Good day, everyone, and welcome to the Entegris 4th quarter 2015 earnings call with analysts. Today's call is being recorded. At this time, for opening remarks and introductions, I would like to turn the call over to Steve Kanter, vice president of corporate relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you. Good morning, everyone, and thank you all for joining our call. Earlier today, we announced the financial results for our fourth quarter fiscal year ended December 1, 2015. You can access a copy of our press release on our website. Before we begin, I'd like to remind listeners that our comments today will include some forward looking statements.
These statements involve a number of risks and uncertainties which are outlined in detail in our reports and filings with the defined by the SEC in Regulation G, you can find a reconciliation table in today's press release as well as on our website. On the call today are Bertrand Law, President and CEO and Greg Graves, chief financial officer. Bertrand will now begin the call. Bertrand?
Thank you, Steve. I will make some general comments on the results for the year and for the fourth quarter. Greg will then provide more details on our financial results. Overall, I am very proud of the performance for Entegris and our many accomplishments in 2015. It was an extremely busy and productive year, and I wanted to thank the entire Entegris team around the world for their hard work and focus in making 2015 in the success.
To lift a few of our achievements, of sales of $1,100,000,000 reached a record high for Entegris and grew faster than our markets. We grew our adjusted earnings per share of 23 percent to a record high. We completed the integration of ATMI achieving the full $30,000,000 of synergies ahead of schedule and at a lower cost, sustain our investments in new products and new technologies both in our constantly connected business and in our adjacent markets. We generated strong cash flow and achieved an EBITDA margin of 21.5 percent. Finally, we met our debt repayment target and paid down 100,000,000 of debt during the year, which reduced our net leverage to less than 1.4 times.
I was particularly pleased with these achievements given the soft industry environment in the second half of the year, and the significant currency headwinds we faced. After a strong Q1, wafer production slowed through the year and was below seasonal trends. As device makers lowered their production to reduce inventories and push down the timing of production of new process technologies. Given these industry trends, we performed well. Our sales of nearly $1,100,000,000 for the year were up 3% on a pro form a basis when adjusted for a EUR 32,000,000 currency headwind.
This year, we made very good progress to leverage our expanded technology platform and greater scale to address opportunities in ways we could not before. The intensity and quality of customer engagements this past year were greater than anything I have seen in the past. These projects are resulting in solutions, not only for the leading edge, but also for pockets of growth as the training notes. During our Analyst Day in July, we described how we are positioned to grow and expand our share by leveraging our unique strength. The breadth of our technologies, our drive for manufacturing excellence and our largest scale.
This past year, we made great progress in delivering even more differentiated materials and solutions to enable cleaner and higher purity process chemistries that are helping our customers reach acceptable yields faster. For example, We are developing a new series of liquid filters targeting photochemical suppliers to enable them to meet more exact impurity requirements demanded by leading fabs. For Entegris, this represents an opportunity to expand our served available market and to leverage the enhanced capabilities of our I2M center. In addition, we continued to develop a number of materials that are critical to the next generation nodes. For instance, we expanded the offering of our gas specialty gas solutions business with new boron gas mixtures for advanced ion implant applications.
These mixtures help produce the buildup of Dungsten in the implant tool chamber thus improving the lifetime of the iron source and increasing the stability of the IND. By using our specialized gas canisters to deliver these boron mixtures and our deep knowledge of implant gas applications, we will be ideally positioned in this growing market segment. These two examples I just described are just samples of how we are using our capabilities to enable our customer's roadmap. More generally speaking, we are delighted with the quality of our new product pipeline This past year, we generated healthy operating cash flow of EUR 121,000,000, and we deployed that cash consistent with our stated capital allocation strategy. That strategy seeks to balance debt repayment, pending liquidity for targeted M And A and opportunistic share repurchases.
In 2014 2015, our objective was to use our excess cash to pay down our debt which we did. We repaid $51,000,000 in 20.14 and another $100,000,000 in 2015. Which reduced our net leverage from 2x when we announced the ATM ID in 2014 to around 1.4x. Today, with our shares trading at what we believe are below fair market levels and with our growing U. S.
Cash balances, the board has authorized the repurchase of up to SEK 100,000,000 of stock. Turning to the 4th quarter results. Sales of $267,000,000 were slightly above the high end of our guidance as the month of December proved stronger than expected. Semiconductor sales, which represented 77 percent of revenue, were down 2% versus the 3rd quarter, modestly better than the industry trends. Sales in our agents and markets were up 1% sequentially, and represented approximately 23% of our revenue in Q4.
This reflected higher sales in data storage, Solar and glass forming, which was offset by lower sales related to flat panel display. On an operating basis, our non GAAP earnings per share of and a favorable tax rate. During our last call, I indicated that we would take steps to proactively manage through what we conservatively expected, maybe a 6 to 9 months tough batch. Accordingly, we throttled back our expenses and took steps to aggressively reduce our inventory. We knew these measures would put pressure on margins in the short term but it would provide us with greater cash flow and flexibility in our working capital management.
Greg will have more details on this in his remarks. Looking forward, we are excited about what lies ahead for Entegris. This year, we will be celebrating our 5th year anniversary as a company. And we are optimistic it will be another record year for Entegris. While we expect business conditions to remain soft in the first quarter, which tends to be seasonally weak, we expect demand to strengthen as we move through the second quarter into the back half of the year.
I would now turn the call to Greg
for the financial details. Greg? Thank you, Bertrand. 4th quarter sales $67,000,000 were above the high end of our guidance, driven by stronger sales across a number of businesses including liquid filtration and specialty materials. Sales were down 2% from a year ago, but were flat when you consider we faced the 2% $5,000,000 negative impact of foreign exchange.
Our non GAAP earnings per share of $0.20 also topped our expectations. As Bertrand highlighted, gross margin of 41% declined from 43% in Q3, primarily as a result of sharply lower manufacturing output. This enabled us to reduce our inventory levels by 15,000,000 or 18% or excuse me, 8%. In addition, we incurred higher membrane product sampling expense related to customer qualifications as we entered the final stretch of the transition to the I2M center. The transition to the I2M center currently represents a drag on margin of approximately $2,000,000 to $3,000,000 per quarter due to sampling custom to customer sampling costs and duplicative overhead.
We expect these costs will go away when we complete the transition and closed the old facility in 43% in the first quarter and to improve further in the second quarter. Finally, we expect gross margin to reach higher normalized levels in the third quarter as we achieved the full benefit of the I2M transition. Q4 results included amortization of $11,400,000 and the final tranche of integration expense of $5,600,000. The integration expense included litigation related costs from pre acquisition ATMI events, the write down of a warehouse facility built prior to the acquisition and higher than expected transfer costs related to the integration of our Asian legal entities. Excluding these costs, non GAAP operating expenses were $72,200,000 in Q4.
This was within our guidance. We expect non GAAP operating expenses to be $71,000,000 to $73,000,000 in the first quarter of 2016. Adjusted operating margin was 13.9%, slightly below our target model. By segment, the operating margin for CMH of 20.2% in Q4 declined from 22.3 percent in Q3. EM's operating margin at 21 point 3% declined from 22.4%.
Both CMH and EM were impacted by the volume related gross margin headwind I just described. Net interest expense was $9,700,000 in Q4, The slight increase from Q3 was due to the additional 5 days in Q4. Our GAAP tax tax rate for the quarter was 33 was a 33% net benefit. And on a non GAAP basis, was a 3% net benefit. The lower tax rate was driven primarily by 2 factors.
Congressional reenactment of the R and D credit in the 4th quarter and lower taxable income in the U. S. As most of the gross margin impact related to lower production was at U S. Facilities. For Q1, we expect the GAAP tax rate to be approximately 25% and the non GAAP tax rate to be approximately 28%.
The higher tax rate in 2016 is largely due to the expiration of a longstanding tax holiday in Malaysia. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $51,400,000, giving us an EBITDA CapEx was $16,000,000 in Q4 $72,000,000 for the full year. For 2016, we are expecting CapEx to be 75,000,000 to 85,000,000 as we continue to invest in a number of focused growth initiatives. Cash flow from operations for $350,000,000. This reflects the cash flow from operations, less $16,000,000 of capital expenditures plus the cash proceeds related to certain asset dispositions.
Our domestic cash balance stood at nearly 150,000,000. Total long term debt including current maturities ratio of 1.4 times. Under the terms of the debt agreements, we are not required to make any mandatory repayments in 20 16, although we expect to repay $50,000,000 during the course of the year. As Bertrand indicated, the board has authorized the repurchase of up to a $100,000,000 of stock in open market purchases or under 10b5-1 trading plans. In addition to these repurchases, we expect to continue to execute the other elements of our capital allocation strategy, namely debt repayment and building liquidity for potential M and A.
Turning to our outlook for Q1. We expect sales to range from 250,000,000 due to soft seasonal business trends. At these revenue levels, to be $0.13 to $0.17 per share, consistent with our target model. In summary, Q4 capped off a very good year for Entegris with record revenue and EPS. We significantly improved our working capital and generated strong cash flow.
We expect to deliver results consistent with our target model in Q1 and the balance of 20.16. Finally, our balance sheet continues to improve, and we have liquidity available for buybacks, debt reduction, and possible small acquisitions. Operator will now take questions.
Our first question comes from Patrick Ho with Stifel. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Thank you very much and congrats on a nice year. Bertrand, you mentioned some comments about your overall trends. As you look forward to 2016, But given the work out of your inventory in Q4 and, you know, some of the comments from your customers to date about their inventory levels, How do you see 1, their inventory levels? And 2, what kind of demand trends do you potentially see that would drive, I guess, a restocking of inventory at your customers.
Perfect. Thank you for the comment. Well, many of our customers have commented that they believe their inventory levels or the inventory levels in their channel are currently at healthy and normal levels. So that's really our operating assumption as well. You think about the guidance that we provided for Q1 and the guidance we provided for the year ahead, the guidance for Q1 reflects some caution about the overall IC demand and fat activity early in 2016.
And that's a view that is consistent with the comments that we made in October of last year, and that's really the view that led us to take some of the actions that we took in terms of cost containment and inventory management. But we expect things to turn fairly rapidly and then Tobi and Hockley as early as Q2. And we expect growth in our business, in 2016 as a result of 2 factors. The first factor is we expect MSI to grow in the low single digits during fiscal 'sixteen. And the second factors that we expect integrase to benefit from the initial ramp, the initial 10 nanometer ramp at several fab customers later in the year.
So if you take those 2 factors, coupled with the planned introduction of a number of new products, I think we would be in a good position to outgrow the industry yet again by 200 to 300 basis points.
Great. That's helpful. And maybe as a follow-up question, given some of the qualifications that you're seeing at the I2M facility, Obviously, from an intensity sample, you mentioned that it's at a very high point. How much of it is for the leading edge, as you mentioned, 10 nanometers Or is this kind of broadly based in terms of the qualifications that you're seeing with customers?
Actually, that's a great question. Actually, the qualifications that are taking place right now. I'd like to, really covers the full range of products. So trading edge as well as Lini Gage. But you're correct that the reason why the site 2M project is so strategic and so important for us is coming from a number of different reasons.
First, the I2M center will give us access to a cleaner more capable manufacturing process. And that's going to be essential in order for us to develop the next generation of fences required at 10 in the second, once we, complete the qualification of the I2M center, it will essentially double the capacity, for those, those filters. And ultimately, that's going to really lift the cap that lift the lid that has been, plaguing the growth potential of those products now for a number of quarters. So Again, I think as we close the year, as we close 2015, I'm extremely pleased that nearly all of our internal qualifications are complete and that we are moving extremely fast now on supporting and completing, the customer qualification. I think we would be in a very good place in a couple of quarters for now.
Our next question comes from Weston Twigg with Pacific Crest Securities. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Hi, thanks for taking my question. First just on the inventory, can you give us an idea if you expect to continue to take that down in Q1 or if you think it'll stabilize or maybe increase a bit?
In Q1, we'd expect inventory levels to be stable to maybe up modestly. And I think that'll be a function of, as we move through the quarter, what we were expecting as we move into Q2.
Okay. Helpful. And then also just wondering on, adjacent market revenue or non semi revenue. Can you help us understand the revenue trends you see in Q1 and expectations through 20 team for that segment?
Yes, Wes. This is Bertrand. So Q1, I would expect to actually modestly favorable growth for the non semi business. And, I would expect actually modest contribution to the overall growth in 2016. In other words, the bulk the growth I was referring to will most likely come from our semi markets in 2016 as a result of some of the activity that we expect to see around 10 nanometer later in the year.
Very helpful. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Dick Ryan with Dougherty. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Margin on on EM having the same kind of gross margin headwinds as the previous quarter. But if you look last year, I think the contribution was like 29%. Anything else going on in in that story? Are you seeing any pricing issues?
Now there's really nothing else going on in that story. I would just say that the comparability, between last year is not perfect. Because we brought the most of the EM business onto our common SAP system and onto the Entegris costing methodology. So there is nothing that's fundamentally changed in that business. I would say when we talk about, potential price pressure, We have less price pressure in CMH than we do in EM, but, I mean, that's not an overarching concern.
Okay. And I think I got your top line FX impact for the quarter and the year. Did you mention profitability impact from FX at all in the quarter or the year?
No. I mean, we tend to be pretty naturally hedged. I mean, because our biggest headwind on currency on the top line tends to be the yen, and that also ends up being a tailwind on the on the cost side because we manufacture in Japan as well. So for the year, currency was between $30,000,000 $35,000,000 headwind. But when you think about it on an operating margin basis, it's relatively neutral.
Okay. In your Q1 guidance, 25265, can you kinda handicap or would need to to go on, we're halfway through the quarter to hit either end of that. I mean, is it are you factoring anything in from the Taiwan earthquake? Maybe it's too soon for that. But, anything there or, what's your assumptions on Unit And CapEx contribution?
Actually, if you think about both ends of the guidance for Q1, again, as I mentioned earlier, we're trying to capture some caution around, sand activity, starting, the year. I mean, we remember that we, we left 2015 with a number of our customers operating in the low to meet 80% utilization rates. We haven't seen any meaningful improvement from those rates. So far this quarter. So that talks to the low end of the range.
On the high end of the range, Again, it has to do with, you know, some early activity around 10 nanometer And then some scenario where fab activity could actually improve above and beyond our expectations. In the second part of Q1. Another part of your question was around the impact of the recent earthquake that shook the the south and part of, the Taiwan Island. As of this point, and again, the information coming from our customers is still preliminary and still very much positive. But we do not expect, that the impact would be very significant.
And we are obviously working very closely with our customers to help them mitigate any negative impact the earthquake could have on their But again, we try to factor the impact of the earthquake into our guidance the best we could.
Okay, great. Thanks and congratulations on good execution.
Thank you.
And our next question comes from Christopher Kapsch with BB And T Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Yeah, good morning. I had a follow-up question on the guidance for first quarter. If I So I look at that range, the high end of your sales range would be, excuse me, comparable to the 4th quarter. So, roughly flat sequentially. And given that you, I guess, don't have this inventory drawdown penalty in the first quarter, presumably, gross margins would be healthier.
So I'm wondering why the guidance range on the EPS line isn't at least the high end, at least comparable to what you did in the in the 4th quarter. Is there some some mix effect that's going on? Yeah.
The the the big the big change between q 1 in Q4 is really around the tax rate.
I mean,
we're talking about a tax rate of 28 percent in Q1 where it was up benefit of 3% in Q4, we would expect our operating margins to be better than they were in Q4.
Got it. Okay. And then just, can you talk about sequentially how your order demand, patterns trended during sequentially throughout the quarter and thus far into the first quarter. And as a follow-up to that, can you discern any sort of bifurcation around transport your products that go into leading edge versus lagging edge?
I think the first part of the question is what, trended we experienced in our order pattern in Q4. And I would say that, it remained itself throughout the quarter. As I mentioned, a number of our customers were operating at very low levels of fab utilization. What came as a surprise in Q4 as a positive surprise was that the last 2 weeks of the quarter were stronger than expected. In particular, we experienced very strong demand for our UPE and different filters And as a result, our liquid microcontamination business grew 3% sequentially and finished the year on a very high note, If you think about the velocity of our orders going into Q1, I think they are at about similar levels of what we experienced in Q4.
And that's really the basis for the guidance in the guidance that we provided for Q1. Okay. Is there just
yes, the follow-up to that, is there any, you know, difference between the strength or weakness at the leading edge versus the lagging edge in terms of the, the fab utilization rates or demand for your products into those applications? Thanks.
Good question, but I would say that, the fab digitization rates were actually very depressed across notes. So, at the leading edge as well as the trailing edge. So there was not really a lot of differences between between notes and between customers.
And we'll take our next question from Christian Schwab with Craig Hallum Capital Group. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Great. Congratulations on a solid quarter and good execution. Bertrand, can you please elaborate on on what you specifically believe, could cause demand to strengthen in Q1. Is is that, unit driven? Is that CapEx driven?
Is it a combination of both? Is it leading edge? Is it trailing edge? Is it industry comment, or is it more, line of sight to, improves ham to liquid filtration or specialty gas going on into the I'm in plant market. It's a little clarity of a 1, 2, 3 punch there would be very helpful.
Hey, Christian. I tried to address, that question earlier in a comment. And I think that, there are many reasons behind our conviction that 2016 could be a really good year for Entegris. The first is that we believe that MSI will will grow, albeit in, you know, the low single digits in 2016. And, the reason for that is we believe that you know, TC sales will be stabilizing in 2016.
We expect to see some pockets of strength on the mobile device sales front, and we expect to see continued growth on some of the internet of things application. So all of that combined will help, NSI to be in positive territory. In 2016. The other thing, as I mentioned earlier, is that, a number of our fab customers have finally made a commitment to ramp their 10 nanometer process technology later in the year. And as you know, many of our development efforts over the last couple of years have been targeting, enabling technologies around a 10 nanometer node.
So, you would expect some good positive momentum as we see evidence of, of those ramps later in the year. So that's essentially really what would be driving the growth momentum in 2016. It's really leading edge primarily, and more specifically, again, the early rounds of 10 nanometer nodes.
Great. Well, congratulations. In the last conference call, you were kind of first to be kind of grumpy about the market and murky. And the SOX was at 6.83 today. We said 16% lower.
Now you're optimistic, so love to hear your optimism. I don't have any other questions. Alright.
Our next question comes from Amanda Scarnati with Citibank. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Hi, thanks for taking the question. Just a quick question on the debt, and I might have missed this.
What are the expectations for debt repayment in 1Q 2016? And is there a moderating of the aggressiveness of the debt repayment in order to maintain cash for potential acquisitions?
So, I think it's unlikely that we'll make a payment in Q1. We do intend to pay at least $50,000,000, during 2016, and we got that classified current on our balance sheet. In the second half of the question, I was is change our is there a moderating? And I would say if you were to roll the clock back 12 months ago to today, Today, we're more focused on maintaining liquidity and maintaining flexibility than we probably were 12 months ago. What we've been saying is for every dollar of cash we generate, we'll take a dollar and continue to build liquidity, and then we'll take a dollar and use it toward share repurchases or debt repayment.
Whereas a year ago, we'd have set everything over a 125 in liquidity. We're used to reduce debt. So we have we're focused on being a little bit more flexible.
And then on, Bertron, you mentioned that, that when I 2M center fully ramped, you're going through that's in its double capacity. Do you see a risk of significantly lowering ASPs and hurting margins if you double capacity, or is there enough room that you need all that excess capacity? Is there enough demand?
I mean, the reason why we made the investment in investor relations is that we knew that the current manufacturing line was not sufficient based on the forecasted demand for those products. So, I actually do not expect to be facing a situation where there would be a lot of excess capacity. If things go as planned, I would tell you that we could find ourselves in a position where we would need to add capacity to, meet what we expect to be a great growth opportunity for those UP filters. Remember that those filters are essentially the line of defense for many of our fab customers. So think about those filters as really being part and parcel of the fab process for SAP.
Think about those fixes as becoming almost a, a requirement in terms of bulk situation, for the resist chemical manufacturers. So I think that the SAM for those features has expanded tremendously. And I think our market share is also, extending quite a bit recently. So I would expect these products to be a great success going forward and a very important ingredient to our overall growth.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Eric Baraso with Jefferies. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Good morning. Thanks for taking my call. One of my questions already answered, but, on the debt side, is there a target leverage that you guys are looking for?
Would say we don't have a specific target leverage ratio. I mean, we we were comfortable when we were up at 2 when we when we announced the transaction, our goal is to continue to drive that net leverage ratio down. However, in the in the in the absence of a meaningful M and A transaction, you should expect to see the net leverage continue to come down.
Thank you. And just in terms of cash, I know you guys said there's about $150,000,000 of domestic cash puts at about $200,000,000 of offshore. How much that can you repatriate without adverse tax consequences?
We we would have we we we repatriated, about $70,000,000 near the end of 2012. Or excuse me, 2015, and we would expect, this year that we should repatriate somewhere between $50,000,000 75,000,000 as well, most likely in the first half of the year.
And we have no further questions at this time. I'd like to turn the call back to Bertran for closing or additional remarks.
Well, thank you all for joining us today. This concludes our Q4 2015 earnings call. And, have a great day.
And ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's program. You may disconnect at this time. Thank you, and have