Texas Instruments Q1 2022 Earnings Report $169.50 +23.49 (+16.09%) Closing price 04/9/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$168.94 -0.56 (-0.33%) As of 04/9/2025 06:42 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Texas Instruments EPS ResultsActual EPS$2.35Consensus EPS $2.17Beat/MissBeat by +$0.18One Year Ago EPS$1.87Texas Instruments Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$4.91 billionExpected Revenue$4.73 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$173.06 millionYoY Revenue Growth+14.40%Texas Instruments Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2022Date4/26/2022TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, April 26, 2022Conference Call Time8:26AM ETUpcoming EarningsTexas Instruments' Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Wednesday, April 23, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 4:30 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryTXN ProfilePowered by Texas Instruments Q1 2022 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrApril 26, 2022 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day, and welcome to the Texas Instruments First Quarter 22 Earnings Release Conference Call. Today's conference is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the conference over to Mr. Dave Paul. Please go ahead, sir. Speaker 100:00:20Good afternoon, and thank you for joining our Q1 2022 Earnings Conference Call. For any of you who missed the release, you can find it on our website at ti.com/ir. This call is being broadcast live over the web and can be accessed through our website. A replay will be available through the web. This call will include Forward looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties that could cause TI's results to differ materially from management's current expectations. Speaker 100:00:50We encourage you to review the notice regarding forward looking statements contained in the earnings release published today, as well as TI's most recent SEC filings for a more complete description. Our Chief Financial Officer, Rafael Lizardi is with me today and we'll provide the following updates. First, I'll start with a quick overview of the quarter. Next, I'll provide insight into Q1 revenue results with some details of what we're seeing with respect to our customers and markets. And lastly, Rafael will cover the financial results And our guidance for Q2, including the impact from COVID-nineteen restrictions in China. Speaker 100:01:31Starting with a quick overview of Q1. Revenue in the quarter was $4,900,000,000 an increase of 2% sequentially and 14% year over year, driven by growth in Industrial and Automotive as well as Enterprise Systems. Analog revenue grew 16%, embedded processing grew 2% And our other segment grew 27% from the year ago quarter. Now let me comment on the environment in the Q1 to provide some context on what we saw with our customers and markets. Overall, the quarter came in about as we expected across Product segments, end markets and geographies. Speaker 100:02:11The end market environment in the Q1 was similar to what we've observed for the last several quarters. Customers continued to be selective in their expedite requests, focusing on products that completed a matched set rather than expediting products across the board. This behavior was not specific to any product family, end market or geography. Moving on, I'll provide some insight into our Q1 revenue by end market from the Speaker 200:02:39year ago Speaker 100:02:39quarter. First, the industrial and automotive markets were each up about 20% and both were driven by broad based growth across sectors. Personal Electronics was down mid single digits off a strong compare. And next, Communications Equipment was up about 10%. And finally, Enterprise Systems was up about 35% off of a weak compare, and the growth was primarily from data centers and Enterprise Computing. Speaker 100:03:11Rafael will now review profitability, capital management and our outlook. Rafael? Speaker 300:03:17Thanks, Dave, and good afternoon, everyone. As Dave mentioned, 1st quarter revenue was $4,900,000,000 up 14% from a year ago. Gross profit in the quarter was $3,400,000,000 or 70 percent of revenue. From a year ago, gross profit margin increased 500 basis points. As a reminder, we had about $50,000,000 of additional utility expenses in cost of revenue related to the winter storm in the year ago quarter. Speaker 300:03:46Operating expenses in the quarter were $830,000,000 About flat from a year ago and about as expected. On a trailing 12 month basis, operating expenses were $3,200,000,000 or 17 percent of revenue. Restructuring charges were $66,000,000 in the Q1 and are associated with the L FAP purchase we closed in October of last year. Operating profit was $2,600,000,000 in the quarter or 52 percent of revenue. Operating profit was up 32% from the year ago quarter. Speaker 300:04:22Net income in the Q1 was $2,200,000,000 for $2.35 per share, which included a $0.02 benefit that was not in our prior outlook. Let me now comment on our capital management results, starting with our cash generation. Cash flow from operations was $2,100,000,000 in the quarter. Capital expenditures were $443,000,000 in the quarter $2,600,000,000 over the last 12 months. Free cash flow on a trailing 12 month basis was $6,500,000,000 In the quarter, we paid $1,100,000,000 in dividends And we purchased $589,000,000 of our stock. Speaker 300:05:05In total, we have returned $5,000,000,000 in the past 12 months. Over the same period, our dividend represented 62% of free cash flow. Our balance sheet remains strong with $9,800,000,000 of cash and short term investments at the end of the Q1. Total debt outstanding was $7,800,000,000 with a weighted average coupon of 2.6%. Inventory dollars were up $150,000,000 from the prior quarter to $2,100,000,000 and days were 127, up 11 days sequentially, but still below desired levels. Speaker 300:05:43For the Q2, we expect TI revenue in the range of $4,200,000,000 to 4 point $8,000,000,000 and earnings per share to be in the range of $1.84 to $2.26 This outlook comprehends an impact due to reduced demand from COVID-nineteen restrictions in China, which are affecting our customers' manufacturing operations. We continue to expect our annual operating tax rate for 2022 to be about 14% and our effective tax rate to be about a point lower. In closing, we will stay focused in the areas that add value in the long term. We continue to invest in our competitive advantages, which are manufacturing and technology, Our broad product portfolio, reach of our channels and diverse and long lived positions. We will continue to With that, let me turn it back to Dave. Speaker 100:06:45Thanks, Rafael. Operator, you can now open up the lines for questions. In order to provide as many of you as possible the opportunity to ask your questions, please limit yourself to a single question. After our response, we'll provide you an opportunity for an additional follow-up. Operator? Operator00:07:04Thank We'll take our first question from Stacy Rasgon with Bernstein Research. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:07:23Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. First of all, I was wondering if you had any feeling for the size of the gap in revenue that's getting impacted Goodbye, the COVID issues in China. Do you have any view for like what demand would be if you could ship? And like are the customers like getting out of line at all? Speaker 400:07:41Is the overall demand and order environment like kind of where it was, you just can't shift? But any color you can give on the size of that gap would be helpful. Speaker 100:07:51Yes, Stacy. I'll comment on that. Our assessment in early April indicated that Revenue would continue to incrementally grow again in the Q2. However, it just became clear that we were experiencing lower demand, Early due to COVID-nineteen restrictions in China. And just to be clear, Customers' behavior wasn't changing as it related to backlog or cancellations. Speaker 100:08:24In fact, we continue to Sea expedites for deliveries. However, we did see that Our customers' manufacturing operations were being impacted. So as a result, The approach that we took, we just took a tops down assessment and just reduced the midpoint of second quarter by 10%. And so from roughly $5,000,000,000 at the midpoint to the $4,500,000,000 that you see. And the second thing we did was we slightly widened the range just to comprehend the higher uncertainty that we're seeing overall. Speaker 100:09:08Do you have a follow-up, Stacy? Speaker 400:09:10I do. Thank you. And that's helpful. Just wondering, the fact that you guys have mostly internal manufacturing and you're trying to go most direct, Does that imply that I mean, do you have to ship more direct to your customers in China? Do you think that these kinds of issues would impact you more than the broader industry? Speaker 400:09:26Or do you think This is something that everybody is going to have to be dealing with to the same degree. Speaker 300:09:32Stacy, our sense is primarily due to issues with our operations at our customers' factories, And it is not related to shipping to direct or to distribution or anything of that sort. Speaker 100:09:50Thank you, Stacy. We'll go to the next caller, please. Operator00:09:53Absolutely. We'll take our next question from Vivek Arya with Bank of America Securities. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:09:59Thank you for taking my question. The first one also related to China. Do you think this is Something you can recover, is this demand destruction or is this something you can recover? And then along those lines, how would you characterize demand excluding Your China customers where there were no other of these kind of restrictions in place? Speaker 100:10:22Yes, Vivek. Again, the approach that we took was really just a tops down 10% Assessment of what the impact would be. So I wouldn't Look at that as any precision in choosing that number, part of the reason why we widened the guidance. I think trying to get into predictions of what could happen as the quarter unfolds, I think time will tell and we'll see how that unfolds and we'll report that when the quarter is over. So That's really the approach that we took at trying to assess what was going on. Speaker 100:11:06You have a follow on? Yes. Speaker 500:11:09Thanks, Dave. So how are you managing your fab utilization and your inventory? It seems like you're implying gross margins down A few hundred basis points sequentially. So just curious how you're managing fab utilization because I thought I heard Rafael say that you are still below your target inventory level. So do you continue to plan and build more inventory during the quarter? Speaker 300:11:37Yes. So a couple of things to that question. Let me try to address most of them. We are factories As we have said, we would. And the next step beyond incremental will be once the RFAB 2 starts Production in the second half of the year and then L FAB in the Q1 of next year of 2023. Speaker 300:12:10Well, I'd like to thank that we're breaking ground later this year for the Sherman factory. So we're going to continue running our production high. We are going to build inventory. Inventory did build about $150,000,000 in this last quarter we just reported, but we're So our intent is to continue building that inventory that is our objective inventory, as you know, is to maintain high levels of customer Roughly our target is 130 days to 190 days, but we want to be at the high end of that and we would not be uncomfortable even above the high end of that range. Speaker 100:12:46Okay. Thank you, Vivek. And we'll go to the next caller, please. Operator00:12:50Thank you. We'll hear next from Ross Seymore with Deutsche Bank. Speaker 200:12:54Hi, guys. Thanks for letting me ask a question. I guess, if the China side is weak and I guess 10% is as good a cut number as anyone could come up with. But To the extent there are shortages across the industry and demand elsewhere, it doesn't sound like it's changed from part of your preamble, Dave. Why wouldn't this allow a little bit of the fungibility of your standard product shipments to just increase to those customers and shortages To make up for the shortfall that you're otherwise going to see in China? Speaker 300:13:23So, yes, no, that's a fair question and that's already embedded in our process to the To the extent that, that is doable, we our processes allow for that redirecting of inventory. But keep in mind, we're talking about 100,000 different parts 100,000 different customers, 80,000 different parts. So it never quite fits in a perfect situation where the excess in one place can go to the other place neatly, right? And then the other thing I would tell you, just like Dave stressed a couple of times, this is a top down estimate assessment On that adjustment, it's not meant to imply precision. Speaker 100:14:05And maybe I'll just add to that too, Ross. The behavior that We've talked about now for a couple of quarters that we've been seeing as customers are being more focused on match sets and that It can be symptomatic of growing customer inventory that's out of mix. So even though we might have some parts that are available in one region, customers may So you've got multiple dynamics at work there. Do you have a follow on? Speaker 200:14:35I do. Since Kind of we collectively have given you guys some grief over the last couple of years for not really buying back any stock despite your 100% cash return goals. This quarter you did, and it seems like you got pretty darn close back to that 100% return. What changed? Speaker 300:14:53So Ross, you've known us for a long time and you know how we think about cash return. But just for everybody else, We talked about this during Capital Management every quarter. Our objective when it comes to cash return is to return all free cash flow To the owners of the company, we do that through dividends and repurchases, and we've been really consistent in how we do that, and we have a really good track record. So we have done that and are committed to continuing to do that. Speaker 100:15:24Okay. Thank you, Ross. We'll go to the next caller, please. Operator00:15:28Thank you. We'll hear next from Chris Danley with Citi. Speaker 600:15:33Hey, thanks guys. So given all these COVID issues in China and shutdowns, but then no change in the rest of the world. Do you expect the Shortage situation at TI and in semis to get better or worse from this or do you think it will be no change? Speaker 100:15:54Yes. I'll take a first shot and Rafael if you want to add in. We're not trying to Predict the cycle or call even the out quarters of what's going I think what we'll continue to do and how just how we approach things independent of cycles is just staying focused on Building the company stronger for the long term, and that includes things like adding in the new manufacturing capacity that we have, Investing in R and D, investing in new capabilities. So those are the things that we can control, and that's what we'll stay focused on. You have a follow on, Chris? Speaker 600:16:37Yes. So if we take the COVID issues in China outside, How would any sort of end market commentary you would make? Anything a little better or worse than your expectations either during the quarter or going forward? Speaker 100:16:52Yes. The quarter came in, I'd say, about what we expected. We were just slightly above The top end of our range, overall, the quarter was driven by The industrial and automotive markets, we did see strong growth in enterprise systems as we Had talked about that was primarily from data center and enterprise computing. Now that's a small part of our revenue, but You saw it grow strongly last quarter. And as you look over the coming years, that probably will continue to be a strong But it's just not a very large portion of our revenue. Speaker 100:17:40So, we continue to be pleased with the growth that we're seeing in industrial and automotive. That when you zoom out for a second, that is where the strategic focus has been for the company. And so we're pleased to see that turn into growth longer term. So thank you, Chris. And we'll go to the next caller, please. Operator00:18:05Thank you. We'll hear next from Joe Moore with Morgan Stanley. Speaker 700:18:09Great. Thank you. I wonder if you could address first in terms of you said you're still seeing Strong expedite activity. Are the constraints that you guys are still seeing coming from Your internal fab capacity from foundry back end, can you just kind of give us an idea where the bottlenecks are? Speaker 300:18:27So I'll start. First, I want to Maybe adjust what your premise is a little bit. We are still seeing some expedites, but as Dave mentioned a couple of times, Customers continue to be selective in how they're expediting. So they're continuing to focus on the match set, okay? So it's not just expedites across the board. Speaker 300:18:482nd, specifically on what you said on your second part of your question, what we're seeing is primarily based on How our customers manufacturing operation is are being affected in Speaker 100:19:04China. And we're able to meet many of those expedite requests as well. So I think your question more, Joe, is where we do have constraints, What's driving those, and that's not specific to any product or Any particular area, it can move from 1 quarter to the other. It may be a process technology, it could be a packaging Technology, other things that may drive it that our teams work with customers on to meet those needs. Do you have a follow on? Speaker 700:19:39Yes. I also was curious about pricing to the extent that your competition has kind of passed along foundry price increases and has raised prices. How have you guys reacted to that? And do you have can you give us any sense for what your pricing has done on a like for like basis? Speaker 300:19:56Yes. So a couple of things. First, on the input cost side of things, part of our one of our competitive advantages is manufacturing technology. We own the vast majority of our manufacturing, in fact, on the front end over 80% and our goal is to grow that to 90% over the coming years. So that puts us in a really good situation to not be beholden by to the mercy of what those Foundries or subcons do in terms of pricing, right? Speaker 300:20:26So we have much better way to handle those input costs. So that's on the input cost side of things. On the pricing in general, we are our pricing with our customers. Our process on that has not changed. Our process is to price to market. Speaker 300:20:46And as prices have moved up Over the last 2 or 3 quarters and that certainly did happen in Q1, we have moved our prices as well And growth in Q1 did benefit from the pricing tailwind. Okay. Thank you, Joe. We'll go Speaker 100:21:04to the next caller, please. Operator00:21:06Thank you. We'll take our next question from Timothy Arcuri with UBS. Speaker 800:21:11Thanks a lot. I just wanted to push on this 10% That you talked about the haircut for June. The lockdown seem like they're already getting a little bit better. They're seeming to Loosen up a little bit. So I guess the question is, does the 10% assume that the situation persists through the month of June? Speaker 800:21:30Or if it gets It's better between now June, will that 10% prove to be conservative? And then I had a follow-up as well. Speaker 300:21:39Yes. And I know maybe it's unsatisfying, but I'll just repeat what we said before. This is a top level Assessment tops down is not meant to imply precision. In fact, just like as we said earlier, we even widened the range to reflect that higher uncertainty. So time will tell and when we report 90 days from now, we'll see what things land. Speaker 900:22:06Got Speaker 800:22:06it. Maybe as my second yes, yes. Thanks, Dave. So I guess my second question is, This is a question that Ross asked before, but if customers are so tight and if the lockdowns are certainly going to be transitory, I would think It seems like customers would just take the product and they would put it into inventory. So obviously during the past 3 weeks, you opted to take this big cut to guidance. Speaker 800:22:28But is that because they're pushing out shipments? Or is it because they just can't accept shipment of your product? I mean, it seems like it has to be the latter versus Then pushing out shipments are not pulling from consignment because everything's tight and the whole chain is trying to build inventory. Thanks. Speaker 100:22:47Sure. Yes. And Tim, I think we've talked about now for a couple of quarters that we've observed behavior where Customers' behavior really shifted to focusing on those match sets. And as we've talked about, that It can be symptomatic of growing customer inventory. That's just out of mix, right? Speaker 100:23:10So And with that, we've got tens of thousands of products that are immediately available on ti.com. So They can get more product if they wanted and if they're indiscriminate of the types of products that they need. But Increasingly, they're trying to find those match sets to complete those bills, whether that's our product in some cases, A lot of times it's our peers' products in the industry and sometimes it's maybe not even a semiconductor product that they need to complete Their system to get it out the door. So, yes, so just to say, just because you Have a product sitting there, customers just indiscriminately aren't taking product overall. Speaker 300:24:03Let me just add to that. And Tim, if I understood your If you're asking tactically of whether the customers where is the bottleneck for the customers in China not being able To run their operations, we're seeing cases where factories are shut down and they just will not accept they cannot accept deliveries. In other cases, The freight forwarders will not take our parts from our distribution centers to ship them to the factories in China, particularly in the Shanghai area because those are shut down. So tactically, that is what's keeping the primary reason why we took this adjustment because that's keeping our parts from Being delivered to the productive staff Speaker 100:24:43or other reasons that are going on that's reducing that demand. Okay. Thank you, Tim. We'll go to the next caller, please. Operator00:24:51And so we'll take our next question from William Stein with Truist Securities. Speaker 800:24:55Great, thanks. The last question is very similar to mine and I just want to Maybe in a little bit more of a detailed fashion. When we talk about these disruptions in China, are you Maybe you can just provide a bit more detail. Are you not shipping to the region as a whole? Or are you taking this On a customer by customer basis, in terms of what you're choosing to or in terms of what you're able to ship. Speaker 800:25:25And then the follow-up is related to that, we've heard at least 1 large automotive OEM talk about having opened up their Facility recently and ramping with a vengeance. And I wonder if you see this among customers more broadly or is that an exception? Thank you. Speaker 300:25:44Yes. So I'll give you my take. It is case by case. There is at least, you saw a report, Dozens, if not hundreds of factories that are shut down, but there are other hundreds that are operating at different levels, right? Some cities are affected more than others. Speaker 300:26:02Obviously, Shanghai, we've already in the news what's going on there and factories in that area are affected more. And but there are restrictions beyond Shanghai, but it's case by case. Their factories operate at 0, like complete shutdown, their orders operate at 20%, 50% and so forth. A follow on, Will? Speaker 800:26:22Perhaps you can talk about changes in delivery patterns by channel. In particular, I'd be curious if you saw any slowdown in orders at ti.com, which I think It's somewhat of a different channel from your typical direct business. Thank you. Speaker 100:26:40Yes. I would say that in the quarter, And as we describe the environment in Q1, we would describe it as similar to what we've seen over the last couple of quarters And just order rates and cancellation order rates remain strong, cancellations, reschedules and those That customer behavior is consistent. Those things are low and consistent with what we've seen over the last couple of quarters And that's across those different channels and inputs. Yes. The other thing Speaker 300:27:17I would add is, as we have seen in other cases during the The entire pandemic, but being able to ship direct and have the direct relationship with customers is a huge advantage, especially when you face these type of challenges. Just Not having an intermediary that kind of frankly most of the time gets in the way and is not optimal for your relationship with the customer, but also there's Going direct, it's a huge benefit being able to do that. Now close to 70% of our revenue is direct. Okay. Speaker 100:27:55Thank you, Will. We'll go to the next caller, please. Operator00:27:58Thank you. We'll take our next question from Blayne Curtis with Barclays. Speaker 1000:28:02Thanks for fitting me in. I want to ask you on the CapEx plans. You're pretty clear about your plans with the Capital Allocation Day. I guess the spend in March is a little bit Kind of flat at that kind of base level for you at Lehigh. I guess you were talking about adding capacity in the second half, so maybe, refresh us if you're Speaker 300:28:17still going to spend Speaker 1000:28:18kind of 3,500,000,000 And if the capacity is still coming in line in the second half? Speaker 300:28:24Yes. So a couple of angles on your question. First, No changes to our plans. That is our long term plans. So our in terms of CapEx, so our $2,500,000,000 per year for the next 4 years that is intact. Speaker 300:28:38We're very excited about those. I'm very excited about those. We are R5-two will ramp production in the second half of this year. Lehigh will qualify and ramp production in the Q1 of next year. In just a matter of weeks or a month or so, we're going to break ground in Sherman. Speaker 300:28:55So that's all I feel very excited and that is not changing. Maybe the first part of your question on the CapEx, short term, Just keep in mind that the 4th quarter CapEx had the Lehigh numbers there. So that's why that number was higher than you're seeing that number come down in Q1. That's just you had about $800,000,000 close to $900,000,000 worth of CapEx. But our plans, The $3,500,000,000 run rate per year for 2022, 2023, 20 24, 20 25, of course, that's just an average, That is still that is in place and we're very excited about that. Speaker 100:29:33That's just math. Blaine, do you have a follow-up? Speaker 1000:29:38Yes. Well, I guess, 400 times 4 is not 3.5 times. That was, I guess, the question. But I guess you're still seeing that forecast and it should go up. Speaker 300:29:46Just remember, just on average, the $3,500,000,000 is an average. So it's not going to be every year $3,500,000,000 We'll likely Run below very likely run below 2.5 in 2022, which of course means we'll run higher in the next 3 years. That's just the math on that. Right. And then I guess just for Speaker 1000:30:05the guide, I want to make sure I understand the mechanics. It sounds like utilization stays high, the mix has been kind of industrial and auto, That all say your loan gross margin, you did hit 70%. I think a lot of companies have signaled that maybe gross margins would tail off to the rest of the year as pricing comes down, I'm kind of curious your perspective on kind of gross margins at this level being sustainable for the rest of the year. Speaker 300:30:29Yes. Our focus is not on managing gross margins. Our focus has been and will continue to be on growing free cash flow per share for the long term. So gross margin will be what it will be, but we'll continue to make our investments on CapEx to support our revenue plans and generate long term growth of free cash flow. Speaker 100:30:55Okay. Thank you, Blaine. And we've got time for one more caller, please. Operator00:30:59Thank you. We'll take our next question from Ambrish Srivastava with BMO. Speaker 900:31:05Hi. Thank you. Rafael, Dave, I had a question on I just wanted to make sure I understood this. From a top down, I got that perspective. But then David, I thought I heard you mention that cancellations have not changed. Speaker 900:31:21Why shouldn't cancellation change if you're taking your numbers down by 10%? Should that lead to cancellation changing versus what they have been in the last couple of quarters? Speaker 100:31:34Yes. So Just to explain that, customers that where their operations are being impacted, they would still like that product. And so they're not canceling those orders. They'd still like to be in line and get that product as soon as they can take it. So that's what they're communicating to us from that. Speaker 100:32:01So that's why we're not That's not showing up as a cancellation, though we are seeing the demand being impacted at this point. Speaker 900:32:10Got it. But that metric is usually for that 1 quarter or I should know this answer, but I don't. That metric is usually for the quarter that you provide us or it's for more than Is it for longer than a quarter? Speaker 100:32:23Well, yes, the cancellations as we look at them or the cancellations that we would receive in a quarter Could of course be for demand that might be outside of either in the current quarter or even a longer Period of time, if a cancellation comes in, right, a customer could say they want to cancel an order for next week and also for 6 months out as well. So but if they canceled it, we record it as a cancellation in the quarter that we received the cancellation. So, okay. Well, with that, we'll go ahead and wrap up, Rafael? Speaker 300:33:05Okay. So let me wrap up by reiterating what we have said previously. At our core, we're engineers and technology is the foundation of our company. But ultimately, our objective and the best metric to measure progress and generate long term value for owners is the growth of free cash flow per share. While we strive to achieve our objective, we will continue to pursue our 3 ambitions. Speaker 300:33:27We will act like owners who will own the company for decades, We will adapt and succeed in a world that's ever changing, and we will be a company that we're personally proud to be a part of and would want as our neighbor. When we're successful, our employees, customers, communities and owners all benefit. Thank you, and have a good evening. Operator00:33:46Thank you. And that does conclude today's conference. We do thank you all for your participation and you may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallTexas Instruments Q1 202200:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Texas Instruments Earnings HeadlinesWhat You Need to Know Ahead of Texas Instruments' Earnings ReleaseApril 9 at 6:33 PM | nasdaq.comTexas Instruments (NASDAQ:TXN) Raised to Outperform at Robert W. BairdApril 9 at 2:24 AM | americanbankingnews.comTrump to unlock 15-figure fortune for America (May 3rd) ?We were shown this map by former Presidential Advisor, Jim Rickards, one of the most politically connected men in America. Rickards has spent his fifty-year career in the innermost circles of the U.S. government and banking. And he believes Trump could soon release this frozen asset to the public. April 10, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)Texas Instruments upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at BairdApril 7 at 7:57 PM | markets.businessinsider.comTexas Instruments to webcast Q1 2025 earnings conference callApril 3, 2025 | prnewswire.comGreen Hills Software Accelerates Safety System Development with Texas Instruments' New AM26x Microcontroller PlatformApril 2, 2025 | businesswire.comSee More Texas Instruments Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Texas Instruments? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Texas Instruments and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Texas InstrumentsTexas Instruments (NASDAQ:TXN) designs, manufactures, and sells semiconductors to electronics designers and manufacturers in the United States and internationally. The company operates through Analog and Embedded Processing segments. The Analog segment offers power products to manage power requirements across various voltage levels, including battery-management solutions, DC/DC switching regulators, AC/DC and isolated controllers and converters, power switches, linear regulators, voltage references, and lighting products. This segment provides signal chain products that sense, condition, and measure signals to allow information to be transferred or converted for further processing and control, including amplifiers, data converters, interface products, motor drives, clocks, and logic and sensing products. The Embedded Processing segment offers microcontrollers that are used in electronic equipment; digital signal processors for mathematical computations; and applications processors for specific computing activity. This segment offers products for use in various markets, such as industrial, automotive, personal electronics, communications equipment, enterprise systems, and calculators and other. It provides DLP products primarily for use in project high-definition images; calculators; and application-specific integrated circuits. The company markets and sells its semiconductor products through direct sales and distributors, as well as through its website. 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There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day, and welcome to the Texas Instruments First Quarter 22 Earnings Release Conference Call. Today's conference is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the conference over to Mr. Dave Paul. Please go ahead, sir. Speaker 100:00:20Good afternoon, and thank you for joining our Q1 2022 Earnings Conference Call. For any of you who missed the release, you can find it on our website at ti.com/ir. This call is being broadcast live over the web and can be accessed through our website. A replay will be available through the web. This call will include Forward looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties that could cause TI's results to differ materially from management's current expectations. Speaker 100:00:50We encourage you to review the notice regarding forward looking statements contained in the earnings release published today, as well as TI's most recent SEC filings for a more complete description. Our Chief Financial Officer, Rafael Lizardi is with me today and we'll provide the following updates. First, I'll start with a quick overview of the quarter. Next, I'll provide insight into Q1 revenue results with some details of what we're seeing with respect to our customers and markets. And lastly, Rafael will cover the financial results And our guidance for Q2, including the impact from COVID-nineteen restrictions in China. Speaker 100:01:31Starting with a quick overview of Q1. Revenue in the quarter was $4,900,000,000 an increase of 2% sequentially and 14% year over year, driven by growth in Industrial and Automotive as well as Enterprise Systems. Analog revenue grew 16%, embedded processing grew 2% And our other segment grew 27% from the year ago quarter. Now let me comment on the environment in the Q1 to provide some context on what we saw with our customers and markets. Overall, the quarter came in about as we expected across Product segments, end markets and geographies. Speaker 100:02:11The end market environment in the Q1 was similar to what we've observed for the last several quarters. Customers continued to be selective in their expedite requests, focusing on products that completed a matched set rather than expediting products across the board. This behavior was not specific to any product family, end market or geography. Moving on, I'll provide some insight into our Q1 revenue by end market from the Speaker 200:02:39year ago Speaker 100:02:39quarter. First, the industrial and automotive markets were each up about 20% and both were driven by broad based growth across sectors. Personal Electronics was down mid single digits off a strong compare. And next, Communications Equipment was up about 10%. And finally, Enterprise Systems was up about 35% off of a weak compare, and the growth was primarily from data centers and Enterprise Computing. Speaker 100:03:11Rafael will now review profitability, capital management and our outlook. Rafael? Speaker 300:03:17Thanks, Dave, and good afternoon, everyone. As Dave mentioned, 1st quarter revenue was $4,900,000,000 up 14% from a year ago. Gross profit in the quarter was $3,400,000,000 or 70 percent of revenue. From a year ago, gross profit margin increased 500 basis points. As a reminder, we had about $50,000,000 of additional utility expenses in cost of revenue related to the winter storm in the year ago quarter. Speaker 300:03:46Operating expenses in the quarter were $830,000,000 About flat from a year ago and about as expected. On a trailing 12 month basis, operating expenses were $3,200,000,000 or 17 percent of revenue. Restructuring charges were $66,000,000 in the Q1 and are associated with the L FAP purchase we closed in October of last year. Operating profit was $2,600,000,000 in the quarter or 52 percent of revenue. Operating profit was up 32% from the year ago quarter. Speaker 300:04:22Net income in the Q1 was $2,200,000,000 for $2.35 per share, which included a $0.02 benefit that was not in our prior outlook. Let me now comment on our capital management results, starting with our cash generation. Cash flow from operations was $2,100,000,000 in the quarter. Capital expenditures were $443,000,000 in the quarter $2,600,000,000 over the last 12 months. Free cash flow on a trailing 12 month basis was $6,500,000,000 In the quarter, we paid $1,100,000,000 in dividends And we purchased $589,000,000 of our stock. Speaker 300:05:05In total, we have returned $5,000,000,000 in the past 12 months. Over the same period, our dividend represented 62% of free cash flow. Our balance sheet remains strong with $9,800,000,000 of cash and short term investments at the end of the Q1. Total debt outstanding was $7,800,000,000 with a weighted average coupon of 2.6%. Inventory dollars were up $150,000,000 from the prior quarter to $2,100,000,000 and days were 127, up 11 days sequentially, but still below desired levels. Speaker 300:05:43For the Q2, we expect TI revenue in the range of $4,200,000,000 to 4 point $8,000,000,000 and earnings per share to be in the range of $1.84 to $2.26 This outlook comprehends an impact due to reduced demand from COVID-nineteen restrictions in China, which are affecting our customers' manufacturing operations. We continue to expect our annual operating tax rate for 2022 to be about 14% and our effective tax rate to be about a point lower. In closing, we will stay focused in the areas that add value in the long term. We continue to invest in our competitive advantages, which are manufacturing and technology, Our broad product portfolio, reach of our channels and diverse and long lived positions. We will continue to With that, let me turn it back to Dave. Speaker 100:06:45Thanks, Rafael. Operator, you can now open up the lines for questions. In order to provide as many of you as possible the opportunity to ask your questions, please limit yourself to a single question. After our response, we'll provide you an opportunity for an additional follow-up. Operator? Operator00:07:04Thank We'll take our first question from Stacy Rasgon with Bernstein Research. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:07:23Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. First of all, I was wondering if you had any feeling for the size of the gap in revenue that's getting impacted Goodbye, the COVID issues in China. Do you have any view for like what demand would be if you could ship? And like are the customers like getting out of line at all? Speaker 400:07:41Is the overall demand and order environment like kind of where it was, you just can't shift? But any color you can give on the size of that gap would be helpful. Speaker 100:07:51Yes, Stacy. I'll comment on that. Our assessment in early April indicated that Revenue would continue to incrementally grow again in the Q2. However, it just became clear that we were experiencing lower demand, Early due to COVID-nineteen restrictions in China. And just to be clear, Customers' behavior wasn't changing as it related to backlog or cancellations. Speaker 100:08:24In fact, we continue to Sea expedites for deliveries. However, we did see that Our customers' manufacturing operations were being impacted. So as a result, The approach that we took, we just took a tops down assessment and just reduced the midpoint of second quarter by 10%. And so from roughly $5,000,000,000 at the midpoint to the $4,500,000,000 that you see. And the second thing we did was we slightly widened the range just to comprehend the higher uncertainty that we're seeing overall. Speaker 100:09:08Do you have a follow-up, Stacy? Speaker 400:09:10I do. Thank you. And that's helpful. Just wondering, the fact that you guys have mostly internal manufacturing and you're trying to go most direct, Does that imply that I mean, do you have to ship more direct to your customers in China? Do you think that these kinds of issues would impact you more than the broader industry? Speaker 400:09:26Or do you think This is something that everybody is going to have to be dealing with to the same degree. Speaker 300:09:32Stacy, our sense is primarily due to issues with our operations at our customers' factories, And it is not related to shipping to direct or to distribution or anything of that sort. Speaker 100:09:50Thank you, Stacy. We'll go to the next caller, please. Operator00:09:53Absolutely. We'll take our next question from Vivek Arya with Bank of America Securities. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:09:59Thank you for taking my question. The first one also related to China. Do you think this is Something you can recover, is this demand destruction or is this something you can recover? And then along those lines, how would you characterize demand excluding Your China customers where there were no other of these kind of restrictions in place? Speaker 100:10:22Yes, Vivek. Again, the approach that we took was really just a tops down 10% Assessment of what the impact would be. So I wouldn't Look at that as any precision in choosing that number, part of the reason why we widened the guidance. I think trying to get into predictions of what could happen as the quarter unfolds, I think time will tell and we'll see how that unfolds and we'll report that when the quarter is over. So That's really the approach that we took at trying to assess what was going on. Speaker 100:11:06You have a follow on? Yes. Speaker 500:11:09Thanks, Dave. So how are you managing your fab utilization and your inventory? It seems like you're implying gross margins down A few hundred basis points sequentially. So just curious how you're managing fab utilization because I thought I heard Rafael say that you are still below your target inventory level. So do you continue to plan and build more inventory during the quarter? Speaker 300:11:37Yes. So a couple of things to that question. Let me try to address most of them. We are factories As we have said, we would. And the next step beyond incremental will be once the RFAB 2 starts Production in the second half of the year and then L FAB in the Q1 of next year of 2023. Speaker 300:12:10Well, I'd like to thank that we're breaking ground later this year for the Sherman factory. So we're going to continue running our production high. We are going to build inventory. Inventory did build about $150,000,000 in this last quarter we just reported, but we're So our intent is to continue building that inventory that is our objective inventory, as you know, is to maintain high levels of customer Roughly our target is 130 days to 190 days, but we want to be at the high end of that and we would not be uncomfortable even above the high end of that range. Speaker 100:12:46Okay. Thank you, Vivek. And we'll go to the next caller, please. Operator00:12:50Thank you. We'll hear next from Ross Seymore with Deutsche Bank. Speaker 200:12:54Hi, guys. Thanks for letting me ask a question. I guess, if the China side is weak and I guess 10% is as good a cut number as anyone could come up with. But To the extent there are shortages across the industry and demand elsewhere, it doesn't sound like it's changed from part of your preamble, Dave. Why wouldn't this allow a little bit of the fungibility of your standard product shipments to just increase to those customers and shortages To make up for the shortfall that you're otherwise going to see in China? Speaker 300:13:23So, yes, no, that's a fair question and that's already embedded in our process to the To the extent that, that is doable, we our processes allow for that redirecting of inventory. But keep in mind, we're talking about 100,000 different parts 100,000 different customers, 80,000 different parts. So it never quite fits in a perfect situation where the excess in one place can go to the other place neatly, right? And then the other thing I would tell you, just like Dave stressed a couple of times, this is a top down estimate assessment On that adjustment, it's not meant to imply precision. Speaker 100:14:05And maybe I'll just add to that too, Ross. The behavior that We've talked about now for a couple of quarters that we've been seeing as customers are being more focused on match sets and that It can be symptomatic of growing customer inventory that's out of mix. So even though we might have some parts that are available in one region, customers may So you've got multiple dynamics at work there. Do you have a follow on? Speaker 200:14:35I do. Since Kind of we collectively have given you guys some grief over the last couple of years for not really buying back any stock despite your 100% cash return goals. This quarter you did, and it seems like you got pretty darn close back to that 100% return. What changed? Speaker 300:14:53So Ross, you've known us for a long time and you know how we think about cash return. But just for everybody else, We talked about this during Capital Management every quarter. Our objective when it comes to cash return is to return all free cash flow To the owners of the company, we do that through dividends and repurchases, and we've been really consistent in how we do that, and we have a really good track record. So we have done that and are committed to continuing to do that. Speaker 100:15:24Okay. Thank you, Ross. We'll go to the next caller, please. Operator00:15:28Thank you. We'll hear next from Chris Danley with Citi. Speaker 600:15:33Hey, thanks guys. So given all these COVID issues in China and shutdowns, but then no change in the rest of the world. Do you expect the Shortage situation at TI and in semis to get better or worse from this or do you think it will be no change? Speaker 100:15:54Yes. I'll take a first shot and Rafael if you want to add in. We're not trying to Predict the cycle or call even the out quarters of what's going I think what we'll continue to do and how just how we approach things independent of cycles is just staying focused on Building the company stronger for the long term, and that includes things like adding in the new manufacturing capacity that we have, Investing in R and D, investing in new capabilities. So those are the things that we can control, and that's what we'll stay focused on. You have a follow on, Chris? Speaker 600:16:37Yes. So if we take the COVID issues in China outside, How would any sort of end market commentary you would make? Anything a little better or worse than your expectations either during the quarter or going forward? Speaker 100:16:52Yes. The quarter came in, I'd say, about what we expected. We were just slightly above The top end of our range, overall, the quarter was driven by The industrial and automotive markets, we did see strong growth in enterprise systems as we Had talked about that was primarily from data center and enterprise computing. Now that's a small part of our revenue, but You saw it grow strongly last quarter. And as you look over the coming years, that probably will continue to be a strong But it's just not a very large portion of our revenue. Speaker 100:17:40So, we continue to be pleased with the growth that we're seeing in industrial and automotive. That when you zoom out for a second, that is where the strategic focus has been for the company. And so we're pleased to see that turn into growth longer term. So thank you, Chris. And we'll go to the next caller, please. Operator00:18:05Thank you. We'll hear next from Joe Moore with Morgan Stanley. Speaker 700:18:09Great. Thank you. I wonder if you could address first in terms of you said you're still seeing Strong expedite activity. Are the constraints that you guys are still seeing coming from Your internal fab capacity from foundry back end, can you just kind of give us an idea where the bottlenecks are? Speaker 300:18:27So I'll start. First, I want to Maybe adjust what your premise is a little bit. We are still seeing some expedites, but as Dave mentioned a couple of times, Customers continue to be selective in how they're expediting. So they're continuing to focus on the match set, okay? So it's not just expedites across the board. Speaker 300:18:482nd, specifically on what you said on your second part of your question, what we're seeing is primarily based on How our customers manufacturing operation is are being affected in Speaker 100:19:04China. And we're able to meet many of those expedite requests as well. So I think your question more, Joe, is where we do have constraints, What's driving those, and that's not specific to any product or Any particular area, it can move from 1 quarter to the other. It may be a process technology, it could be a packaging Technology, other things that may drive it that our teams work with customers on to meet those needs. Do you have a follow on? Speaker 700:19:39Yes. I also was curious about pricing to the extent that your competition has kind of passed along foundry price increases and has raised prices. How have you guys reacted to that? And do you have can you give us any sense for what your pricing has done on a like for like basis? Speaker 300:19:56Yes. So a couple of things. First, on the input cost side of things, part of our one of our competitive advantages is manufacturing technology. We own the vast majority of our manufacturing, in fact, on the front end over 80% and our goal is to grow that to 90% over the coming years. So that puts us in a really good situation to not be beholden by to the mercy of what those Foundries or subcons do in terms of pricing, right? Speaker 300:20:26So we have much better way to handle those input costs. So that's on the input cost side of things. On the pricing in general, we are our pricing with our customers. Our process on that has not changed. Our process is to price to market. Speaker 300:20:46And as prices have moved up Over the last 2 or 3 quarters and that certainly did happen in Q1, we have moved our prices as well And growth in Q1 did benefit from the pricing tailwind. Okay. Thank you, Joe. We'll go Speaker 100:21:04to the next caller, please. Operator00:21:06Thank you. We'll take our next question from Timothy Arcuri with UBS. Speaker 800:21:11Thanks a lot. I just wanted to push on this 10% That you talked about the haircut for June. The lockdown seem like they're already getting a little bit better. They're seeming to Loosen up a little bit. So I guess the question is, does the 10% assume that the situation persists through the month of June? Speaker 800:21:30Or if it gets It's better between now June, will that 10% prove to be conservative? And then I had a follow-up as well. Speaker 300:21:39Yes. And I know maybe it's unsatisfying, but I'll just repeat what we said before. This is a top level Assessment tops down is not meant to imply precision. In fact, just like as we said earlier, we even widened the range to reflect that higher uncertainty. So time will tell and when we report 90 days from now, we'll see what things land. Speaker 900:22:06Got Speaker 800:22:06it. Maybe as my second yes, yes. Thanks, Dave. So I guess my second question is, This is a question that Ross asked before, but if customers are so tight and if the lockdowns are certainly going to be transitory, I would think It seems like customers would just take the product and they would put it into inventory. So obviously during the past 3 weeks, you opted to take this big cut to guidance. Speaker 800:22:28But is that because they're pushing out shipments? Or is it because they just can't accept shipment of your product? I mean, it seems like it has to be the latter versus Then pushing out shipments are not pulling from consignment because everything's tight and the whole chain is trying to build inventory. Thanks. Speaker 100:22:47Sure. Yes. And Tim, I think we've talked about now for a couple of quarters that we've observed behavior where Customers' behavior really shifted to focusing on those match sets. And as we've talked about, that It can be symptomatic of growing customer inventory. That's just out of mix, right? Speaker 100:23:10So And with that, we've got tens of thousands of products that are immediately available on ti.com. So They can get more product if they wanted and if they're indiscriminate of the types of products that they need. But Increasingly, they're trying to find those match sets to complete those bills, whether that's our product in some cases, A lot of times it's our peers' products in the industry and sometimes it's maybe not even a semiconductor product that they need to complete Their system to get it out the door. So, yes, so just to say, just because you Have a product sitting there, customers just indiscriminately aren't taking product overall. Speaker 300:24:03Let me just add to that. And Tim, if I understood your If you're asking tactically of whether the customers where is the bottleneck for the customers in China not being able To run their operations, we're seeing cases where factories are shut down and they just will not accept they cannot accept deliveries. In other cases, The freight forwarders will not take our parts from our distribution centers to ship them to the factories in China, particularly in the Shanghai area because those are shut down. So tactically, that is what's keeping the primary reason why we took this adjustment because that's keeping our parts from Being delivered to the productive staff Speaker 100:24:43or other reasons that are going on that's reducing that demand. Okay. Thank you, Tim. We'll go to the next caller, please. Operator00:24:51And so we'll take our next question from William Stein with Truist Securities. Speaker 800:24:55Great, thanks. The last question is very similar to mine and I just want to Maybe in a little bit more of a detailed fashion. When we talk about these disruptions in China, are you Maybe you can just provide a bit more detail. Are you not shipping to the region as a whole? Or are you taking this On a customer by customer basis, in terms of what you're choosing to or in terms of what you're able to ship. Speaker 800:25:25And then the follow-up is related to that, we've heard at least 1 large automotive OEM talk about having opened up their Facility recently and ramping with a vengeance. And I wonder if you see this among customers more broadly or is that an exception? Thank you. Speaker 300:25:44Yes. So I'll give you my take. It is case by case. There is at least, you saw a report, Dozens, if not hundreds of factories that are shut down, but there are other hundreds that are operating at different levels, right? Some cities are affected more than others. Speaker 300:26:02Obviously, Shanghai, we've already in the news what's going on there and factories in that area are affected more. And but there are restrictions beyond Shanghai, but it's case by case. Their factories operate at 0, like complete shutdown, their orders operate at 20%, 50% and so forth. A follow on, Will? Speaker 800:26:22Perhaps you can talk about changes in delivery patterns by channel. In particular, I'd be curious if you saw any slowdown in orders at ti.com, which I think It's somewhat of a different channel from your typical direct business. Thank you. Speaker 100:26:40Yes. I would say that in the quarter, And as we describe the environment in Q1, we would describe it as similar to what we've seen over the last couple of quarters And just order rates and cancellation order rates remain strong, cancellations, reschedules and those That customer behavior is consistent. Those things are low and consistent with what we've seen over the last couple of quarters And that's across those different channels and inputs. Yes. The other thing Speaker 300:27:17I would add is, as we have seen in other cases during the The entire pandemic, but being able to ship direct and have the direct relationship with customers is a huge advantage, especially when you face these type of challenges. Just Not having an intermediary that kind of frankly most of the time gets in the way and is not optimal for your relationship with the customer, but also there's Going direct, it's a huge benefit being able to do that. Now close to 70% of our revenue is direct. Okay. Speaker 100:27:55Thank you, Will. We'll go to the next caller, please. Operator00:27:58Thank you. We'll take our next question from Blayne Curtis with Barclays. Speaker 1000:28:02Thanks for fitting me in. I want to ask you on the CapEx plans. You're pretty clear about your plans with the Capital Allocation Day. I guess the spend in March is a little bit Kind of flat at that kind of base level for you at Lehigh. I guess you were talking about adding capacity in the second half, so maybe, refresh us if you're Speaker 300:28:17still going to spend Speaker 1000:28:18kind of 3,500,000,000 And if the capacity is still coming in line in the second half? Speaker 300:28:24Yes. So a couple of angles on your question. First, No changes to our plans. That is our long term plans. So our in terms of CapEx, so our $2,500,000,000 per year for the next 4 years that is intact. Speaker 300:28:38We're very excited about those. I'm very excited about those. We are R5-two will ramp production in the second half of this year. Lehigh will qualify and ramp production in the Q1 of next year. In just a matter of weeks or a month or so, we're going to break ground in Sherman. Speaker 300:28:55So that's all I feel very excited and that is not changing. Maybe the first part of your question on the CapEx, short term, Just keep in mind that the 4th quarter CapEx had the Lehigh numbers there. So that's why that number was higher than you're seeing that number come down in Q1. That's just you had about $800,000,000 close to $900,000,000 worth of CapEx. But our plans, The $3,500,000,000 run rate per year for 2022, 2023, 20 24, 20 25, of course, that's just an average, That is still that is in place and we're very excited about that. Speaker 100:29:33That's just math. Blaine, do you have a follow-up? Speaker 1000:29:38Yes. Well, I guess, 400 times 4 is not 3.5 times. That was, I guess, the question. But I guess you're still seeing that forecast and it should go up. Speaker 300:29:46Just remember, just on average, the $3,500,000,000 is an average. So it's not going to be every year $3,500,000,000 We'll likely Run below very likely run below 2.5 in 2022, which of course means we'll run higher in the next 3 years. That's just the math on that. Right. And then I guess just for Speaker 1000:30:05the guide, I want to make sure I understand the mechanics. It sounds like utilization stays high, the mix has been kind of industrial and auto, That all say your loan gross margin, you did hit 70%. I think a lot of companies have signaled that maybe gross margins would tail off to the rest of the year as pricing comes down, I'm kind of curious your perspective on kind of gross margins at this level being sustainable for the rest of the year. Speaker 300:30:29Yes. Our focus is not on managing gross margins. Our focus has been and will continue to be on growing free cash flow per share for the long term. So gross margin will be what it will be, but we'll continue to make our investments on CapEx to support our revenue plans and generate long term growth of free cash flow. Speaker 100:30:55Okay. Thank you, Blaine. And we've got time for one more caller, please. Operator00:30:59Thank you. We'll take our next question from Ambrish Srivastava with BMO. Speaker 900:31:05Hi. Thank you. Rafael, Dave, I had a question on I just wanted to make sure I understood this. From a top down, I got that perspective. But then David, I thought I heard you mention that cancellations have not changed. Speaker 900:31:21Why shouldn't cancellation change if you're taking your numbers down by 10%? Should that lead to cancellation changing versus what they have been in the last couple of quarters? Speaker 100:31:34Yes. So Just to explain that, customers that where their operations are being impacted, they would still like that product. And so they're not canceling those orders. They'd still like to be in line and get that product as soon as they can take it. So that's what they're communicating to us from that. Speaker 100:32:01So that's why we're not That's not showing up as a cancellation, though we are seeing the demand being impacted at this point. Speaker 900:32:10Got it. But that metric is usually for that 1 quarter or I should know this answer, but I don't. That metric is usually for the quarter that you provide us or it's for more than Is it for longer than a quarter? Speaker 100:32:23Well, yes, the cancellations as we look at them or the cancellations that we would receive in a quarter Could of course be for demand that might be outside of either in the current quarter or even a longer Period of time, if a cancellation comes in, right, a customer could say they want to cancel an order for next week and also for 6 months out as well. So but if they canceled it, we record it as a cancellation in the quarter that we received the cancellation. So, okay. Well, with that, we'll go ahead and wrap up, Rafael? Speaker 300:33:05Okay. So let me wrap up by reiterating what we have said previously. At our core, we're engineers and technology is the foundation of our company. But ultimately, our objective and the best metric to measure progress and generate long term value for owners is the growth of free cash flow per share. While we strive to achieve our objective, we will continue to pursue our 3 ambitions. Speaker 300:33:27We will act like owners who will own the company for decades, We will adapt and succeed in a world that's ever changing, and we will be a company that we're personally proud to be a part of and would want as our neighbor. When we're successful, our employees, customers, communities and owners all benefit. Thank you, and have a good evening. Operator00:33:46Thank you. And that does conclude today's conference. We do thank you all for your participation and you may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by