LS
LATTICE SEMICONDUCTOR CORP (LSCC)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 revenue was $117.4M, in line with prior guidance ($112–$122M), but down 7.6% q/q and 31.2% y/y; non-GAAP diluted EPS was $0.15 (at the low end of $0.15–$0.23 guidance) as a ~$7M one-time assembly/test materials charge reduced non-GAAP gross margin to 62.1% (would have been 68.1% ex-charge) .
- Operating discipline continued: non-GAAP opex fell 2% q/q and 5% y/y; free cash flow margin was 33.8% and operating cash flow margin 38.7% in Q4, with the Board authorizing an additional $100M repurchase through 2025 .
- Management guided Q1 2025 above Q4 guide midpoints: revenue $115–$125M, non-GAAP GM 69% ±100 bps, opex $50–$52M, EPS $0.20–$0.24; CEO said Q1 EPS guidance is above current consensus, with backlog strengthening and book-to-bill >1 for the first time in six quarters, signaling early-cycle recovery and potential stock catalysts .
- Strategic positives: record 2024 design wins; double‑digit growth from new products (Nexus/Avant); far‑edge AI and post‑quantum cryptography (PQC) adoption highlighted as share-gain vectors; leadership strengthened with a new CFO, Chief People Officer, and WW Sales leader .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- “Record design wins” in 2024; new products Nexus and Avant grew double-digits y/y, with Avant ramping faster than Nexus at comparable points in the cycle .
- Cash generation and cost discipline: Q4 free cash flow margin 33.8%, opex reduced via a 14% workforce transformation and resource realignment (Pune R&D center opened) .
- Demand signals improved: stronger backlog and book-to-bill >1 for the first time in six quarters; management expects a U‑shaped 2025 recovery with mid-channel inventories guided to mid‑point by mid‑2025 .
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What Went Wrong
- Top‑line/mix pressure: revenue down 31.2% y/y and 7.6% q/q on continued inventory normalization and macro softness; Industrial & Automotive revenue roughly halved y/y (to $49.2M) .
- Gross margin hit: ~$7M one‑time materials charge drove non‑GAAP GM to 62.1% (vs would‑be 68.1% and prior 69.0% in Q3) .
- GAAP charges: Q4 included a $13.9M impairment of acquired intangibles and a write‑off of a nonrecoverable cost‑basis investment, masking underlying opex progress on a GAAP basis .
Financial Results
Segment breakdown (Revenue $M):
KPIs:
Notes: Q4 non-GAAP GM would have been 68.1% absent an ~$7M one‑time assembly/test materials charge . Q4 y/y and q/q decline figures (revenue −31.2% y/y; −7.6% q/q) per company tables .
Guidance Changes
Sequential guidance change (Q4 2024 guide vs Q1 2025 guide):
Context on Q4’24 delivery vs guide: revenue of $117.4M was within $112–$122M; non-GAAP GM printed 62.1% due to a one‑time charge (would have been 68.1%, in line with prior 68% ±1%); non-GAAP EPS was $0.15 (would have been ~$0.20 ex-charge) .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We are starting to see signs of improvement in the broader market environment as evidenced by our stronger backlog and improved book to bill” .
- “Revenue…was $117.4 million…non-GAAP gross margin would have been 68.1%…before the impact of an approximately $7.0 million one-time charge” .
- “For the first time in 6 quarters, our book-to-bill ratio has been over 1 for the past few weeks…This bodes well for our business” .
- “Our computing subsegment grew in 2024…new products…grew double digits in 2024 compared to 2023” .
- “We are very pleased to be guiding our Q1 EPS above the current consensus estimate” .
- “We inaugurated our new…R&D site in Pune, India” .
Q&A Highlights
- End‑market color: Automotive stabilizing/recovering; communications slightly stronger q/q; expectation for all segments to grow into Q1 .
- Server/computing content: Management cited ~50% content increase generation‑to‑generation and broad attach across security, I/O expansion, bridging; >50 FPGAs per rack example .
- Inventory path: Disti inventory targeted to midpoint (~3 months) during 2025; improvement contingent on continued market recovery; Lattice-owned inventory trending down .
- Strategy focus: Remain centered on small/mid‑range FPGAs; no ambition to pursue high‑end/cloud FPGAs; partner ecosystem approach emphasized .
- PQC timeline/opportunity: Only vendor with shipping PQC solution; strong Tier‑1 adoption; solutions may evolve with standards .
Estimates Context
- We attempted to retrieve Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q4 2024 and forward, but the request failed due to provider rate limits. As a result, we cannot definitively classify Q4 revenue/EPS as beats or misses versus consensus. Values would have been retrieved from S&P Global.*
- Management stated “we are very pleased to be guiding our Q1 EPS above the current consensus estimate,” implying near‑term EPS expectations could move higher; the formal Q1 guide is EPS $0.20–$0.24, non‑GAAP GM 69% ±1%, and opex $50–$52M .
* Values retrieved from S&P Global (consensus data unavailable due to rate limits).
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Recovery signals: Book‑to‑bill >1 and improving backlog are positive early‑cycle indicators; watch for Q1 execution within the higher sequential guide (revenue $115–$125M, GM ~69%) .
- Margin normalization: Ex one‑time charge, Q4 non‑GAAP GM would have been 68.1%, consistent with prior levels—supporting the view that the Q4 GM dip was transitory .
- Product mix tailwind: New products (Nexus/Avant) are scaling (mid‑teens of revenue vs single‑digit in 2023), positioning LSCC for share gains as far‑edge AI and security workloads proliferate .
- Security/PQC as a differentiator: Being first with PQC solutions and alignment with Caliptra can expand attach in networking/security, a credible structural catalyst .
- Cost leverage: Opex discipline and footprint shifts (e.g., Pune) support sustained margin recovery as volumes improve; Q1 non‑GAAP opex guided down to $50–$52M .
- Channel/inventory: DSO/DIO improved sequentially in Q4; management targets disti inventory at midpoint by 2025—monitor progress as a gating factor to accelerating growth .
- Capital returns: Continued buybacks (17th consecutive quarter; new $100M authorization) provide downside support while growth drivers play out .