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To: John Liu who wrote (440)6/21/1999 7:07:00 PM
From: Nevin S.  Respond to of 668
 
From Hambrecht & Quist Part 1:

June 17, 1999 - 9:04pm


Hambrecht & Quist

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**** Hambrecht & Quist **** Hambrecht & Quist **** Hambrecht & Quist ****

Date: 6/18/99

1 of 4 DAC '99 Preview; Tackling Tough Problems in the Big Easy

Next week, EDA and SIP vendors will meet in New Orleans for the 36th Annual
Design Automation Conference (DAC). DAC serves as the most significant
conference for chip design tool providers, and typically announcements at DAC
highlight the key issues facing the design community. We believe that the
critical issues involve the next-generation of design tools for 0.18-micron
designs, the recovery of the semiconductor industry and signs of life in Japan.

Opportunities:
*We expect an upgrade cycle for EDA tools targeted at 0.18-micron design to
begin in the second half of 1999.
*Recovery in application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) business and
continued strong growth in communications ICs should help boost demand for
chip design tools and semiconductor intellectual property (SIP).
*As designs increase in complexity, third-party SIP is finding increasing use
in designs, creating revenue opportunities for both SIP and EDA companies.
*New problems in logic and physical verification have created the need for new
tools and methodologies, creating revenue opportunities for the majors and
start-ups.
*Transition to time-based licensing can enhance overall visibility for design
tool companies.
*Japan is showing signs of life for some industry participants.

Challenges:
*Many of the existing design tools appear to be "broken," creating
opportunities for market share shifts among the majors and the entrance of
nimble upstarts.
*Growth for the majors will come primarily from winning larger contracts from
a well-defined set of key customers.
*Customers appear willing to pay large licenses and royalties for only the
highest value SIP.
*Efforts by the majors to grow beyond EDA are still in their infancy.

Recommendations:
*Our top pick in EDA is Synopsys whom we believe to be best positioned to take
advantage of the 0.18-micron transition.
*Our top picks among the semiconductor IP companies are MIPS Technologies and
ARM Holdings.

36th Annual Design Automation Conference Preview
Next week, EDA and SIP vendors will meet in New Orleans for the 36th Annual
Design Automation Conference (DAC). DAC serves as the most significant
conference for chip design tool providers, and typically announcements at DAC
highlight the key issues facing the design community. We believe that the
critical issues involve the next-generation of design tools for 0.18-micron
designs. We believe that the transition to 0.18-micron design has the
potential to shake up the EDA industry, creating opportunities for both the
major players and young, aggressive start-ups. We also believe that a
recovery in the semiconductor industry and some signs of life in Japan bode
well for the industry as a whole. This report outlines our views of the
opportunities and challenges facing the EDA and SIP industries entering into
the 36th DAC.

OPPORTUNITIES / POSITIVE SIGNS:

Upgrade cycle for EDA tools targeted at 0.18-micron design to begin in the
second half of 1999.
In the past week, Intel launched its first microprocessor, a mobile Pentium
II, fabricated in a 0.18-micron manufacturing process. The major Taiwanese
foundries, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp. (TSMC) and United
Microelectronics Corp. (UMC) are currently launching their 0.18-micron
processes. We believe that we are on the verge of an upgrade cycle for EDA
tools targeted at 0.18-micron designs, and we expect purchases to begin in the
second half of 1999. We expect ASIC and ASSP design starts to shift from 0.35-
and 0.25-micron designs to 0.25- and 0.18-micron designs through 2000. We
believe that current design creation tools run out of steam after 0.25-micron
design, and that semiconductor companies will need to upgrade. (See the
"Challenges" section below.) This creates revenue opportunities for companies
targeted at next-generation design creation tools, particularly integrated
synthesis / place-and-route tools. We expect winners both on the public and
private company fronts.

Recovery in application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) business and
continued strong growth in communications ICs should help boost demand for
chip design tools and semiconductor intellectual property (SIP).
On top of the 0.18-micron technology transition, we are seeing a recovery in
the ASIC market combined with robust secular growth in communications-related
application-specific standard parts (ASSPs). Historically, a robust
semiconductor market appears to drive an improved outlook for EDA tool
purchases on a two- to three-quarter lagged basis. See Exhibit 1. We do not
believe this is a clean enough correlation to use as a basis of projection,
but combined with other observations, a cyclical recovery argues for a more
favorable disposition towards the EDA sector. We believe the boom in
communications semiconductors provides some additional growth opportunities
for the EDA vendors -- reinforcing our belief that semiconductor industry
dynamics argue for better EDA growth levels. A number of new companies such as
Broadcom, PMC-Sierra, and Conexant have emerged as vibrant growing
semiconductor companies expanding the customer base for the major EDA players.
A similar boom in fabless PC-related semiconductor companies helped the EDA
industry grow in the early and mid-1990s.

Exhibit 1. EDA Industry versus Relevant IC Sectors,* Year-over-Year
Growth, by Quarter, 1994-1999
*Includes microprocessors, microperipherals, and cell-based ASICs

Source: WSTS, H&Q

As designs increase in complexity, third-party SIP is finding increasing
use in designs, creating revenue opportunities for both SIP and EDA companies.
Increasingly, the ASIC business is migrating towards system-level ICs that
have embedded microprocessors, memory, digital logic and analog/mixed signal
blocks. We believe that we will see both ASIC and ASSP vendors selling system-
on-a-chip (SOC) platforms targeted at particular applications, such as
wireless handsets and cable set-top boxes. Embedded microprocessors lie at the
heart of most of these SOC designs, and we see clear revenue opportunities for
MIPS Technologies and ARM Holdings who are well positioned to dominate the
bulk of these designs with their licensable RISC cores. The physical library
market has undergone a year of dramatic change with Artisan Components
emerging as the winner. Given the difficulty in design, analog / mixed-signal
is another area where we might see some interesting revenue growth
opportunities for private SIP companies, like Pivotal Technologies. We believe
that many elements of pure digital logic design will be dominated by the EDA
tool providers themselves, with companies like Synopsys offering SIP packages
that are available through low-cost licenses, providing incremental
opportunities for the EDA companies.





To: John Liu who wrote (440)6/21/1999 7:12:00 PM
From: Nevin S.  Respond to of 668
 
H & Q Part 2

June 17, 1999 - 9:04pm


Hambrecht & Quist

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**** Hambrecht & Quist **** Hambrecht & Quist **** Hambrecht & Quist ****

Date: 6/18/99

2 of 4 DAC '99 Preview; Tackling Tough Problems in the Big Easy

Next week, EDA and SIP vendors will meet in New Orleans for the 36th Annual Design Automation Conference (DAC). DAC serves as the most significant conference for chip design tool providers, and typically announcements at DAC highlight the key issues facing the design community. We believe that the critical issues involve the next-generation of design tools for 0.18-micron designs, the recovery of the semiconductor industry and signs of life in Japan.

Problems in logic and physical verification have created the need for new tools, creating revenue opportunities for the majors and start-ups. The increasing complexity and smaller feature sizes of chips has created bottlenecks for both logic and physical verification. Verifying the logic in a million-gate chip has become a tricky problem using the traditional simulation methods that rely on driving test inputs (vectors) through a simulation model of the chip while measuring the outputs. The number of vectors increases exponentially with the number of gates making simulation more and more costly.
Automated test benches and simulation "cockpits" can be used to streamline the traditional simulation process considerably, and new formal methods are creating an alternative path towards logic verification. In addition, hardware-based emulation can accelerate the verification process and companies like Quickturn (now part of Cadence) and IKOS Systems appear to be doing well. We believe there are revenue opportunities for the leaders, particularly Synopsys
and Cadence, in the logic verification space, and also room for emerging players like Verisity, 0-In Design Automation, Sente and TransEDA.

The complexity of design also argues for moving to the next level of
abstraction, making the design process more efficient and streamlining
verification by minimizing coding errors. In the late 1980s, the use of high-level design languages (HDLs) and Synopsys' introduction of synthesis revolutionized the industry. In the same way, we believe that moving to higher-level languages, such as C, should reap major benefits in productivity. We see private companies, such as C-Level Design and CynApps (formerly C2 Design Automation) addressing this opportunity, as well as initiatives at the majors, primarily Synopsys.

Physical verification of deep submicron chips presents its own problems. Small feature sizes, multiple layers of metal, and fast speeds all conspire to make accurate physical extraction and verification a necessity prior to taping out a design. Mentor Graphics has been the biggest beneficiary in deep submicron
physical verification with their fast-growing Calibre tool driving their return to growth. On the private side, companies like Simplex and Frequency Technology are pursuing the fast growth opportunities in this sector.

Looking beyond 0.18 micron, we also see the industry facing sub-wavelength geometries where the feature sizes are smaller than the wavelength of light used in the lithography process. This will also stretch existing design, verification and manufacturing tools which must incorporate new technologies to account for the realities of the subwavelength era. Optical proximity correction and phase-shifted masks are two of the key technologies. Avant! and Mentor Graphics are both making pushes here, with private company, Numerical
Technologies taking an impressive leadership role.

Transition to time-based licensing can enhance overall visibility for
design tool companies. In general we believe that the trend towards time-based licenses (TBLs) should enhance the visibility of revenues in the industry, reducing the dependence on large perpetual licenses signed late in the quarter. Avant! and Synopsys appear to be the companies furthest along in this regard. Avant! has approximately 30% of its revenue coming from subscription-based licenses providing much better visibility on quarterly revenues than its peers. Synopsys has been moving towards greater than 50% of product revenue coming
from time-based licenses, preferring short-term one-year deals that do not build backlog per se, but create some "virtual backlog" given the 95%+ renewal rates. For this reason, we like both the Avant! and Synopsys approaches towards TBLs, and we favor smaller EDA companies pursuing these models, especially as they evolve into mature companies.

Japan is showing signs of life for some industry participants.
We believe that there is some hope that Japan will come to life with the 0.18- micron upgrade cycle. Some vendors in front-end logic tools, Quickturn and Synopsys, seem to be seeing a rosier picture in Japan. The back-end providers, Cadence and Avant!, have yet to see a pick-up, which could arguably be seen later on due to some lag in purchasing for back-end tools. Historically, Japan and the rest of Asia have been large growth contributors for all EDA sectors, especially in the mid-1990s. See Exhibit 2. Lately, Japan has been struggling, but a renewed purchasing cycle in Japan could contribute substantially to the outlook for all of the EDA players in the back half of 1999.

Exhibit 2. Asian and US / Europe Year-over-Year Growth
Source: H&Q

CHALLENGES:
Many of the existing design tools appear to be "broken," creating
opportunities for market share shifts among the majors and the entrance of nimble upstarts. As feature sizes shrink below 0.25 microns, many traditional EDA tools break down because they are built on the basis of approximations that do not hold true in very deep submicron (VDSM) geometries. For example, in the VDSM world,
interconnect delay rather than transistor delay begins to dominate timing considerations. Traditional synthesis tools focused on transistor delay and this helped allow the clear partitioning of synthesis and place-and-route. Today's 0.35- and 0.25- micron design flows have integrated various approximation techniques to help solve this problem with tools like floorplanning bringing some placement information into the front-end of the flow. At 0.18 microns, it is becoming clear that a whole new design creation flow is needed -- one that pulls synthesis and placement (and perhaps routing) together in an integrated design-creation tool. Clearly, we are describing a
new very high value software tool, and the winners should see good growth through the 0.18-micron upgrade cycle.

Both the core synthesis (Synopsys) and place-and-route (Cadence and Avant!) franchises are at risk during this transition. Among the majors, we believe that Synopsys has been the most aggressive early on in attacking this space, and may have a time-to-market advantage with their solution. Cadence is staging a credible effort, but only recently appears to have made it a strategic focus. Avant! has the best position in the 0.35/0.25- micron place- and-route based flow but lacks the proven synthesis technology to field a complete tool. Mentor will also be announcing an offering in this space, but
the core technology has not been tested in the marketplace. We also see a handful of new entrants making a strong entrance into this space, including Magma Design Automation, Monterey Design Automation, Sapphire Design Automation and Silicon Perspective. Others, including Aristo Technology, are offering complementary technologies that will help solve 0.18-micron design creation problem.




To: John Liu who wrote (440)6/21/1999 7:22:00 PM
From: Nevin S.  Respond to of 668
 
H & Q Part 3

June 17, 1999 - 9:04pm


Hambrecht & Quist

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**** Hambrecht & Quist **** Hambrecht & Quist **** Hambrecht & Quist ****

Date: 6/18/99

3 of 4 DAC '99 Preview; Tackling Tough Problems in the Big Easy

Next week, EDA and SIP vendors will meet in New Orleans for the 36th Annual Design Automation Conference (DAC). DAC serves as the most significant conference for chip design tool providers, and typically announcements at DAC highlight the key issues facing the design community. We believe that the critical issues involve the next-generation of design tools for 0.18-micron designs, the recovery of the semiconductor industry and signs of life in Japan.

Growth for the majors will come primarily from winning larger contracts from a well-defined set of key customers.
The EDA industry is characterized by a relatively well defined set of large customers, including integrated device manufacturers (IDMs), fabless semiconductor companies and electronic systems vendors. The addressable customer base grows somewhat; for instance, we have recently seen new communications semiconductor companies grow into large EDA purchasers. Despite modest growth in the customer base, EDA vendors rely primarily on increasing budgets at the large customers, such as Intel, Sun Microsystems and Motorola. These increasing multi-million dollar contracts are subject to intense scrutiny and professional, down-to-the-wire negotiation at the end of each
quarter. We view this as a challenge for the whole industry as it becomes increasingly difficult for large EDA players to grow faster than EDA budget growth. Given the concentration of the customer base, it is also relatively easy for new start-ups to identify and target leading EDA purchasers.

Customers appear willing to pay large licenses and royalties for only the highest value SIP. The semiconductor intellectual property industry has matured over the past two years, resulting in several notable winners. The SIP model has proven to be a viable one for many smaller companies seeking to capitalize on design expertise in given segments, but perhaps not surprisingly, few businesses have proven able to scale into publicly-tradable franchises. The embedded
microprocessor companies, MIPS and ARM, have been able to carve out large 50+ million unit opportunities where the license fees and royalties are compelling for the public market investor. Rambus has targeted a billion unit market, DRAM, with a proprietary licensable interface and should see tremendous growth over the next 2-3 years. Artisan Components has carved out a position selling broadly applicable fundamental physical libraries and memories tuned for the
leading foundries. We expect a few more leading SIP companies to reach the public market, most likely in the analog/mixed-signal area where the value proposition is high and SIP clearly differentiated. We continue to believe the challenge for SIP companies is to find a market where the business can scale to a compelling size and where differentiation is long-term and sustainable.

Efforts by the majors to grow beyond EDA are still in their infancy.
The large vendors, such as Cadence, have struggled to grow beyond EDA, a relatively well defined industry with somewhat limited headroom. Recently the EDA industry underwent a large push into design services which has turned out to be somewhat of a failure. Cadence was the most notable proponent of the design services strategy, and under-performance last year in services appear
to have been the key underlying reason that Cadence stumbled this year.

Though there are some compelling segments in design services, the original vision of being a general design outsourcer appears to be fundamentally flawed. Design services, unlike many forms of consulting, is about getting a product out the door in a set timeframe, and managing that process can be tricky and easily unprofitable. We believe that in some areas of services,
such as methodology consulting and select verticals, there can be profitable growth. We do not think services alone will propel an EDA company beyond the boundaries of the EDA industry, at least without sacrificing profitability. We do think that strategic moves into system-level tools (e.g., software - hardware co-design & co-verification), embedded software and software development tools seem like more logical extensions of an EDA franchise. We are beginning to see moves in that direction, particularly by Synopsys and Cadence, but these are still relatively small efforts. The largest opportunities for growth by the major EDA companies will likely come at the expense of the other leaders.

PUBLIC COMPANY PROFILES:
ARM Holdings (ARMHY/$32.75/BUY)
*We expect ARM Holdings to report a solid June quarter, with the potential for modest upside to our estimates of $22.1 million in revenue and earnings per ADR of $0.05.
*The company continues to show good momentum in the royalty side of thebusiness driven by solid growth in the digital cell phone business.
*In 1998, approximately 50 million ARM-based processors were shipped. Webelieve that in 1999, that number could jump to between 125-150 million. ARM's average per unit royalty into this market will decline over the year mitigating the royalty growth potential, and we might expect a $0.12 average royalty by the end of they year.
*Licensing remains solid, with several key renewals this quarter, including Lucent and LSI for the ARM9E processor launched in May, which has enhanced DSP
capabilities.

Artisan Components (ARTI/$9.75/MARKET PERFORM)
*We expect Artisan to report a solid quarter on both the licensing and royalty front, meeting or exceeding our estimates of $4.30 million in revenue and a loss per share of $0.04.
*The company received its first royalty check from TSMC this quarter according to plan, and we believe royalties have the potential to ramp faster than the current model reflects.
*We remain somewhat cautious on the overall revenue size of the addressable market for physical libraries and believe that the transition in the physical libraries business (driven by Artisan's introduction of the free library model) creates some risk for of all the players in the market.
*The company's CFO recently resigned for personal reasons, and the company is in the process of recruiting a new CFO.

Avant! Corporation (AVNT/$13.19/MARKET PERFORM)
*We do not expect the Xynetix and Chrysalis acquisition to close this quarter as previously expected, so we are going back to our prior estimates of $70.5 million in revenue and EPS of $0.42. We expect Avant! to report a solid quarter in-line with these estimates.
*Avant! has a compelling flow (called SinglePass) centered on their Apollo place-and-route tool and tied together by the company's unified MilkyWay database. Cadence is moving towards a single database approach with their Genesis database project, a testament to the success and leadership of Avant! with this flow for deep submicron design.
*Avant! is building a credible presence in the front-end of the design flow and has made several strategic acquisitions over the past year, including interHDL for RTL verification and analysis and Chrysalis for formal verification.
*Our MARKET PERFORM rating is a result of the ongoing civil and criminal litigation against the company which has heavily depressed the shares. The fundamentals argue for a BUY rating. We expect the criminal trial to begin in late September and the civil trial to begin in early October.




To: John Liu who wrote (440)6/21/1999 7:25:00 PM
From: Nevin S.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 668
 
H & Q Part 4

June 17, 1999 - 9:04pm


Hambrecht & Quist

Back to Search Results




**** Hambrecht & Quist **** Hambrecht & Quist **** Hambrecht & Quist ****

Date: 6/18/99

4 of 4 DAC '99 Preview; Tackling Tough Problems in the Big Easy

Next week, EDA and SIP vendors will meet in New Orleans for the 36th Annual Design Automation Conference (DAC). DAC serves as the most significant conference for chip design tool providers, and typically announcements at DAC highlight the key issues facing the design community. We believe that the critical issues involve the next-generation of design tools for 0.18-micron designs, the recovery of the semiconductor industry and signs of life in Japan.

Cadence Design Systems (CDN/$13.81/MARKET PERFORM)
*We believe that Cadence should report an in-line June quarter with revenues of $300 million and EPS of $0.20, but we do note that guidance may still change for both the quarter and the year.
*Earlier this week, we reinitiated coverage of Cadence with a MARKET PERFORM rating. We believe that Cadence has a tough year in front of it, with some risks to market share as 0.18-micron design opens opportunities for competitors in key segments like place-and-route.

*We also believe the licensing model will need to be reworked over the next year, and the old flexible access model (FAM) deals may put some constraints on the company in terms of short-term revenue growth.
*We believe that the strategy and focus of the company has made a turn for the better, but that the benefits will not be seen until FY2000.

Mentor Graphics (MENT/$13.38/MARKET PERFORM)
*We expect Mentor to report a June quarter in-line with our estimates of $131 million in revenue and EPS of $0.14.
*In the past two quarters, Mentor has returned to top-line and bottom-line growth, driven by solid performance in several key business including the HDL business (anchored by Model Technology) and physical verification (where the Calibre product has been a phenomenal growth engine).
*We do not believe that recent strength in some of the older product lines, such as Board Station for PCB design, is sustainable. Some of these product lines are benefiting from Mentor selling Y2K upgrades for products that were not originally Y2K compliant, creating a non-recurring spike in demand in 1999.
*With the exception of Exemplar's FPGA synthesis business, Mentor lacks a large presence in design creation tools such as synthesis or place-and-route.
We believe the major upside opportunities in the back half of the year will be in next-generation design creation tools for 0.18 microns. We expect Mentor to make some product announcements targeting this space, and note that any share
in this sector would be all upside for Mentor. At this stage, we do not see Mentor as a likely winner in this arena, but we will reevaluate as the tools are announced.

MIPS Technologies (MIPS/$32.44/BUY)
*We expect MIPS Technologies to report a solid June quarter with potential for upside. We are looking for $15.5 million in revenue and EPS of $0.10 and believe the company can exceed that.
*Over the next several years, we expect to see Nintendo cartridge-based revenues (forecasted to be approximately $50 million in FY1999) trending towards zero. This is the major challenge facing MIPS - how to fill this gap and show compelling revenue growth.
*There are a few ways we expect MIPS to do this. In 1999, the company has seen major design wins for two chips that are going into the Sony Playstation 2 (PSX2). We expect the PSX2 to begin shipping in early 2000 in Japan and for Christmas 2000 in the US. We believe that PSX2 should be a major driver of unit volume for MIPS and could be a 20-million unit product in its peak year.
*Broadcom and Texas Instruments are also compelling licensees for MIPS in the set-top box arena where unit volume could prove to be in the tens of millions in the next couple of years.
*MIPS appears to be the leader for Windows CE-based personal digital
assistants (PDAs), and a break-out product or products in this sector also could generate significant royalty streams for MIPS.

Synopsys Inc. (SNPS/$57.25/BUY)
*We believe that the Synopsys June quarter is tracking well and expect the company to meet our estimates of $205 million in revenue and EPS of $0.64. We believe that the company will show some promising growth in Japan, a positive sign for the industry overall.
*Over the past two years, the company has transitioned towards one-year time- based licenses for approximately 50% of their revenue in any given quarter. During the transition, Synopsys experienced 10-15% growth rates, which we believe somewhat understated growth. As the licensing model stabilizes, we expect Synopsys to report better year-over-year growth (> 20%) comparisons. Renewal rates on TBLs appear to be better than 95%.
*Among the majors, Synopsys was the first company to introduce new products targeted at the 0.18-micron design creation flow. We expect the first product, Chip Architect, to be complemented by additional announcements and product launches throughout the year. Synopsys through the Everest and Gambit acquisitions has sought to build up some internal place-and-route capability that should help them field some more integrated design-creation tools.
* We believe Synopsys is best positioned among the majors to realize upside from the transition to 0.18-micron design-creation tools.