UPDATE: Xilinx Lowers 1Q Revenue View On Supply Constraints
02 July 2009 - 11:56PM
Dow Jones News
Xilinx Inc. (XLNX), in a reversal of the generally optimistic
sentiment recently building in the chip sector, now sees fiscal
first-quarter sales below the low end of its prior projections
because of supply constraints on some devices.
The company, which designs logic chips that are programmed to
perform specific chores in products, said it now expects sales for
the quarter ended Saturday to be down about 5% from the prior
quarter. It had said in April that it expected sales in a range of
down 4% to up 4% sequentially.
Xilinx shares fell 4.7% to $19.60 premarket. The stock is down
about 14% over the past year, a slimmer decline than most of its
semiconductor peers. The sector as a whole has struggled from a
sharp slump in demand in recent months.
San Jose, Calif.-based Xilinx's chips are used in products such
as cellphone base stations, network routers, DVD players and cable
modems. About 40% of its business comes from the communications
market, and about 30% stems from the industrial segment.
Xilinx's outlook cut follows more bullish expectations from
rival Altera Corp. (ALTR). In early June, Altera, which also makes
logic chips, backed its second-quarter projection for a 2% to 7%
sequential rise in revenue.
Altera shares were down 2.7% to $15.95 premarket.
In addition to Altera, several other chip names have offered
hopeful comments concerning the state of the chip market.
Analog chip giant Texas Instruments Inc. (TXN) surprised Wall
Street by raising its second-quarter outlook during its regularly
scheduled mid-quarter update June 8. Also in mid-June, National
Semiconductor Corp. (NSM) topped analyst expectations when
reporting its fiscal fourth-quarter results, with Chief Executive
Brian Halla adding that business conditions improved throughout the
quarter.
Xilinx, meanwhile, raises a red flag for Altera and the rest of
the chip sector as investors question whether the revision
represents the start of a more bearish theme set to continue
through second-quarter earnings season, or remains specific to
Xilinx, said Jefferies & Co. analyst Adam Benjamin.
"I'm inclined to keep this as a one-off right now because it's
so inconsistent with everything we heard throughout the quarter.
But it's something that bears watching," he said.
The company said the reduction in its sales outlook was because
of supply constraints on some Virtex-5 devices that are in high
demand. It said it expects most of the issue to be resolved in the
current quarter.
Xilinx, for its part, said in April that it would cut about 6%
of its staff, freeze salaries and work to improve efficiency,
following actions by other companies in the sector to reduce costs
amid the downturn.
-By Jerry A. DiColo, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2155;
jerry.dicolo@dowjones.com
(Kerry Grace Benn contributed to this report.)