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Penguin Solutions - Earnings Call - Q1 2021

January 5, 2021

Transcript

Speaker 0

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the SMART Global Holdings First Quarter Fiscal twenty twenty one Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participant lines are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Suzanne Schmidt with Investor Relations.

Thank you. Please go ahead, ma'am.

Speaker 1

Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us on today's earnings conference call to discuss SMART Global Holdings first quarter fiscal twenty twenty one results. On the call with me today are Mark Adams, Chief Executive Officer and Jack Pacheco, Chief Operating and Financial Officer. This call is being webcast from our website at smartgh.com. In addition, our website contains an accompanying slide presentation and the earnings press release.

We encourage you to go to our Web site throughout the quarter for the most current information on the company, including information on the various conferences that we will be attending. Before we begin the call, I would like to note that today's remarks and the answers to questions may include forward looking statements. Any statement that refers to expectations, projections or other characterizations of future events, including financial projections and future market conditions, is a forward looking statement. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed in these forward looking statements. For more information, please refer to the forward looking statements disclosures in our earnings releases as well as the risk factors discussed in the documents we file from time to time with the SEC, including our most recent Form 10 ks and Form 10 Q.

We assume no obligation to update these forward looking statements, which speak as of today. Additionally, during this call, our non GAAP financial measures will be discussed. Reconciliations to the comparable GAAP financial measures are included in today's earnings press release. We will begin the call with CEO, Mark Adams, who will provide a business update and then Jack Pacheco, COO and CFO, will review the financials and forward guidance, after which we will take questions. Mark?

Speaker 2

Thank you, Suzanne. Happy 2021 to all of you. I want to take this opportunity to thank our global team members for their commitment and resilience as we operate in these uncertain times. During my first full quarter at SPH, I've been impressed with the team's work ethic and I am optimistic about the potential to execute on our growth and diversification strategy. For me success is largely driven by people, purpose, planning and process.

In my first few months with the company this is exactly what I've been focused on. Is the organization structure set up for success? Are we aligned as a team on purpose what we need to do and equally important what we need not to do? After alignment of purpose do we have the right plan to address the company's priorities or are there some cases where we have aspirations that need more clarity, investment and commitment? Once we have the right structure in place aligned on purpose with the right plans, do we have the right process in place execute and measure our performance to hold ourselves accountable?

While we are certainly a work in process in some of these areas, I'm more excited today than I was one hundred and twenty days ago. Our future at SDH is very bright. Strategically, we continue to focus on providing differentiated solutions across all of our lines of business. We are targeting future expansion into growth markets such as high performance computing, artificial intelligence and cloud with Penguin computing, edge computing with our embedded business formerly Artisan Embedded Computing, IoT solutions with our smart wireless formerly In Force computing and advanced package memory, low density storage and in memory computing as part of our memory solutions business, which includes our specialty memory and Brazil memory business. Financially, each of the lines of business has a mandate to improve their profitability.

On this and future calls, we will be sharing proof points to demonstrate our progress along the way. Turning to our first quarter performance, our revenue came in at $292,000,000 7% higher than the same quarter in fiscal year twenty twenty. Gross margin came in just above the midpoint of our guidance range and our non GAAP earnings per share of $0.78 exceeded the upper end of our guidance. In addition, we continue to strengthen our balance sheet as cash and equivalents increased 9% over the prior quarter and is now at $164,000,000 Overall, I was pleased with our results as we continue to execute on our transformation into a diversified growth company. Let me now provide some more detail around each of our businesses performance.

Starting with Specialty Compute and Storage. Revenue and gross margins were approximately flat with the prior quarter at $66,000,000 and 27% respectively. As I mentioned on our last call, we are conducting a careful review of all of our lines of business and if warranted, we'll either find ways to improve gross margins or exit those lines of business that don't meet our margin targets. One example of the latter was our recent decision to shut down our battery business in Brazil. We will be aggressive in looking at new opportunities, but prudent in how we invest and monitor success.

In Specialty Compute and Storage, we are focused on developing higher margin opportunities as we leverage software and services as part of our solution portfolio. This value add focus was reinforced by the official launch of Penguin Computing solution strategy, which encompasses four dedicated solution practices targeted at enabling customers adoption of artificial intelligence, high performance computing, cloud and data analytics. We will be bundling software and services optimized for each of these four practice areas. While growth in the high performance computing and artificial intelligence markets is primarily being driven by new entrants in these disciplines, existing enterprise customers are benefiting from access to these emerging technologies as we help them to bring these capabilities in house. Validating this new direction, Penguin received the HPC Wire Readers' Choice Award for Best HPC Solutions and Financial Services.

We were also recognized by our key partners. Intel awarded Penguin Computing with their Executive Summit Award for Outstanding Platform Innovation and weka.io selected Penguin as their twenty twenty Partner of the Year Awarded for Software Defined Storage. Smart's embedded business secured a $30,000,000 order from the U. S. Government for ruggedized ATCA system that operates under extreme shock and vibration conditions.

On the technology front, our embedded team released a new advanced telecom computing architecture or ATCA memory blade targeted at both industrial and military edge computing applications. One example of a customer usage model for this technology was a leading semiconductor company looking to use our memory blade product as part of an edge computing solution to enable on-site maintenance predictability in AI applications. While some of our strategic initiatives in specialty compute are longer term in nature, I am confident in our short term pipeline demonstrating customer validation of our vision. We are forecasting sales in specialty compute to grow by over 20% as compared with our first quarter. I am excited with our team's focus on solutions and value add services and see this as a growth engine for the company in the future.

Now turning to Specialty Memory, which achieved revenue of 120 point $700,000 in the quarter, a 16% increase when compared to fiscal Q1 twenty twenty. Our DDR3 product portfolio performed well in our first quarter due to increased demand as well as stabilization of DRAM pricing. We also saw increased demand for our persistent memory or NVDIMM products aimed at storage applications. As we look to broaden our customer base end markets, we are targeting Specialty Solid State Storage or SSD as an important growth area. We have customer sampling our newest SSD product, which leverages Smart Modular's internally developed controller.

The team is focused on expanding into new vertical markets such as surveillance and transportation end markets. Strategically, our Specialty Memory team is continuing to evaluate ways we can provide higher value memory solutions for customers focused on enterprise cloud, AI and industrial applications. Our Brazil business totaled revenue of $105,200,000 an increase of almost 12% compared to fiscal Q1 of twenty twenty. Increasing memory densities led to strong mobile sales in the quarter which grew by almost 30% compared with a year ago. We also achieved stronger memory sales for notebooks which grew 27% as compared with the prior year's first quarter driven by a growing trend of more people working from home.

We continue to accelerate new product introductions in support of our Brazilian customers. We qualified a number of high density products for mobile applications including a 64 gigabyte and 128 gigabyte eMCP. The team is currently qualifying in country SSD manufacturing which leverages our advanced packaging capabilities, strategic customer relationships and in country manufacturing capabilities. Now I'd like to provide a brief update on our pending acquisition of Cree LED. We remain very excited about Cree LED joining the Smart family.

CreeLED's leadership position in the Specialty LED segment aligns well with our overall Specialty Solutions strategy emphasizing growth, margin enhancement and diversification. I continue to be impressed with their leadership team, culture and overall operating discipline as we collectively work on a successful integration plan for Cree LED as part of SGH. We have received positive signs on the regulatory front and the teams are working hard on integration milestones which we feel will result in a potential close in the late February, early March timeframe. I will now turn the call over to Jack for a closer look at the financials and guidance for Q2. Jack?

Speaker 3

Thanks, Mark. First quarter fiscal twenty twenty one net sales of 291,700,000.0 exceeded the midpoint of our guidance range as our combined memory sales, including Specialty Memory in Brazil, were up 14% from the year ago quarter. Non GAAP gross margins came in at 18.6 and non GAAP EPS exceeded the high end of our guidance range, reaching $0.78 per share. As Mark briefly alluded to in his comments, our balance sheet continues to strengthen with cash and equivalents increasing by $13,000,000 in the quarter to reach $164,000,000 along with our continued focus on increasing our inventory turns, which increased to 10 this quarter. A breakdown of net sales by end market for the first fiscal quarter was as follows: Mobile and PCs 34% Network and Telecom 19% servers and storage 17%, industrial defense and other 30%.

Mobile and PCs along with servers and storage as a percentage of sales were both up from Q4 of fiscal year 'twenty, accounting for 51% of our revenue in Q1 versus 43% in Q4. Networking and telecom was down 6% from the prior quarter, reflecting weaker enterprise spending in our just completed quarter. Now moving to the rest of the income statement. Non GAAP gross profit for the first fiscal quarter was $54,100,000 or 18.6% of net sales compared with last quarter's $57,800,000 or 19.5% of net sales. Non GAAP gross profit margin by business group was as follows: Specialty Compute and Storage, 27% Specialty Memory, 15% Brazil, 17% Non GAAP operating expenses were $30,400,000 compared with $29,400,000 in the previous quarter.

Non GAAP net income for the first quarter was $19,600,000 or $0.78 per diluted share compared with 20,400,000.0 or $0.82 per diluted share in the previous quarter. Adjusted EBITDA totaled $29,500,000 compared with $33,000,000 in the prior quarter. Our non GAAP effective tax rate for the quarter was 14.1% in line with our expectations. Turning to working capital. Our net accounts receivables totaled $212,900,000 compared with $215,900,000 last quarter.

Our days sales outstanding remained similar to last quarter at forty six days. Inventory totaled $147,200,000 at the end of the first quarter compared with $163,000,000 at the end of the fourth quarter. Inventory turns were 10 times compared with nine times in the previous quarter as we continue to work to increase our material efficiency. Consistent with past practice, accounts receivable, days outstanding and inventory turnover are calculated on a gross sales and cost of goods sold basis, which were $423,200,000 and $370,600,000 respectively for the first quarter. As a reminder, the difference between gross revenue and net sales is related to our Supply Chain Services business, which is accounted for on an agency basis, meaning that we only recognize as net sales the net profit on a Supply Chain Services transaction.

We ended the first quarter with $164,100,000 of cash and cash equivalents compared with $150,800,000 at the end of the prior quarter. First quarter cash flow from operations more than doubled in the quarter to reach 35,200,000.0 compared with $16,200,000 in the prior quarter. On a trailing twelve month basis, cash flow from operations totaled $88,700,000 For those of you tracking CapEx and depreciation, CapEx was $14,600,000 in line with our expectations for the quarter and depreciation was $5,000,000 We also increased our source of liquidity by entering into $100,000,000 ABL with Bank of America on December 23, has an effective interest rate of 2.25% plus or minus 0.25% depending on the amount drawn. The line is undrawn at this point in time. We also have a revolver of $50,000,000 which is also undrawn.

Combined with our strengthening balance sheet, we feel we are well positioned for future success. Turning to our fiscal Q2 twenty twenty one, let me first provide you with some context with respect to our guidance. Our guidance reflects the accounting change we made in our 2020 for Brazil, which equally decreased our gross profits as well as operating expenses. With that as a backdrop, let me now turn to our guidance for the second quarter of fiscal twenty twenty one. We currently estimate that our second quarter net sales will be in the range of $285,000,000 to $3.00 $5,000,000 Gross margin for the quarter is estimated to be approximately 18% to 20%.

GAAP earnings per diluted share is expected to be approximately $0.38 per share plus or minus $05 On a non GAAP basis, excluding share based compensation expense, intangible asset amortization expense and convertible debt discount OID and fees, we expect non GAAP earnings per diluted share will be in the range of $0.80 plus or minus $05 The guidance for the second fiscal quarter does not include any view on the foreign exchange gains or losses and includes an income tax provision expected to be in the range of 10% to 14%. The number of shares used to estimate earnings per diluted share for the second fiscal quarter is 25,600,000.0 Capital expenditures for the second fiscal quarter are expected to be similar to last quarter in the range of 10,000,000 to $15,000,000 Please refer to the non GAAP financial information section and the reconciliation of non GAAP financial measures to GAAP results and reconciliation of GAAP net income to adjusted EBITDA tables in our earnings press release for further details. Operator, we are now ready to take questions.

Speaker 0

Our first question comes from the line of Kevin Cassidy from Rosenblatt Securities. Your line is now open.

Speaker 4

Thank you for taking my question. And congratulations on the good results. First question is, in the market and Mark, you mentioned that the memory market or the DRAM market is stabilizing. In the last in the downturn, last time we found that some of the companies manufacturing phones, smartphones in Brazil decided to build them outside of Brazil. Do you as prices are coming back up, will there be a change?

Is there a trend to building more phones within the country?

Speaker 3

Kevin, it's Jack. I mean I think the phones in the country will continue to build. The ones that are in the country will continue to build in the country. I don't think we'll see any new entrants right now. We're not getting damn made news going come into Brazil.

So I think you'll tell the current companies will continue to build the phones in Brazil they've been building. We don't think it will.

Speaker 4

Okay. So no change in seasonality then, I guess, is another way of asking my question.

Speaker 3

No change in seasonality right now. We're not seeing because if you think about the phone too, there's a lot of flash memory in the phone. We're not seeing flash memory go up in price, right? Flash memory continues to fall off.

Speaker 4

Okay. I see. And maybe,

Speaker 3

Mark,

Speaker 4

turning to your comment about the profitability and the Penguin business in particular, as you're leveraging for software and services, can you say what progress you have and how much interest is there from your customer base? And maybe what is the customer base that would be interested in your cloud services or software services?

Speaker 2

Sure. I appreciate the question, Ken. Thanks. When we look at the elements of what might help us drive these margin opportunities, it's really on strengthening our overall engagement with both the federal and our commercial customers. And the way to think about it is there's kind of three buckets.

There's kind of, I would say hardware optimization, there's software and then there's services that include things like on demand type offerings as well as systems implementation, installation and overall field service. And so in each of those areas, we're kind of investing to strengthen our offering. When we talk about software, most of the software we're referring to are in these few areas around workload optimization, resource provisioning, a concept called data gravity, which comes into play when we start to see customers wanting a hybrid implementation of cloud services for certain workloads and more compute intensive workloads on premise. And so we're developing opportunities and partnerships with software companies in conjunction with Penguin to be able to deliver these types of capabilities on the software side. On the service side, there's obviously presale configuration analysis.

There's systems design work that's done to optimize our platforms for the end market applications that we're looking at. Secondly, there's installation services and post sale capabilities that we are delivering to the customer. A lot of these customers don't necessarily have the infrastructure and resources in place to be able to manage the hardware side of the data center installation, even post sales around break fix opportunities. And then more longer term, I think we've commented in the past, and I want to just kind of reinforce that we're very heavily looking at on demand services at Penguin and investing in business models that will allow us to extend our current customer relationships as well as engage with new customers on the on demand side, whether it be multi cloud or again a public to private or private to public type architecture using on demand models. Some of the infrastructure we already have built out and looking to roll out more in the area of POD, which is the acronym for Penguin On Demand, and then GovPod for our federal customers.

And so that's really kind of how we think about the enhancement model. And it's a partnership that's primarily third parties on the software side today that we're evaluating how we want to play in that piece of it. But a lot of the infrastructure that we have in place that has made Penguins a strong player in HPC allows us to provide this kind of value add around these systems and on demand part of the equation.

Speaker 4

Okay, great. Thanks. And maybe if I'll just add on to that. Sales process for that, is that a six month or a year? I guess how long is it from the time you land the customer?

Speaker 2

So typically, you're kind of breaking this up because some of this is actually happening. And I think you heard my comments earlier on the call today about our Q2. Some of this is already in play. And a lot of times, systems level sale won't accompany with these new levels of services that we're offering. So we do think margins will improve in the short term.

But Jermaine, to your question around sales cycles, it could be anywhere from three to six months on the presale side of getting a customer identified and a live project that is funded, whether it be again on the federal side or the commercial side. And then there's this kind of process we go through to understand the customer requirements in a specific vertical and what application they're trying to optimize around. And that's really where our expertise at Penguin comes in because we've been around high performance computing for so long that we have a skill set and a competency that our customers really value around understanding the system and the optimization around the systems for those applications. And we're able to kind of emulate that and test that in these different verticals. And so I would say three to six months on the presale side

Speaker 3

and

Speaker 2

then it's probably another six to nine months on a Phase one rollout. And so as I talked about in the last call, I was starting to see signs that we have some really good opportunities that are in the funnel. And funnel might mean opportunities we're negotiating for. And the conversion of those has really taken place in a nice way. We entered Kevin, we entered Q2 with a backlog that was 40% higher four-zero percent higher than the backlog we had entering Q1.

And so this process of managing that cycle is obviously it's kind of an art so to speak that we have to keep on optimizing. But the size of the funnel and the commitments we're getting on this timeline of how we forecast in the quarter is getting more predictable for us as we're scaling the business.

Speaker 4

Great. Thank you.

Speaker 2

Thank you.

Speaker 0

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Raji Gill from Needham and Company. Your line is now open.

Speaker 5

Yes. Thank you and congratulations as well. Mark, correct me if I'm wrong, you had mentioned that the Penguin Computing business for February, you're expecting that business to grow 20% sequentially. I just want to make sure I have that correct. And if that's the case, kind of what's the drivers of that going into February?

And Jack, any kind of thoughts in terms of the guidance for the Brazil business and for the Specialty Memory business, the moving pieces there in the February?

Speaker 2

Great. Thanks, Raj. I'll go first. Relative to the 20%, that was our overall Specialty Compute business. And Penguin is right on that actually.

We've got some very strong backlog both in the federal business as well as some newly accepted commitments that we're going to be delivering starting to deliver in Q2 in our Penguin business. And what's so those are the two primary customer types are federal and our commercial customers. For obvious reasons, we don't like to kind of give the specific customer names out. But I can tell you that each of the orders that I'm referencing are in the tens of millions of dollars. And mind you that they don't all bill in one quarter.

But given what I said about the healthy backlog, again up about 40% coming into this quarter when compared to Q1 and a continuing growing funnel, you can see where we're going to end up in a pretty good place in Q2 on the Penguin business. I also wanted to call out and recognize that our embedded business secured a $30,000,000 order. Now that order is to be delivered over the course of the whole calendar year sorry, full fiscal year and which we delivered about 20% in the first quarter. So the combination of the stronger Penguin funnel and some big commitments on the embedded side have us feeling pretty bullish. I don't think this is a one quarter phenomenon.

We're really feeling pretty good about the continued growth and the execution of our specialty compute business. It's got a long way to go, but I think it's got some really good upside opportunity in the future. Jack, do you want to just address Brazil and especially? Yes. If you look at where

Speaker 3

we think they're going to fall in Q2 versus Q1, Raji. I mean, we said Brazil we'll be seasonally down for Brazil a little bit. I would expect the memory business to be down low single digit percentage from Q1 in that range. So not a dramatic difference when we finished Q1, but down a little bit.

Speaker 5

Okay. So the Specialty Memory kind of down low single digits sequentially and then Brazil seasonally down?

Speaker 2

Yes, yes, a little bit, yes.

Speaker 5

A little bit. Okay, got it. Okay, got it. And so the Specialty Memory business, the growth year over year in November, so it was 121,000,000 in November And then in November of the year ago quarter, it was $103,000,000 So the growth, can you maybe elaborate on kind of on what you're seeing there? It looks like there's been some growth in the storage and networking market, but any kind of thoughts on kind of the broader macro trends that's driving the year over year growth in Specialty Memory and how we think about that in calendar throughout this year in a potentially post COVID recovery?

I'm just curious to see how your business could be affected positively if there's a recovery in COVID in that business?

Speaker 3

Sure. I mean the growth I think you've seen over the last year has really been in the DRAM side. The DRAM side has performed well. As Mark alluded to, DDR3 had a good quarter. We continue to get new design wins in DDR3.

So the DRAM business is doing well for specialty. And as we get I think as we go towards the back half of this year, we expect to see the flash business pick up. The flash business has been impacted more by COVID-nineteen. We were trying to get new design wins, and it's been a struggle to get design wins in the COVID-nineteen era as our customers are not in their lab, so it's been a lot slower process. So those start to kick in.

I think as you get the recovery, you'll see the flash business pick up in the back half of the year for the Specialty Memory business. And I think that will help us back half of the year drive up our margin, as we talked about, for that business as well. So we still think that business is on track. Year end is in really well, we think the Flash business will start to pick up here towards the back half of this fiscal year.

Speaker 5

And my last question on the gross margins. So the margins are guiding up about 40 bps at the midpoint on slightly higher revenue volume. And you broke out the gross margin split in this quarter. So putting aside CRE, what are going to be the kind of the margin levers to push for each of these business lines? And how do we think about Brazil improving the margin, Specialty Memory improving the margins, etcetera?

Speaker 3

Sure. I'll start with I mean, I think Brazil Brazil, we went we talked about for a while, we've been trying to get to a more fixed price model in Brazil and the unit our value add per unit in Brazil. And so I think as we as Brazil grows, gets through this year, you may not see the gross margins in Brazil get that much better if we're trying to be more get the

Speaker 2

gross margins a little more

Speaker 3

stable, right? ASPs go up, if revenues go up, we will get more value add. But I think our gross margin percentage will kind of stay the same. So really not looking for Brazil to have major changes. Specialty, we said we thought we could get Specialty up back towards 20 as we exit the year, and we still think we can do that.

And that's going be based on flash. A lot of new design wins in flash. And also the return of some more enterprise customers. On the flash side, we've had some weakness in the enterprise, which has really impacted our flash business, which tends to be a higher margin business. We see that coming back as well as the back half of the year for Specialty Memory.

Then on Yes.

Speaker 2

But just one point of clarification before I comment on Specialty Compute on the margin side. During my comments around profitability, we're not going to jump in the flash business just to be a revenue play. And as Jack mentioned, some of our design in efforts have taken a little longer than we'd like. But again, the emphasis is going to be on specialty flash storage solutions, not just commodity trading of NAND. That's not a business I'm going to allow us to get into.

So as he's mentioned, some of the application work we're doing on specialty NAND storage is playing out. It's just isn't at the timing that we'd like. But it's still going to be we're going to be very disciplined on how we compete in the NAND space. I think the NAND business is going to be a lot more volatile when compared to DRAM. And we're going be really careful there, although we expect growth and good performance in the back half.

We were just hoping it'd be here a little bit earlier. On the specialty compute side, I think I talked about it in the areas of software services and effectively as we move into more value add type applications that we sell into. And I think that's going to be again very similar for us going forward. We're going to be a lot more disciplined as we include these as part of the deals we like to go win. We're not looking for just hardware revenue.

And you've already started to see that. Penguin was acquired at the time the acquisition was like a 15% gross margin business. Think in the quarter, we're above 20% gross margins. And I think I mentioned in the last call, I'll reaffirm today. I think a next stop for us in the near term over the next quarter or two should be in the mid-20s.

And I have a lot of aspirations for a much better gross margin picture in Penguin over the next three years or so. But we were on a good path there and we're going to be selective. Because in this business, you want to get these customers who really need your expertise in all those areas, not just hardware. And we're identifying these customers. And some of these people in these vertical markets we're talking about, such as AI or sophisticated high end machine learning with utilizing high performance computing, we become a lot more important than just a hardware provider.

And those are the skills that we're investing in and developing. And I think that's going to show up in the margin as we move forward.

Speaker 5

And last question. In terms of PRE, the shift over to Taiwan in terms of production, any status update there?

Speaker 2

So on track. We're I don't want to say too much because it's obviously, the deal is not closed and that's for them to comment on. But I would just signal that we're very happy with where things are in the process and continue to be very pleased obviously with the strategic value that they're going to bring to us. But just as we get to know the team better and their operating philosophy and culture, we're very excited about enjoying the team.

Speaker 5

All right. Good deal. Thank you, Mark and Zach.

Speaker 2

Thank you. Thank

Speaker 0

you so much. Our next question comes from the line of Brian Chin from Stifel. Your line is now open.

Speaker 6

Hi, there. Good afternoon. Happy New Year, and thanks for letting us ask a few questions. Maybe just to kind of keep the discussion back on LED here for a moment. Mark, I heard the timing, you kind of updated in terms of closing on the deal.

I guess what are some of those, if you can, indications that you have that you think you'll get that regulatory approval here over the next month or two? And can you just especially given that I think probably the key hurdle you have there is in China?

Speaker 2

Yes. Actually, I don't think regulatory approvals are a problem. And we'd actually, but I shouldn't even say problem. There are just a couple of things in terms of timing around integration matters with IT systems. Because remember, this is a carve out and pre acquisition Cree LED was part of a broader corporate IT infrastructure that was not being able to be carved out kind of nice and tidy.

And so I think the long pole in the tent, so to speak, is going to be IT. One of our closing conditions was a third party audit of the business. Again, due to the carve out nature of this transaction, it's a very important thing for us to get a clearness of opinion of the carve out financials and that's on track. But I would tell you, I don't think I mean, we've gotten positive indication on the regulatory side. That's not the issue that we're dealing with relative to the February target.

Speaker 6

Got it. Okay. Thank you. Another question in terms of the CRE business. Under CRE, the LED component business carried a good bit of fixed cost.

Yet once you close, Smart will no longer have any of that wafer and wafer fab any of the wafer and wafer fabrication assets. So I guess my question is sort of off the bat, unless you do close, how much higher would the LED gross margins be consolidated under Smart if we were to exclude for the associated depreciation? I think fully loaded is something like 21% gross margins in their fiscal twenty Yes. '20 and like '22

Speaker 2

I think just from a modeling perspective, I think it'd be safe to say somewhere in the 400 basis points improvement. Now, yes, on the one hand, the fixed costs go away. But on the other hand, as it relates to cost of goods in an outsourced model, those fixed costs don't necessarily go away. They just may show up in cost of goods relative to your partner's pricing to you. Now having said all that, we think there's a lot of efficiencies and we do think there's a margin improvement opportunity with CRE.

And again, we're trying to be careful until we get really inside to understand all of the upside opportunity. But we're pretty comfortable that there's going to be some gross margin expansion on the LED business.

Speaker 6

Got it. So just to make sure I'm clear there. I think you originally said you could be at in a year's time post close something like 200 to 400 basis points of improvement. And that's inclusive of the fixed cost. Maybe it's little bit of shifting from in source to outsource.

That's very But that's all baked in in terms of that plus other efficiencies

Speaker 2

we I can think that's in the right ZIP code at this point.

Speaker 6

Yes. Maybe just one last question going back to the prior targets that you had established when you announced the pending acquisition. At the time, I think you said that there was some organic growth sort of dialed in there. But if you look at sort of the crude business, it's $400,000,000 plus annualized revenue at the moment. And if you kind of add that to where your revenues were last fiscal year, it kind of embeds sort of zero ish growth.

And clearly, HPC, especially compute, sounds like it's got a good growth orientation to it certainly to start the fiscal year. I'm just wondering to what degree maybe you've reevaluated those or kind of we could view those a little bit conservative.

Speaker 2

Fair enough. Although as I said in my prepared comments, we're continuing to evaluate businesses that we might have been chugging along in without a lot of upside potential or gross margin that's not at the level we want to kind of hit as a company or target as a company I should say. And so I think it's fair. And if we get a better understanding of what's going on inside of Cree beyond our due diligence and where we're at today, I think there's a potential for that. There's also potential that we if we can't get our arms around the gross margin of some of these lines of businesses that I referred to earlier, we may kind of exit some of those businesses.

I don't think it's going to be dramatic. Think I would say the range that we gave initially is certainly something I'm comfortable with today. And at a kind of towards the end of our calendar quarter calendar quarter this year, I'll probably give it be able to give a better update on how we see the operating model having spent some more time inside of GREE LED and obviously evaluating some of the existing businesses inside of SGH.

Speaker 6

Got it. So in terms of that revenue and that margin improvement, some of this addition by subtraction is contemplated, sounds like. Okay.

Speaker 2

I think but I think your question is a good one, and I'm not shying away from it. I think there is a potential for that. We're not here to comment on that now because I just I want to get more clarity on what's underneath the hood at preLED on specific product lines and see if there's either a need to reinvest in those businesses and scale them more beyond where they are. Because you got to remember, they've been pretty limited at some level in their ability to grow given the fixed wafer capacity out of North Carolina. So we have a lot to learn about that business.

We see how it's operating today, but we want to make sure that we want to invest properly. We think it's a really good acquisition for us obviously. And so I'm hedging a little bit because I want to go get those answers done and get back to you and kind of towards the end of the first quarter and be able to give you a first quarter calendar to give you a sense on how we kind of look at the combined entity going forward.

Speaker 6

Okay. I appreciate the detail. Thanks Mark.

Speaker 2

Thank you.

Speaker 0

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Sidney Ho from Deutsche Bank. Your line is now open.

Speaker 7

Thanks for taking my question. I want to follow-up on the gross margin discussion earlier. You talked about this gross margin improvement 200 to 400 basis points a year after the LED deals closed. I was just hoping you'd give us a sense as to how much of that improvement comes from the inclusion of that business versus coming organically. I know, Mark, you talked about some of the new profitability initiatives, especially in Specialty Compute, but I was hoping you can help quantify them.

The one thing that I noticed is that the Specialty Memory today is quite a bit lower than what it was a year ago. And I think last quarter, you talked about some of the new products is having a margin headwind. So I'm just trying to get a sense as to how each segment can grow, what kind of margin profile can it be without the LED side of things?

Speaker 2

Sure. So separate again, just to your point, separate from the LED discussion that we just had, which I think you're satisfied with, On organic side within SGH today, I mentioned that specialty compute in the area of software and services, I mentioned some of the examples specifically with Penguin. I think that's inherently a meaningful uptick to their gross margin and have a good impact on our gross margin. On the Specialty Compute side, you also have to consider that as part of that revenue stream, we have a logistics service business that also has an impact on margin. And so if you take if you separate that out, Jack referred to some of these newer market opportunities that we're investing in for growth around again specialty flash, not commodity flash, but specialty flash, lower density, our own controller, individual kind of ruggedized or industrial strength type products.

These products that we're aiming at for some of our newer efforts in memory do carry higher margins. So I think if you think about gross margin across the table, he already commented on Brazil being relatively flat. I think you'll see organically a gross margin uptick in the area of 2% to 2.5% gross margin before CRE. And then as I said, CRE has some margin opportunities on their own. I think it's going to combine to a pretty good story overall.

Speaker 7

Great. That's very helpful. My follow-up question is on the Specialty Compute Storage business. Obviously, you made a number of acquisitions in the past two years, but the growth hasn't been it's just not very consistent for reasons that are out of your control. So as you look forward, now that you have one hundred and twenty days into your job, what kind of growth rate do you expect that business in aggregate can do organically?

And what type of seasonality do you expect going forward?

Speaker 2

Yes, good question. I think you're kind of hitting a couple of points. I do think this is a growth business to be honest with you. And again, as you said, four months into the job, I think we have to strengthen the leadership team and we'll be doing that. I think we have to keep on investing in not just the people, but the capabilities of the company, whether it be software or integration capabilities or service capabilities.

But I do think that I don't think this quarter is an anomaly in terms of our growth opportunity. It's interesting and I just want to offer this to people on the team on the call. This is a different business. And so to try to make it look like a smart modular memory business, it doesn't work that way. And so what I mean by that is it's a design in business that will grow.

It's less about seasonality. There is some spending patterns relative to the federal business for sure. But it's less about seasonality. It's more about design in and wins and delivery schedules. And so I happen to think by the way that will get crowded out by our increasing backlog and growth opportunities.

And so but I think the business it's not a fulfillment model. It's not a design in model like the memory business. It's more of a point to point customer to vendor relationship design and sale that is a longer term sale than again per se the memory's model. So it's a long winded way of saying, I think the growth will crowd out. It's not really about seasonality as much as the lumpiness that may exist as we are targeting growth in new vectors and new scale.

But coming from where we are coming from, as you noted on your question, I don't think you're going to see that. I think you're going to see continued growth for the foreseeable future starting with Q2.

Speaker 7

Great. Appreciate it. Thanks, guys.

Speaker 0

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mark Lapatis from Jefferies. Your line is now open. Pardon me, Mark. Your line is now open.

Please check your mute button. Mark Lapatis from Jefferies, please check your mute line. Your line is now open.

Speaker 2

Operator, I think if Mark doesn't join here in a second, we can proceed to anyone left in the queue or I can start with the commentary.

Speaker 0

At this time, I'm showing no further questions. I would like to turn the call back over to Mark Adams, CEO, for closing remarks.

Speaker 2

Well, thank you again. We started fiscal twenty twenty one on a strong footing as we embark on our journey to deliver profitable growth while diversifying our business with a specialty focus. We are doing this through expanded strategic customer relationships that are aligned with growth markets such as cloud and edge computing, IoT, high performance computing, enterprise storage and specialty memory solutions. We've transformed our balance sheet for future success, and we are in the process of building out the leadership team to enable this next phase of scaling up our business. We are focused on creating new approaches to extend existing business models that will demonstrate our ability to deliver higher value solutions to our customers with a greater focus on software, services and on demand offerings.

Included in my list of top priorities is to enhance the diversity of our leadership team and across the company. In addition, we are launching a process around our environmental, social and governance business practices. I will be commenting more on these in upcoming calls. In closing, I'm very excited for our future at SDH, and I want to thank you for your interest and support of the company. Thank you.

Speaker 0

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.