Tag Archives: technology

With SanDisk Purchase Done, Western Digital Will Give New Guidance

Western Digital ( WDC ) will provide revenue and earnings guidance for the first time since completing its $16 billion acquisition of SanDisk. Western Digital announced the completion of its SanDisk acquisition on Thursday, creating a formidable competitor in both disk drives and flash-chip storage. The company says it will update its guidance on May 26, after the market close, for its fiscal fourth quarter ending July 1. The guidance will reflect the partial period of ownership of SanDisk in Q4. RBC Capital Markets analyst Amit Daryanani, in a research note, said he expects Western Digital to imply Q4 revenue guidance of $3.4 billion. That’s above the consensus estimate of $3.34 billion from analysts polled by Thomson Reuters. The Wall Street consensus on earnings per share minus items is 86 cents. Daryanani expects 93 cents. He has an outperform rating on Western Digital stock and a price target of 56. Western Digital was trading near 39, up 5%, in afternoon trading in the stock market today . But shares are down more than 20% since the company’s posted fiscal Q3 earnings on April 28. Western Digital and SanDisk had combined revenue of about $20 billion in 2015. Western Digital is the largest provider of disk drives, ahead of Seagate Technology ( STX ). Seagate was trading near 20, up 4%, Wednesday afternoon. The stock is down 24% since the company reported its fiscal Q3 earnings on April 29. SanDisk is a leading provider of chips used for data storage in a wide variety of devices, including smartphones, tablets and PCs. The deal will help SanDisk, which has a strong retail business, move up the ladder to make bigger sales to businesses and other enterprise customers — the market where Western Digital is strongest. Western Digital gets the ability to offer chip-based storage in areas where its disk drive technology is losing ground.

Applied Materials’ 3D ‘Tide’ Won’t Help It Outpace Rivals Lam, KLA

Applied Materials ( AMAT ) could surf the “rising tide” of 3D Nand, but rival Lam Research ( LRCX ) will likely outgrow the No. 2 chip-gear-maker, a Needham analyst said Wednesday ahead of Applied Materials’ Q2 earnings report, due after the close Thursday. In afternoon trading on the stock market today , Applied Materials stock was up 2%, near 20, leading soon-to-merge rivals Lam and KLA-Tencor ( KLAC ), whose shares were up 1.8% and 1%, respectively. The three trail ASML ( ASML ) in terms of market value. ASML stock was up 1% Wednesday afternoon. For its fiscal Q2 ended in late April, Applied Materials is expected to report $2.43 billion in sales and 32 cents earnings per share minus items, flat and up 10%, respectively, on a year-over-year basis. That would come off 4% declines for both metrics in Q1. Three months ago, Applied Materials guided to a 5%-10% sequential jump in sales ($2.37 billion to $2.48 billion) and 30-34 cents EPS ex items. Needham analyst Y. Edwin Mok reiterated his buy rating and 22 price target on Applied Materials stock. Mok and Credit Suisse analyst Farhan Ahmad both expect Applied Materials to report an in-line Q2. But Mok sees potential upside to Applied Materials’ Q3 guidance on strength in 3D Nand flash memory demand. Lam recently guided to 9% quarter-over-quarter shipment growth for Q2. Mok expects Applied Materials to “grow similarly, although likely at a slower pace than Lam.” He sees Applied Materials guiding to 2%-7% sequential growth for Q3 vs. consensus of 22 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters, which models 3% quarter-over-quarter sales growth. Ahmad, on the other hand, expects in-line Q3 guidance. For the second half of the year, display revenue could be guided up 10%-20% vs. last year’s flat quarter, but DRAM (dynamic random-access memory) guidance could disappoint. “DRAM second-half revenues could be ticked down to flat (vs. the prior period),” he wrote in a research report. “Expectations are relatively high. Most investors expect a beat than a miss,” but DRAM has been macroeconomically slogged for several years on slowing PC sales. He kept his outperform rating and 23 price target.

First Solar R&D ‘Paying Off,’ But Sales Remain ‘Uneven’: Argus

First Solar ‘s ( FSLR ) quarterly $31.5 million R&D spending average is starting to pay off, Argus analyst David Coleman said Wednesday, noting the No. 1 solar installer’s technology is becoming cost-competitive even without subsidies. Coleman rates First Solar stock a buy, but he slashed his price target to 66 from 90. Shares have pulled back 33% since hitting a 2016 high on March 18, as earnings last month missed Wall Street expectations. Over the past three months, First Solar stock has fallen 23.1% vs. a 6.8% gain in the S&P 500. But midday on the stock market today , First Solar stock was up nearly 2%, near 50. Shares of top rival SunPower ( SPWR ) were up a fraction, trailing IBD’s 20-company Energy-Solar industry group, which was higher by close to 2%, above 27, after touching a three-year low of 25.86 on May 10. The group ranks just No. 180 out of 197 groups tracked by IBD. First Solar stock was slammed on the company’s $100 million Q1 sales miss last month. Then, the firm announced CFO Mark Widmar would succeed CEO James Hughes, effective July 1. Hughes will join the board. But that sales miss was largely due to the timing of project revenue recognition, Coleman wrote in his research report. Predicting quarterly sales for developers like First Solar and SunPower can be tricky. This month, SunPower’s Q2 sales view lagged by $400 million. “Overall, we remain optimistic about the company’s long-term earnings power; however, investors should expect First Solar’s financial results to be uneven on a quarter-to-quarter and year-to-year basis due to the timing of revenue recognition,” he wrote. First Solar Rides Cadmium Telluride R&D During Q1, cash declined 3.5% sequentially to $1.1 billion, but First Solar remains profitable “even as its peers have been hurt by oversupplied markets and a lack of pricing power,” Coleman wrote. It investments in cadmium telluride technology are starting to pay off. “We see evidence that First Solar’s technological investments are paying off, as they have enabled the company to lower the cost of solar generation on a per-watt basis and to expand its opportunity set of utility-scale projects,” he wrote. Cadmium telluride should provide a cost advantage vs. more commoditized solar module technology such as polysilicon, Coleman wrote. In some markets, it’s becoming cost-competitive even without subsidies — a tough goal for solar companies still largely dependent on governmental whims. By 2025, First Solar expects to have 40 gigawatts in North American utility installations, implying 21.9% growth. The company also has bookings in Turkey, Japan, Australia, India and Africa, Coleman wrote. First Solar should also benefit from stricter environmental regulations on fossil-fuel-based power, and from increased government and public support for solar. Last year, the U.S. Congress extended the Investment Tax Credit (ITC) on solar by five years, avoiding a cliff in 2017 installations. The biggest risk lies in First Solar’s dependence on utility-scale deployments, Coleman wrote. “If the market for utility-scale solar power generation does not expand significantly over the next few years due to cost factors or technological or political developments, First Solar would likely experience slower-than-anticipated growth,” he said.