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Power Integrations - Q2 2023

August 3, 2023

Transcript

Operator (participant)

Thank you for standing by. My name is Maria, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Power Integrations second quarter earnings conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, press star one again. Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Joe Shiffler, Director of Investor Relations. Mr. Shiffler, please go ahead.

Joe Shiffler (Director of Investor Relations)

Thank you, Maria. Good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for joining us. With me on the call today are Balu Balakrishnan, Chairman and CEO of Power Integrations, and Sandeep Nayyar, our Chief Financial Officer. During this call, we will refer to financial measures not calculated according to GAAP. Non-GAAP measures for the second quarter of 2023 exclude stock-based compensation expenses, amortization of acquisition-related intangible assets, and the tax effects of these items. A reconciliation of non-GAAP measures to our GAAP results is included in today's press release. Our discussion today, including the Q&A session, will include forward-looking statements denoted by words like will, would, believe, should, expect, outlook, plan, forecast, anticipate, prospects, and similar expressions that look toward future events or performance. Such statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those projected or implied.

Such risks and uncertainties are discussed in today's press release and in our most recent Form 10-K, filed with the SEC on February seventh, 2023. This call is the property of Power Integrations, and any recording or rebroadcast is expressly prohibited without the written consent of Power Integrations. I'll turn it over to Balu.

Balu Balakrishnan (Chairman and CEO)

Thanks, Joe. Good afternoon. As expected, our Q2 results mark the start of a recovery from the cyclical trough reached in the prior quarter. While the pace of the recovery reflects a soft demand environment, especially in China, we do expect meaningful revenue growth in the second half of the year compared to the first half, as inventories continue to improve and new designs go into production. We also expect significantly higher gross margins and operating margins in the second half. Most importantly, our products are winning in the market, secular trends like energy efficiency, renewable energy, and electrification are going strong, regardless of the industry cycles.

Each of these trends contributes to a lower carbon future. We are participating in all of them through our presence in renewable energy and electric transportation, energy-efficient drivers for brushless DC motors and LED lights, our leading position in GaN, and our expertise in reducing standby power waste. Low standby technology remains as relevant today as ever, thanks to the ever-increasing number of electronic devices drawing power from the grid. It remains a priority for policymakers who recognize that the cleanest energy is the energy we never use in the first place. With that in mind, EU has recently revised its Ecodesign standards for standby consumption. I'll talk more about that in a moment. Second quarter revenues were in line with our guidance at $123 million, up 16% from the prior quarter.

Industrial, the last category to enter the cyclical correction, declined slightly. All other categories showed strong sequential growth, led by consumer, which grew 35%, driven by appliances and air conditioning. Channel inventories associated with the consumer market fell significantly in Q2 and are approaching normal levels. The computer category was up more than 20% sequentially, driven by tablets, desktops, and aftermarket GaN chargers. Revenues from the communications category were up high teens sequentially, despite continued softness in the Android market. While revenues from Android customers were essentially flat from the prior quarter, channel inventories continued to be well below normal, and we have received a number of rush orders in recent months from distributors serving Chinese OEMs.

Overall, distributor inventories ended the quarter at 10 weeks, down more than a week and a half from the prior quarter and down about three and a half weeks since the beginning of the year. We expect further reductions in channel inventory in the September quarter. Lower channel inventories should enable continued sequential growth in Q3, though our expectations for September quarter do reflect a weaker near-term demand environment, especially in China. Nevertheless, we are pleased to be past the bottom of the cycle, and we look forward to a resumption of year-over-year growth in the fourth quarter. We believe we are well positioned for growth in 2024, driven not just by cyclical recovery, but also the strength of our product portfolio and an expanding pipeline of design activity.

In Q2, we achieved an all-time high in terms of potential revenue value of design opportunities created during the quarter. This reflects the increased breadth of applications we are addressing and rising dollar content in chargers and appliances, and superior performance and ease of use of our products. Our flagship InnoSwitch ICs, now in the fourth generation, continue to set the state-of-the-art in power supply technology with the highest level of integration available, including primary and secondary side control and FluxLink isolation technology, which eliminates optocouplers. InnoSwitch ICs offer a choice of silicon, GaN, or silicon carbide switches, as well as an integrated USB PD interface for mobile applications, removing the needs for a separate protocol chip.

One of our largest cell phone customers has recently taken advantage of this capability, designing out the USB PD protocol chip in a high-volume charger and upgrading to the PD version of the InnoSwitch, driving a substantial increase in our dollar content. We won a wide range of other advanced charger designs in Q2 with GaN InnoSwitch products, as well as our HiperPFS-5 GaN power factor correction ICs, including two aftermarket USB PD chargers with 140 watts of output. GaN InnoSwitch devices also won designs in a number of non-mobile applications in Q2, including air conditioners, industrial controls, medical equipment, USB wall receptacles, and surge protectors. Overall, we expect about half of our GaN revenue this year to come from non-cell phone applications.

In automotive, we are seeing strong interest in our new 900 volt GaN InnoSwitch products for power supplies in 400 volt passenger cars. In 800 volt vehicles, we are racking up with wins with our silicon carbide InnoSwitch products, which are far and away the best solution for 12-volt battery replacement and emergency power supplies in drivetrain inverters. A recent Tier One design win for emergency power supplies is now ramping with a major European car brand, and we have significant follow-on design activity at the same Tier One customer. two Chinese customers are beginning production with us in Q3, and we expect to be in production with a total of four Chinese car models by the end of this year.

In all, our design opportunity pipeline exceeds $100 million, and as we have noted in prior calls, we are converting opportunities into design wins at a much higher rate in automotive than any other end market. The transition to brushless DC motors in appliances and HVAC equipment is creating a broad set of opportunities for our BridgeSwitch motor drive products, and our strong incumbent position in appliance power supplies gives us a leg up as sockets become available. In Q2, we grew our opportunity pipeline to more than $60 million and secured our first design in at a major supplier of circulation pumps for radiant heating systems, scheduled to begin production in early 2024. BridgeSwitch ICs not only drive motors more efficiently than competing solutions, but also minimize power consumption of the motor when an appliance is not in use.

This capability takes on greater importance in light of Europe's updated Ecodesign standards, which mandate a reduction in the allowable standby power for a wide range of electronic products beginning in 2025. This is the first major update to standby regulations since 2013, and should provide a tailwind across a broad range of applications as OEMs redesign products to meet the stricter limits. Power Integrations has been the leader in reducing standby waste since we introduced our EcoSmart technology 25 years ago. EcoSmart technology all but eliminates standby consumption in power supplies, saving more than two million homes worth of electricity usage every year by our estimates. It produces these savings without any loss of functionality for the end user and without added cost or design effort on the part of our customer.

In addition to saving standby power with EcoSmart technology and driving higher active mode efficiency with GaN, we also contribute to decarbonization with our SCALE gate drivers, which drive IGBT and silicon carbide modules in high-power applications. We are on track for another year of growth in this business, driven mainly by renewables, where our gate drivers are key components of inverters for wind turbines and utility-scale solar installations. Just as important as generating renewable energy is delivering it efficiently to the grid. We have recently won a design for a high voltage DC transmission link connecting a North Sea wind farm to the mainland. This multi-year project, worth millions of dollars in revenues, is scheduled to begin production in the second half of 2024.

While electric passenger cars get most of the attention, we are equally well positioned to benefit from electrification in heavy vehicles and locomotives. We won a high-volume gate driver design in Q2 for a traction inverter at Europe's largest locomotive manufacturer, and we are seeing strong interest from customers in our SCALE EV driver boards for heavy vehicles such as trucks, buses, and construction equipment. In all, our high-power business is poised to benefit tremendously in the years ahead as the world drives towards a lower carbon future. With that, I will turn it over to Sandeep for a review of the financials.

Sandeep Nayyar (CFO)

Thanks, Balu. Good afternoon. We delivered Q2 results in line with our guidance, and while the demand environment is challenging, we expect the second half of 2023 to be much better than the first in all key respects, with significant improvements in revenues, profitability, cash flow, and inventories. Revenues for the second quarter were $123 million in the middle of our guidance range, and up 16% from the prior quarter. Revenues fell 33% compared to Q2 of last year, which was the peak quarter of the cycle. The consumer and industrial categories drove the year-over-year decline, with each down by roughly half compared to a year ago. However, the communication and computer categories have resumed growing on a year-over-year basis, with each of them up mid-single digits in Q2.

Revenue mix for the quarter was 29% industrial, 29% consumer, 28% communication, and 14% computer. Sell-through exceeded sell-in for the third consecutive quarter, resulting in a further reduction in distribution inventory. We ended the quarter at 10.1 weeks of channel inventory, compared to 11.8 weeks last quarter, and 13.5 weeks at the end of December. Non-GAAP gross margin was 51.8%, up modestly from the prior quarter as expected, driven mainly by a slight benefit from the more favorable dollar-yen exchange rate that began in the second half of last year and is now beginning to affect our P&L. I expect a bigger benefit from the yen in the second half, as well as a more favorable end market mix, and a benefit from higher back-end production volumes as we convert more wafers into finished goods.

As indicated in our press release, this should drive our Non-GAAP gross margin to around 54% in the September quarter, with a further increase to come in the fourth quarter. Non-GAAP operating expenses for the quarter were $43.9 million, up sequentially as expected, due mainly to annual salary increases, which took effect around the start of the quarter. We came in below our guidance on OpEx as we slowed the pace of headcount additions and deferred some discretionary spending. Non-GAAP operating margin for the quarter was 16.1%, and Non-GAAP earnings were $0.36 per diluted share. Cash flow from operations for the quarter was $6.2 million, reflecting unfavorable working capital flows, which should reverse over the next several quarters. Inventory dollars on the balance sheet peaked in the June quarter and should begin declining in Q3.

March was the peak in terms of inventory days, and we ended Q2 at 226 days, down 22 days from the prior quarter. Uses of cash during the quarter included $3 million for CapEx, $11 million for dividends, and $4 million for share repurchases. We bought back 57,000 shares during the quarter at an average price of about $75 per share. Turning to the outlook, we expect revenues for the third quarter to be $130 million, ±$5 million. Sell-through should once again be higher than reported revenues as channel inventories continue to fall. As noted earlier, I expect non-GAAP gross margin to be around 54%.

Non-GAAP operating expenses for the third quarter should be about $43.5 million, down slightly from Q2 as we continue to manage headcount growth and discretionary spending in light of the soft demand environment. Finally, I expect non-GAAP effective tax rate for the third quarter and the year to be between 7% and 8%. Now, operator, let's begin the Q&A.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. At this time, I would like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press star, then the number 1 on your telephone keypad. We will pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from Mr. Christopher Rolland with Susquehanna. Please go ahead.

Christopher Rolland (Senior Equity Analyst of Semiconductors)

Hey, guys. Thanks for the question. I guess looking forward in terms of your segments here, perhaps you can give us some clues as to the better and worse performers. Sounds like industrial's dragging a little bit here. Maybe even force rank those if you could, for us. Thanks.

Sandeep Nayyar (CFO)

Basically, if you look at it, if you look at the beginning of the year, what we had talked about was that the communication and computer segment are going to do well, and the biggest drag this year would be in the consumer and the industrial segment, especially the consumer segment. If you remember, we had talked about during COVID, there was a significant amount of pull-in of demand, and that is getting normalized, and that was reflected in the channel inventories. Now, the channel inventories have normalized in the consumer segment and are actually below in the communication, while as industrial, you know, is still higher, but that's where I think it's a timing issue.

As we move in the second half, we do expect industrial to come back. We are seeing that even in appliances, because, you know, in the third quarter, it's typically the where the air conditioning comes down. There were some demand which we were expecting, you know, like from our Korean customer, which has got pushed into Q4. I think as the year goes by, the mix is gonna get more favorable, which is reflected in our margins, along with the yen benefit and the higher volume benefit coming from the revenue growth in the second half.

Christopher Rolland (Senior Equity Analyst of Semiconductors)

Great. Thank you, Sandeep. You talked about higher gross margins in the second half. You just alluded to the yen, but I think you called out yen, rising production volumes, and a more favorable end mix. Maybe talk about gross margin progression through the year, how we might end the year, and then what we would attribute to each of those three factors. Thanks.

Sandeep Nayyar (CFO)

Yeah. If, if you look at it, we had talked about it, that the first half, as you know, in Q1, we were around 51.5. We inched up a bit to 51.8 in Q2. If you remember, we talked about how the yen had moved in the second half of last year, it takes talk typically about 6 months to move into our P&L. Now with the inventory levels, it, it's taking a little longer, about 9 months. In Q3, we will see our gross margin non-GAAP at around 4.54%, then it'll inch up from there. As I have talked about in the past, you know, we are going to be in our model, more towards the higher end of our model.

I think as the revenue starts coming back in the second half, it is more reflective of what I have discussed. I think the benefit in both those quarters come from mix, volumes, and the yen benefit.

Christopher Rolland (Senior Equity Analyst of Semiconductors)

Yeah. Thanks so much, guys.

Operator (participant)

Your next question comes from Mr. Ross Seymore from Deutsche Bank. Please, go ahead.

Ross Seymore (Managing Director)

Hi, guys. Thanks for ask a question. Just wondering, you know, you guys have done a great job on the channel inventory and being very clear on that. It seems like coming out the other side, the, the rub to the situation is that true end demand is just weaker than you might have otherwise hoped. You still express the confidence in the second half being bigger and the fourth quarter being up year-over-year. Any sort of even just directional color on the magnitude to the fourth quarter? Because, you know, the third quarter is, is up. You set the bottom, but it's not up quite as much as you might have hoped earlier this year.

Balu Balakrishnan (Chairman and CEO)

Yeah, well, you-- hi, Ross, this is Balu. If you look at the la- last 10 or 12 years, the seasonality for the Q4 is slightly down, about 2% down. This year, because of the inventory depletion, and hopefully some of the areas coming back, we think to the best we can estimate, it'll be an incrementally higher revenue quarter, compared to Q3. What we don't know is exactly how much higher it's going to be, because it will really depend upon whether the demand comes back on a number of these end markets, by the end of this year, whether some of it will come into Q4. We feel comfortable that it's going to be a increase from Q3 to Q4, but we don't know by how much.

Ross Seymore (Managing Director)

Got you. That seems fair. You know, well, I know visibility is limited. To the extent you guys have, you know, that over a $100 billion dollar pipeline or million, excuse me, dollar pipeline, you have a ton of different design wins, diversifying within GaN and a number of different end markets in general. If we talk just about the stuff you can control for the company's specific design wins that you think, generally speaking, will layer in next year, how would you look at the puts and takes? Macro might be a negative or an uncertainty, but for the stuff you can control, walk us through what those incremental drivers could be for 2024.

Balu Balakrishnan (Chairman and CEO)

Well, 2024, I am optimistic that we'll have a strong growth quarter. Now, this is based on our just our previous experience, that whenever we come out of a, you know, down cycle, we actually do better than, you know, the industry because of the share gains we have during the downturn. We expect all markets to grow next year. If you look at it this year, a lot of the revenue growth we are seeing in Q3 and in Q2 and Q3 are coming from just inventory depletion, the inventory replenishment, I should say. The real demand is still very weak, but it has to turn around at some point. Now, whether it happens in Q4 or Q1, I don't know. The magnitude of growth next year will depend upon when that turnaround happens.

Let's say it happens, you know, by the end of this year. You know, Q4 could be a pretty strong growth year, you know, just based on our history and based on the fact that we have significant design wins in consumer, in industrial, in automotive. Automotive will not have a big impact next year, but it's, it'll have a, you know, incremental increase, and computers. Even in cell phones, we are gaining, you know, ASP, the market itself is not growing, but we are gaining ASP increase because of higher level of integration, as we just mentioned about the, you know, PD design win.

Sandeep Nayyar (CFO)

Ross, the other thing, as we had talked about, is if you really look at it, the pull in of demand during COVID, and if you remember, we talked about that, how that is going to get adjusted if you took a year and the anniversary was at the end of this Q2, which has an impact on the full years, if you really look at that segment. The other area is that we are continuing to have content share gain in communication, as Balu had alluded in when he was talking about it. The high power business continues to do well. We really believe if you look at an analogy, what happened back in 2018 and before, and then the three years that came after, we came back and came back much stronger than the market. Considering, depending on when this thing turns.

.Typically, if you look at historically, when it turns, we come back and we do much better. That's why the hope for 2024, the issue is, when does the ramp? Is it Q4, Q1? That's the part that I think it will be a timing issue.

Ross Seymore (Managing Director)

Got it. Thank you.

Balu Balakrishnan (Chairman and CEO)

Thanks, Josh.

Operator (participant)

Our next call is Mr. David Williams from The Benchmark Company. Please go ahead.

David Williams (Equity Research Analyst of Semiconductors)

Thanks. Good afternoon, gentlemen, and thanks for taking my question. I guess, Sandeep, you had talked last quarter just about the, the strength of the second half and had expected more replenishment and talked about some expedited orders as well. Just kind of curious, if you could give some color on, on maybe what changed dramatically versus where it softened around the edges? Just any color, I guess, on the, the magnitude of, of what you might have changed during the quarter?

Balu Balakrishnan (Chairman and CEO)

Hi, David, this is Balu. Let me take this question. You know, last quarter, when we talked at the earnings call, we declared Q1 was the bottom, and second half should be significantly better than first half. But the slope of the recovery will depend on the demand. All of that is still true, but what has changed is our short-term view of the demand environment, and that has significantly weakened over the last six to eight weeks. Now, a lot of people in the last quarter were thinking about V-shaped recovery, and we believed in that based on strong bookings we had in March, April, and May. Then the orders fell off the cliff in June. June was, you know, very low in orders.

You know, I was actually in China visiting customers, and it was clear they were very pessimistic, and the reason being, they thought after the COVID restrictions were lifted, the demand would come back strongly, and that's why they placed the orders, not just in Q2, but also Q3 and Q4. That's what gave us the confidence that second half will be much stronger. What really happened was that the demand never came back, and they were very pessimistic for in, in terms of demand, not only for local demand, but also for a demand of a, an export demand, which is a little bit confusing because export demand should be better than local demand.

We truly believe China had a serious, genuinely serious problem in terms of demand. I believe, you know, Europe is better and U.S. is actually much better than that. I think the Chinese customers have become very pessimistic because of what they see that is going on in China. In some sense, they're probably erring on the side of too much caution, and they really don't want to keep any inventory. I mean, that's very evident in cell phones. You know, their inventory is way below normal, but they still won't buy parts until they need them, and when they need them, it's always a rush order.

That's kind of the mentality in China, and I think they might have gotten too cautious, and it is possible that this demand issue is only delayed by maybe a quarter or 2. It's hard to tell. This is more of the psychology of customers that's causing this, you know, short-term weakness. I am, you know, crossing my fingers and hoping that this demand will restart hopefully in Q4 of this year, which will really bode well for 2024. Because eventually the demand has to come back, right? Even though there was a lot of pull-in during COVID times, you know, it's, it's more than one year now, and it has to come back. It's just a question of time and the.

You know, fundamentally, we are in a very, very good position. We are very confident when the demand comes back, we will outperform the market. In terms of Q3 guidance, you know, based on what backlog we have, we will need roughly about 30% turns to meet the midpoint of our guidance. We are very comfortable with that because July bookings have improved. Actually, they have significantly improved from June. Still it's below March and March through May. It's better than June. More important, we have had a very strong turns business. That again, tells me people are, you know, trying to minimize inventory and order parts only when they need them.

They have that luxury because our lead times are so low, they're, they're able to get the parts when they need them. That makes the visibility of Q4 not as clear, but as I said, personally, I'm, I'm optimistic.

David Williams (Equity Research Analyst of Semiconductors)

Great. A lot of really good color there. Thank you for that. Then maybe, just on the automotive side, I know that, that revenue is still some time out, but any updates there that you'd like to share?

Balu Balakrishnan (Chairman and CEO)

As I said in my script, the level of interest in our products is just extraordinary. I mean, you know, we have $100 million or so plus in identified opportunities, but more interesting is how many of those we are able to convert to real design wins. The conversion rate is at least twice as much as the rest of the market. So that gives us confidence that, you know, automotive is gonna be a very, very attractive business for us, even though it's a couple of years away in terms of significant ramp. We are feeling better every day.

We are engaged with a large number of big OEMs that all of you would recognize, and another large number of Tier One that supply to these OEMs. The other thing we're finding is the number of sockets that we fit into keeps increasing every time we talk to the customer. In some cases, the fact that we can offer such high integration and efficiency actually changes the architecture that they wanna use. You know, for example, replacement of 12-volt batteries is really driven by the fact that we can offer a very efficient, you know, very reliable power supply directly from the main battery voltage, whether it's 400, 800 volts, and totally eliminate the 12-volt supply, the 12-volt battery.

David Williams (Equity Research Analyst of Semiconductors)

Great. Thanks again, certainly appreciate the, the color.

Balu Balakrishnan (Chairman and CEO)

You're welcome.

Operator (participant)

As a reminder, in order to ask a question, press star, then the one on your telephone keypad. Our next call, our next Our next question is from Mr. Tore Svanberg Stifel. Please go ahead.

Tore Svanberg (Managing Director)

Yes. Yes, thank you. That's Stifel. Sandeep, do you have-- What would you expect the channel inventory to be at in the September quarter? I think this quarter was just about 10 weeks. I know your target is eight to nine, so, you know, what, what do you think it will come in at in the September quarter?

Sandeep Nayyar (CFO)

Yeah, I, I think it should come around the nine. I'll tell you, you know, I had expected this quarter, the sell-through to exceed sell-in by about, you know, 12-15, and it came in.

Tore Svanberg (Managing Director)

Mm-hmm.

Sandeep Nayyar (CFO)

At 10, and that's why you see that as being reflected in my, our Q3 guidance. For the next quarter, I do expect about $5 million-$10 million sell-through to be higher than sell-in, and that should enable the inventory to come to the nine, somewhere around nine.

Tore Svanberg (Managing Director)

Got it.

Sandeep Nayyar (CFO)

Give and take.

Tore Svanberg (Managing Director)

Got it. Perfect. Balu, sounds like, BridgeSwitch is really starting to take off now, and I was just wondering, is the gross margin higher for BridgeSwitch, or is it still in line with the corporate average? 'Cause I, I guess eventually this could potentially be, like, 10% of your revenues, right?

Balu Balakrishnan (Chairman and CEO)

Absolutely. I mean, the BridgeSwitch is, could be that level, and automotive could be in the similar level. Remember, they are similar in terms of SAM. They're about $1 billion in SAM each. We're very optimistic about both of them. In terms of, you know, design wins, we have a lot of design wins, but thanks to demand being low, we are not seeing the ramp as fast as we originally anticipated. Nevertheless, we expect this year, BridgeSwitch will be in the mid-single digit millions, but next year it could have a very strong growth, simply because many of these designs will go into production by that time. As far as gross margin, again, it's, it's consistent with our, you know, overall gross margin for various markets.

Tore Svanberg (Managing Director)

Perfect. My last question is, you, you mentioned the computing category was up because of a third or, like, an accessory charger, I, I guess, I'm just starting to feel confused, right? What... I don't know anymore what, you know, what is a PC adapter versus a cell phone adapter, especially as we move to PD. How, how do you classify what's, you know, what should be in a communications accessory adapter versus in a computing accessory adapter?

Balu Balakrishnan (Chairman and CEO)

That's an excellent question. Let me talk about various concepts. One of the areas we have done, done very well in, computers is tablets. You know, that's grown very nicely for us. In terms of aftermarket chargers, we classify them as computer if it is above a certain power level.

Tore Svanberg (Managing Director)

Twenty.

Balu Balakrishnan (Chairman and CEO)

It's, I think, about 45 watts or so.

Plus multi-port.

If it is multi-port, we always classify it as a notebook adapter simply because usually it's a very high power, and it can charge notebooks on one port and cell phones on the other port. We, we have to pick a power. We pick the power where we said, "Okay, if it's below that, it's definitely cell phones. If it is above that, you know, it's, it's, notebooks." That's how we classify it. The growth there came from aftermarket GaN chargers, primarily. And we also had a strong quarter on the, in the, on the desktop power supply, standby power supplies for that. But we are actually making significant inroads in terms of design activity for notebooks.

That should help us grow even further, because notebooks, we still have a relatively low %, share, and that should allow us to grow computers over time.

Tore Svanberg (Managing Director)

Perfect. Thanks for clarifying that. Thank you.

Balu Balakrishnan (Chairman and CEO)

Thanks, Tore.

Operator (participant)

I will now turn the call back over to Mr. Joe Shiffler, Director of Investor Relations, for closing remarks.

Joe Shiffler (Director of Investor Relations)

Okay. Thanks everyone for listening. We'll leave it there. There will be a replay of this call available on our website, which is investors.power.com. Thanks again for listening on this busy earnings afternoon, have a good afternoon.

Operator (participant)

Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.