Hello Judy,
On ANAD and VTSS, I can't say I would invest in either company as most of the easy money has been made on these stocks. VTSS is currently the stronger of the two from a business model perspective if not a valuation one mainly because most of its sales are in the telecommunications infrastructure business. In this market cost is not as important as reliabliity as the cost of servicing the equipment far exceeds the parts cost. One of VTSS's strengths is also it weakness. They use standard silicon manufacturing equipment to make their parts. So customers designing Vitesse ASIC products can use industry standard CAD tools (including those offered by Cadence, Mentor Graphics, Synopsys and Viewlogic) . The result though is that their yields are lower than some of the proprietary processes used by other manufacturers.The difference in the prices has to do with the perception of the more stable earnings for VTSS. Their advantage may be temporary though as even infrastructure vendors are under pressure to improve margins. I know that this is the case at NT for their PCS infrastructure division as the margins for this product line are less than some of their traditionals product lines.
The GaAs field is quite fragmented right now with different players fighting for different segments of the market. Some of the players are ANAD, VTSS, AHA, CLTK, Fujitsu Microelectronics Inc., ITT Corp., Motorola Inc., Raytheon Co. Rockwell International Corp. and TriQuint Semiconductor, Inc.
I am not up to date on the different proprietary processing methods for manufacturing GaAs parts but given the long list of manufacturers that I found there does not appear to be that big a barrier to entering the industry. These companies have been able to thrive because they were there to fill niche markets. Their markets are now more mature and the focus of their customers going forward will be to reduce costs to increase their own margins. As a result margins going forward should contract for most of these companies. The small number of customers for each of these GaAs manufacturer means the customer has great pricing leaverage. Given the amounts of money at stake, spending a few million dollars to change your production line for a new supplier's part becomes cost effective. As a result , whoever has the better technology (such as 3.4 volt parts) or the best price with acceptable quality will get the contract. This may have been one of ANAD's problems this quarter. In order to keep margins high, these GaAs companies will need to aggressively find new applications in emerging technologies. Part of the problem with these companies right now is the some of these new technologies are not being deployed as fast as anticipated or fast enough to keep income growing at the rates of past quarters.
Here are the critical details from the 10K's:
ANAD
What they do:
ANADIGICS, Inc. ("ANADIGICS" or the "Company") is a leading supplier of radio frequency ("RF") and microwave gallium arsenide ("GaAs") integrated circuits. The Company's products are used to receive and transmit signals in a variety of high volume communications applications in cellular telephone systems and personal communication systems ("PCS"), in fiber optic communication systems and in cable ("CATV") and direct broadcast satellite ("DBS") television systems. The Company designs, develops and manufactures its integrated circuits in GaAs semiconductor material that allows the integration of numerous RF/microwave functions which cannot be easily integrated in silicon-based circuits. The Company's high frequency integrated circuits can typically replace 30 to 100 discrete components, permitting manufacturers of end products to reduce the size and weight of their products, increase power efficiency, improve reliability, reduce manufacturing time and cost and enhance overall system performance.
Product lines:
Power Amplifiers for wireless communications - the Company's major customers for wireless communications products are Ericsson, Nokia, Nortel and Qualcomm PE.
Transimpedence amplifers for WDM (wavelength division multiplexing), cable television distribution, asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) data communication, and data transmission and related products.- the Company's major customers for fiber optic products include AMP Inc., Hewlett-Packard Co., Lucent and Nortel.
Integrated circcuits for set top boxes and cable modems- The chip set has been designed into tuners by General Instrument and Komatsu Murata Manufacturing Company, Limited and in cable modems by Intel Corp., Bay Networks Inc. and 3COM Corp.
Integrated line amplifiers for repeaters-the Company's principal customer for this amplifier is Scientific-Atlanta, Inc.
DBS(direct broadcast satellite) products-customers for DBS products include Continental Microwave Technology, Inc., Grundig Microwave Technology Ltd., Pace Micro Technology plc, Philips Electronics N.V. and Smile Communications, Inc.
Proprietary Manufacturing ptocess:
The Company has developed a GaAs depletion metal semiconductor field effect transistor ("D-MESFET") process that it uses to produce all of its products. By using ion implant variations, the Company can optimize performance and yield, allowing it to produce, for example, high linearity, low-noise, receiver integrated circuits or transmitter integrated circuits with high power and efficiency.
The competition:
While competition in all of the markets for the Company's current products is intense, the basis on which the Company competes varies by product. Competitors in the wireless market are entrenched suppliers of discrete receiver front-end devices such as Fujitsu Microelectronics Inc., Mitsubishi Electric Corp., Motorola, Inc., Philips Electronics N.V. and Siemens AG; discrete hybrid power amplifiers suppliers such as Fujitsu Microelectronics Inc., Hitachi, Ltd., Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd., Mitsubishi Electric Corp. and Philips Electronics N.V.; and GaAs integrated circuit manufacturers for receiver front-end or power amplifiers such as Raytheon Co., Rockwell International Inc. and TriQuint Semiconductor, Inc. The Company competes in the wireless market generally on the basis of product performance, size and price.
In the fiber optic markets, ANADIGICS competes with other GaAs and silicon integrated circuit manufacturers, generally on the basis of product performance, reliability and price. Principal competitors in this market are Analog Devices, Inc., Philips Electronics N.V., TriQuint Semiconductor, Inc. and Vitesse Semiconductor Corp. as well as many end-user product manufacturers who design and fabricate their own systems. In the cable television and DBS markets,
ANADIGICS' integrated circuits compete primarily with manufacturers of discrete components. In these markets, the Company competes on the basis of price and product performance, specifically as they relate to the ability of its GaAs integrated circuits to replace a large number of discrete components. In many cases, discrete components are designed into the end products, and many potential customers may therefore be reluctant to adopt the Company's products. Manufacturers of discrete components include Fujitsu Microelectronics Inc., Mitsubishi Electric Corp., NEC Corp., Philips Electronics N.V. and Siemens AG. Competition from other GaAs integrated circuit manufacturers which include Raytheon Co. and Fujitsu Microelectronics Inc., has begun to emerge in the DBS market
Most of the Company's competitors have significantly greater financial, technical, manufacturing and marketing resources than the Company. Increased competition could adversely affect the Company's revenue and profitability by causing it to reduce prices or by reducing demand for the Company's products.
Sales By Customers:
The Company receives most of its revenues from a few significant customers. Sales to the Company's five largest customers in each of the past three years accounted for 61%, 67% and 60% of net sales in 1994, 1995 and 1996, respectively. General Instrument, Ericsson, Qualcomm PE, Nokia and Nortel accounted for 16%, 16%, 12%, 10% and 6% of 1996 net sales, respectively. The Company's operating results have been materially and adversely affected in the past by the failure of anticipated orders to be realized and by deferrals or cancellations of orders as a result of changes in customer requirements.
Sales to customers located outside North America (based on shipping addresses and not on the locations of ultimate end users) accounted for approximately 80%, 68% and 65% of total net sales for 1994, 1995 and 1996, respectively. The Company expects that revenues derived from international sales will continue to represent a significant portion of its total net sales.
According to the conference call ANAD has 15 percent of the GaAs business. 63 percent of its sales comes from wireless. Approximately 40, 30 and 20 percent of its wireless sales comes from parts for CDMA, GSM and TDMA respectively (specically power amplifers for handsets).
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VTSS
Vitesse is a leader in the design, development, manufacturing and marketing of digital GaAs ICs. The Company's products incorporate its proprietary H-GaAs (high integration gallium arsenide) technology to produce high-performance ICs primarily for telecommunications, data communications and automated test equipment (ATE) systems providers. The Company believes H-GaAs technology provides significant advantages over silicon-based IC technologies in addressing the combination of speed, power dissipation and complexity requirements of these high-performance systems providers. In fiscal 1997, sales of telecommunications, data communications and ATE products represented 52%, 22% and 22%, respectively, of the Company's total revenues. The Company's major customers include Alcatel, Credence, Ericsson, Lucent, Schlumberger, Seagate, Tellabs and Teradyne.
Product lines:
Fiber optic applications designed to the SONET/SDH and ATM standards use data transmission rates of 155 MHz, 622 MHz, 2.488 GHz or 10 GHz. The Company believes that SONET/SDH transmission systems installed by network providers generally operate at 2.488 GHz and above. The Company also believes that silicon-based approaches are not practicable solutions at such frequencies and, as a result, telecommunications systems manufacturers increasingly look to GaAs solutions because of their requirements for high bandwidth.
The Company believes that CMOS silicon approaches are not practicable solutions at the 1 gigabit per second or higher clock rates used in the Fibre Channel and Gigabit Ethernet standards. The Company believes that its H-GaAs solutions for these markets operate at lower power and greater performance margins than competing ECL and BiCMOS ICs.
For high-performance ATE systems, the Company believes that CMOS and BiCMOS silicon ICs are too slow and that the high power dissipation in ECL silicon ICs limits their integration capabilities. The Company believes that the low power dissipation and high complexity of the Company's H-GaAs ICs, which permit systems to be built with fewer ICs, are well-suited for the increasingly demanding requirements of present generation ATE equipment.
Manufacturing Process:
The Company's proprietary manufacturing process utilizes industry standard manufacturing equipment. This enables the Company to employ developments in silicon manufacturing technology to continue to improve minimum feature size, dimension control, deposition and etch capabilities.
While the Company's process technology utilizes standard silicon semiconductor manufacturing equipment, aggregate production quantities have been relatively low and the process technology is significantly less developed than silicon process technology used by competitors. This leads to overall yields lower than levels typically achieved in the silicon process. The Company expects that many of its current and future products may never be produced in high volume.
Sales By Product:
Telecommunications products accounted for 52% of the Company's total revenues in both fiscal 1997 and fiscal 1996. In fiscal 1997, substantially all of the Company's sales in the telecommunications market were for SONET/SDH applications. In fiscal 1997, the Company's significant telecommunications customers, each of which purchased at least $100,000 of the Company's products, included Alcatel, Ericsson, H.Y. Associates, Lucent and Tellabs.
Data communications products accounted for 22% and 8% of the Company's total revenues for fiscal 1997 and fiscal 1996, respectively. Vitesse has developed a line of Fibre Channel products for this market, which consist primarily of transmitters, receivers and transceivers. In fiscal 1997, the Company's significant data communications customers, each of which purchased at least $100,000 of the Company's products, included Cisco, IBM, Newbridge Networks, Seagate, and Sequent.
ATE products accounted for 22% and 24% of the Company's total revenues for fiscal 1997 and fiscal 1996, respectively. Vitesse provides gate arrays and custom products that offer a combination of high complexity, low power dissipation and high speed for ATE. In fiscal 1997, the Company's significant ATE customers, each of which purchased at least $100,000 of the Company's products, included Credence,Hewlett-Packard, H.Y. Associates, Integrated Measurement Systems, LTX, Schlumberger and Teradyne.
The Company's ten largest customers accounted for approximately 77% and 75% of total revenues in fiscal 1997 and fiscal 1996, respectively. In fiscal 1997 and fiscal 1996, sales to Lucent accounted for 20% and 25%, respectively, of the Company's total revenues, and sales to H.Y. Associates Co., Ltd., the Company's Japanese distributor, accounted for 22% and 11%, respectively, of the Company's total revenues.
Competition:
The high-performance semiconductor market is highly competitive and subject to rapid technological change, price erosion and heightened international competition. The telecommunications, data communications and ATE industries, which are the primary target areas for the Company, are also becoming intensely competitive because of deregulation and heightened international competition, among other factors. In the telecommunications market, the Company competes primarily against other GaAs-based companies such as Triquint Semiconductor and the GaAs fabrication operations of systems companies such as Rockwell. In the data communications market and the ATE market, the Company competes primarily against silicon ECL and BiCMOS products offered principally by semiconductor manufacturers such as Fujitsu, Hewlett-Packard, Motorola, National Semiconductor and Texas Instruments, and bipolar silicon IC manufacturers such as Applied Micro Circuits Corporation and Synergy Semiconductor Corporation. Many of these companies have significantly greater financial, technical, manufacturing and marketing resources than the Company. In addition, in lower-frequency applications, the Company faces increasing competition from CMOS-based products, particularly as the performance of such products continues to improve.
Competition in the Company's markets for high-performance ICs is primarily based on price/performance, product quality and the ability to deliver products in a timely fashion.
PS: You might want to check out Clint's post on this thread. |