Vicor - Q1 2024
April 23, 2024
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Good day, everyone, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Q1 2024 Vicor Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during that session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear a message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw this question, simply press star one one again. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference to Jim Schmidt, Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.
James Schmidt (CFO)
Thank you. Good afternoon, and welcome to Vicor Corporation's earnings call for the first quarter ended March 31, 2024. I'm Jim Schmidt, Chief Financial Officer, and I am in Andover with Phil Davies, Vice President, Global Sales and Marketing. Patrizio Vinciarelli, Chief Executive Officer, is joining the call from Washington, D.C., ahead of the upcoming patent infringement trial before the International Trade Commission. After the markets closed today, we issued a press release summarizing our financial results for the three months ending March 31. This press release has been posted on the investor relations page of our website, www.vicorpower.com. We also filed a Form 8-K today related to the issuance of this press release. I remind listeners, this conference call is being recorded and is the copyrighted property of Vicor Corporation.
I also remind you, various remarks we make during this call may constitute forward-looking statements for purposes of the safe harbor provisions under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Except for historical information contained in this call, the matters discussed on this call, including any statements regarding current and planned products, current and potential customers, potential market opportunities, expected events and announcements, and our capacity expansion, as well as management's expectations for sales growth, spending, and profitability, are forward-looking statements involving risk and uncertainties. In light of these risks and uncertainties, we can offer no assurance that any forward-looking statement will, in fact, prove to be correct. Actual results may differ materially from those explicitly set forth in or implied by any of our remarks today.
The risk and uncertainties we face are discussed in Item 1A of our 2023 Form 10-K, which we filed with the SEC on February 28, 2024. This document is available via the EDGAR system on the SEC's website. Please note, the information provided during this conference call is accurate only as of today, Tuesday, April 23, 2024. Vicor undertakes no obligation to update any statements, including forward-looking statements, made during this call, and you should not rely upon such statements after the conclusion of this call. A webcast replay of today's call will be available shortly on the investor relations page of our website. I'll now turn to a review of our Q1 financial performance, after which Phil will review recent market developments, and Patrizio, Phil, and I will take your questions.
In my remarks, I will focus mostly on the sequential quarterly change for P&L and balance sheet items, as well as year-over-year changes, and refer you to our press release or our upcoming Form 10-Q for additional information. As stated in today's press release, Vicor recorded total revenue for the first quarter of $83.9 million, down 9.5% from the fourth quarter total of $92.7 million, and down 14.3% from the first quarter 2023 total of $97.8 million. Brick Products revenue declined 11.7% sequentially, while Advanced Products revenue declined 7.3% from the fourth quarter. Shipments to stocking distributors increased 21.8% sequentially. Exports for the first quarter decreased sequentially as a percentage of total revenue to approximately 42.6% from the prior quarter's 56.5%.
For Q1, Advanced Products share of total revenue increased to 51.6%, compared to 50.4% for the fourth quarter, with Brick Products share correspondingly decreasing to 48.4% of total revenue. Turning to Q1 gross margin, we recorded a consolidated gross profit margin of 53.8%, increasing approximately 2.7% from the prior quarter. A number of factors contributed to the sequential increase in gross margin percentage, including increased royalty income, improved sales mix, reductions in tariff spending, and lower freight costs. I'll now turn to Q1 operating expenses. Total operating expenses increased 10.1% from the fourth quarter, or $4 million, with the increase being primarily due to legal expenses incurred ahead of trial in our patent infringement case before the ITC.
The amounts of total equity-based compensation expense for Q1 including goods, SG&A, and R&D was $754,000, $1,919,000, and $1,107,000, respectively, totaling approximately $3.8 million. For Q1, we recorded operating income of $1.1 million, representing an operating margin of 1.2%. Turning to income taxes, we recorded a tax provision for Q1 of approximately $1.2 million, representing an effective tax rate for the quarter of 31.3%. Net income for Q1 totaled $2.6 million. GAAP diluted earnings per share was $0.06 based on a fully diluted share count of 45,031,000 shares. Turning to our cash flow and balance sheet, cash and cash equivalents totaled $239.2 million at Q1.
Accounts receivable net of reserves totaled $57.6 million at quarter end, with DSOs for trade receivables at 47 days. Inventories net of reserves increased 5.4 sequentially to $112.3 million. Annualized inventory turns decreased sequentially to 1.71. Operating cash flow totaled approximately $2.7 million for the quarter. Capital expenditures for Q1 totaled $7.4 million. We ended the quarter with a construction in progress balance, primarily for manufacturing equipment of approximately $13.6 million, and with approximately $17.8 million remaining to be spent. I'll now address bookings and backlog. Q1 book-to-bill came in below 1, and with 1-year backlog decreasing 6.5% from the prior quarter, closing at $150.3 million. As stated in our earnings call in February 2024 is a year of uncertainty and opportunity.
As of today, the quarterly and annual outcome, in terms of top line and bottom line, remains subject to a wide range of scenarios. Given the wide range of possible outcomes, we're unable to provide quarterly guidance until we are further along resolving uncertainties and capitalizing on opportunities. With that, Phil will provide an overview of recent market developments, and then Patrizio, Phil, and I will take your questions. I ask that you limit yourself to one question and a related follow-up, so that we can respond to as many of you as we can in the limited time available. If you have more than one topic to address, please get back in the queue. Phil?
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
Thank you, Jim. My remarks this quarter will build on Patrizio's comments in the press release that we issued earlier today. As a reminder, Patrizio commented, "As we confront challenges and pursue opportunities, 2024 will be seen as the year in which our product strategy, selective licensing of intellectual property, and clarity of purpose secured Vicor's future growth and profitability." So let's look at this from the point of view of our four business units and the growth opportunities each of them has with our top 100 customers. The current base of our business lies with the Industrial Business Unit and the Aerospace and Defense Business Unit. This year, we will release to production over 20 new high power density products that leverage our new chip fab capabilities. These products utilize advances in our topologies, control systems, components, and packaging to raise the bar on power density and performance.
From high power regulated and fixed ratio DC/DC converters to new AC to DC products aimed at the aerospace industry, to a new family of radiation-tolerant, factorized power products for both LEO and MEO satellite constellation deployments. Customers from our top 100 are now designing advanced power systems for exciting new product launches that leverage electrification and autonomy in their systems. As part of our industrial and aerospace and defense strategies, we have also consolidated our distribution channel partners to large global distributors, who have the customer base, the reach, and the market status needed to achieve our broad market growth goals. Our global channel partners, Arrow and Avnet, are now placing a higher focus on power conversion and power management as a strategic business and a major growth driver, due to the electrification trends in broad industrial and transportation markets.
They clearly recognize the advantages and differentiation that our high-density power modules bring to their customer base. This quarter, we concluded a series of meetings with both channel partners, jointly laying out clear strategies and targets for growth by focusing on specific vertical markets with a clear set of identified target customers globally, that map to the numerous new products that we will launch in 2024. Technology licensing will become an expanding segment of our business portfolio, and an important parallel path to our product revenues across our four business units. Licensing will enable more rapid scaling of our automotive market opportunity as we expand our relationships with OEMs and automotive Tier One suppliers.
The automotive market, in particular, is aggressively looking for new technologies for both 48-volt zonal architectures, onboard charging, and 800- to 48-volt powertrain conversion systems, which deliver high power density and low weight for electric vehicles. OEM technology licensing partnerships are a way to monetize and rapidly scale this business. Our HPC customer engagements continue to expand with a set of customers with target production dates now for new, innovative, and higher performance AI processors that will take full advantage of our Generation Five vertical power delivery chipset. VPD is very strategic in achieving the power delivery, low power losses, and performance required. Electrical and thermal models representing the Gen Five chips have now been delivered to leading customers, enabling their system simulations at processor currents up to 2,000 amps.
... We are on track to deliver evaluation systems and power module samples in Q2 and Q3 respectively. Q2 will be very busy for our automotive business unit, as we host, at the current count, six customers at our new facility in Andover, Massachusetts. New collaborations and design-ins continue, with significant new engagements with OEMs and tier ones in the Asia Pacific region, where investments in electric vehicles and 48-volt zonal architectures are leading the rest of the world. The team had a very successful WCX in Detroit once again this year, with four technology papers that showcased our power module-based power system value propositions for 800-volt and 48-volt powertrains. The new 48-volt zonal architecture will provide both product and OEM licensing revenue opportunities. Thank you, and with that, we will now take your questions.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. As a reminder, press star one one to get in the queue and wait for your name to be announced. To remove your question, simply press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. One moment for our first question. It comes from the line of Quinn Bolton with Needham & Company. Please proceed.
Quinn Bolton (Analyst)
Hey, guys. Was wondering if you could start with, I think the ITC case is gonna be heard next week, but was hoping you could give us just sort of an update on the ITC schedule, what you expect to happen next week, and then, you know, what would you expect to sort of follow over the summer until the expected decision date, which I believe is in early October. But anything you could sort of provide us on the, you know, what the next key milestones in the ITC case are, would be helpful.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
So to your point, the proceedings remain on schedule. There's going to be a trial next week, and a decision by the administrative law judge in September with a deadline of early October. We look forward to an outcome that we expect to be favorable to Vicor. We are on the right side of the issues, and our opponents are on the wrong side of the issues, and that's clear or should be clear to everybody. But again, we're going to trial prepared, confident of a positive outcome.
Quinn Bolton (Analyst)
Great. And then, you'd mentioned both in the press release and the prepared script, you know, that royalty revenue has continued to increase in the March quarter. Just wondering if you might be able to quantify that. How much of an uptick did you see in March? And then, you know, would you expect that royalty line to continue to grow through the remaining quarters of 2024?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
So generally, we expect the royalty contribution to our revenues and bottom line to continue to expand, as far as we can see. And there may be a step up events that occur at certain points in time, but to be clear, we're taking a very long-term view with respect to the opportunity, and in approaching it with the right balance in terms of Vicor's interest, as well as the interests of OEMs that you know elect to take a license as opposed to potentially being confronted with litigation situations following exclusion order.
Quinn Bolton (Analyst)
Got it. I'll go back in the queue. Thank you.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. One moment for our next question, please. It comes from the line of Richard Shannon with Craig-Hallum. Please proceed.
Richard Shannon (Analyst)
Well, hi, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. I guess I've got a couple of interlocking questions on your 5G second gen VPD product here. I guess I wanted to get a sense of kind of the milestones that we should expect to see over the next coming quarters towards, you know, getting bookings and eventual revenues here. I think in the past, you've talked about models and tool delivery, which I think I heard some detail that I missed, some of that. I think last quarter you talked about some maybe some more equipment needing to be delivered to support that. And then anything about manufacturing experience required for, you know, essentially the larger customers to have confidence in the ramp here?
If you could kind of detail that, what we should be looking for this year, that'd be great, please?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Sure. So let's start with the revenue opportunity. I think as we made clear in prior calls, 5G is not a 2024 revenue opportunity. It's a revenue opportunity starting in 2025. This is a year of delivery of solutions to initial key customers, and we're far along, particularly with one, and before too long with more. So I will look again at 2024 as bringing this development effort to fruition, you know, setting the stage with some leading customers before we get into production volumes next year.
Richard Shannon (Analyst)
Okay, let me follow up and kind of looking at this opportunity a different way, and certainly understanding that, that as you said last quarter, that this is not the year for 5G revenues at all here. But I guess, do you expect to be able to intersect with the first generation of three-nanometer accelerators, CPUs, GPUs, whatever is out there, to be ready by then? Or is that something you, we might be lagging the leading, leading edge there?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
I would say that we have highest attention, both premised on our capability, the much higher current density, the other performance attributes of our VPD solution, which is what we call a second generation VPD, distinct from the first generation by itself pioneered and patented, and which is being practiced by competitors with a great deal of difficulty, from the performance perspective, from the reliability perspective, and last but not least, from the intellectual property perspective.
So we believe that customers with the visibility to all the issues, and we're engaged with some of them, understand that to get to reliable, scalable, and not challenged by intellectual property issues, Vicor is the source, and this, at this point in time, no other source for a VPD system that works well, that is scalable, and that is not devoid of intellectual property challenges.
Richard Shannon (Analyst)
Okay, fair enough. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. One moment for our next question, please. All right, one moment. It comes from the line of John Tanwanteng with CJS Securities. Please proceed.
John Tanwanteng (Analyst)
Hi, good afternoon, and thank you for taking my questions. I was wondering if you could give us an update on the potential for lateral vertical product shipping, if that might contribute to 2024, 2025, and if there's active programs in the pipeline for that.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
I'm sorry, I missed the potential for which, if you could repeat?
John Tanwanteng (Analyst)
Lateral vertical products, so the in-between product.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Yes. So, I think as it turns out, the potential is limited. I will let Phil fill in with more color on this with a global view, because the answer depends on which particular end market we're looking for. Phil?
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
Yeah. So, we do have, still have engagement with customers on lateral vertical designs. We've also seen lateral vertical be used with some reference designs for the network communications market for the, you know, the Broadcom, Marvell type of processors from some of the contract manufacturers in Asia. So there could still be some revenues on lateral vertical at towards the end of this year, early next year. So that, that's still a potential for us.
John Tanwanteng (Analyst)
Got it. Thank you. And then, so you mentioned something about licensing and enabling more rapid scaling in automotive. Are you allowing your partners there to produce your designs? Or is it something more similar to the current status quo, where you are allowing people to use your IP, you know, from different vendors? It's like how it's happening in HPC markets?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
So we are open to the opportunity for selective licensing in, among others, the automotive market, and there's been some expression of interest with respect to that. It's predicated on the distinct attributes of our solutions, and I'm referring to solutions involving 400 volts, with 100-volt, you know, bus conversion, as well as, you know, other solutions, including 48-volt zonal architecture, which is once again, something that Vicor conceived of 10 years ago, and with respect to which we have intellectual property. So we have a number of opportunities in the automotive area, in particular. There are some that are now beginning to develop, also related to AC-DC.
I do expect that over time, some of these opportunities may turn into licensing deals.
John Tanwanteng (Analyst)
Okay, great. Thank you. And then finally, could you, Jim, could you break out the legal expense in the quarter and what you expect over the next two or three as the ITC case wraps up?
James Schmidt (CFO)
Like we said on the, in prepared remarks, legal expense was the primary driver of the $4 million incremental OpEx. I would stop short of trying to predict the future on that, John. And I might let Patrizio comment as well, because he's obviously been very close to all of it.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Yeah. So to Jim's point, last quarter, there was a significant step up primarily relating to, you know, preparations for the upcoming trial next week. We are not in a position to forecast the evolution of legal expenses. You know, frankly, they could keep stepping up, they could level off, or they could come down, depending on a variety of scenarios. So, I think, if you wanted to pick one among those three scenarios, keeping it pretty much level would be probably the middle of the road alternative, but it could step up again because of additional actions we might take.
John Tanwanteng (Analyst)
Understood. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. One moment for our next question, please. It comes from the line of Don McKenna of DB McKenna & Company. Please proceed.
Donald McKenna (Analyst)
Thank you. Patrizio, you know, the comments that on future sales opportunities, again, are pretty, pretty positive. And with the exception of last quarter, the outlook has always been quite positive. And if you go back and read the transcripts, it's obvious that the potential markets that you envisioned and the superior products that you're offering just haven't produced the results you would hope for. And I'm wondering what you've learned from, you know, that failure to capture the potential, and what changes you've made in your approach to improve the sales and profitability?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
So as suggested, in my quotes, we believe we are executing well, with a clear vision of what challenges and opportunities are. And frankly, I think there's a big part of the answer to your question that has to do with the vagaries of what has been going on, with certain leading OEMs, where their priorities have taken them in terms of product development.
And to keep it at a very high and general level, I would say that from our visibility, our unique perspective with respect to the evolution of power system requirements, some of the choices that have been made with certain OEMs are going to get those OEMs into a real bind, both in terms of the performance of their platforms, and more importantly, their competitive standing relative to other companies that are aspiring to capture market share, and they see the opportunity of leveraging a superior power system technology from Vicor. So, I guess I'm not apologetic with respect to, to how we got to where we are. We don't control our destiny in every respect.
Obviously, we make ethereal decisions with respect to strategy and how we're going to make the most of the opportunity, both in terms of fab, our 5G technology, and importantly, our intellectual property. And I would say that quite aside with how we got to where we are, and I think we have tremendous opportunity. It takes perseverance, clarity of vision, persistence. We have all those traits, and we expect to, before too long, capitalize on the opportunity.
Donald McKenna (Analyst)
Yeah, and I realize it's very difficult for you to try to, you know, make any projections on the short term. Can you give us some kind of a feel for where you would expect revenues as a percentage increase over current, let's say, three years down the road? What would you be satisfied with?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
I don't know that I can honestly give you numbers or general expectations without substantial risk in either direction. I think I can say that we do expect to fill our fab. As we know, the fab has got $1 billion worth of capacity and maybe a little more than that. We're going to be able to fill that fab with opportunities relating to, you know, 5G in AI in the center type applications as well as other applications. And generally speaking, to Phil's earlier point, our top 100 customers in diversified several markets.
Donald McKenna (Analyst)
And w-
Would you expect to fill that fab in the next three years?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
I do expect that that will happen. I don't know if Phil wants to add some color to this.
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
No, I, I would just say that that's the objective, is to, is to achieve that, and to do it with the broad-based market, with our distribution channel on the, on the broad-based level, but also the top 100 focus. And we're, we're making great progress across the four BUs with the top 100. And, the new products that we're introducing this year, not just the, the Gen Five, but new high-power front end, products are, are, are getting designed into these top 100 customers that we're now focused on. So I, I'm confident that we'll, we'll, we'll fill the fab. And, I think that, you know, some exciting times are, are ahead of us.
Donald McKenna (Analyst)
All right, great. Thanks, guys.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. One moment for our next question, please.... It comes from the line of Alan Hicks with Ainsley Capital. Please proceed.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Yeah, good afternoon. I think I heard you say 48% on BBU and 50% on advanced products. Is that—was that correct?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
I'm sorry, could you repeat that? I'm a little bit handicapped here with my audio today.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Oh, on the percentage of revenues, advanced products, I think, were a little over 50%, and BBU was a little over 48%. Was that correct?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
That's correct. For the first quarter, yeah, the mix between advanced products and brick products changed.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Okay, so could we assume that royalties were that other 2%?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
I'm sorry, the royalties what?
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
The differential. So it added up to 98%, roughly, so would the differential be roughly 2%?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
I wouldn't make that assumption. I don't know that I can give you a quantitative measure here. I know as part of our reporting, and maybe Jim can comment on that. He can point you to where you can find additional information.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Okay.
James Schmidt (CFO)
Yeah, Alan, the better way to think about it is we said 51.6% advanced, 48.4 brick, which is 100%. And, you know, the, the royalty, the royalty income is associated with advanced products.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Okay. So but did it last quarter, it was $7 million, I believe. Did it grow significantly from last quarter?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
It grew.
James Schmidt (CFO)
It did grow. It did. And, yeah, it did grow. It stepped up substantially from last quarter.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Okay. And are the gross margins also improving on the factory?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
So-
James Schmidt (CFO)
Sorry, go ahead, Patrizio.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Okay, well, so needless to say, capacity utilization in the factory is an issue, was an issue as the last quarter, still going to be an issue this quarter. And the fact that the revenues, specifically our revenues, took a step down last quarter, that didn't help with respect to margins. But all the factors that Jim pointed to in his prepared remarks, including beyond licensing income, reduction in tariffs, changing mix, favorable mix, this contributed to a significant improvement in total gross margins. And that's the trend line that we are satisfied with. I think we represented in the past that we have a goal to achieve substantially higher margins.
And that goal is supported by the strategy that we're implementing and executing with the mix of further advances with respect to our product capabilities, as well as the complementary element of, in effect, monetizing some of the value or IP through selective licensing.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Mm-hmm. So I think those gross margins were easily the best you've ever had, if I think it was 53.6%?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
I think gross margins for the quarter, Jim, correct me if I'm wrong, but 53 and change, right?
James Schmidt (CFO)
Yeah. So I can comment on that, Alan, actually. So 53.8 was the result last quarter, and that was the highest for sure since I've been at Vicor.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Mm-hmm. Yeah, I've got going back over 20 years, so that's the highest I've ever seen. Do you expect that to continue to grow the rest of the year, based on royalty increases?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Again, we're not going to be making detailed quarterly predictions in a year in which so much could happen. So, I think we're just going to have to—the ones among us that are invested in Vicor for the long term are going to look at this. I think one of the analysts asked a question in the last call about 2024 being, quote, unquote, "the transition year." I think at the time, I didn't embrace that characterization. I think in hindsight, it is probably the better way of looking at it. This is a year of transition in which, in effect, a lot of things are going to change and with respect for the better.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Mm-hmm. Okay, well, I was at the NVIDIA conference, I think it was February or last month, and I stopped by the Delta booths, and they showed—I asked about the NBM product, and they showed it to me and said: "We're not infringing because we have a different process." I don't know. That's all they said, and they kind of shut up. But can you comment on that, or?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Yeah. The letter BNS come to mind. The fact is that their copycat product infringes three of our patents, and thus far, the proceedings corroborated that is the case. So let's wait and see, you know, what happens with what I expect to be an exclusion order against them.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Okay. And just a quick question on that. There was a product, I think it was showed at the WCX, that had DC-DC converter, 150,000 watts, I think. Is that for charging stations?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Phil, could you answer that?
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
Yeah, that was the PSU, Patrizio, the demo of the five paralleled MBMs in the PSU, the 150 kW onboard 800-400 Volt charger.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Mm-hmm.
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
That, that was on demo. Well, we had it in a case, not powered up, at WCX.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Mm-hmm. But is the application for charging stations?
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
No, that's an-
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
That's an application for fast charging, and it's an application where we have a major weight advantage, as well as a major efficiency advantage. So that system comprising, at the moment, five of our modules, and in fact, we'll be able to get to the 150 kW capability with a reduced number of four. You know, that system supports a peak efficiency of over 99%, and it has, you know, astronomical power density, meaning its volume, measured in liters, and weight, measured in kilograms, is a small fraction of any competitive unit.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
So that would go both in the car and the charging station?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
No, this is a device that certain automakers are going to incorporate within the vehicle in order to facilitate, you know, flexible charging.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Okay. But how far away are you from design wins there?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
We have design wins with two smaller automakers.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Okay. And one last question, you say you're gonna fill the factory to $1 billion in three years or whatever, so that's in addition to whatever OEMs are also manufacturing or licensing your products?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Phil, I'm having a hard time hearing with my audio. Could you respond to that?
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
Yeah. So, yes. So our goal is product revenues out of the factory at, as Patrizio said, just over $1 billion out of that new fab, and OEM licensing activities adding to that, yes.
Alan Hicks (Analyst)
Mm-hmm. Okay. Okay, thank you very much.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. One moment for our next question, please. It comes from the line of John Dillon with D&B Capital. Please proceed.
John Dillon (Analyst)
Hi, guys. Thanks a lot for taking my questions. I appreciate it. Phil, now that your factory is finished, and we're seeing processors at 1,000 watts and higher coming to the market, and also in your prepared remarks, I think I heard you say target production dates for HPC. When will we start seeing evidence of GPUs from major manufacturing manufacturers using the VI Chip PoL solutions?
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
So I think Patrizio talked about that, John. I think that, you know, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks, we're delivering electrical, mechanical, thermal models to leading customers right now. Then we'll follow that up in at the end of Q2 with a demo system that they'll be able to check out hardware and test the models against the demo system. And then, we'll be sampling in the towards the end of Q3, and we expect production probably towards the second half of 2025. That's when we'll have vertical power delivery and production.
John Dillon (Analyst)
Is that what you were referring to when you were talking about-
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
So, Phil, there's one notable customer, though, that may well be in production come the very beginning of next year.
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
Absolutely.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
And for that customer, the hardware is due to be delivered in the summer months.
John Dillon (Analyst)
Excellent. And Phil, is that the target production dates that you were talking about, or is that something different?
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
No, that's the target production dates. Yeah.
John Dillon (Analyst)
Gotcha. Are there current Gen Four designs in production or about to go in production that will act as a bridge to the Gen Five?
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
Yeah, we have some Gen Four design wins, but, you know, again, as Patrizio pointed out, there have been some, you know, market shifts with people changing strategies with supply chain considerations ahead of performance and technology. But, as vertical power delivery comes along, we have, with the Gen Five technology, an incredible solution with the current density that we can get to 3x over what the competition will have. So, I think there'll be some really hard reassessments being made as we move forward here with a number of accounts, but, we'll see that happen.
But, we have some very good interest from the accounts that are building, you know, really, big investments into AI and developing their own processor chips, and they, they're the people that you would expect, and we have great engagements with them right now. So, I'm confident Gen Five's gonna be all that it can be, and, we're gonna be having a very exciting 2025.
John Dillon (Analyst)
You're pretty confident then that the productization schedule will stay on schedule?
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
I'm personally confident. Patrizio, you wanna comment on that? But I certainly am.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
I'm also confident. I think, you know, we're leveraging, for the most part, processes and equipment that we have installed and have fully vetted. There are a few process steps that are going to be used in order to scale up capacity, not to deliver initial units that are still under some level of refinement. But generally speaking, the capability is in place, and we have a fab with the capacity to build very, very large quantities of panels and system solutions for customers.
John Dillon (Analyst)
You guys have working alpha or beta product right now?
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
So we have a lead customer that we're going to be delivering a functional systems. We started some initial partial delivery, but we're going to be delivering complete systems in late June, July timeframe. That-
John Dillon (Analyst)
Excellent.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
The lead application, to be followed by others, as we get into the other parts of the year.
John Dillon (Analyst)
Excellent. I'll get back in the queue. Thank you very much.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. One moment for our next question, please. And it comes from the line of Quinn Bolton with Needham and Company. Please proceed.
Quinn Bolton (Analyst)
Hey, Jim, just a question on the royalty, how it works. The royalty revenue you recognized in the first quarter, is that for shipments of your licensee that took place a quarter in arrears, so effectively shipments in the fourth calendar quarter of last year? Or is it, is it sort of, for shipments that took place in 1Q of 2024?
James Schmidt (CFO)
It's real time. It's based on shipments that basically they take receipt of. So but it's not in arrears, it's in the quarter.
Quinn Bolton (Analyst)
Okay, perfect. And then, just sort of following up on John's question around the Gen Five deliveries. The lead customer is, you know, for Gen Five, I assume that that's a data center or sort of AI or HPC application, but just wondering if you could, you know, give us in broad strokes, what sort of the application is for that first Gen Five customer.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
It's within the confines you just defined, but at this point in time, we really don't want to be specific. We wanna give this customer the full advantage of being first, and having an element of surprise. But it's within the general field that you identified.
Quinn Bolton (Analyst)
Got it. Got it. Okay. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. One moment for our next question, please. It comes from the line of Richard Shannon of Craig-Hallum. Please proceed.
Richard Shannon (Analyst)
Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my follow-on question here. I guess, Phil, following on your prepared remarks here, which probably has as much focus outside of HPC as we've heard in some time here, and you kind of alluded to this at your shareholders meeting last year as well. But in that context, can you give us some sort of understanding of a split of your advanced product revenues between HPC and other applications? And then also, if you might just give us a flavor of how much of that advanced product segment is also point of load versus bridging and other kinds of functionality.
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
Um, so-
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Phil?
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
Yeah. So can you hear me?
Richard Shannon (Analyst)
Yeah.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Yeah.
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
Yeah. So today, the advanced product revenues are... Yeah, the advanced product revenue was, last quarter was, 51.6%.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Yeah, right.
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
52% of the total company.
Yeah, and the bulk of that was, well, not the bulk of it, a number of it was into HPC.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Yeah.
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
There's quite a bit of it's now going into industrial. And I think that there's early days in automotive, as everyone knows, so we can see. Aerospace and defense, that's growing quite a bit with the new electronic warfare and defense and aerospace applications, you know, like the space satellite application that we've been talking about, we're getting more design wins there. So, it's really spread amongst those three business units, excluding automotive, Richard.
Richard Shannon (Analyst)
Okay. That's helpful.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Yeah, I would add to that, you know, the strategy that Phil outlined with better diversification among different end markets, with different trades and different sets of opportunities. That's fully supported by a product strategy that leverages commonality of, you know, power conversion engines, control systems, packaging technology. So we are able to, in effect, address market needs in markets and markets that may appear to be somewhat different, like test equipment on the one end, and, you know, high current point of load, the VPD applications. You know, with modules, in particular, Gen Five-type modules, they're essentially the same. And that sets us apart in another way relative to, you know, the competition, so to speak.
Richard Shannon (Analyst)
Okay. Thanks for all that detail. A quick follow-on question for Patrizio. You talked about, you know, consistently from the time that we've covered you, and frankly, a lot longer, about having a distinct advantage in terms of the power delivery at very high currents. You talked about delivering samples or whatever to customers up to 2,000 amps. I wonder if you characterize the competitive dynamics here in the future with 5G, in the terms of above what do you think you're gonna be the only credible solution out there? Is that at 1,000 amps or below that or above that? Just any characterization so we can think about this as we see, you know, the next generation of accelerators come to market.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
So we've enabled systems. They're already up to a few tens of thousands of A on a wafer. I would say that's the most advanced solution in terms of power system capability and from what I can tell, compute capability in the market. So that's obviously cutting edge and far above the more common denominator type applications, which as Phil suggested earlier, are trending up to the 1,000-2,000 A level. So we're involved in one important development with a major OEM at the 2,000 A level. At that level, fundamentally, you need VPD and you need an advanced form of VPD, such as what we call second gen VPD.
Yes, you could try to do it with the first-gen VPD that has been copied to a high degree by competitors, but what you'll be stuck with is a system, a power system that involves modules that are very heavy, very thick, thermally inept, difficult to cool, with very poor yields in assembly and reliability issues, not to mention the IP issues I alluded to earlier. So we see the market in AI in particular quickly getting past the 1,000-amp level and fundamentally left with VPD-only solutions. A lateral is out, even lateral vertical, while achieving significant benefits relative to lateral, not as good as vertical.
Fundamentally, what's going to be needed is a more advanced version of VPD that doesn't bring about the stacking challenges that characterize first-generation VPD, as Vicor pioneered and patented.
Richard Shannon (Analyst)
Okay, great. Thank you, guys.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. One moment for our next question, please. All right, our last question comes from John Tanwanteng with CJS Securities. Please proceed.
John Tanwanteng (Analyst)
Hi, thanks for taking one more from me. I was wondering if you could update us just on the uptake of automotive and, and when you expect to start shipping in volume, those products. I think you've said for a number of years now that you expected 2025 to be the year that automotive really starts shipping and making a difference. I'm wondering if that remains on track, and if that's gonna be a good source of growth, even before your VPD products start shipping in the second half of 2025.
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
Hi, John, this is Phil. So, no, the timing for automotive is really 2026, 2027 from, you know, reasonable revenue ramps beginning. There may be opportunities in Asia Pacific, conversations that we've had in the last six months that could pull that in, but those are yet to develop, so it's too early to talk about those yet. But this is really a 2026, 2027 story for automotive. Although we will begin, as I mentioned, I think last quarter or even in my remarks, the quarter before, production, early production, at the end of this year, and for high performance applications. So I think that that's sort of the timeframe that we're on with automotive.
John Tanwanteng (Analyst)
Okay, got it. If you were to characterize, you know, what, what could be a bridge market between then and now, which one would be the most likely to drive, you know, some sort of upside, whether it be HPC or automotive or, or some of these other applications you're talking about?
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
Yeah, HPC is definitely number one, and I think that, you know, we are, again, as I mentioned, seeing very good design-ins and wins in industrial, defense, and aerospace. So there's gonna be some really good growth at good margins coming from those markets, but HPC and Gen Five could just completely dominate that.
John Tanwanteng (Analyst)
Got it. Thank you, guys.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. I'm not showing any further questions in the queue.
Patrizio Vinciarelli (CEO)
Thank you.
Philip Davies (VP, Global Sales and Marketing)
Okay. Thank you, operator, and thank you everyone for joining.
Operator (participant)
With that, everybody, we appreciate your participation, and you may now disconnect.