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Apple iPhone, Samsung Galaxy OLED Swap May Juice Applied Materials

Stout competition to take a chunk of Apple ‘s ( AAPL ) iPhone and Samsung’s Galaxy business drove Applied Materials ‘ ( AMAT ) Q2 display orders to grow nearly sixfold, and Applied Materials CFO Robert Halliday doesn’t see that slowing this year. On a year-over-year basis, display orders soared a whopping 483% to $700 million, accounting for 20% of Applied Materials’ record-busting $3.45 billion in Q2 orders. For the year, mobile will push more than 70% of those display orders, Halliday predicts. “The great majority of that is focused on the OLED market this year in terms of the order rate,” he said late Thursday on Applied Material’s fiscal Q2 earnings conference call with analysts. “It’s not a one-quarter event, and we see the concentration in mobile.” In afternoon trading on the stock market today , Applied Materials stock rocketed more than 13%, near 22.50, touching a 14-month high. Chip-gear rivals Lam Research ( LRCX ) and KLA-Tencor ( KLAC ) stocks jumped 4.5% and 2.5%, respectively.  ASML ( ASML ), the No. 1 maker of chip manufacturing gear by market cap, was up 2%. Applied Materials’ equipment enables chip manufacturers such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing ( TSM ) and Intel ( INTC ) to produce chips. Last year, Applied Materials unveiled two systems that enable high-volume production of OLED displays. OLEDs, organic light-emitting diodes, are used to create thin, flexible displays and lighting panels for TVs and mobile. Apple is reportedly switching to OLED iPhone displays and might have tapped Samsung to make them, according to AppleInsider.com. The OLED opportunity is huge, Applied Materials CEO Gary Dickerson said on the call. “New display technology, such as OLED, are enabled by materials innovation,” he said. “This is creating significant new market opportunities for Applied.” At least four investment banks boosted their price targets Friday on Applied Materials stock, with Needham and Credit Suisse analysts noting Applied Materials’ huge opportunity in China, where the company has a 30-year-plus relationship. During Q2 ended May 1, Applied Materials reported $1.97 billion in silicon orders, up 15% year over year. Nand (flash memory) accounted for 49% of those orders, as companies like Micron ( MU ) and Intel ramp their 3D Nand technology. “The almost $1 billion in Nand bookings confirmed Applied Materials’ strong positions around 3D Nand with multiple products,” Needham analyst Y. Edwin Mok wrote in a research report, as he boosted his price target on Applied Materials stock to 26 from 22. Mok rates the stock a buy. Chinese orders hit $903 million, accounting for 26% of the total, as memory customers transition to solid-disc drives (SSD) from hard-disc drives (HDD), Credit Suisse analyst Farhan Ahmad said Friday. Dickerson noted Thursday that the company has doubled its sales in China over the last two years. Chinese customers are talking about spending $20 billion to $30 billion over the next four to five years, Halliday added. Ahmad boosted his price target on Applied Materials stock to 25 from 23 and kept his outperform rating.

Applied Materials Q3 Guidance Tops By $300 Mil After Narrow Q2 Beat

No. 2 chip-gear maker Applied Materials ( AMAT ) toasted Wall Street’s current-quarter guidance expectations late Thursday and reported in-line Q2 metrics, prompting shares to rise in after-hours trading. Late Thursday, Applied Materials stock was up more than 4% in after-hours trading Thursday, after the company posted its Q2 earnings results. Shares closed down a penny in the regular session in the stock market today , at 19.91. Top rival ASML ( ASML ) stock fell 1.3% Thursday. Soon-to-merger KLA-Tencor ( KLAC ) and Lam Research ( LRCX ) stocks split the difference, down and up less than 1% each in the regular session. IBD’s 34-company Electronic Semiconductor-Manufacturing industry group fell nearly 1%. For the quarter ended May 1, Applied Materials reported $2.45 billion in sales and 34 cents earnings per share ex items, flat and up 17%, respectively, vs. the year-earlier quarter. Sales edged analyst views for $2.43 billion and EPS beat the consensus for 32 cents. Three months ago, Applied Materials guided to a 5%-10% sequential increase in sales, implying $2.37 billion to $2.48 billion, and 30-34 cents. Applied Materials guided to a 14%-18% quarter-over-quarter jump in current-quarter sales, implying $2.79 billion to $2.89 billion and topping the consensus of 22 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters for $2.51 billion. Sales would be up 14% vs. the year-ago quarter. EPS minus items guidance for 46-50 cents was a dime above Wall Street at the low point, and would be up 45.5%.

Federal Dig Snags Lam’s KLA Buy; Will China Cry Antitrust?

Chinese, Japanese and South Korean regulators could gum up Lam Research ‘s ( LRCX ) attempt to buy KLA-Tencor ( KLAC ) by following in the footsteps of the U.S. Department of Justice, which is asking for more information on the proposed merger, an analyst said Monday. Late Friday, the companies said the DOJ had sent a “second request,” digging deeper into Lam Research’s $10.6 billion plan to acquire KLA-Tencor. Only 2%-4% of merger proposals get a second request, Semiconductor Advisors president Robert Maire says. Of those, he says about a third go through as planned but the other two-thirds either get challenged by the DOJ or get a consent decree, which is approval with conditions. In the Lam-KLA deal, the likely concerns revolve around antitrust. Together, the companies would be close to matching the market cap of  Applied Materials ( AMAT ), which is No. 2 among makers of chip manufacturing equipment, behind ASML ( ASML ). Also, together they could pressure etch pricing for major players like Intel ( INTC ) and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing ( TSM ), the latter an Apple ( AAPL ) supplier. Tokyo Electron and Hitachi ( HTHIY ), which compete against Lam in etch, might oppose having KLA continuing to inspect their tools and processes. “While not good news, a second request is certainly not a death sentence for the merger, but at the very least (it) means more time and money and scrutiny to get approval,” Maire wrote in a research note. The 30-day clock for DOJ approval has now been reset. ‘Kitchen Sink Of Information’ In midday trading on the stock market today , Lam Research and KLA-Tencor stocks were down nearly 2% and 1.4%, respectively, both near three-month lows. IBD’s 34-company Electronic Semiconductor-Equipment industry group was down a small fraction midday Monday. Maire says the DOJ could “ask for the kitchen sink of information.” “The (second request) is not just a simple test of overlapping product lines,” he wrote. “It looks at things like market concentration and anti-competitive issues. (Lam-KLA) would certainly have a large concentration of the overall market.” The chip industry is most concerned about KLA’s standing as an “impartial arbiter” of others’ tools, he says. “Will Lam dep and etch tools get an unfair advantage? An early look at results? A more complete look?” Maire asked. “(It’s) kind of a lot like insider trading.” Lam and KLA already have the go-ahead from Germany, Ireland, Israel and Taiwan, but they still needs a slew of other foreign approvals. This DOJ action can “snowball into a problem” if it becomes too costly, Maire says. Applied Materials and Tokyo Electron called off their merger in the face of strong regulator scrutiny. DRAM Slowdown Hits Lam The request further delays the merger’s close, Needham analyst Y. Edwin Mok noted in a research report, saying he expects the deal to close in Q4, as opposed to the companies’ target for Q3. Western Digital ( WDC ) closed its $19 billion SanDisk acquisition last week, a merger that was announced within hours of the Lam-KLA match-up. Neither Mok nor Cowen analyst Timothy Arcuri worry about the Lam-KLA deal getting approval, however. In his report, Arcuri called the second request “more procedural in nature.” “There is no overlap here, and certain big customers have been pushing these companies together for several years, especially around the issue of yield ramp in 3D,” he wrote. “We continue to see the deal closing in (the) August time frame.” Arcuri cut his price target on Lam stock to 85 from 93. Lam and rival ASML recently indicated minor timing delays for DRAM (dynamic random-access memory)-related shipments, he wrote. Lam has guided shipments up for the second half of the year, but Arcuri isn’t that confident. “Weakness for Lam seems focused on the memory side, with some signs of a less aggressive 3D Nand (flash) shipment cadence to Toshiba, seemingly due more to capital constraints at this customer rather than any fundamental change in the 3D Nand ramp itself,” he wrote. But Samsung, SK Hynix, Micron ( MU ) and Intel Dalian haven’t experienced any mirrored slowdown, he wrote.