Cognex - Q1 2014
April 30, 2014
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Cognex first quarter 2014 earnings call. At this time, all participants will be in a listen-only mode, but later there will be a chance to ask questions, and instructions will be given at that time. If anyone should require audio assistance, you can press star, then zero, and an audio operator will assist you. And as a reminder, today's conference is being recorded. And now, I would like to turn it over to your CFO, Dick Morin.
Dick Morin (CFO)
Thank you, and good evening, everyone. Earlier tonight, we issued a news release announcing Cognex's earnings for the first quarter of 2014, and we've also filed our quarterly report on Form 10-Q. For those of you who have not yet seen these materials, both are available on our website at www.cognex.com. They contain highly detailed information about our financial results. During tonight's call, we may use a non-GAAP financial measure if we believe it is useful to investors or if we believe it will help investors better understand our results or business trends. For your reference, you can see the company's income statement as reported under GAAP in Exhibit 1 of the earnings release and a reconciliation of certain items in the income statement from GAAP to non-GAAP in Exhibit 2.
I'd like to emphasize that any forward-looking statements we made in the earnings release or any that we may make during this call are based upon information that we believe to be true as of today. Things often change, and actual results may differ materially from those projected or anticipated. You should refer to the company's SEC filings, including our most recent Form 10-K, for a detailed list of these risk factors. Now, I'll turn the call over to Cognex's Chairman, Dr. Bob Shillman.
Bob Shillman (Chairman)
Thank you, Dick. And I'd like all the participants to also check with their SkyMall catalog for this quarter and be sure to order those items before they get out of stock. Well, hello, everyone. I want to welcome each of you to the Q1 conference call for 2014. And as you've probably seen in the news release issued earlier today, we reported really great results for Q1. Right now, I'm on the road, but everyone else, at least everyone else who's on the call, is at our Natick headquarters. So for the details of the quarter, I'm going to hand the microphone over to my partner, Rob Willett, Cognex's President and Chief Executive Officer, and Dick Morin and his staff.
Before I do that, I want to remind all of you about our recent decision to share less detail about our business on conference calls and during investor presentations. We are forced to make this change because we're now addressing very large markets with breakthrough technology where we have significant entrenched international competitors who are defending their turf with their own but older products and technology. For that reason, we have to be a bit more close-knit about certain wins and certain applications and even the prospects in certain geographies. We will continue to talk about our successes and the challenges that we face, but we just won't be able to go into nearly as much detail as we have in the past, and I apologize for that.
But in addition, we expect today some questions relating to our recent news release regarding the record orders totaling more than $40 million that we received from a single customer. I want to tell you now that we will not be giving you any additional information beyond what was disclosed in that press release. We have entered into a very strict non-disclosure agreement with this particular customer, and we intend to fully respect that agreement. With that, I'll now hand the microphone over to Rob Willett, and I will remain on the call if there are any questions specifically for me or during the call or at the end of the call. Rob, the microphone is yours.
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Thank you, Dr. Bob. Good evening, everyone. We had a very good start to 2014. Revenue, net income, and earnings per share all set new first-quarter records and were a result of our investments in new product development and sales. We also closed business that we had been working on for some time that will drive growth later in the year. In particular, as previously announced, we received the largest purchase orders ever from a single customer in Cognex history, and we received substantial orders from customers in the logistics market, including $3 million from an automation provider for a well-known retailer. Looking at our first-quarter results, revenue increased 12% year-on-year to $91 million. We were pleased to see the acceleration in revenue growth that began in the second half of last year continued in the first quarter.
Growth was driven by the factory automation market, where revenue increased 19% year-on-year. From a geographic perspective, the Americas and Europe were our top performers. From a product standpoint, both vision and ID products increased strongly over the first quarter a year ago. Gross margin was strong at 77%, reflecting the substantial percentage of revenue that comes from high-margin factory automation sales. We reported an operating margin of 25%, up 300 basis points over the first quarter of 2013 due to the leverage incremental revenue has on our profitability. We reported earnings of $0.21 per share, which is $0.03 higher than the $0.18 per share reported for the prior year's first quarter. It's also $0.01 above the Thomson Reuters First Call consensus estimate. Now, let's turn to the details of the quarter.
In factory automation, revenue was $75 million in Q1 and accounted for 83% of total revenue. As I said a moment ago, factory automation revenue increased 19% year-on-year, which is just below our 20% long-term target. Typically, we see a decline in factory automation revenue from Q4-Q1 due to seasonality, and this year was no exception. Factory automation revenue declined 6% from Q4, and a decline was experienced in each geographic region. Despite the seasonal trend, factory automation revenue in Q1 was the second highest ever for our company. Looking at factory automation year-on-year from a geographic perspective, the Americas was our fastest-growing region. It was also the largest contributor in absolute dollars to factory automation growth. We saw particularly strong performance in medical devices, logistics, and consumer products. Europe had another strong quarter, reporting a substantial increase in factory automation revenue over Q1 of 2013.
Sales to customers in the food and beverage and consumer products industries drove revenue growth in this region following a sluggish 2013. In Asia, excluding Japan, factory automation revenues declined year-on-year due to the timing of large projects. We're confident about the high potential that this region offers in terms of long-term growth. Factory automation revenue from Japan continued to be negatively impacted by the weak yen on a reported basis. However, revenue in constant currency increased in the mid-teens over Q1 of 2013. Revenue from the semiconductor and electronics capital equipment market, or SEMI as we call it, was $6.2 million in the first quarter. That revenue represents a decrease of 12% year-on-year, but an increase of 19% over the prior quarter. While we are pleased with the sequential improvement, it's too soon to say if it signals the beginning of a market recovery.
In the surface inspection market, first-quarter revenue was $9.6 million, which is below both Q4 and Q1 of 2013. As discussed in our last call, revenue related to a new software release was deferred until we could test new functionality at customer sites. We made good progress during the quarter and expect the deferred revenue to start coming into the P&L in Q2. Total operating expenses increased in Q1 by 9% year-on-year. This increase was due to our investments in new product development and in our sales channel that are targeted at longer-term initiatives. Revenue increased year-on-year at a faster rate, and expenses as these efforts paid off. In summary, Cognex had a very good start to 2014. In regards to guidance for Q2, we expect revenue for our first $100 million quarter to be between $101 million and $105 million.
This range represents an increase of 11%-16% over the revenue reported tonight for Q1. Gross margins are expected to be in the mid-70% range and will reflect a higher level of surface inspection revenue. Operating expenses are expected to increase substantially by up to 15% on a sequential basis. This increase is due to support capabilities we are building for the $40 million business win, which will be recognized as revenue further out. We are making additional investments in growth areas, and we will have incremental legal fees related to our patent lawsuit against one of our competitors that went to trial in Q2. The effective tax rate is expected to be 19%, excluding discrete tax items. Now, let's open the call up for your questions. Operator, we are ready to take questions.
Operator (participant)
Okay. So, ladies and gentlemen, at this time, if you have a question or comment, press the star followed with the one key, and you'll be placed into a question queue. So again, for questions, press the star followed with the one key, and we'll take your questions. So our first question comes from Ben Rose from Battle Road Research.
Ben Rose (Analyst)
Good evening. With regard to some of the competitors in the ID space, SICK seems to be revitalizing its product line with some new image-based scanners and not relying as much in the past as they have been on lasers. Could you comment on what you're seeing in the marketplace from them specifically?
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Yeah, sure. Hey, Ben. Yeah, we're addressing the logistics market with highly advantaged proprietary technology. Well, our competitors are generally defending their products with their market with older products. You're probably referring to the interestingly named SICK Lector product, which we've seen a lot on trade shows, stands, and in customers recently. I think it's interesting to us. I think we have a number of thoughts on it. One is I think it's interesting to see that they're starting to legitimize image-based readers in the logistics market. Generally, they've used lasers, and I think even they are starting to see and others that imaging is what's going to win out, and machine vision is what's going to win out in this market. The Lector may look similar in packaging to our DataMan readers, but differs greatly in the software.
Cognex technology, such as Hotbars and our ability to read low-resolution codes and to read codes at very high speeds, gives us tremendous advantage over products such as that one. And it's very hard for any competitor to duplicate these capabilities, we believe, certainly for a number of years. Cognex will either outperform the SICK products that you're seeing with the DataMan 300 at a similar price point where our performance will be way superior, or it can match the performance with a lower price point DataMan 303 product. So we're seeing them respond. We're feeling it's legitimizing our strategy, and we're very, very confident about, and our customers are confident about our outperformance of those products.
Ben Rose (Analyst)
Okay. And also, Rob, with regard to the Far East, notwithstanding this very large and significant order that you've announced and won't provide additional details on, there does seem to be some debate as to whether the Far East, China in particular, is starting to weaken just from kind of a macro standpoint. Could you comment at all about what you're seeing there, just kind of on a day-to-day basis, and whether anything there portends more challenges, generally speaking, for the second half?
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Well, I think, Ben, the macro concerns in Asia, particularly in China, are something we've all been reading a lot and know well. We saw a little softness primarily in surface inspection in the first quarter of the year, and we're watching that closely. But based on our sales funnel and investments, we're confident that Asia is going to go on delivering very strong growth for us, particularly in the second half of this year. You always see a very soft situation in advance of Chinese New Year. Nothing new there. We saw that, and we did see a good pickup in business immediately following Chinese New Year. So I'd say the indicators for us continue to look very good, but we also do see some of that nervousness that you're referring to.
Ben Rose (Analyst)
Okay. Thanks very much.
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Sure.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We'll take our next question coming from Jim Ricchiuti from Needham & Company. Please go ahead.
Jim Ricchiuti (Analyst)
Hi. Good afternoon.
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Hey, Jim.
Dick Morin (CFO)
Hey, Jim.
Bob Shillman (Chairman)
Hey, Jim.
Jim Ricchiuti (Analyst)
Again, you may or may not be able to answer any of these questions, but just on the expense side, is there any way we can think about OpEx in Q2, Q3 related to this order, if you can help at all?
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Well, I mean, we sort of said we're not going to comment more on.
Jim Ricchiuti (Analyst)
That's fine. That's fine. I just wanted to make sure on the expense side if you were going to be giving any kind of help on that. If I switch gears a little bit and talk about the broader factory automation market in North America and Europe, it seems like we're seeing some mixed signals just in terms of factory automation in North America. Can you talk about what you're seeing, and were there any, did you see any pause in the quarter, or have you seen any acceleration more recently?
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Yeah. In general, I think I said in my opening remarks that the Americas is our strongest performing region in the quarter, and the order momentum was strong across a broad base of customers and industries.
Jim Ricchiuti (Analyst)
It was fairly strong, Rob. You didn't see any pockets. It's fairly broad-based?
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Correct. Yeah. I mean, I think, here's what I will say. A lot of broad-based industries, consumer products, medical devices, pharmaceuticals, etc. Yeah. And also, of course, for us, logistics performing very, very well. I mean, I think, as we've mentioned in the past, automotive is a very significant market for us in the Americas. And I would say it performed okay, but it's perhaps automotive in general. I think we saw perform more strongly in other markets in the first quarter. And I don't know to what degree that relates to some of the news on quality and other issues coming out of the U.S. automotive market at the moment, whether this is some deferred capital spend around that.
It wasn't troubling to us, but if you pass the growth by industries, automotive is one that generally we would have expected to see a little bit more growth out of in Americas than we did.
Jim Ricchiuti (Analyst)
If we separate the logistics portion from the ID business, is there any additional color you can provide on that business in some of your geographic regions? How would you characterize the ID business, excluding some of the work you're doing in logistics?
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
I'd characterize it as great across the board. I mean, we've now been reporting a number of years of 30% growth in ID, and we continue to see that going. Of course, logistics is helping that, but the underlying business in ID is growing well, and we have now pretty substantial business in ID in most regions, and we're seeing great growth rates and order momentum in that. So yeah. And I mean, that's overall very, very positive. And I think, as I've said in the past, we're still a relatively small share player in a pretty large market, a $900 million-plus market for ID, and maybe take $250 million out of that for logistics. Still a large market.
And so we think we have a lot of headroom for continued growth, and we just have a lot of great technology we're bringing to bear and a sales force that is growing quickly and training well, and they're performing well. So yeah. I mean, really very positive by all regions. There's really no exception to that on the ID side.
Jim Ricchiuti (Analyst)
Yeah. Thanks a lot. Congratulations, by the way.
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. And we'll take our next question from Richard Eastman from Robert W. Baird.
Richard Eastman (Analyst)
Yes. Good afternoon.
Thank you, Rick.
Dick, can I just ask you to maybe clarify? I'll address this to Dick because I'm looking at the OpEx, and there's commentary that the second quarter will increase up to 15%, starting to stage the cost for this Asian order. So if we build that out 15%, just go to the max, obviously, we'll carry that cost into the third because this business ships in the third primarily. What happens in the fourth quarter with that OpEx number?
Dick Morin (CFO)
Yeah. Let me just clarify one thing relative to that 15% increase. That up to 15% increase included three pieces, one of which was some incremental work that we were or expenses that we were going to incur relative to supporting this particular project order that we were talking about. Secondly, we also said that we intended to continue to invest in some of our growth initiatives, which is some of the engineering and development work and expanding our sales force.
And the third thing was we have a lawsuit that is in trial in New York City where we are suing Microscan for patent infringement, and we've been in the court in New York City last week and this week. So there's a significant increase in the amount of legal fees that we are spending in that regard. So the up to 15% increase was based upon those three factors.
Richard Eastman (Analyst)
I see. Okay. And the presumption is that at some point, the legal winds back down. I mean, we'll make the assumption timeline. And then, obviously, the incremental expenses on the large order would continue through the third quarter, but presumably, some of that is temporary? Is it variable? Does it go away in the fourth?
Dick Morin (CFO)
Well, without getting into too much detail because we're not going to be talking about that particular order, at some point in time, when that order is completed, some of those costs will go.
Richard Eastman (Analyst)
Okay. They're variable. Okay.
Dick Morin (CFO)
We're certainly hoping that this is not just a one-time bluebird, but that we can expect follow-on business.
Ben Rose (Analyst)
Okay. And then can I also ask the second quarter revenue guide, the $101-$105 million, does that include any portion of that large order?
Dick Morin (CFO)
It does not.
Richard Eastman (Analyst)
Does not. Okay. So that order, glad we're not talking about this, but that order then ships largely all in the third quarter.
[crosstalk]
Dick Morin (CFO)
In the press release, we do not expect any of that revenue to fall into the second quarter.
Richard Eastman (Analyst)
Okay. Okay. Okay. But this isn't an installation deferred revenue except this is revenues recognized when the product is shipped.
Dick Morin (CFO)
Rick, Rick, Rick, you're going way over what I'm willing to talk about.
Richard Eastman (Analyst)
Okay. Well, all right. That doesn't help me with who the customer is, but nonetheless. Hey, and then just on the SISD business, can I just ask, did the deferred revenue piece there grow? I think when we exited the fourth quarter, I think it was $2 million. Are you implying that that $2 million will come in later, or has that deferred number grown from the $2 million?
Dick Morin (CFO)
I don't know where you got that $2 million number, Rick, but the deferred revenue on some of these installations that we needed to test in the field did, in fact, grow in Q1, and we expect to start to see, based upon some of the results that we've seen in the month of April. Again, we're talking about different installations, different industries, different things that we need to test. We do expect that starting in April, we're going to start to see some of that deferred revenue come into actual revenue during Q2.
Richard Eastman (Analyst)
I see. Okay. Okay. And then just one last question on the factory automation side, maybe for Rob. You had mentioned we saw in Europe some substantial increases on the machine vision side. Could you just repeat or just flag the couple of industries there that might be the driver?
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Sure. Yeah. Sure. Rick, Europe factory automation, we had a good start to the year. We saw growth year-over-year across a range of industries, including food and beverage, consumer products, electronics, pharmaceuticals, and automotive.
Richard Eastman (Analyst)
Okay. All right. Great. Okay. Thank you very much.
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Sure.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. So again, ladies and gentlemen, if you would like to queue up for a question, you can press the star followed with the one key, and we'll take your question. So our next question comes from Jeremie Capron from CLSA.
Jeremie Capron (Analyst)
Good afternoon. Congratulations on the impressive start to the year. Looks like a lot of exciting new orders coming through the door. And also, I'm quite happy to see that there's some operating leverage coming back into the business and margin expansion. And on that point, you've talked about that OpEx increase going into the second quarter. I'm wondering if you back out those temporary items, legal fees, the increase in cost related to that large order over in Asia. Are we seeing a continuation of that, meaning that revenue is increasing, but essentially, the bottom line is growing faster?
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Well, hi, Jeremie. I think we don't give guidance for the full year, and we're trying to paint a picture of the Q2 situation to put it in context. I think we did say coming into the year, though, that we expect revenue to grow faster than expenses going forward. And I think with the exception of some of these one-time situations, we're talking about that's still the picture that we see. And we see strong revenue growth as we move through the year with a lot of great prospects. We see ourselves continuing to invest in the long-term growth of the business, but we do expect revenue growth to outpace expense growth over the medium term.
Jeremie Capron (Analyst)
Okay. Great. And then the semi business, I mean, yes, it was up sequentially, but we're still on a very, very low level. And I'm a little bit surprised to see that given what we are hearing from the semiconductor capital equipment manufacturers. Is this weakness in the business really driven by market demand, or are you seeing a change in your customers' behavior in terms of the vision products they buy or what they do in-house? Any comment on that would be helpful.
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
I think SEMI for us, we see it as a cyclical, probably long-term declining business as more technology can put through customers can put through more capacity on existing lines. So we think it will cycle, but probably not in the long term provide a lot of growth. I would say there'll be opportunities for innovation and growth for us, particularly around new specifications such as the 450 millimeter technology that's coming at some point, and we can see some initial interest in that. And that's where Cognex innovation perhaps could drive some significant business. But it's very hard for us to see when that's coming. I mean, I think overall, the trend of kind of any sort of in-house vision technology and SEMI is kind of probably run its course. I don't think we're going to see large increases in internal vision spend among our customers.
But at the same time, I think we're not going to see the sort of growth, macro growth drivers, or the drive for innovation that's really going to mean our semi business will grow hugely over any significant time period. So it's a less exciting market for us in general.
Jeremie Capron (Analyst)
Okay. One question on the world of 3D. I mean, I know you launched a 3D product last year. I think it's on the measurement side. I'm wondering if Cognex as a company is interested in the 3D market in general and 3D scanning and those technologies.
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
So we have a couple of areas where we play in 3D today. We have stereoscopic machine vision that often is mounted on robots that we sell. But then the product you're referring to is the displacement sensor product that we launched around this time last year. And this is interesting technology taking us into 3D measurement using our machine vision tools in the context of a laser structured light creating a 3D image of the product. So this is an exciting market where we're really still beginning our journey, and we have more products and technology coming to market. The end users for that product, to get to your question, are very diverse. We see a lot of different end users covering our existing markets today.
It's possible that people using 3D printing technologies would also use displacement sensors such as us to scan products and input them for printing. So that's certainly a potential application, although it's really not one where I would expect us to book any significant revenue this year.
This is Bob. I might want to expand on that question. The questioner may be thinking about the large business for pieces of capital equipment that perform 3D measurements on large objects, whether they're car bodies or bridges or the like. We have, at the current time, no interest in offline measurement. There are two or three very strong companies in those areas that make large pieces of capital equipment that provide sub-micron measurements of large objects, and they're all offline. They're generally done in a laboratory setting. The products that we've designed are specifically for online items during the manufacturing of items and even when the products are moving. The criteria and the capabilities of those products are very different from the offline ones. There are two separate, very distinct markets in 3D.
One we have a strong interest in, and that's where we're developing products and our gaining traction. The other one, we don't have products.
Jim Ricchiuti (Analyst)
Excellent. Thank you very much.
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
You're welcome.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. And our next question comes from Holden Lewis from BB&T. Please go ahead.
Holden Lewis (Analyst)
Thank you. Good afternoon. You're able to hear me okay?
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Yes, we can, Holden. Go ahead.
Holden Lewis (Analyst)
All right. Thank you. I just wanted to get a sense of where you think the margins are going. I know that the next couple of quarters you're going to have kind of some moving parts, but as you get into Q4 and into next year, what can we sort of expect aspirationally about sort of the operating margin level? And I guess I ask because you're talking about investing in growth initiatives again, even though in the near term you're going to firm. But I mean, can we kind of expect you to get maybe into the high 20s and then decide that the time is right to begin ramping the investment again? Or would you expect to sort of be done with the investment for two or three years and just let the margins fall where they may?
What's kind of the philosophy around operating margin at this level?
Rob Willett (President and CEO)
Yes, say, Holden. I think for us, our operating margin target is to be above 25% of revenue, which is where we were in the seasonally soft first quarter. There is room for margin expansion, certainly in our business model. Obviously, with the gross margins we report, there's a lot of leverage when we grow. That said, we see lots of opportunity in our market for growth. And we, as a company, are really about high-margin technology-driven growth in vision. And we certainly intend to go on investing behind that. So I think you should see high gross margin growth from Cognex continuing over the long term. That's certainly what we expect with good fall-through going on.
But we certainly don't have specific operating margin targets or long-term goals beyond the plan to be above 25% of revenue and to keep seeing revenue growing above expenses over the long term. So I think we can't really, we're not looking to be driven to a specific operating margin target at this point in our development as a company.
Holden Lewis (Analyst)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Okay. Thank you. That does conclude our Q&A session for today. I'd like to turn it back to Bob Shillman for closing remarks.
Bob Shillman (Chairman)
Great. Thank you very much. Well, I just want to wrap up. It was a great start of the year, and it's going to be, from what I can tell, a fantastic year. In addition to the results that we reported, as we mentioned, we closed some very large pieces of business, including the two press releases that we talked about, one totaling $40 million, the other $3 million, which I believe are not one-time orders. These are going to be, in my expectation, we can expect more such orders from these kinds of customers. And we're going to work hard to make that happen. And as it does happen, we will be reporting to you on a quarterly basis and on investor conferences. Until then, I want to thank you very much for attending, and stay tuned for more work hard, play hard, moving fast.
Operator (participant)
Okay, ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude your conference. You may now disconnect and have a great day.