SIMG's Last Quarter Report
SIMG Beats 2Q; Unveils Data Networking Strategy
July 18, 2000 - 6:33am Credit Suisse First Boston Corporation Silicon Image (SIMG)
Summary
Silicon Image reported operating EPS of $0.05 for 2Q00, soundly beating our estimate and consensus of $0.02, and reporting profitable pro-forma operating income for the first time.
SIMG's PanelLink brand continues to show good adoption with design wins from Sony, Compaq and IBM. Large design wins from its HDCP product (intro'd in 2Q00) look to include Sony, Sharp and Echostar.
SIMG also unveiled its data networking/storage technology that effectively brings a low cost fibre channel solution to the desktop storage (e.g., HDD) bottleneck. A full demo is expected in August.
Due to conservative guidance from management owing to anticipated competition (that has yet to materialize, again) and higher R&D from the DVDO acquisition and earlier tape-outs for new products and customers, we are increasing our 2000 EPS slightly to $0.11, while 2001 remains unchanged at $0.26 - for now.
Silicon Image is a fabless semiconductor company that develops and markets transmitters, receivers & controllers under the PanelLink brand, addressing the dollar per bandwidth concern initially in the digital display market. PanelLink is the basis for the DDWG's DVI standard.
Investment Summary
Silicon Image reported operating EPS of $0.05 for 2Q00, soundly beating our estimate and consensus of $0.02. Equally important, this was the first quarter SIMG was profitable on a pro-forma operational basis (ex-amortization of previous compensation expense).
Higher R&D expenses going forward reflect a high-class problem: more customer wins, faster market adoption, and earlier product releases. Revenue for the quarter was $12.4 million, beating our $11.8 million estimate, growing 23% sequentially. Better-than-expected mix of products drove both the revenue and gross margin upside, even with expected ASP erosion (which we estimate to be 5-7% in the quarter and going forward). Gross margin was surprisingly strong, staying essentially flat with the previous quarter at 63.4%, versus our expectation for a sequential decline of 350 bps to 60%. R&D spending came in lower than we had anticipated, but should kick up given the company's acquisition of DVDO and several new product tape-outs (for new customers). This type of higher R&D is viewed as more of a high class problem: more customer design wins, quicker market adoption, and earlier release of new products are contributing to higher R&D - to fuel higher revenue growth 6 months out. While operating expenses are expected to increase, primarily as a result of this aggressive R&D spending, SIMG should still be able to capitalize on its first-to-market advantage thus slowing any expected gross margin erosion.
Gross margins are expected to decline, owing to anticipated (but still yet to be seen) competition and increased materials costs. SIMG indicated that it would expect about a 2-3% increase in wafer prices during 3Q, but had already planned on that type of increase at the beginning of the year. As we mentioned last Fall, we believe that within two weeks after the Taiwanese earthquake, SIMG actually received a letter from TSMC committing to a tripling of SIMG's wafer needs - showing that SIMG is perceived as long-term valued customer.
20/80/12 - Wind in the Sails of DVI Adoption
Management surprised us by not increasing forward guidance, despite evidence that future prospects are better. Some of the reasons why we believe the market indicators have improved over the last quarter include:
Quicker Adoption of DVI
Competition Still not A Major Factor, But Modeled in Nevertheless.
HDCP and Data Network Products Introduced Early
One-third of flat panels shipped have PanelLink with penetration expected to increase to two-thirds by end of year.
So far, SIMG's strategy seems to be well seeded, and is on the cusp of showing full returns. The company estimates that already one-third of the flat panels begin shipped are using PanelLink, and 5% of total PCs. By the end of the year, that penetration is expected to hit two-thirds and 10-15%, respectively. The significance of this is that in prior technology adoptions (such as for AGP and USB), the market has gone from 20% adoption of, to 75-80% penetration within 12 months. Thus, we expect SIMG to hit a major inflection point as the market approaches a 20% adoption rate for DVI (both for the host and receiver markets). Like the consumer electronics market, this aggregate addressable market is huge, with roughly 550-600 million potential units forecasted in 2002 (by Dataquest).
Management noted that market adoption of its DVI technology is gaining momentum. During the quarter, PanelLink solutions were shipped to 9 of the top 10 PC OEMs and SIMG shipped its ten millionth PanelLink chip, proof positive of market acceptance of the company's technology. CRT revenue commenced as ViewSonics began shipping PanelLink-based displays. We expect Acer, NEC, and Compaq to ship volume CRTs by year-end, too, with Sony right behind. Currently, less than 5% of our modeled revenue for 2000 ($54 MM) is from CRTs, so there is plenty of upside. SIMG also reported design wins at companies such IBM (including an all-in-one PC), Compaq, and Sony. Sony also joined the DDWG (Digital Display Work Group) task force that oversees the DVI standard, and represents the last of the holdouts in giving full support to DVI, and its future prolifera- tions such as HDCP.
Competition Welcomed, But Few Join In
As part of its guidance, SIMG continues to embed assumptions that more competition will emerge and has already factored in steps to proactively address this issue. The problem is, that competition really has yet to emerge. Silicon Image's PanelLink technology, the heart of the industry's Digital Video Interface (DVI) standard, is based on an open technology adoption that SIMG freely licenses to its perspective vendors.
So far, we have been surprised by the limited number of chip vendors who have viable solutions. So far, most of the solutions have been on the transceiver side (not the more difficult receiver side) enabling some premium ASPs for SIMG. However, it also demonstrates that while many companies have announced plans, they have found the actual design implementation to be more of a challenge. Texas Instruments was about 3 months late with its original DVI 1.0 version, and did not even have the receiver component at Intel's Developer Forum. Actually, TXN used SIMG's receiver with the clever marketing spin that it was showing the "interoperability" of the DVI technology. ATI is also the other major vendor, although we have seen initial products from Genesis. Contrary to its press release at the time it was acquired by Broadcom, industry contacts indicate that Pivotal's prototype is a two-chip solution (meaning it doesn't hit full DVI specs) and that Pivotal has yet to even license the HDCP technology (even though its free).
Meanwhile, SIMG is on its fourth and fifth generation of PanelLink chips and has already shipped 10 million of these units, plus unveiled real production chips of the HDCP product. Thus, while SIMG continues to factor in competitive issues, it has yet to materialize. That has not stopped SIMG from aggressively cutting pricing to foster more rapid adoption of DVI - better to have 25% of a big market, than 40% of a smaller one. HDCP Unveiled in 2Q00 and Already Getting Adoption Momentum: Sony, Echostar Appear on Board; DVDO Acquisition Closes SIMG formally unveiled its new HDCP (High-Bandwidth Digital Content Protection) products during the quarter, although significant revenue isn't expected until 2001. Along those lines, we believe that the recent delay in Sony's HDTV roll-out until 1Q01 will now include SIMG's HDCP technology, although a formal announcement probably won't occur until the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) next January. On Friday, EETimes disclosed that Echostar will announce their intention to include DVI with HDCP into their next generation satellite set-top boxes. This would be used as an alternative to the more costly IEEE 1394. While no specific supplier was announced, the fact that SIMG is the only vendor with actual HDCP silicon would strongly argue that SIMG has the inside track.
SIMG also noted that adoption by the entertainment industry is gaining further traction: Universal Studios is indicating interest in supporting SIMG's HDCP for DVI and would join the ranks of other industry giants Warner Bros., Disney, and Fox Studios. In addition, during the quarter, JVC announced that it would develop a digital player with HDCP technology, and Sharp shipped its first products with HDCP technology.
Just to remind investors, HDCP is an approved technology by the Motion Pictures Association of America (MPAA) for digital transmissions or video - to prevent unauthorized copying. There is a current NSTC solution but is an analog-based one, using software, and requiring a royalty payment to Macronix.
Thus, customers would pay more for a lower quality solution if they want to hook up their DVDs, while not even able to fully utilize the capabilities of their digital TVs. SIMG allows open licensing of this technology, to further its adoption, so there are no royalties. The consumer market for digital content is a fast growing segment, and users are only just beginning to realize the advantages of digital content. By adding on HDCP to the current high speed (10-Gbps), low cost DVI 1.0 standard, SIMG combines both low cost digital capabilities and content protection for high quality video transmissions into some of the large consumer electronics markets -- set-top boxes, digital CRTs, DVD players and HDTVs.
Along those lines, just after the end of the quarter, SIMG closed on its acquisition of DVDO, a provider of digital video processing technology for consumer electronics. DVDO includes many of he same ex-Apple engineers that used to work with many of SIMG's own engineers previously - increasing our confidence that this merger will be highly successful. The acquisition of DVDO will enable SIMG to further its penetration into the consumer electronics arena.
Unveils Networking/Storage Strategy; Acquires Zillion
SIMG unveiled its data storage initiative, a technology that should enable SIMG to tap into and release the interface bottleneck for internal storage devices (HDD, etc.). Effectively this is equivalent to bringing a low cost fibre channel interface to the desktop. The size of this market could be enormous. Since SIMG has yet to release all of the specifications of this technology, we would describe it as a type of serial-based interface with a "synchronization" that removes at least four of the 6 PLL components (Phase Locked Loop) and much of the buffer/overflow memory that is currently used in these storage systems. Thus SIMG's solutions would significantly reduce cost while potentially improving performance (reduced latency). This market is estimated to include over 165 million addressable units.
SIMG also announced that it has acquired Zillion Technologies, a developer of high-speed data storage transmission technology. This acquisition is expected to provide SIMG with high-level architecture engineering expertise.
Raising EPS estimates for 2000 to $0.11, 2001 unchanged at $0.26.
Thanks to a higher revenue base reported for 2Q00, we have bumped up our revenue estimates for both 2000 and 2001, mostly offset by higher R&D expenses associated with the new DVDO acquisition and tape-outs from both new products and new customers that have occurred earlier than originally expected. Forward guidance remained inline with previous guidance for mid-teens sequential revenue growth for 3Q and 4Q00. In several recent talks with management, we believe that SIMG is giving conservative guidance in order to easily beat future earnings reports. This effectively allows the company to focus on its new design initiatives (DVI, HDCP, and data storage) than on managing near-term stock appreciation or second derivative perceptions about upside guidance. Given this one step back-for three steps forward trade-off, coupled with SIMG management's conservative stance (think: RFMD meets Jack Gifford), we are raising our 2000 EPS estimate slightly to $0.11 (formerly $0.10) while keeping our 2001 estimate of unchanged at $0.26; but believe there is significant upside to 2H00 and 2001.
Maintain BUY rating and Price Target of $95
Our investment thesis on SIMG remains intact: the industry is moving rapidly to digital displays and OEMs are adopting SIMG's innovative PanelLink solution for flat panels, digital CRT, projectors, and consumer electronic devices by year end. SIMG has already raised the bar by introducing its HDCP technology and laying out its preliminary networking/storage roadmap, with significant revenue commencing in 2001. However, since there have been no formal announcements, we have essentially no revenues from either of these initiatives in our model - much in the way that we originally had no CRT revenue in our 2000 model, when SIMG went public.
As a result, we reiterate our Buy on the shares and $95 price target, with plenty of upside expected into 2001. That upside should materialize as the market transitions more quickly digital and/or SIMG gains more market share and dollar content per system. We believe that between Intel's Developer Forum in August and CES next January, there will be plenty of catalyst to SIMG stock in the form of customer announcements and better visibility as to market adoption. We recommend investors take a position in SIMG before that period commences.
N.B.: CREDIT SUISSE FIRST BOSTON CORPORATION |