CI
COHU INC (COHU)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 revenue was $94.1M, within prior guidance, but down 1% sequentially and 31% year over year; GAAP EPS was -$0.46 and non-GAAP EPS was -$0.15 .
- Gross margin was pressured by a $2.1M inventory reserve charge, reducing Q4 GM to 41.9% GAAP (41.8% non-GAAP) and costing ~4 cents of EPS; absent the charge, GM was in line with guidance .
- Management guided Q1 2025 revenue to $97M ± $7M, lower than earlier commentary calling for ~10% sequential growth, due to ~$7M of shipment pushouts; Q1 GM ~44%, OpEx ~$49M, tax ~$3M, net interest income ~$1.3M .
- Strategic initiatives advanced: first HBM inspection shipment with repeat order, entry into SiC die-level burn-in, and the Tignis AI/process-control acquisition to drive software growth, positioning medium-term margin expansion toward ~50% as software scales .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Systems revenue increased sequentially in Computing, Industrial and Consumer during a seasonally slow period, while recurring revenue remained 62% of total, supporting cash flow resilience .
- HBM and SiC vectors progressing: first HBM inspection system shipped with repeat order; management targets ~$7M HBM and ~$5M SiC in 2025, plus $10–$15M from a Diamondx automotive win, implying $25–$30M incremental revenue drivers .
- Operating expenses came in below expectations for Q4 (non-GAAP OpEx ~$45.3M) due to lower labor costs and higher vacation utilization; cash and investments remained strong at $262.1M .
- “We are expanding our analytics offering with Tignis, creating the opportunity to potentially grow software revenue at an annual rate of 50% or more over the next three years…” — CEO Luis Müller .
What Went Wrong
- Gross margin miss: Q4 non-GAAP GM 41.8% was ~220 bps below guidance due to a $2.1M inventory reserve for slow-moving customer-specific inventory; non-GAAP EPS was a -$0.15 loss .
- Revenue headwinds: declines in Automotive and Mobile as customers work through inventory corrections; overall revenue -31% YoY vs Q4 2023 ($94.1M vs $137.2M) .
- 2025 Q1 outlook reduced from earlier commentary (≈10% sequential growth) to $97M ± $7M on shipment pushouts (~$7M deferred across 2025), tempering near-term recovery expectations .
Financial Results
Quarterly trend (oldest → newest)
Year-over-year comparison (Q4 2023 → Q4 2024)
KPIs and operational context
Systems revenue mix context (FY 2024)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Estimated test cell utilization at the end of December increased 1 point quarter-over-quarter to 73%, driven by OSATs that improved 2 points to 76% and while IDMs closed the quarter at 70%.” — CEO Luis Müller .
- “We shipped our first HBM inspection system and received a repeat order early in first quarter that we expect to ship in the middle of this year… potential to deliver $7 million of revenue this year.” — CEO Luis Müller .
- “Q4 gross margin was 41.8%, about 220 basis points lower than guidance due to a $2.1 million charge to our inventory reserve… Excluding the impact… gross margin was in line with the guidance.” — CFO Jeffrey Jones .
- “We believe there is an opportunity to grow Cohu's software revenue at an annual rate of 50% or more over the next 3 years…” — CEO Luis Müller .
Q&A Highlights
- Tignis impact: ~$2M Q1 OpEx addition; revenue sub-$1M in 2024 and likely ~$1M in 2025; breakeven expected in a few years .
- 2025 incremental drivers: HBM ~$7M, SiC ~$5M, Diamondx automotive ~$10–$15M; aggregate ~$25–$30M; incremental GM guided high-40s, approaching ~50% as software scales .
- Shipment timing: ~$7M of Q1 tools pushed to later 2025; book remains intact; sequential revenue uplift deferred .
- Segment recovery cadence: Auto/Industrial have most inventory to digest; recovery expected to begin in 2H25, with Mobile lagging but with customer-share dynamics potentially benefiting Cohu mid‑year .
- Recurring revenue stability: ~$60M run-rate in services/spares seen as relatively stable with ~1/3 the volatility of systems .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for EPS and revenue was unavailable due to a data access limit on retrieval. As a result, we cannot quantify beats/misses versus consensus for Q4 or Q1 guidance at this time (S&P Global consensus data unavailable).
- Management indicated Q4 revenue was within guidance, and absent the inventory reserve GM would have aligned with guidance; pending consensus restoration, sell-side models are likely to reflect lower near-term GM and modestly lower Q1 revenue timing due to pushouts .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term margin headwinds were driven by a discrete $2.1M inventory reserve; non-GAAP EPS (-$0.15) and GM (41.8%) should improve as mix normalizes and as Q1 GM (~44%) benefits from recurring business and product differentiation .
- The medium-term narrative is improving: HBM and SiC initiatives, plus Diamondx wins, support ~$25–$30M incremental 2025 revenue, with incremental GM in the high-40s and a path toward ~50% as software scales (Tignis/DI‑Core) .
- Recovery cadence remains back-end weighted: Auto/Industrial digestion likely requires 2–3 more quarters; investors should expect steadier recurring revenue and systems growth tied to data center and network infrastructure demand before broad-based recovery .
- Q1 2025 guide reset ($97M ± $7M) reflects ~$7M shipment deferrals, not order cancellations; monitor backlog conversion and HBM tool revenue recognition (one tool in Q1, repeat shipment mid‑year) for catalysts .
- Cash/investments of $262.1M and low net debt provide flexibility to invest through the cycle while supporting buybacks as conditions permit .
- Watch for software traction and margin mix: management’s ≥50% software growth target over the next three years is a key driver for sustained gross margin expansion .
- Tactical implication: limited near-term estimate upside until shipment timing normalizes; medium-term thesis rests on AI/data‑center aligned products and software monetization that can drive re‑rating as cycle turns .
Non-GAAP adjustments and reconciliations are provided in company schedules; key Q4 items included amortization of purchased intangibles, share-based compensation, restructuring, and the $2.1M inventory reserve impacting GM and EPS **[21535_0cf835fabf9144adaae334f4be4f9e30_6]** **[21535_0001437749-25-003753_ex_777843.htm:5]** **[21535_0001437749-25-003753_ex_777843.htm:7]**.