CI
COHU INC (COHU)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 revenue was $96.8M (63% recurring) with GAAP gross margin 43.7% and non-GAAP gross margin 44.2%; non-GAAP EPS was -$0.02, in line to slightly better than internal guidance and above Wall Street consensus for EPS while revenue was roughly in line . Consensus EPS was -$0.166* and revenue $96.6M*, implying a small EPS beat and revenue in line. Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Management guided Q2 2025 revenue to $106M ± $7M and non-GAAP gross margin ~45%; the sequential uptick is driven roughly half by systems and half by recurring, with strengthening HBM inspection shipments and recurring consumables demand .
- Recurring orders rose 28% QoQ, and the company received a repeat multi‑unit HBM inspection order; test cell utilization ended at ~72% (IDMs ~70%, OSATs ~73%), suggesting potential early-cycle improvement led by OSATs and mobile .
- Strategic AI/software integration progressed: three new demos signed for Tignis AI process monitoring; balance sheet remains strong ($200.8M cash/investments), though buybacks are paused for Q2 after repurchasing ~432K shares in Q1 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Recurring revenue strength and order momentum: “Recurring orders increased 28% quarter‑over‑quarter,” with recurring comprising ~63% of Q1 revenue . CEO: “We are optimistic by the business prospects of our design‑wins, pick‑up in recurring orders, and expansion into new market segments.”
- HBM inspection traction: repeat multi‑unit order and ~$8M 2025 HBM revenue expectation, expanding memory/data center exposure .
- AI/software progress: “We have signed 3 new demonstration opportunities… for our AI process monitoring platform,” reflecting interest across front‑end equipment, materials suppliers, and U.S. defense research .
What Went Wrong
- YoY revenue decline and GAAP loss: Q1 revenue fell to $96.8M vs $107.6M YoY; GAAP net loss widened to -$30.8M (EPS -$0.66) amid restructuring and amortization charges .
- System demand mixed; utilization still subdued: Systems strength in automotive/consumer offset by declines in computing, industrial, mobile; utilization ended ~72%, below the ~80% threshold often associated with capex inflection .
- Buyback pause and elevated effective tax at breakeven: management paused buybacks for Q2 and noted an unusually high effective tax rate (~90%) at breakeven levels, tempering near‑term EPS leverage .
Financial Results
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “We are optimistic by the business prospects of our design‑wins, pick‑up in recurring orders, and expansion into new market segments.”
- CEO on HBM: “We’re projecting about $8 million of revenue in HBM this year… started discussions with a second customer… expect that revenue to grow going out to 2026.”
- CFO on guidance mix: “Half of that quarter‑over‑quarter increase [for Q2]… half systems, half recurring.”
- CEO on tariffs: “We have not seen any meaningful change in customer buying patterns due to tariffs.”
- CEO on utilization: “Utilization closed the quarter at about 72%. IDMs were about 70% and OSATs about 73%.”
- CFO on operating expenses scaling: “At $100M revenue… OpEx ~ $47M [post full restructuring]; at $130M… OpEx ~ $49M.”
- CFO on taxes: “Effective tax rate… in the 90% range at breakeven… carry that 90% into the second half.”
Q&A Highlights
- Q2 sequential growth drivers: revenue increase at the midpoint (~$9M) split ~50/50 between systems and recurring .
- HBM outlook: 2025 revenue raised to ~$8M; second customer discussions underway; broader 2026 opportunity expected .
- Demand signals: recurring orders strength concentrated in mobile; viewed as a leading indicator for utilization and eventual systems demand .
- Utilization methodology: overall 72%; refining market segmentation granularity; OSATs typically lead recoveries .
- Operating model: OpEx scaling to ~$47M/quarter at $100M revenue post full restructuring; tax rate unusually high (~90%) at breakeven .
- Capital allocation: Q1 buybacks (~432K shares, ~$8.6M) executed; Q2 buybacks paused; M&A funnel active .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025: EPS -$0.02 vs consensus -$0.166*; Revenue $96.8M vs consensus $96.61M* — EPS beat, revenue in line . Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Q4 2024: EPS -$0.15 vs -$0.0933*; Revenue $94.1M vs $95.11M* — both slight misses . Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Q3 2024: EPS -$0.08 vs -$0.0725*; Revenue $95.3M vs $95.75M* — small misses . Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Implication: With Q2 guide up and recurring strength, estimate revisions may trend higher on revenue and margin for Q2–Q3, but high effective tax rates and buyback pause dampen near-term EPS leverage .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Recurring demand and HBM traction provide near-term visibility; Q2 guide up to $106M ± $7M and ~45% gross margin is a potential stock catalyst if execution holds .
- Non-GAAP profitability is stabilizing despite GAAP losses driven by amortization/restructuring; non-GAAP EPS beat vs consensus in Q1 suggests model resilience at ~$100M revenue run-rate . Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Early-cycle signals: utilization steady to slightly improving, OSATs leading; recurring strength in mobile likely precedes systems demand into 2H .
- Strategic expansion in data center (HBM inspection, high-performance networking contactors) and AI/software (Tignis + DI‑Core) broadens TAM and could lift margin toward high‑40s over time .
- Operating discipline: OpEx targeted to ~$48M near term (Q2) and ~$47M after full restructuring at $100M revenue, enabling operating leverage in recovery .
- Tariff risk appears limited under Cohu’s shipping terms and Asia-centric operations; monitor policy changes but near-term cost impact expected to be minimal .
- Trading implications: Near-term set-up favors positive revisions if Q2 demand materializes and recurring momentum persists; watch for confirmation of utilization improvement and additional HBM/customer wins to sustain multiple expansion .
Notes:
* Consensus values are from S&P Global (Capital IQ). Values retrieved from S&P Global.