to just about $20 in Q2 05, the increase seen in the preceding quarter has continued through Q4 05, and is back to $22.8, which is just about the level it had for FY04.  Coupled with reflating margins, the profit per chip is up about 50% to 6.7 ($/unit).
 
 Q104	FY 04	Q105	Q205	Q305	Q405
 Number of chipsets shipped (in M)	32	137	39	37	36	40
 Revenues (in 100M)	                752	3111	865	746	766	912
 Earnings  (in 100M)	                259	1049	242	158	166	266
 Price/unit ($)	                        23.5	22.7	22.2	20.2	21.3	22.8
 Profit/unit ($)	                         8.1	7.7	6.2	4.3	4.6	6.7
 
 I have pasted as usual the three-quarter moving average for QCT revenues, smoothing out somewhat quarter to quarter variation. After the small sequential drops the past two quarters, the series had turned up again, though it is still not back up at the level reached in Q2 and Q1 05.  It will take another quarter of solid numbers to get there.
 
 Q300	323,238
 Q400	295,436
 Q101	312,584
 Q201	321,227
 Q301	342,602
 Q401	344,685
 Q102	343,047
 Q202	346,613
 Q302	369,071
 Q402	410,562
 Q103	532,517
 Q203	615,390
 Q303	639,931
 Q403	571,538
 Q104	604,519
 Q204	655,858
 Q304	751,018
 Q404	782,078
 Q105	833,326
 Q205	818,667
 Q305	792,333
 Q405	808,000
 
 In the CC, Sanjay indicated that profitability for Q1 06 would remain in line with the current quarter—confirming that the results of this past quarter are reflective of a continuing improvement process.  He mentioned that the WCDMA portfolio of QCT now includes more than 30 handset manufacturers with 110 models.  He singled out the success of LG and Samsung with Qualcomm WCDMA chipsets.  He indicated that HSDPA will not become a factor until the second half of 06.
 
 In summary, the recovery in the critical QCT business segment, after the concerns that surfaced around Q2 05, is now well underway, and the outlook looks very bright in the next few quarters in this regard.  The anticipated ramp up in EVDO chipsets to power the growing competition among network carriers in the US for broadband wireless customers, as well as the growth in QCOM's market share in WCDMA appear to both be on track.  With solid positioning in HSDPA, and what seems to be greater responsiveness to WCDMA industry needs, especially carriers in Europe, QCT will likely continue to deliver on all cylinders and exceed expectations.
 
 Record Royalties
 
 QTL revenues this past quarter were only three million dollars shy of the half-billion mark. This is nearly 25% year on year growth in the royalty stream, as continued evidence of the value of the company's intellectual property portfolio. And it all still converts to earnings at a 91% profitability ratio— a record quarter in both revenues and earnings.
 
 QTL
 Revenues	Earnings	margin (%)
 Q100	183,845	         168,890	92
 Q200	157,197	         139,968	89
 Q300	161,301	         139,440	86
 Q400	165,568	         147,466	89
 Q101	186,824	         174,139	93
 Q201	225,646	         206,663	92
 Q301	180,129	         152,890	85
 Q401	189,340	         172,102	91
 Q102	210,803	         188,688	90
 Q202	193,955	         171,535	88
 Q302	198,853	         174,450	88
 Q402	243,481	         221,500	91
 Q103	255,423	         229,409	90
 Q203	260,110	         236,192	91
 Q303	242,479	         218,363	90
 Q403	242,184	         212,657	88
 Q104	353,421	         324,673	92
 Q204	390,257	         361,591	93
 Q304	436,449	         398,187	91
 Q404	402,000	         362,000	90
 Q105	400,000	         358,000	90
 Q205	493,000	         448,000	91
 Q305	448,000	         407,000	91
 Q405	497,000	         451,000	91
 
 The WCDMA effect is now a reality, and expectations are for accelerating adoption in the coming year.  Coupled with EVDO momentum in the US, the outlook is as compelling as it has ever been in recent memory.  And whereas QTL had carried a heavier burden in terms of the company's revenues and earning the past couple of quarters, this quarter's numbers are more in line with the historical ranges of about 25%~30% of revenues and 50%~60% of earnings. This is seen in the table below of the percentage of total revenues and earnings, respectively, accounted for by QTL.  QTL revenues are still slightly above the 30% share, but will likely drop further next week as QCT revenues continue to increase, as projected by Sanjay.
 
 QTL R	QTL E
 % of    % of
 Total   Total
 
 Q100	23.96	51.46
 Q200	24.88	50.20
 Q300	23.10	47.14
 Q400	26.93	58.29
 Q101	28.51	61.50
 Q201	31.46	64.97
 Q301	27.43	63.72
 Q401	29.09	73.41
 Q102	30.43	65.64
 Q202	29.42	68.12
 Q302	27.57	58.58
 Q402	29.00	57.68
 Q103	23.92	43.92
 Q203	25.58	51.27
 Q303	27.21	54.86
 Q403	27.83	60.35
 Q104	29.29	53.50
 Q204	32.10	57.84
 Q304	32.56	59.60
 Q404	29.36	54.68
 Q105	28.78	53.92
 Q205	36.12	67.27
 Q305	32.99	62.04
 Q405	31.86	57.38
 
 For completeness, I am including the 3-quarter moving average of QTL revenues, using the mixed series of “Old Method” values up until Q402 followed by “New Method” values thereafter.
 
 Q300	167,448
 Q400	161,355
 Q101	171,231
 Q201	192,679
 Q301	197,533
 Q401	198,372
 Q102	193,424
 Q202	198,033
 Q302	201,204
 Q402	212,096
 Q103	224,778
 Q203	251,827
 Q303	258,000
 Q403	256,000
 Q104	262,667
 Q204	294,667
 Q304	359,333
 Q404	394,000
 Q105	408,000
 Q205	432,333
 Q305	447,000
 Q405	479,333
 
 This series has continued on a solid upward trend since Q4 03; it will continue to do so.
 
 In the CC (and in the earnings release), we were told that WCDMA royalties now account for 41% of third party royalties;  443M (out of  the total 497M) are from 3rd party licensees (the rest are presumably the initial license fees, pro-rated over the lifetime of the agreement). The WCDMA contribution was approximately 26 percent in the year ago quarter and approximately 36 percent reported in the prior quarter.
 
 Another boost in QTL revenues is expected in fiscal 2006 because of the termination of royalty sharing obligations; this should contribute approximately $290 to $310 million to fiscal 2006 revenue, all converting to earnings at better than 91% rate.
 
 Gentle QWI Trickle
 
 The QWI (Wireless and Internet) division is still delivering reasonable numbers, though no particular signs of acceleration in that stream (still a trickle in the big picture).  While earnings went up 75% sequentially, we're still talking about small numbers ($21M in earnings, on $170M in revenues).  The profitability (at only 12%, a significant sequential improvement), still trails the rest of the company's segments.  BREW is still not delivering strong returns in its own right, though it is undoubtedly an important part of the mix of services that Qualcomm offers its operators.
 
 It was interesting to hear CEO Paul Jacobs state that “QCOM no longer just a CDMA company”.  He referred particularly to the acquisition of Flarion, which is expected to increase the company's IP portfolio, and augment those that QCOM already had or was developing in OFDM.  The CEO made sure to stress that the combined portfolio now encompasses all forms of OFDM, including Wi-Max (and then preceded to dismiss mobile Wi-Max as a competitor to EVDO).
 
 It is certainly premature to assert that Qualcomm is no longer just a CDMA company.  The performance numbers certainly would not suggest that.  Perhaps what he was trying to say is that it is no longer a niche player in wireless, but a player in all of wireless. He referred several times to multi-mode, multi-network chips, to working with European operators since 2001 to help them optimize their networks.  But it will be many years before anything that does not contain the letters CDMA is contributing significantly to the company's bottom line.
 
 Other than the excitement of the Bandix complaint in Europe, which is not likely to have much short term impact on revenues, and is likely to be handled deftly but firmly by the company's leadership, all signs are that the company is very well positioned to profit handsomely from the growth of the 3G wireless market in all its forms.  Even the market appears to agree.
 
 Insights, reactions, and additional thoughts are welcome, as always.
 
 BR
 |