Thanks for mentioning that JAVA had two upgrades, which prompted me to take a look over at C, which had a SELL on JAVA going into earnings:
Sun Microsystems Inc (JAVA): Upgrading to Buy; All Lines on the P&L Trending Favorably
6 November 2007 - 12 pages
Sun Microsystems Inc (JAVA) Change in Upgrading to Buy; All Lines on the P&L Trending Favorably opinion Y Rating change Y * Upgrading to Buy - We are upgrading shares of JAVA from Sell to Buy w/$7.25 tgt due to improving product line, restructuring, and share repurchase. We are also lowering risk rating from Speculative to High to reflect better earnings predictability, return to sustainable profitability, and ample working capital. * Attractive Risk/Reward - We expect solid 2FQ08 (December) results on strong gross margin, headcount cuts, and share repurchases. While revenue momentum should improve more gradually, we see worst-case downside to $5 and best-case upside to $8 within one year, a very favorable risk/reward. * Product Positioning Is Improving - With the introduction of its second-generation differentiated Niagara chip architecture, the addition of Intel to its x86 lineup, and the introduction of Rock in CY08, Sun looks to have a competitive server line from top to bottom for the first time in seven years. * Aggressive Restructuring - Operating expenses should decline by nearly $400M between FY07 and FY09 via real estate and IT consolidation, headcount reductions, etc. Consensus estimates do not give the company full credit for this. * Share Repurchase - Sun repurchased an impressive $1.25B in stock during 1FQ08, and has another $1.55B remaining in its current authorization. With $1-2B in free cash flow during FY08 and FY09, there is ample room for additional repurchase once the current authorization is exhausted.
Buy/High Risk 1H from Sell/Speculative Price (05 Nov 07) US$5.71 Target price US$7.25 from US$5.25 Expected share price return 27.0% Expected dividend yield 0.0% Expected total return 27.0%
U p g r a d i n g t o B u y
We are upgrading shares of JAVA from Sell to Buy with a revised target of $7.25. In the near term, gross margin upside, operating expense reductions, and share repurchase should drive solid earnings despite the absence of revenue upside.
For this reason, clients should begin building positions now and simply average down if product transitions prompt a 5-10% pullback in the share price. Our thesis is as follows:
* Within one year, Sun looks to have a competitive, low- to high-end server product portfolio for the first time in seven years.
* Despite fairly-specific guidance regarding planned operating-expense reductions, sell-side consensus estimates do not give the company full credit for a $400M reduction in annual operating expenses between FY07 and FY09.
* Sun is reducing its share count more quickly than we had expected. Moreover, with $1-2B in annual free cash flow during FY08 and FY09, the company appears to have plenty of flexibility to authorize additional repurchase activity once its current $3B authorization is fully used.
While product transitions and a change in channel revenue-recognition policy (from sell-in to sell-through) could limit revenue upside for the next several quarters, we expect revenue momentum to improve throughout FY08 as the company's server line-up improves.
Sun has been steadily diversifying its server product portfolio for a number of years:
* In 2002, Sun acquired Afara Websystems, a developer of multi-core, multi-threaded microprocessors based on Sun's UltraSPARC architecture. The first UltraSPARC T1 'Niagara' systems based on this innovative architecture were introduced in 1CQ06 and achieved $100M in quarterly revenue in just one quarter. During 3CQ07, Sun introduced 'Niagara II,' the second generation of this architecture, which offers almost twice the price/performance of its predecessor and significantly-improved floating point performance. The 'Niagara' architecture offers significantly-better price/performance and performance/watt than competing x86 chips for certain applications, including web, network infrastructure, and online transaction processing. With the introduction of Niagara II, we expect production deployments of Niagara to accelerate.
* In 2004, Sun added x86 servers to its proprietary line-up in recognition of the fact that the x86 architecture offers superior price/performance for most applications and the flexibility to run a number of different operating systems. Initially, Sun limited its x86 portfolio to AMD microprocessors, which in turn limited the company's available market to 15-20% of the total X86 market. In 1CQ07, Sun announced its intention to offer a full line of both AMD and Intel-based x86 servers, which should significantly expand the company's available market. We expect to see a full line of Intel-based servers in Sun's portfolio by the end of FY08. We note that Sun is the only Unix server vendor providing support for its proprietary Unix, Solaris, on high-volume, low-cost x86 architecture.
* Sun should complete the rejuvenation of its server portfolio in the second half of calendar 2008 with the introduction of 'Rock,' a version of the multi-core, multi-threaded Niagara processor with support for large symmetric-multiprocessing systems. At this point, Sun will have a mid-range and high-end proprietary line able to compete more effectively with IBM on price/performance and virtualization capability.
Cost reductions
Sun reduced pro forma operating expenses by approximately $400M between FY06 and FY07 via headcount reductions, real estate consolidation, and other restructuring actions. We expect the company to reduce operating expenses by an additional $400M between FY07 and FY09 through IT upgrades and consolidation, real estate consolidation, and further headcount reductions. The Street is not giving Sun full credit for this level of expense reduction, in our view.
In the near term, the company should benefit from a 1,500 person headcount reduction announced in August 2007. The 3CQ results suggest that virtually none of this reduction occurred during the September quarter, but we still expect it to be largely completed within two quarters. This relatively-small reduction should alone yield $150M in annual operating expense savings.
Given Sun's recent strong track record of delivering on promised operating-expense reductions, our confidence in the company's ability to reduce opex by $400M between FY07 and FY09 has grown. This still leaves the company one percentage point below its stated goal of a 10% operating margin in FY09, but a nickel above consensus EPS in FY09.
Share repurchase
Sun completed an impressive $1.25B of its $1.8B outstanding share repurchase authorization during 3CQ07. Because the repurchase occurred throughout the quarter, diluted share count only dropped 95M shares despite the fact that Sun repurchased a total of 245M shares. Another significant drop in diluted share count will likely occur during the December quarter as Sun enjoys the full impact of 3CQ's large buyback.
Looking forward, it is reasonable to expect Sun to continue buying back shares aggressively for two reasons: 1) The company seems very confident in its ability to deliver 10% operating margin during FY09, which would suggest that it believes JAVA shares are undervalued; 2) Sun ended 3CQ07 with a cash and marketable debt-securities balance of $5.2B and should generate another $1-2B in free cash flow annually during both FY08 and FY09. In fact, we would not be surprised to see a second-consecutive quarter of $1B+ in repurchase activity during 4CQ07.
With its current cash balance, Sun could theoretically buy back 25% of the company at the current share price.
R a i s i n g E s t i m a t e s a n d T a r g e t P r i c e
We are significantly raising EPS estimates for FY08, FY09, and FY10 to reflect higher gross-margin assumptions, lower operating-expense assumptions, and lower share count assumptions.
Of these three changes, our increase in gross margin assumptions is sure to be the most controversial. We concede that a significant portion of recent improvements in hardware gross margin have been driven by mix and favorable component pricing, but we expect mix to remain favorable as customers consolidate infrastructure onto larger systems. In addition, barring a sharp slowdown in demand, it seems unlikely that Sun's hardware margins will deteriorate 300-400 basis points during the coming year in the face of significant improvements in the company's relative competitive position.
* We are raising FY08E EPS from $0.17 to $0.27 to reflect higher gross- margin assumptions, lower operating-expense assumptions, and lower share count assumptions. We are now $0.05 above the pre 3CQ07- results consensus.
* We are raising FY09E EPS from $0.24 to $0.38 to reflect higher gross margin assumptions, lower operating expense assumptions and lower share count assumptions. We are now $0.05 above the previous consensus.
* We are raising FY10E EPS from $0.30 to $0.52 to reflect higher gross margin assumptions, lower operating expense assumptions and lower share count assumptions. We are now $0.10 above the previous consensus.
Valuation: Risk/Reward Looks Attractive
Without significant changes to our P/E or DCF assumptions, our revised estimates suggest a new 12-month price target for JAVA shares of $7.25, 31% upside to Monday's after-market price of $5.55. The target price implies a multiple of 15X. Given estimated 34-117% EPS growth between FY08 and FY10, we view a 15X target multiple as conservative. Given our comfort with near-term earnings estimates, the P/E would have to decline to 13X in order to pull the shares down to $5, which we view as unlikely.
Our DCF valuation assumes 3% growth in free cash flow between 2011 and 2018 and 2% perpetual growth thereafter. We also view these assumptions as conservative.
Net, net, we believe risk/reward is very attractive at current levels, with worst-case near-term downside to $5 (-10%) or 13X, and best-case 12- month upside to $8 (+44%) or 16X.
R e v i e w o f 1 F Q 0 8 R e s u l t s
Revenue of $3.22B (+1% yoy, -16% qoq) was in line with our estimate and about $50M (one percentage point) below consensus. Both product revenue of $1.98B (+1% yoy) and service revenue of $1.24B (+1% yoy) were in line with our forecasts. Excluding $113M in restructuring charges, non-GAAP EPS of $0.05 exceeded both our $0.01 and consensus $0.03.
Server revenue of $1.31B (-1% yoy) was $5M above our forecast. ASPs of $17.6K grew 1% yoy versus our 3% forecast. Total server shipments only declined 2% yoy versus our 4% forecast, thanks to good upside in Niagara volume outweighing slight shortfalls in UltraSPARC and x64 volumes.
UltraSPARC revenue of $970M (-9% yoy) was $80M (seven percentage points) below our forecast. UltraSPARC ASPs rose 18%, below our 25% forecast. Despite $45M upside in Niagara revenue of $170M, Sun's total Unix-server (UltraSPARC plus Niagara) sales declined 2% versus IBM pSeries' 6% rise. By contrast, x64-server revenue of $165M grew 10% yoy, resuming growth after a flat 2CQ and comfortably ahead of IBM xSeries' +6%.
Storage revenue of $505M were $5M below our forecast; however, 3% yoy growth was better than both overall revenue and IBM storage's flat yoy performance.
The 48.0% (+530bp yoy, +60bp qoq) product gross margin was 360bp above our estimate, even better than 2CQ's 200bp upside. Server margins again benefited from favorable component pricing; DRAM prices only rose 2% qoq in 3Q after having dropped by more than 50% qoq in 2Q.
Professional Services revenue of $260M exceeded our forecast by $10M, compensating for $10M downside in Maintenance revenue of $769M. However, the 49.2% (+430bp yoy, +210bp qoq) gross margin was 380bp better than our forecast and likely the highest margin in at least ten years, indicating superb utilization.
Thanks to the sharp gross-margin upside in both business segments, the corporate gross margin of 48.5% (+500bp yoy, +130bp qoq) exceeded our forecast by 370bp and was the highest since 2CQ00's 52.1%. In turn, the 5.5% (+680bp yoy) operating margin was 580bp better than our forecast. Opex of $1.39B was $65M lower than our forecast despite the in-line revenue with all the savings coming from R&D, indicating excellent cost control.
The sharecount was about 65M below our forecast; during the quarter the company repurchased 245M shares, but due to the timing of the repurchase, it should not fully impact sharecount until 4CQ. Cash flow from operations of $574M was the highest since 1CQ01's $767M (excluding the Microsoft settlement-benefiting 2CQ04), and free cash flow of $447M more than doubled the $157M of a year ago.
K e y p o s i t i v e s
* UltraSPARC ASPs of $28.4K rose 18% yoy, marking the eighth- consecutive quarter of double-digit growth. Although the lack of UltraSPARC-volume growth remains an issue, Sun-as with other server vendors-continues to benefit from the industry-wide trend toward virtualization. (Please see IT Hardware: Virtualization is a Good Thing for the Server Industry, our contribution to the CIR software team's 23 September 2007 initiation report on VMware, citigroupgeo.com, for more details.)
* Niagara server volume grew 70% versus our 25% forecast. Despite Niagara II-based servers shipping in early 4CQ, Niagara sales during 3CQ surprised us by not showing any signs of disruption.
* Opex management remains very solid. R&D spending $65M below our forecast indicates that the company is finally making progress in holding the line here; as a percentage of revenue, R&D declined by 90bp yoy and 230bp from two years ago. Surprisingly, the company was able to manage opex without needing to execute during 3CQ the 1,500 headcount cuts it announced in early August, indicating the potential for additional savings once the cuts occur.
* Contrary to IBM's comments regarding 3CQ, management specifically cited financial services as an area of good demand despite (or, given the transaction volume-oriented nature of many of Sun's products, perhaps because) of the recent turmoil in global capital markets. Further, management indicates that financial-services exposure for Sun is 20% or less of total revenue, significantly less than we had believed.
K e y n e g a t i v e s
* UltraSPARC volumes declined by double digits for the eighth- consecutive quarter, despite volume availability of the new Fujitsu SPARC64-based models during 3CQ. The strong ASP growth has mitigated this to some degree, but UltraSPARC revenue still declined 9% yoy in the quarter.
S u n M i c r o s y s t e m s I n c
C o m p a n y d e s c r i p t i o n
Founded in 1982, Sun Microsystems develops, manufacturers and markets hardware, software, storage & services for enterprise computing networks. Its portfolio includes: desktops and workstations for graphics, software development, design & other business and technical apps; entry-, mid-range, and enterprise-class servers; storage software and disk/tape systems; SPARC family of RISC processors; Solaris UNIX OS; middleware software; and svcs (deployment, consulting, sys integration & maintenance). In FY07 (ending June), total revs was $13.8B (45.2% overall GM), with 63% from products (45.1% GM) & 37% from svcs (45.2% GM). Geographical rev breakdown was 41% US & 59% int'l (6% Canada/LatAm, 36% EMEA, 17% APAC). Although Sun continues to generate significant revs from the telecom, gov't, and fin svcs verticals, it continues to diversify into others like mfg, education, retail, life sciences, media & entertainment, transportation, energy/utilities & healthcare.
I n v e s t m e n t s t r a t e g y
We rate shares of JAVA Buy/High (1H) with a 12-month target price of $7.25. Sun's continued efforts to develop and market an end-to-end enterprise computing platform places it in direct competition with significantly larger competitors such as Microsoft, Intel, IBM and Hewlett-Packard. However, the company has made meaningful recent strides in improving both COGS and opex, resulting in significantly-better margins even without substantially-better revenues. At the same time, Sun has made good progress with new products (such as x64, Fujitsu APL, and T1) and future offerings (such as Rock) that together offer the real prospect of a future revival in topline growth.
V a l u a t i o n
We have derived our JAVA target price based on price/earnings (P/E) and discounted-cash flow (DCF) analyses. Sun's inconsistent recent history of growth and profitability make it challenging to determine the appropriate target P/E for the shares, and we do not believe the shares deserve to trade at a significant premium to peers or the market. IBM shares have historically traded at 16-20X F12 EPS, excluding unusual periods such as the Internet bubble and the subsequent downturn. HPQ shares have historically traded in a core range of 11-20X F12 EPS. The S&P500 is currently trading at 15X F12 EPS. As a result, we have chosen to use a target multiple of 15X for JAVA shares. The application of this multiple to F12 operating EPS of $0.42 for the four quarters beginning 2FQ09 and the subsequent addition of $1.43 in net cash per share yields a 12-month fair value of $7.73. DCF analysis, assuming 3% revenue growth between FY11E and FY18E, 2% terminal growth in free cash flow, a beta of 1.22 (formerly 1.11), and an 8.8% (formerly 8.5%) WACC produces a 12-month fair value of $6.84. Given these inputs, we establish a 12-month target price of $7.25.
R i s k s
We rate JAVA shares High risk due primarily to the relative lack of scale and inconsistent recent history of profitability compared to larger competitors such as IBM, HP, Dell, Intel, and Microsoft. However, given Sun's ample cash-to-debt ratio and substantial improvements in efficient working capital management, we do not view liquidity as a meaningful near-term issue. While Sun currently enjoys a strong position in Unix servers, we are concerned that Wintel and Lintel servers with superior price/performance are likely to take share from low-end Sun servers for "edge-of-the-network" and even some application tier workloads in coming years. While Sun now sells a line of low-end Lintel, SPARC, and Solaris-on-X86 servers in order to boost its relative value proposition at the low end, we believe these servers are likely to dilute margins over time and, unless incremental to gross profit dollars on a net basis, de- lever the company on relatively-fixed proprietary processor R&D spending. Sun derives 45% of total revenue from the telecom and financial services verticals and is vulnerable to any IT spending slowdowns within these areas. Should these factors have a greater impact on the company than we are anticipating, our target price might not prove to be conservative enough. Similarly, should factors turn more positive than anticipated, the shares might continue to trade above our target price and could materially outperform it. |