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VISHAY INTERTECHNOLOGY INC (VSH)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 revenue was $714.7M, down 2.8% q/q and 9.0% y/y; GAAP diluted EPS was -$0.49 largely due to a $66.5M non-cash goodwill impairment in MOSFETs; adjusted EPS was $0.00 .
- Gross margin fell to 19.9% (from 20.5% in Q3) with a ~175–200 bps drag from Newport; book-to-bill turned positive at 1.01 for the first time in nine quarters, and backlog held at 4.4 months .
- Management guided Q1 2025 revenue to $710M ± $20M and gross margin to 19.0% ± 50 bps, expecting Newport’s drag to trend toward neutral by year-end 2025; SG&A guided to $137M ± $2M in Q1 .
- Strategic demand signals improved: strong smart grid orders and initial AI server shipments; however, Europe remained weak and ASP pressure persisted in semis, impacting margins and profitability .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Positive book-to-bill (1.01 overall; 0.99 semis and 1.03 passives) after nine quarters; “initial shipments for A.I. servers” and strong smart grid orders highlight improving demand quality .
- Capacity expansion and externalization progressing: SK Key Foundry adds MOSFET wafer capacity (+12% in 2025) and split-gate MOSFET capacity (+25%); subcontractor qualifications added >10,400 SKUs in 2024 .
- Clear execution roadmap for Newport and SiC: multiple MOSFET structure transfers on schedule; SiC releases (650V/1200V) advancing; plan to reach margin-neutral at Newport by year-end 2025 .
- CEO: “we saw many promising indicators including a positive book-to-bill… strong order intake for smart grid… and initial shipments for A.I. servers” .
What Went Wrong
- Gross margin compression and operating loss: GM 19.9% (down 60 bps q/q); GAAP operating margin -7.9% driven by goodwill impairment and higher SG&A (R&D/legal), plus ASP declines and Newport drag .
- Free cash flow negative amid capacity investments: Q4 operating cash $67.7M, CapEx $144.9M, FCF -$75.6M; FY 2024 FCF -$143.4M as CapEx and Newport expansion weighed on cash generation .
- Europe weakness and pricing pressure: distributors reduced POS; semis ASPs declined amid competitor underutilization; management cited “weak business conditions” in Europe and price alignments in distribution .
Financial Results
Note: Estimate comparisons to Wall Street consensus were unavailable; S&P Global data could not be retrieved due to a system limit. Values retrieved from S&P Global would be presented here if accessible.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “we saw many promising indicators including a positive book-to-bill for the first time in nine quarters, strong order intake for smart grid infrastructure projects, and initial shipments for A.I. servers” .
- CFO: “Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $66 million for an adjusted EBITDA margin of 9.3%, down from 9.7%… SG&A… reflects higher R&D expenses incurred in Newport and some unanticipated legal and professional fees” .
- CEO on capacity externalization: “Through [SK Key Foundry] we will be able to increase annualized capacity for MOSFETs by 12% in 2025… and… split gate MOSFET by 25%” .
- CFO on margin path: “We hope to be margin neutral [at Newport] towards the end of the year… when we enter ’26, we’re profitable” .
Q&A Highlights
- AI revenue content and visibility: Content ~$30–$40 per tray; uncertain GPU delivery timing; visibility expected to improve post-CNY; active design activity beyond NVIDIA into custom ASICs .
- Margin trajectory: Newport drag to step down through 2025; higher depreciation and ASP declines factored into guidance; margin path is volume-driven .
- Distribution inventory/pricing: ~27 weeks global inventory; Europe elevated; pricing aligned via published pricing adjustments (VPA); competitive on screen pricing; large-volume deals require aggressiveness .
- CapEx and capacity: FY25 CapEx $300–$350M, majority for fabs (Newport, Itzehoe); capacity modulation via subcontractors and order flow; +23% capacity since Vishay 3.0 began .
- Capital returns: Policy to return at least 70% of free cash; despite negative FCF in 2024 returned ~$105M; maintain dividend; opportunistic buybacks in 2025 .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates for Q4 2024 (EPS, revenue, EBITDA) and forward periods were unavailable due to system retrieval limits. As a result, explicit beat/miss versus consensus cannot be determined here. Values retrieved from S&P Global would be presented if accessible.
- Directionally, results tracked near internal guidance (Q4 revenue near $720M ± $20M guided range; GM near 20% guided), but GAAP EPS was negative due to a $66.5M goodwill impairment in MOSFETs (non-cash) .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Demand quality is improving (book-to-bill >1; smart grid and AI orders), but margins remain pressured by Newport drag, ASP declines, and Europe demand softness—watch the volume trajectory and margin step-up through 2025 .
- Newport integration is the pivotal margin lever; management targets margin-neutral exit-2025—progress on technology transfers, customer qualifications, and utilization ramps are near-term catalysts .
- Smart grid remains a secular growth driver, with vertical integration (Birkelbach) and strong backlog; this should support capacitor segment strength and mix improvement .
- AI content opportunity is expanding across GPU and custom ASIC ecosystems; design-in breadth (MOSFETs, inductors, polymer tantalum, diodes, ICs) positions Vishay to capture higher BOM share—expect uneven but improving orders .
- FCF likely negative again in 2025 given capacity investments; management intends to maintain dividends and opportunistic buybacks—balance sheet monitoring (cash, revolver use) is important for return durability .
- Pricing pressure in semis may persist until industry utilization normalizes; distribution SKU expansion enhances turns capture, helping offset ASP headwinds over time .
- Near-term trading: stock likely sensitive to Q1 margin execution and Newport utilization updates; medium-term thesis centers on Vishay 3.0 execution (capacity, externalization, SiC) and secular tailwinds in smart grid, AI, and automotive .