by Anton Shilov
03/24/2003 | 06:35 PM
At the end of last week ATI Technologies announced its financial results for the second quarter of its 2003 fiscal year, which ended February 28, 2003. The company continues to gain momentum thanks to its technology and performance leadership, though, it is not enough to make the company profitable.
<%BANNER[article]%>Revenues for the second quarter were $318.5 million compared to $322.0 million in the first quarter of the fiscal 2003. Gross margin was 28.9 percent, rising 1.6% from 27.3% in the first quarter. On a year-over-year basis, revenues in the second quarter and the first six months were up 19.7% and 24.1% respectively.
Throughout the quarter ATI saw the shipments of high-end R300-based products as well as mobile graphics products grew sequentially, whereas sales of Nintendo GameCube consoles declined, which caused slight downturn in revenues for the quarter. ATI’s products are now installed in 25% of white-box PCs in comparison to only 15% in the first quarter, according to ATI’s officials.
Operating expenses, excluding the amortization of intangibles and other charges, were $80.3 million in the second quarter, up slightly from the first quarter levels of $79.6 million. The increase came primarily from continued investment in R&D. On a year-over-year basis, total operating expenses, excluding the amortization of intangibles and other charges, for the second quarter and the first six months of the year increased 15.0 and 15.1% to $80.3 million and $159.9 million respectively. Higher operating expense levels were primarily a result of increasing investments in R&D, both headcount and the cost of technology required to support the increasingly more complex chips; as well as to a smaller extent, volume related selling expenses.
Adjusted net income for the second quarter was $9.7 million or $0.04 per share compared to $7.0 million or $0.03 per share for the previous quarter, and $17.6 million or $0.07 per share for the same period a year ago.
The net loss for the second quarter was $8.3 million or $0.04 per share compared to net income of $5.0 million or $0.02 per share for the first quarter of 2003 and a net loss of $3.0 million or $0.01 per share for the same period a year ago. The losses were primary caused by special charges that include $8.0 million to settle the U.S. class action law suit, a portion of which is expected to be paid by ATI's insurer; $2.8 million related to costs incurred in connection with the work of the independent Special Committee of the Board relating to the Ontario Securities Commission investigation and Notice of Hearing; $2.8 million resulting from the closure of the European manufacturing operations (ATEL); and $2.4 million in lease termination charges related to surplus space in leased buildings.
Take a look at the statements from the top ATI executives made during the conference call:
Product mix in the second quarter:
Inventory levels declined significantly to $131.3 million at the end of the second quarter compared to both the first quarter of 2003, where inventory was $172.4 million and at year-end where inventory levels were $175.3 million. Inventories were higher in those previous periods due to a major product transition and are now at an appropriate level to support current sales. ATI’s representative said that all legacy products are now “virtually” gone. Analysts believe that current inventory level represents 53 days of sales.
Business and financial expectations for the third and fourth quarters in ATI’s Fiscal 2003:
Product mix in the third quarter and beyond:
The majority of the questions asked were about ATI’s business, not the upcoming products. I can easily explain this: at the moment ATI Technologies is the leader of the market in terms of technologies, right now analysts try to guess if ATI is able to gather momentum and benefit from its current position. Time will tell.