Good day, and welcome to the Lam Research Corporation June 2016 Conference Call. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Sadya Kumar, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to the Lam Research quarterly conference call. With me today are Martin Ansys, President and Chief Executive Officer and Doug Berenger, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. During today's call, we'll share our outlook on the business environment, review our financial results for the June 2016 quarter, our outlook for the September 2016 quarter and provide an update on our planned business combination with KLA Tencor. The press release detailing our financial results was distributed a little after 1 P. M.
Pacific Time this afternoon. It can also be found on the Investor Relations section of the company's website, along with the presentation slides that accompany today's call. Today's presentation and Q and A will include statements about our expectations and beliefs regarding certain future events. All statements made that are not historical facts are forward looking statements based on current information and are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially. These forward looking statements include the timing for the closure of the proposed business combination with KLA Tencor, the beliefs to be realized from that transaction, the anticipated structure of future combined operations and our guidance on revenues, shipments, costs, margins, share count and earnings.
Other forward looking topics that we expect to cover are included in the slide deck accompanying our remarks. We encourage you to review the risk factor disclosures in our public filings with the SEC, including our 10 ks and 10 Qs. The company undertakes no obligation to update forward looking statements. Today's discussion of our financial results will be presented on a non GAAP financial basis unless otherwise specified. A detailed reconciliation between GAAP and non GAAP results can be found in today's earnings press release.
This call is scheduled to last until 3 pm Pacific Time. And as always, we ask that you limit your questions to 1 per firm with a very brief follow-up, so that we can accommodate as many questions as possible. As a reminder, the replay of this call will be available later this afternoon on our website. With that, let me turn the call over to Martin.
Thank you, Satya, and thank you all for joining us today for our quarterly earnings conference call. The headline is that we delivered strong results that continue to reinforce our increasingly strong presence in the industry as the enabling technology inflections continue to intensify around etch and deposition processes. In addition, the quality of our earnings rises as a higher proportion of our market share occurs in critical applications, which are characterized by extreme technical complexity and multiyear cycles of learning for the company. Lastly, our expectations for performance in the second half of calendar twenty sixteen are stronger than previously articulated. We believe that with sustained focus on execution in partnership with our customers, multiyear outperformance opportunity is set to continue.
Lam's shipments, revenue and non GAAP gross margins were above the midpoints and non GAAP earnings above the high end of our guided ranges for the recent quarter. I would like to take a moment to acknowledge the support of our customers and the contributions of all Lam employees, without whom our performance would not be possible. I would also like to recognize the support we have received from our suppliers who have helped us to ramp our capacity, increase responsiveness to customers, increase localization and support our rapid product development cycles. Thank you all. At the core of Lam's outperformance is our culture and values, our close partnership with our customers and our ability to deliver innovative products, service and capabilities at scale, which directly address key semiconductor manufacturing technology and market inflections such as 3 d NANDs, multi patterning, FinFETs and advanced packaging.
Our predominant focus is always on increasing the probability of success for our customers contributing to their stated business objectives. In that context, the importance of these technology inflections and their enabling of new industry growth vectors has never been stronger. Our leading customers are moving to capitalize on the acceleration in innovation centered on the next wave of industry application drivers such as virtual reality, artificial intelligence and connected devices and automobiles. They articulate aspirations to change the world. Realizing the potential of these application drivers will demand unprecedented scaling of performance, power and cost for compute, storage and networking significantly beyond what is possible with traditional scaling and shrink and Moore's Law.
In essence, this reenergizing of our industry demands a more holistic approach to systems architecture through the entire semiconductor ecosystem. In cloud server, storage and networking devices, this revolution is driving significant semiconductor demand for DRAM, NAND, new memory technologies and over time additional logic chip demand for advanced computation necessary for converting data into actionable information. Growth in semiconductor content for DRAM NAND and leading and trailing edge logic is a strong theme also in clients' devices like smartphones, IoT and connected automobiles to deliver the power of the new industry application drivers and enrich the end consumer experience. We believe that Lam is in an outstanding position to help drive needed innovation and capitalize on the opportunities presented by current and future inflections. The foundation of the last several years, great employees, strong ecosystem trust and the increasing quality of products and technology roadmaps delivers an execution track record, proven financial outperformance and leads to our recognized market leadership position.
Lam's etch and deposition products and their on wafer performance are vital to our customer success no doubt. In partnership, we are enabling multi patterning driven scaling in logic and DRAM. We are facilitating cost reduction and density scaling for 3 d NAND and new memory technologies and supporting increased compute performance and memory bandwidth with FinFET and advanced packaging technology inflections. One characterization of our strategic relevance is in our expanding market opportunity. As a result of our strategic and operational execution through the last several years, Lam's addressable market as a share of WFE has increased from 26.5% in 2013 to over 30% last year and is on track once again to exceed the performance of overall WFE in 2016.
The 3 d NAND inflection in particular has accelerated and is driving a greater than 30% growth in 2016 NAND WFE year over year as our customers target probably the single largest growth opportunity in all of semis over the next few years. NAND is still in the early stages of penetration with its share of total bits addressable at under 20% of the overall flash and spinning media storage market combined. Underpinning the strong product cycle for NAND in storage is the visibility provided by the technology roadmap of our customers, which extends well into the next decade. Etch and deposition are the key process technology enablers of 3 d NAND, a fact that is perhaps best illustrated by the greater than 2x growth in our non volatile memory markets over the last 2 years and exciting multiyear growth outlook going forward. In addition to the demanding requirements for high aspect ratio etch and cost and technology enabling, mold stack scaling in 3 d, atomic level processing is growing increasingly important as storage layer counts scale from 40 plus today to over 60 next year and eventually to more than 100 layers in the next few years.
Lam has prepared its product portfolio for this trend. Our latest ULTA system with low fluorine tungsten atomic layer deposition or ALD capability is being qualified at multiple customers. This system enables the next generation 3 d NAND and DRAM by delivering an innovative ALD solution with lower fluorine impurities, differentiated stress control and void free fill properties. Our Vectostrata PVCVD deposition product is seeing very strong momentum with its industry leading productivity and film property control from mold stack deposition and is now a process tool of record at the significant majority of global 3 d NAND customers. Our dielectric etch installed base for high aspect ratio applications in 3 d NAND and DRAM has more than doubled over the last year.
This strong performance of the portfolio of our vector Strata and Altus Deposition and Flex and Keogh Etch products has allowed us to remain on track with our objective first shared with the U. S. SemiComm West a year ago of 7 to 10 percentage points of share gain from the 2 d to 3 d NAND transition. Another important element of the value we bring to our customers and enabling the growth of our systems market share is our customer support business group, which is leading value creation across the entirety of our 40,000 process modules in the installed base. This organization inside of our company is providing world class support for our new systems during integrated circuit production ramp and addressing our customers' ongoing and critical operational needs for spares and services over lifetime.
But increasingly, this organization is also contributing highly innovative, differentiated technology, productivity and life cycle solutions resulting in substantial served market growth and an increasing revenue stream annuity that supports our investments in our future. Now turning to a Lam and KLA Tencor merger update. To reemphasize the points made many times before, the outperformance potential of Lam is set to continue for multiple years, we believe. This period of strength we have chosen to harness strategically through the planned business combination of 2 great companies. We continue to make progress with antitrust agency reviews.
We are pleased with the overall tone of support from our customers for this investments and without compromising the focus and execution in 2 standalone companies, the integration planning is in better shape today than was true for Lam and Novelis at the same point in the process. Excitement and substance internally and with our customers is building. We continue to work diligently to receive the necessary approvals and now targets completion of our merger in the coming few months. We have no doubts this is a value creating transaction for our customers and company, for our employees and suppliers worldwide. The opportunity remains.
We are 100% committed to innovate beyond what is possible for the 2 standalone companies separately to the benefit of the overall semi ecosystem and add to the potential of Lam as currently defined. Now turning to an overview of capital equipment spending patterns in 2016. Expectations for global economic growth have remained generally stable since our last report, although there has been some increased uncertainty with the possible effects of Brexit. End market demand expectations for PCs been relatively stable and there's evidence of solid growth in low end smartphones and slightly slower units, but stronger content expectations today in high end smartphones. We continue to expect solid and long term demand for leading edge silicon in the enterprise markets driven by the move to the cloud.
WFE for 2016 continues to track to $33,000,000,000 plus or minus $1,000,000,000 Our bottoms up analytics imply at or slightly above the midpoint is most likely. By segments, memory WFE tracks to approximately 15,000,000,000 dollars We're spending more biased to NAND than DRAM this year and for sure since our last updates. We now expect NAND CapEx to be up over 30%, offset by DRAM CapEx, which we now expect to be down approximately 40%. Logic and Foundry CapEx is tracking slightly better than our prior expectations. Spending in these segments is weighted primarily to an addition of 10 nanometer and some pilot 7 nanometer capacity as well as additions at the mature 28 nanometer and 40 nanometer technology nodes with China featuring prominently driven by strength in low and mid end smartphones and IoT devices.
Despite a flattish WFE year with some segments mix headwinds for our company, including a substantial decline in DRAM CapEx this year, Lam once again is poised to outperform WFE in calendar 2016. We are confident that calendar year over year revenues and second half twenty sixteen versus first half twenty sixteen trends are very positive. Currently, we anticipate second half shipments will be up mid to high single digits sequentially. Momentum continues to build in 3 d NAND with total 3 d NAND shipped capacity at the end of calendar 2016 now tracking to the higher end of the 350,000 to 400,000 wafer starts per month outlook that we provided earlier. In DRAM, spending remains focused on the 2Z nanometer and 1X nanometer conversions with about 50% of industry capacity converted to 20 nanometer and mid single digits converted to 1x we believe by the end of this calendar year.
We remain optimistic on content demand drivers for DRAM in clients and servers, which combined with our customers' prudent responses to managing supply in response to the PC demand weakness earlier in the year are already pointing to early signs of improving supply and demand balance. This sentiment biases us positively for a recovery in DRAM CapEx as we look into the next calendar year. As we enter the second half of twenty sixteen, we are excited by the inflection driven long term outperformance opportunities for Lam. Also our strong installed base market share positions across all geographies and when combined with KT further increased strategic relevance to our customers by providing them more valuable innovation, trusted productivity and fast solutions. With that, let me hand the call over to Doug.
Okay, great. Thank you, Martin. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us on the call today during what I know was a busy earnings time. The June quarter results represented a solid conclusion to the 2016 fiscal year. In the quarter, we performed above the midpoint of guidance for all metrics with operating margin and earnings per share above the high end of the range.
For the fiscal year shipments, revenues, operating income dollars and earnings per share were all at record high levels. We delivered double digit revenue growth fiscal year over fiscal year through at twice the rate of revenue growth. Moving now to the specifics for the June quarter, shipments were $1,587,000,000 up approximately 10% compared to the March quarter and just slightly below the record high level that we saw in the June 2015 quarter. The combined memory segment made up 66% of system shipments and that was down from 70% in the prior quarter. Non volatile memory shipments contributed 51% of the system shipments and this was up from 43% in the March quarter.
The non volatile shipment dollars represent record levels for Lam Research. As we progress through the first half of the year, 3 d NAND investments have accelerated with multiple customers moving forward in their 3 d NAND ramp plants. We are continuing to see the expansion of our SAM and this combined with our success in winning critical applications in the 3 d NAND process flows of our customers is driving the financial performance we're delivering. 3 d NAND will represent over 95% of NAND shipments for 2016. As we expected DRAM shipments decreased to 15% from 27% in the prior quarter.
Investment is pacing at a rational reduced level in response to market conditions. DRAM spending was predominantly focused on 20 nanometer conversions with a continued objective of lowering cost per bit. PC DRAM pricing seems to have bottomed as the market shifts to server and mobile DRAM. Server and mobile represents roughly 2 thirds of the market bit growth this year. System shipments into the foundry segment increased to 27%, which is up from 23% in the March quarter.
And as Martin mentioned, foundry spending continues to be broad based with an increasing contribution from 10 nanometer capacity additions augmented by the ongoing investment at 28 nanometer and above nodes primarily in China. The logic and other segment held steady at 7% of system shipments, which was a level similar to that we saw in the March quarter. From a geographic standpoint, China continued to be strong representing 17% of total shipments and 22% of total revenue. June quarter revenues came in at $1,546,000,000 a sequential increase of 18% and above the midpoint of our guidance. Gross margin was strong in the period at 46.6%, which was a 150 basis point improvement from the 45.1% that we saw in the March quarter.
The strength in gross margin was a result of higher business volumes as well as favorable product mix. And as we've described previously, you should expect to see variability quarter to quarter in our gross margins. And I'd just like to remind you that our financial model is the best reference to help you think about margins over time. Our operating expenses for the quarter were within our expectations at $61,000,000 which was an increase on an absolute basis from the $350,000,000 in the March quarter, but decreasing to 23% of revenue in the June quarter versus 27% in March. In the June quarter, our spending allocated to R and D was 63% of total spending.
During the quarter, we completed construction on our new R and D lab in Fremont, California. This lab will put us at the state of the art in terms of capability and flexibility to continue to develop leading edge process capability and productivity solutions. Operating income for the quarter was very strong at $359,000,000 which was an increase of 48% compared to the $242,000,000 in the March quarter. Operating margin increased from 18.4% to 23.2%, above the high end of the guidance range due to both the higher revenue as well as the stronger gross margin. This operating margin percentage is the 2nd highest level since our acquisition of Novelis in 2012.
Our tax rate came in at 10%, which was lower than the 14% rate last quarter, primarily due to more income from lower tax jurisdictions. A rate in the low teens for the remainder of 2016 could be a reasonable number for you to use in your modeling. Earnings per share for the June quarter were $1.80 based on a share count of approximately 175,000,000 shares. The share count includes dilution from both the 2018 and 2001 convertible notes and the outstanding 2016 warrants with a total dilutive impact of about 13,000,000 shares on a non GAAP basis. In the June quarter, our $450,000,000 2016 convertible note matured and was settled for both cash and stock.
The stock issuance was offset by the corresponding bond hedge that we had in place. Dilution schedules for the remaining convertible notes are available on our Investor Relations website for your reference. We returned $0.30 per share for a total of $47,000,000 in dividend 10 Core. Let me now turn to the balance sheet. We have a very solid cash position of $7,100,000,000 on the balance sheet, reflecting both the strong performance of the business as well as steps we've taken to increase the cash position of the company during the quarter.
We generated a strong cash from operations of $424,000,000 which was an increase of 132% sequentially in the quarter. Cash from operations for the fiscal year came in at $1,350,000,000 a record high level. As expected, day sales outstanding for the period improved to 74 days from 86 days, but the shipment profile more linear than in the March quarter. Inventory turns improved to 3.5 times. We completed the issuance of $2,400,000,000 in principal value of investment grade senior notes in May.
This issuance together with $1,500,000,000 in term loans completes the required financing for the KLA 10 Core transaction. The net interest expense associated with the $2,400,000,000 financing is $4,000,000 and is excluded from our non GAAP results in this quarter. On a full quarter basis, the net interest expense from this new debt will be approximately $18,000,000 The deferred revenue balance at the end of the June quarter stood at $566,000,000 an 11% increase quarter over quarter. That number excludes approximately $132,000,000 from shipments to customers in Japan, which will convert to revenue in future quarters. And recall that those Japan shipments remain as inventory carried at cost on the balance sheet.
I expect that deferred revenue will again grow in the September quarter. Company non cash expenses during the quarter included the following $39,000,000 for equity comp, dollars 39,000,000 for amortization and $36,000,000 for depreciation. Capital expenditures were $52,000,000 which is up from $46,000,000 in the March quarter. CapEx projects included investment in infrastructure expansion from an additional engineering lab space to support the growth of the company. During the quarter, we sold our San Jose campus for net proceeds of approximately $80,000,000 and a gain of $15,000,000 This gain is excluded from our non GAAP results.
This transaction is part of our R and D consolidation into the Fremont site. We exited the quarter with approximately 7,500 regular full time employees. The growth in headcount was primarily related to growth in factory resources to support the growing business level. Additionally, we added some R and D heads. So now looking ahead, I'd like to provide our non GAAP guidance for the September quarter.
We're expecting shipments of $1,700,000,000 plus or minus $75,000,000 This midpoint would represent a record level of shipments for Lam Research. We expect revenue of $1,625,000,000 again, plus or minus $75,000,000 This midpoint would also represent a record level of revenue. Expect gross margin of 45.5 percent plus or minus 1 percentage point. Gross margin is down sequentially due to higher customer concentration in September. We forecast operating margins of 22.5 percent plus or minus 1 percentage point.
And finally, we forecast earnings per share of $1.77 plus or minus 0.10 dollars based on a share count of approximately 176,000,000 shares. This earnings per share number excludes the $18,000,000 associated with the $2,400,000,000 KLA 10 Corp Financing. The net interest expense will be excluded from our non GAAP results until such time as the deal closes. We expect both shipments and revenue to be stronger in the second half than the first half with mid to high single digit growth in shipments in the second half of the calendar year compared to the first half. We expect revenue growth in the second half to outpace shipment growth half over half.
We expect to deplete some of the deferred revenue balance by the end of the calendar year. And that concludes my prepared remarks. Operator, Martin and I would now like to open up the call for questions.
Certainly. And we'll go ahead and take our first question from Tim Arcuri with Cowen. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Thank you very much. I had two questions. I guess, first, Doug, I'm not sure if I heard the guidance right, but it sounds like the second half shipment guidance is sort of up mid to high singles. So that would imply that the 4th quarter shipments are down a smidge. They're down maybe $150,000,000 And I guess and my question on that is, we've all heard about some recent big 3 d NAND projects that may have sort of pulled into this year.
So is that more something that's more of a Q3 phenomenon than a Q4 phenomenon? Thanks.
Tim, we're giving you a little bit of color we're giving you a firm number on calendar Q3 and then calendar Q4, it's more directional. That's why it's mid to high single digits because I don't want to get specifically pinned down to exactly what is December and that's why we put a range around it. But when we describe it, it represents our expectation for everything that's going on, not just in 3 d NAND, but foundry logic as well. Just to add
to that, Tim, I would say the message that we would very deliberately emphasize is the inflection space and whether it's multi patterning with logic or 3 d NAND scaling, the ebbs and flows in any one quarter or ebbs and flows from one customer to another. I mean, I guess they're interesting at some level, but I think one of the headlines from the industry in the last 2 to 3 months is a very strong strategic commitment to some inflections that fall directly into the wheelhouse of this company because of the intensity of etch and deposition related process. So yes, there's always an ebb and a flow, but the headline, I hope you help us with, which is long term commitments for customers to inflection that are extremely relevant to the future of this company. Yes. Good point.
Totally, totally Martin. Okay, great. And then a follow-up question is on China. So of course, overnight 2 of the bigger projects in China, the Tsinghua Plan and XMC, they merged to form a new venture. Obviously, they still need IP, but it seems like maybe there's a little more confidence that this project could sort of get off the ground.
I know, Doug, you guys have been a little more, I think, not cautious, but a little more realistic, I'd say, on China that it's sort of like an even sum game. So sort of in light of that recent development, can you talk a little bit about China and whether you're seeing any increased signs that maybe you could see some business from these indigenous projects on the memory side next year? Thanks.
I'll let Martin handle this one. Yes.
I mean, I think I don't really think there's a kind of deliberate kind of tone differentiation for Lam relative to a China agenda. We all see exactly the same thing more or less at exactly the same time. And what we said, I think fairly consistently is that the conviction to an IC 202025 agenda appears very solid and robust. There are very strategic actions sometimes involving global companies, sometimes the domestic community. We are tracking at least 20 different fab level, kind of ambition statements.
And there's a full spectrum of kind of probability associated with each one of those. There clearly is over a multiple year timeframe more than 1,000,000 wafer starts per month out there as a kind of reference point for installed base capacity in China. Relative to it being incremental for me, that's all about performance and cost of devices. And if the performance and cost of devices out of China can be a catalyst and a trigger for incremental demand, it's kind of positive for a global kind of industry, including Lam. So time will tell, but clearly the commitment appears to be there.
And as Doug said in his prepared comments, China is not an insignificant part of the revenues of the industry and the company.
Yes. Tim, just to remind you, whatever happens in China, we are going to be involved substantially. Our share position, our presence here is very strong. So whatever's going on, be it a global multinational or an indigenous Chinese customer, we're extremely well positioned.
Of course. Okay. Thank you so much.
Yes. Thanks, Tim.
Thank you. And we'll go ahead and take our next question from Joe Moore with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Great. Thank you. I wonder if you guys have done any analysis in terms of the current level of DRAM shipments, if you know kind of where we're tracking for DRAM supply next year, kind of given the rate of investment we've seen, if you have any thoughts on that?
Yes. I mean, I think we've done analytics, but we're not going to get ahead of our customers relative to quantitative disclosure. We feel really good about kind of the ASP dynamic in the last several months and the inventory situation generally. I think those are kind of positive trends. The discipline appears to be in the system.
We end the year, we believe with a smaller installed base than we began the year. There's plenty of opportunity left to improve the performance and lower the cost of DRAM chips from conversions. I said in my prepared comments, no more than 50% converted at the 20 nanometer technology node by end of year. So we are biased to a positive spending year in DRAM next year, but we're going to hold off on dollars until a little later in the year.
Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. And then I guess just when you talk about that, that's more based on your extrapolating what the DRAM environment will look like next year? Or are you sort of hearing forecast from your customers that spending would pick up next year?
In DRAM?
I guess the humorous response would be, we don't just make it up. So it's an educated judgment from the analytics of the company and a lot of dialogue with our customers. I mean, we try to give you the best perspective we have and I just did.
Very helpful. Thank you very much. Appreciate it.
Thanks, Joe.
Thank you. And our next question comes from C. J. Muse with Evercore. Please go ahead.
Your line is open. J.
Muse:] Yes, good afternoon. Thank you for taking my question. I guess first question, when you think about an environment with shipments down in Q4, curious how we should think about deferred revenues cascading in given they're at record levels today and you suggested they would grow further in September. So curious how we should think about that coming through and then what would the impact be to gross margins?
So I described an expectation that next quarter deferred revenues will grow again. They grew this quarter. You normally see that when shipments are above revenue, which obviously we've had the last couple of quarters now. I also described an expectation in the scripted remarks that I expect by the end of the year to deplete some of the deferred revenue. And obviously that will happen then in the June quarter if it's growing in September.
So that's the way to think about it. Gross margin, CJ, I'm really only going to guide it 1 quarter at a time. There isn't anything magic about the deferred revenue and gross margin. It's more what the product mix is, the customer concentration, all of that.
Okay. Very helpful. And then I guess as a quick follow-up, hoping to, I guess, dig a little bit into the KT transaction. Can you update us on what needs to get done on a regulatory basis? And then whether you can extend the bridge financing beyond October 20th?
I think I saw that as an important date in the filing. Thank you.
So I will let Doug deal with the financing part of that question. What needs to get done is we need to get consent from agencies that we have to get consent from. We're working hard to do that. We've obviously communicated to you today a delay relative to our original September reference. We might be lucky and still be pleasantly surprised, but we don't expect to receive consents globally inside of the September quarter.
We're targeting before mid October and obviously the disclosure of the company will stay consistent with our learnings. We feel the deal is clearly a compelling value proposition to our customers and our company. We feel better about it today as the value proposition than ever. I think even as recently as Semicon West, we had a couple of customer meetings with clear statements of interest in the joint development activity and the innovation that would be possible when Lam and KT come together. We're targeting closure as fast as practically possible and obviously looking forward to being part of 1 company.
And then CJ, you're right. The term loans have an expiration that would be in the 20th October and were we to still be going back and forth and we extend the deal timing, then I'd have to go extend those as well. It wouldn't be all that hard to do it.
Okay, excellent. Thank you.
Thank you. And our next question comes from Harlan Sur with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Good afternoon and congratulations on the solid quarterly execution. Last quarter, the team was somewhat optimistic on second half shipments being up over first half, but a little bit tempered just given the DRAM fundamental environment. Obviously, this call you seem extremely confident, you even quantified the growth in second half shipments. What segments or programs are driving the better second half view relative to your outlook 90 days ago? Is it truly broad based across memory, foundry and logic or is it skewed towards one segment or the other?
I would say relatively speaking to the commentary of the company 3 months ago, it's memory and foundry both. And it's exactly where you'd expect it to be. It's 3 d NAND and demand related with broad industry commitment to that technology and it's 10 and 7 nanometer focused with, as best I can tell, very good tape outs and customer engagement commentary from the customers that are making those investments. So it's definitely not just a single segment or limited customer commentary.
Thanks for the insights there, Martin. And given the stabilization in DRAM pricing, as you mentioned, there is a focus on profitability. As you mentioned, 50% of the capacity may be transitioned to 20 nanometers exiting this year, but it also seems like there's a sense of acceleration on some of the leaders in this space to make the move to 18 and 16 nanometer nodes. So I'm wondering if you're seeing this reflected in your second half shipment outlook and your thoughts on shift to 1x capacity as we exit this year for DRAM?
Yes. I mean, I think, I mean, the essence of fundamental value in these conversions is kind of well understood and I don't think debated. I think appropriately our customers are disciplined around supply and demand in their as the cycle of demand emerges and as the cycle of demand emerges and there's a decent amount of commentary on content expansion in some of our devices, as well as some positive signs in terms of unit demand on the low and mid end. That this will kind of naturally play itself out. So I don't really think it's a big second half commentary for us, which is why we've articulated an expectation of calendar a big second half commentary for us, which is why we've articulated an expectation of calendar 17 biased to the positive.
And that's certainly when we would expect the supply and demand kind of conversation to be more or less behind us.
Thanks for the insights.
Yes, there's a little bit of 1x conversion occurring, but that really is going to be more about what's happening next year.
Thanks for the insights.
You're welcome. Thank you.
Thank you. And we'll go ahead and take our next question from rahmet shaw with Nomura. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Yes. Thank you. I just wanted
to ask about the deal because there's been uncertainty as to whether or not it's going to go through. And I think part of this stems from what happened last year, you aim at tell, that was a deal that was consistently delayed until it ultimately got killed. And with KLA, this is, from what I understand, the second time that you guys have delayed the timing of the closure. So I guess the question is, why should we be more confident that this transaction actually goes through?
I guess I don't really get chance to comment about your confidence. I will tell you that we believe this transaction is fundamentally different than the conversation and the transaction that you just referred to. There is no overlap whatsoever. We strongly believe in the merits of this transaction. We believe it's pro competitive.
We believe that Lam and KT together can innovate and deliver value to our customers beyond what we can do as independent companies. We are, as you know, from prior disclosure, codifying kind of the behavior that will be relevant to the company with the consent decree conversation. And I think we're on records in prior earnings calls on that point. One part of that obviously is describing our commitment to the entire semiconductor ecosystem relative to availability, supply and support on KT products. And that's just kind of part of this process.
And we're stepping through and working diligently and collaboratively with agencies. We respect their work products. And as you likely anticipate, the crystal ball of Lam Research doesn't extend beyond the precision that we're kind of currently articulating. So we're doing the best we can to give you our best knowledge and we'll continue to make that commitment.
And Martin, is customer feedback really important? And do you feel like there's a difference here with what you guys are trying to do with KLA versus previous deals?
Well, again, maybe I don't want to get trapped in a comparison here. I will tell you what I've tried to communicate from the beginning here. Obviously, we're doing this for the benefit of our customers. We believe we can innovate more and contribute more value to our customers and support their technology and economic roadmaps with this transaction. We believe if we do that, there will be more opportunity for our company and hence all stakeholders benefit.
So we believe passionately in that value proposition and we spend a decent amount of time working the conversation indirectly and sometimes directly with our customers to make sure the strategic choices were lined up with their expectations. There's always an ebb and a flow and I'm sure every one customer has a slightly different characterization of this. But I feel at least as best I can tell from my personal interactions with customers, there's much more support than not and much more interest in exploring innovation potentials.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you. And our next question comes from Toshiya Hari with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Thank you for taking my question and congrats on a great quarter. My first question was on 3 d NAND. I appreciate 2017 is still a couple of quarters out, but I was curious how you guys were thinking about 3 d NAND spend into next year. Are there enough projects out there and is the mix broad based enough for you to predict another healthy year?
Well, I think if the I'm going to stay away from quantitative again, if I may, but qualitatively, we think this is probably one of the most healthy spaces in the semiconductor industry because there are some very compelling value propositions and growth opportunities for semiconductors with solid state drive technology particularly. So again, in any one quarter, there's an ebb and a flow precisely how it plays out, but broad industry commitment to this technology and very compelling growth opportunities as we characterized in our prepared comments today.
Okay. Thank you. And my follow-up is on EUV. It seems like your customers are warming up to the idea of EUV insertion at the 7 nanometer node. Have you also sensed a slight change in tone as it relates to their approach to EUV?
And it would also be helpful if you could help us understand how your opportunity in etch and depth would differ between a world with no EUV and perhaps some EUV? Thank you.
Well, a gentleman by the name of Peter Wennick is much more qualified to answer your question than I am. So as we said a number of times, we are invested in extending immersion and enabling EUV to the best of our abilities as an etch and deposition and clean company. And we believe that the inflection opportunities, multi packing opportunities in DRAM and logic for us extend into an EUV implementation. So when that happens, which we hope it does in the best interests of the semiconductor industry and our customers, we're there to support. And we believe the multi patent growth opportunity continues in that context.
So no major tone comment for me at the customer interface because obviously we dialogue much more about our business than ASML's.
Great. Thank you very much.
Thanks.
Thank you. And we'll go ahead and take our next question from Farhan Ahmad with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Thanks for taking my question. You obviously guided on NAND to be a little bit stronger this year. I just wanted to probe the linearity of NAND. Do you still see the NAND shipment as being primarily first half weighted?
It's a little stronger in the first half than the second half, Fahren. It continues though to be quite strong as we look into the second half.
Got it. And then Doug, can you talk about how much of the cash is onshore versus offshore?
It hasn't well, it hasn't materially changed. All of the $2,400,000,000 that we raised obviously is domestically available, taking that out, the remaining balance sheet cash, it's still about 20% or 25%. As it pertains to funding the transaction, we have all the domestic cash that we need to complete the KLA 10 card transaction.
Thank you. That's all I had.
Yes. Thanks, Farrar.
Thank you. And we'll go ahead next to Stephen Chen with UBS. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Hey, thanks. Hi, Martin and Doug. Nice results. Thank you. Just a question on the customer concentration.
It looks like Lam's shipments to Southeast Asia were up a lot in the quarter. Was this region mostly one customer? And is Lam likely to see a different top 3 customer list every quarter and it's basically just up to you to manage this quarterly customer lumpiness?
Yes, there is primarily one big customer investing in Southeast Asia that I'm sure you know who it is, Stephen. And yes, you're going to see variability quarter to quarter as these very large fab projects get undertaken. They will come in and then they will need to ramp and then another one will come in and they will need to ramp. And so you're going to get variability due to that. That's just the nature of this business.
Yes. And I don't I mean to the managed reference, I don't think we get chance to manage it. We get we are biased to give our customers what they need, when they need it to the best of our abilities. And as Doug says many times, that creates an up and a down week to week, month to month and quarter to quarter in every element of our financial statement. And it's tough for you.
We realize hopefully you realize it's tough for us as well.
And Stephen, just one last comment on this. I mean, I always refer back to the public financial model that we put out there as the best way to kind of think about things over time. When we put that together, we did our best to kind of model some level of variability. It doesn't mean it's going to be exactly those numbers, but that's the right kind of medium to longer term way to think about it.
Okay. Thanks for sharing that color. My follow-up question is on shipments to logic customers. We saw Lam recently win a preferred quality supplier award from Intel last year. Congratulations on that.
But we still haven't seen a big inflection in Lam's shipments to logic customers. Just curious if you still see logic as a customer segment that you're confident you're taking market share from and maybe future upside? Thanks.
Absolutely, yes. Yes, definitively.
Thank you. And we'll go ahead and take our next question from Krish Sankar with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Hi, thanks for taking my question. I have 2 of them. 1, Doug, I know you don't want to comment on December, but I'm just curious if December revenues are flat versus September, would the gross margins be up in December?
Again, I'm only guiding gross margin 1 quarter at a time. Usually everything else equal, if you have a higher level of revenue, margins will tend to be better. But you got all the mix that I've always described. So you can't necessarily just run to that conclusion.
Got it.
Got it. All right. And then a follow-up for Martin. When you look at the 3 d NAND, as you go into like 64, 96 layers and beyond, does the etching composition shift more towards dielectric etch versus conductor? Do you think conductor etch still remains the major portion of the overall etch market on 3 d NAND?
I don't think I have a segment message for you, more or less because I think the productivity solution sets that will play out in high volume manufacturing for the types of vertical scaling that you just described, have still a lot of work from the entire supply chain and also from the customers. So I would say watch this space and if we see anything of value to communicate, we will. Again, to reemphasize what I said in my prepared comments that the 2 d to 3 transition for us was very strong with a 7 to 10 percentage points share gain for the company. Another kind of couple of data points that I would give you on 3 d NAND for the company from a market share perspective. In general, the development tool of record decisions that translated to production tool of record decisions actually got stronger for us.
And the other reference I would give you is that obviously our presence in critical applications, which is really a commentary on quality of earnings is very, very strong. So we are right at the center of enabling and that puts pressure on us, but we feel really pleased about the position of the company. Got it. Thank you.
Thanks, Krish.
Thank you. And our next question comes from Patrick Ho with Stifel Nicolaus. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Thank you very much. Martin, first, in terms of the growing adoption for applications for both atomic layer deposition and etch, what's the market opportunity as a whole that you see for those type of products?
That's something that, if I may, I'd like to defer to our analyst meeting planned for November because to your point, atomic level processing generally for us, atomic level action, atomic level deposition is a very central part to the opportunity for growth in the company and competitive differentiation and also quality of earnings. So I would prefer delay if I may until our November meeting on that point.
Fair enough. And then maybe for Doug, now that you're approaching record shipments, and obviously you've done a really good job up to this point with the high level shipments and probably a lot of pulls and pushes. Can you just discuss or give a little bit of color into some of the tactics either whether it's the supply chain, manufacturing, how you're managing these record levels, especially as they keep growing?
I mean, as I talked about, we have added resources in the manufacturing organization. You've seen our inventory balances tick up a little bit in anticipation of very strong shipments. And I think specifically the reason Martin in his scripted remarks thanked our suppliers is they've supported our ramps very, very well. We've been talking to them well in advance of them needing to grow their volumes so that they're going to be ready for this. And I think we've executed extraordinarily well and we'll continue to manage the churn as it happens.
And we've got a great global operations group that is really good at what we do. Great, thank you. Thanks, Patrick.
Thank you. And our next question comes from Sidney Ho with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Thanks and thanks for taking my question. So in terms of foundry spending, it looks like the 28 and 40 nanometer and maybe 200 millimeter as well Seems to have a longer life cycle because of low and mid range phones and end of things that you suggested. And how do you think that changes your WFE forecast this year or next year? Or maybe it's just related to your service business? Any way you can quantify it?
I don't know, some comments, I don't know if I'll give you as much as you want. I mean, 28 nanometer looks to be a very long node and we're seeing even some 40 nanometer investments occurring. I think it has somewhat to do with low and mid end phones for sure. It's got equal amounts to do with kind of where IoT stuff is going and that is how we monetize some of the installed base business as well. We're looking at that very differently in terms of that opportunity.
And you're right, some of the stuff is even 200 millimeter equipment. So we're very focused on it. I don't know if that was what you were looking for, but 28 nanometer is going to be around for a while.
Okay. My follow-up question is curious about your thoughts on another deal in the space between litho company and the process control company. I guess from a KLA perspective, does that change in any way your thoughts on the combined company SAM expansion opportunity?
No, I don't think it changes our objectives or our strategy. I think in many respects it probably validates the legitimacy of the vision to bring process and process control capability together at some level to innovate for the success of our customers. So it's another data point. There are others with other peer companies and other competitors. Sometimes it's an acquisitive action like the one you just referred to.
Sometimes it's organic. There are plenty of examples now in our industry where people are employing similar strategies. If your question maybe more relates to the competitive dynamic between e beam and optical, our sense is that industry consensus is very complementary technologies. We're not obviously in a position to speak to KLA's business, but from the seat that we have with limited knowledge of the details, the latest generation optical inspection capabilities that KLA has brought to the market appear very robust and getting pretty solid traction. So no real change in how we think about it, perhaps further validation of the vision.
And to kind of restate what I said before, we're targeting to close this thing and we're working diligently with agencies to get that done. We never have any guarantees, but we're working hard to do that a little later than the September timeframe targeting right now mid October. Okay.
Thank you very much.
Thanks, Sidney.
Thank you. And our next question comes from Weston Twigg with Pacific Crest. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Hi. Yes, thanks. Actually, I had a similar question on the ASML Hermes deal, but from a different angle, I was looking at it as an opportunity for Lam potentially, given that you have a pretty tight relationship with ASML already and they're talking about doing pre and post etch measurements and creating a holistic litho loop extends into the process arena. And so I was just wondering if you could maybe tell us how closely you're collaborating with ASML on this type of application and if you think there's an opportunity to maybe gain market share if you can drive customers to use more LAM tools in a holistic litho loop?
No, I think it's kind of premature for me to start talking about collaboration when we haven't actually closed our deal yet. But obviously, to your point, the relationship between the companies is good and strong. We work diligently both to support the long term success of our customers and I see that trend continuing. So we all have some version of the same vision, I think, to deliver more predictable process to our customers, to open up process windows, to deliver their roadmaps with higher quality, lower cost IC devices. And whether we call that holistic litho or holistic etch or holistic depth or holistic process, we've all got our own nomenclature.
But I think the strategy and the model of collaboration for our company is set to continue, I hope for many years.
Got it. And then as a follow-up just looking at the model, guidance implies that OpEx should increase meaningfully next quarter. Just wondering if most of that falls into R and D and if you could give us an idea of what level of R and D increase you're looking at throughout the rest of the next fiscal year?
Yes, a decent amount of it, Wes, is R and D. And again, the right way to think about how we're going to spend money is pinned on that financial model. Obviously, as we grow, we need to invest more to continue to grow and that's part of how we think about it. In the back half of the year, given a little bit stronger P and L, there's also a general increase in that variable compensation piece that varies with the P and L.
Got it. Helpful. Just extending that answer a little bit further, I don't think we've ever invested more in the future of this company than we are today. I mean, I feel really good about the distribution of operating expenses to R and D and SG and A. I think we kind of set a tone whether we're the best in the industry or one of the best.
I'm sure you guys can figure out that the 63% reference is something we worked hard for. If you look at the last several years since 2013, we have increased our investments in R and D by more than 30 percent. And in the same timeframe, the increase in investments in SG and A is about 10%. So investing in the future of the company to prepare us for the inflections that we're describing. Today's inflections getting bigger and the next generation inflections is central to long term success of the company.
Operator, we'll take one more question.
Okay, perfect. Our last question comes from Amit Daryanani with RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Thanks. Glad I snuck in over there. I guess, first off on the KT transaction, could you just talk about what are the concerns you're hearing from regulators because the deal seems fairly complementary and no real overlap. So I'm curious, what's the feedback you're getting? And is there anyone other than the DOJ that's giving you negative feedback or concerns on the deal?
Yes. We're not really in a position to talk about the conversations we're having with regulators. I mean, the essence of this deal, as I said a couple of times is no product overlap. We believe a compelling and pro competitive value proposition for the benefit of our customers. We have made broad commitments to the ecosystem relative to supply and availability and support of process control equipments and the protocols around intellectual property protection are well established in this industry and the company.
So those are the qualitative statements I can make around your question, but the specifics of our agencies, unfortunately, we're not at liberty to dialogue about.
Understood. And if I just follow-up, if I get your comments on the back half shipments right, I mean, you're implying December could be down modestly. Is that essentially just a pause that you're seeing maybe on the 3 d NAND side or something else driving that shipment down ticking to some end? I get it could be lumpy, but I'm curious what's the driver this time around in December?
Yes, I wouldn't describe it as a pause. I mean there's just every customer has their own cycle of investments and they can't continue to jam tons of capacity into their fabs like forever. So they add and then they pause a little bit, but there's no generic kind of industry cycle type pause commentary that we could make. And frankly, I don't think we'll ever be able to make. I think the industry is very different today as a result of consolidation.
It's just timing of projects. I mean it's nothing more than that.
Perfect. Thank you.
Thank you.
And that does conclude our question and answer session. I will now hand the program back over to Satya Kumar for any additional or closing remarks.
Yes. Thank you everyone for joining our conference call. Our Analyst Day is scheduled for November 16 to make a note of that. We've issued a press release on that. Thanks once again.
And that does conclude today's program. We'd like to thank you for your participation. Have a wonderful day and you may disconnect at any time.