Lattice Semiconductor Corporation (LSCC)
NASDAQ: LSCC · Real-Time Price · USD
113.91
-5.32 (-4.46%)
At close: Apr 28, 2026, 4:00 PM EDT
114.11
+0.20 (0.18%)
After-hours: Apr 28, 2026, 7:13 PM EDT
← View all transcripts

Investor Day 2023

May 15, 2023

Rick Muscha
Vice President of Investor Relations, Lattice Semiconductor

All right. Good afternoon, everyone, welcome to Lattice's 2023 Investor Day. I'm Rick Muscha, Head of Investor Relations, we certainly appreciate everyone joining us here today. It really is great to be here in person for the event. I'd also like to extend a welcome to those listening on the webcast as well. To the extent we do make some forward-looking statements in our presentation and our Q&A, these are all detailed on our safe harbor disclaimer statement as well as on our filings, our 10-Ks, 10-Qs, and 8-Ks. We'll also be presenting some non-GAAP financial measures in the presentation with a full GAAP reconciliation on our investor relations website following today's event.

With regards to the agenda, Jim Anderson will start things off and provide a overview and discuss our strategy. Esam Elashmawi, our Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer, will then discuss our products and core markets. Lastly, Sherri Luther will recap our financial performance to date and provide an updated financial model. Following today's presentations, I will be moderating a question answer session. We'll be taking questions from both the in-person audience as well as those of you watching virtually. With that, I'd like to turn it over to Jim to start things off. Again, thank you for joining us, and welcome. Jim.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

All right. Thank you, Rick. Thanks, everybody. Welcome. Thanks for being with us here today. It's great to be back at Nasdaq. It's actually been a couple years since our last Investor Day, but it's actually been four years since our last in-person Investor Day, it actually feels great to be back in person. Actually, four years ago, it was here at Nasdaq, it's great to be back. Actually, a number of you, I think, were with us here four years ago. I think the crowd's gotten a little bigger over the past 4 years, but it's good to see everybody that was here four years ago.

If you were here at that time, you might remember that I kicked off the Investor Day by talking about how Lattice kind of reminds me of the house that my wife and I live in with our family. Bought this house about 20 years ago, the house is in a really great location. It's surrounded on three sides by redwood trees. My wife and I both grew up in Minnesota, so redwood trees are like, they're a big deal to us, so we love the location. The house itself, it needed a lot of remodeling. It had, you know, like, good architecture, good bones, but it had, you know, basically 1970s decoration. Really needed. It was in desperate need of a remodel. When I joined Lattice during that first year, that house kinda.

Lattice kinda reminded me of that house. Lattice is in First of all, we're in a great neighborhood. If you look within the semiconductor industry, the FPGA part of the semiconductor industry, it's a great neighborhood. Then Lattice, we've certainly been remodeling. Lattice needed, just kinda like that house, needed a lot of remodeling, and we've been hard at work over the past years remodeling the Lattice house. We're definitely kinda moving out of that remodeling phase, and we are definitely deep into the next phase of the company, which is the growth and expansion phase of the company. Happy to talk a little bit about that with you today. First of all, the mission. Lattice's mission is very straightforward. It's to be the absolute world's best at making power-efficient, programmable solutions for our customers, actually over 9,000 customers.

We are very passionate about that, but that's also something that's really important to our 9,000+ customers. That innovation is really important to their systems. Now, I wanna talk today a little bit about how we've done over the past couple years in terms of how some of the progress we've made, but we'll spend most of the day talking about where we're headed from here. If you remember from the Investor Day two years ago, we actually talked about four specific goals that we wanted to accomplish with the company. First goal was to continue to expand and build out our portfolio in small FPGAs. Small FPGA, that part of the FPGA market, Lattice has innovated in that part of the market for 40 years. That's our home base. We wanted to continue to build out our lead there.

Second goal, really important, was we wanted to double our addressable market by expanding into mid-range part of the FPGA market, an adjacent part of the market. Third was around software. Software is a very important part of our strategy. It's how we enable our customers to adopt our solutions. Our fourth goal was to accelerate top-line growth and accelerate profitability. I wanna take a couple minutes here at the beginning, just talk about how we made progress on each one of those goals over the past years. Let's start with the first one on small FPGAs. This really is the foundation of Lattice. We're 40 years old this year. We've innovated for 40 years around small power efficient FPGAs. We've continued to build out a really robust product offering here. Our newest product line is Nexus.

Nexus, over the past two years, we've doubled the size of the Nexus portfolio since we last talked two years ago. We brought out three new device families, each one of those very innovative. We're really pleased with the Nexus ramp and customer adoption, so we're gonna continue to make sure we have our foot on the gas and continuing to bring out a very robust, exciting product line for our customers in small FPGA. The second goal was to expand now into mid-range FPGAs, which is, which would double the addressable market for Lattice. This definitely, we made progress on this. We launched our Avant platform in December of this past year. Avant is purpose-built for mid-range applications. Avant, more than just doubling our addressable market, significantly expands the capabilities of the company from a product standpoint.

Significantly more capacity, more performance. This is a big step forward for the company and something we're really excited about. Software, this is a key way that we enable our customers to adopt Lattice solutions and get to market quickly. We've continued to innovate and drive forward on the existing solution stacks that we already had in the market. Again, since we last talked a couple of years ago, we've continued to build out this portfolio of software solution stacks. The two most recent additions, Lattice Automate for factory automation and robotics, big growth area that we're seeing, and 5G O-RAN solution stack for wireless infrastructure. We've continued to build out that software portfolio. The fourth goal, and maybe the most important to this particular crowd, was to continue to accelerate our top line growth, but also our bottom line profitability.

Here, I'm really pleased with the progress teams made over the past couple of years, really robust growth over the past couple of years. That growth coming from exactly where we expected it to and where we talked about even four years ago, coming from our core markets of communications and computing, and industrial and automotive. Actually, in those markets, in comms and computing, we've now grown four years in a row, four consecutive years at double-digit growth rates. In industrial and automotive, three consecutive years of double-digit growth. That growth coming from our core markets right where we expected it to. Beyond revenue, we've continued to make progress on some of the other financial metrics as well. Sherry will talk to you in detail about all our financials, but I wanted to give just a few highlights here at the beginning.

Gross margin, this is something you heard us talk about since when I joined Lattice. At the beginning of 2019, we put in place a new gross margin expansion strategy that's yielded a tremendous amount of benefit for the company to date to just over the past two years, over 800 basis points of expansion in gross margin, over 1,300 basis points of expansion in operating income. We're really proud of the EPS. Over the last two years, 2.5x higher EPS over the past two years. I think, you know, safe to say we've made some good progress on that fourth goal around the financials as well. We're pleased about the progress we've made over the past few years, but we are definitely much more excited about where we take the company from here.

We're very excited about the current growth and expansion phase that we're in with the company right now. There's really four kind of key things that are behind that growth phase that we're in right now. 1 is we're absolutely positioned in the right end markets. We're positioned in the right end markets for the types of products Lattice builds, and these are big, growing, large addressable markets. two, we're in one of the biggest product expansions ever. We're significantly expanding out the product portfolio. We're not just bringing out a lot of new products, we're bringing out market-leading products, very differentiated products, and that is creating a tremendous amount of momentum across our entire customer base. Let's start with the markets.

So our four core markets, communications, computing, industrial, and automotive, these markets, if you look through the end of this decade and even beyond, these are absolutely the right markets for Lattice to be in. First of all, in these markets, there are underlying secular growth trends that are driving consumption in general for the semiconductor market, but in particular for the types of products and solutions that Lattice brings to those markets. Over the past years, we've totally repositioned the company into these four core markets. Actually, now over 90% of our revenue comes from these core four markets. When we project out about five years out to 2028, we believe our total addressable market is about $10 billion, with about 1/2 of that coming from industrial and automotive, and about 40% of that coming from comms and compute.

Big, large addressable markets for Lattice and the right markets for Lattice to be in. Now Sam, when he comes up, he'll talk more in his section about some of the specific growth drivers within those markets, but I want to give you just a flavor of kind of where we see within those markets, some of the biggest growth drivers. One, certainly not a surprise, artificial intelligence. We're seeing AI growth at the edge of the network, where customers are increasingly adopting not just AI, but inference processing at the edge of the network. Lattice solutions are a naturally good fit for that type of application. We're also seeing growth from generative AI. Lattice has built a really good position in servers over the past years, and as generative AI drives demand for the data center, it drives natural growth for Lattice.

Industrial automation and robotics. We've seen tremendous growth in this over the past few years. We believe this is going to be a great growth driver for Lattice moving forward. Automotive electronics, still a relatively small part of our revenue today, but one of our fastest growing parts of our revenue. Then, hardware platform security. We've brought some really unique, innovative technology to servers for platform security. We believe that technology is very extensible to a number of other markets as well. We're positioned in the right end markets, large growing addressable markets. If you asked us probably, you know, what are we most excited about, it would be this. It would be the portfolio expansion that we're going through right now. Really rapid build-out of the product portfolio.

Starting with small FPGAs, I already shared that we've doubled the size of the Nexus portfolio over the past couple of years. Very pleased to announce today for the first time here, we'll be bringing out our seventh product based on the Nexus platform, our seventh device family in Q3 of this year. We absolutely have a full portfolio, full roadmap of the innovative products we're continuing to bring out to small FPGA. We are not going to let our foot off the gas on small FPGA. This is a place that Lattice has led for decades, and we're going to continue to lead the market in this segment. Now we're, of course, really excited about the mid-range product launch that we did in December of this past year.

We launched the Avant platform, but we also launched the first device family in that series, the Avant-E. Avant-E is targeted for edge applications. We're seeing really good customer adoption, very strong design win pipeline. Very pleased to, again, announce first time here today, the next two device families in that lineup, the Avant-G and the Avant-X, and those will launch in theH2 of this year. By the end of this year, we'll have three very complete device families in the hands of our customers who are very excited about all these products.

Here again, we have a very robust roadmap of Avant devices beyond this year to continue to bring out a steady beat rate of new innovation in the mid-range market and bring all of those great power efficient characteristics that our customers love Lattice foreign small FPGA into mid-range as well. Software, very important. I'll talk a little bit more about this, but as I've shared, to date, we've got five different software solution stacks. Again, today for the first time, we're announcing in Q3 of this year, we're gonna launch the Lattice Drive software solution stack. This is specifically for our automation or automotive customers. This helps our customers in the automotive space get Lattice products designed in all sorts of different automotive electronics applications. Here again, of course, we've got more in the pipeline, more under development.

If you asked us, you know, what is the single thing that we're most excited about with Lattice moving forward, this is it. We are in the middle of the biggest product expansion that this company has ever done in its 40-year history. We're excited about that, but our customers are very excited about that. It's not just the number of products that we're bringing out. We're bringing out incredibly competitive products, very differentiated in the marketplace. This is data that we shared at the Avant launch in December, where we compared Avant to some of our other FPGA competitors, and this is all measured data. We showed that Avant is up to 2.5 x better power efficiency than our competition. Not just better power efficiency, but higher performance.

All of that in just amazingly small physical device size, actually up to 6x smaller physical package size. It's not just the number of products that we're bringing out, but incredibly differentiated products. Software, I've talked about this a couple times. This is a very important part of how we enable our customers. Our strategy is to build out a portfolio of application-specific software solution stacks that our customers can adopt that help them get to market quickly. We're measuring adoption rates that are now over 50%, which means that if you look at design wins over the last. These are silicon design wins, over the last 12 months-18 months, over half the time, our customers are adopting one of these five, soon to be six, solution stacks.

When they do adopt these solution stacks, with a number of customers, we're finding examples where they're significantly accelerating their time to market, sometimes accelerating their time to market by up to three months- six months. They're not just getting to market faster, we're also getting to revenue faster. We know our customers are valuing this software because they're paying for it. When we measure the ASPs of those design wins that include software attached versus not, those ASPs are significantly higher. Very importantly, over the long term, we believe that the adoption of these software solution stacks by our customers creates multi-generational long-term stickiness for the products.

With that rapid build-out of our silicon portfolio combined with the software solution stacks, we're seeing the biggest design win momentum, customer momentum, customer engagement, whatever measure you wanna use, that we've ever seen in the company's history. We're really excited about that, and we have been preparing for this over the past years. First of all, we've doubled the size of our customer engineering support. These are the customers that or these are the engineers, Lattice engineers, that spend time with our customers to help them design in our products. We've doubled the size of that support structure. We've also significantly increased the size of the Lattice ecosystem. If you look at the ecosystem, these are all the companies that have reference designs or other software that helps enable the solution.

Our ecosystem has grown by 5x over the past years. Very importantly, for our newest product, Avant, if you look at the target customers for Avant, 90% of those target customers are already customers of Lattice today. If they're using any of our software, that software is leverageable onto the Avant platform as well. We've done tremendous amount of work to make the customer adoption of not just Avant, but all of our existing products as easy as possible. What does that mean in terms of business moving forward, business expectations? When we look out over the next three years- four years, we're raising our growth target, raising our growth target to 15%-20% per year.

That's higher than the growth target we talked about two years ago at our Lattice, at our last Investor Day. We expect that growth to continue to come from those same markets that have been driving growth for us over the past years, communications and computing, industrial and automotive. Those are our core markets. That's where our growth is gonna continue to come from. Esam will walk you through some of the specific details of some of the specific areas that we see for growth in these markets. The other way of looking at our new growth target is by product segment. I think the easiest way is to start with the small FPGA segment.

Today, 100% of our revenue comes from small FPGAs. We expect that small FPGA revenue to continue to grow double digits over the coming years. Nexus is still early in its ramp. We expect Nexus to continue to ramp for multiple years moving forward, and even our pre-Nexus products continue to grow. In a lot of cases, the software that I was just talking about has helped reinvigorate the pre-Nexus products. That combination of Nexus and pre-Nexus, that overall portfolio, we expect that to continue to grow double digits moving forward. The way to think about Avant and our mid-range FPGAs is think about that as additional revenue that layers on top and further accelerates the growth rate.

Avant revenue, still expecting that as we talked about a couple years ago, expecting that to start at the end of this year, a little bit of revenue this year, but to be more significant in 2024 and then ramp beyond 2025 and beyond. All of this is additive to the small FPGA revenue. Avant doesn't cannibalize Nexus or pre-Nexus devices in any way. Avant ASPs are 10x- 20x higher than our small FPGAs today, and this additive revenue stream accelerates the revenue growth over time. Beyond top-line growth, we're also raising the bar on our other financial targets, so raising our gross margin targets to now low 70s. This is significantly higher gross margin target than we talked about a couple years ago. Our OpEx target, we're setting that at 30% of revenue.

30% is the right investment level for this business. It's a good balance between funding all of the great growth opportunity that's ahead of the company while still staying disciplined. Operating income, we're raising our operating income target to over 40%, to the low 40s. That's a big jump from what we talked about, two years ago. I think if you step back and you think about the combination of that revenue growth target with that profitability target, I think that really stands out in the semiconductor industry. I've been talking a lot about either what we've done or what we're planning to do, just as important is how we do that. We're absolutely committed to the highest standards, holding ourselves to the highest standards in terms of how we do things.

Definitely culture of innovation, this is really important at Lattice. Hopefully, you see that culture of innovation show up in the differentiation of our products. A lot of our innovation is focused on power efficiency. It has been for decades. Power efficiency drives energy efficiency for our customers, and that certainly benefits the environment. Very important how we treat our customers, our suppliers, our employees, all of our stakeholders. We're always holding ourselves to highest standards in terms of honesty and integrity, especially on our corporate governance principles. How we do things, equally important.

Now, before I hand it off to Esam, just to summarize a little bit here, once again, thanks for being with us here today, but we're pleased with the progress we've made to date on kind of the remodel of Lattice, but we're much more excited about where we're headed with the growth and expansion. The combination of being in the right markets for Lattice with the biggest product portfolio expansion we've ever done in our history, it's exciting for us and definitely exciting for our customers. With that, I'm gonna ask Assam to come up and talk more about the products and the markets.

Esam Elashmawi
Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer, Lattice Semiconductor

Thank you, Jim.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

All right.

Esam Elashmawi
Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer, Lattice Semiconductor

It's good to see everyone, a lot of familiar faces as well. You know, prior to this, I was reminiscing a bit about the past, and I'm actually gonna get to my five-year anniversary at Lattice this September. Being in this industry for a few decades, I can tell you on a personal level that the energy that I feel and the excitement, and not just me, you think about it, our employees and our customers as well, I've never felt that before in my career, and I've been around doing this stuff for a few decades. When you think about the innovative products that we're bringing out to the market, the customer intimacy, I think it's fairly evident what we've been able to accomplish thus far. What's more exciting to me is what's to come.

If you look at our market opportunity, it's just expanding, and we're finding really good ways with our customers how to leverage our flexible power-efficient FPGA into new applications. Since the last time we were here in 2021, we've identified $2 billion of additional SAM. Those are in areas of artificial intelligence, within the data center, as well as with factories as well. When you combine that with what we had last time, when we had the $6 billion we identified last time, and you take just moderate, you know, mid-single digits to high single digits growth on that and combine that's $10 billion of opportunity. That's significant. That says we have lots of headroom to grow for our small and mid-range FPGAs. It's in our core markets of industrial, automotive, and comms and compute.

When you break that $10 billion by small and mid-range FPGAs, about 55% of it is with mid-range FPGAs, and 45% of that is in small FPGAs. Later on, I'm gonna walk you some of the growth drivers and opportunities in each of our core segments. Before I do that, I think it's important to spend a little bit of time framing the FPGA landscape because that also points out where's Lattice's focus. When you look at the FPGA landscape, you can break it up into three simple categories. There are small FPGAs, mid-range FPGAs, and there's large FPGAs. Each of those categories has a distinct difference in ASPs, volumes, and the types and number of applications they can address. When you look at the small FPGA category, the ASPs can vary anywhere from $1 to tens of dollars.

When you contrast that with a large FPGA, that could be thousands of dollars per device. As such, when you look at the volumes of shipments on an annual basis, significantly more volume shipped in small and mid-range FPGAs than the large FPGAs. That correlates directly with the number and types of applications you can address with small and mid-range FPGA as well. Lattice's focus is really on the small and mid-range. This is where we're innovating. This is where we're bringing out leadership products, both hardware and software, to really help our customers themselves innovate and get their products into the market. The focus is on small and mid-range FPGAs. This is a slide that Jim showed, and to me, this is also a really key slide.

I can tell you know, working in marketing and working with the field and engaging with the customers, this slide says it all. This is a slide that I really, really love. The reason is, it's a portfolio expansion. This is our largest portfolio that we've ever had in the history of the company. What does a product portfolio expansion do? It drives customer intimacy, and that's what we want. We want more customer intimacy. As we drive customer intimacy, they're actually helping us define the products that are coming out. You all know we shared with you, they helped us define Avant. We had over 100+ customers that we engaged with that helped us define Avant. Having a portfolio that has a roadmap and products that are coming out on a regular cadence drives customer intimacy. That drives your product definition.

What it also does, which is key, it helps us work with our customers, and in that engagement, we're finding new ways to leverage our power-efficient, flexible FPGAs. It also drives SAM expansion. What it also drives is new product revenue cycles as well, because we're releasing new products out into the market. This, to me, is the most important slide. What I'm going to do now is I'm going to walk you through what to expect for the remainder of this year. The way I'm going to approach this, I'm going to start off with a small FPGA, tell you what to expect, and then I'm going to go through the mid-range, and then we're going to touch on the software. Let's look at the small FPGA portfolio. We have a leadership position in small FPGAs. We committed to two additional small FPGAs Nexus devices this year.

We did the first one in April, the MachXO5T. This is leveraging our Mach family, which is really leadership and control and board management. What we've done with this device is we've increased the capacity, but we've also added advanced interfaces that didn't exist in prior Mach devices. This is a really good example of what we talk about when we say we're adding more functionality into our customer systems that drive higher ASPs. This is a good example of that. We're engaging with customers on this product, and we expect initial revenue to be in the first part of next year. Also today, for the very first time, we're introducing our CrossLink-U device. This is building on our leadership of embedded vision FPGAs.

What we're doing here is we're adding additional artificial intelligence capabilities, we're adding also new interfaces, and we're also adding new low power capabilities that you're gonna hear more about as we get closer to launch. We're excited about this product, and as you can imagine, when we launch in Q3, we're already engaged with customers working with us on the CrossLink-U. What does all this mean? It means that we're still committed to the investment in small FPGAs and expect more to come. Now, let's move to Avant. Avant we launched in December of last year. At the launch event, if you watched it, you would notice there was a lot of customers that were part of that launch event, either participate in the event itself or were there with us. We're really excited about Avant as its additive revenue.

It doesn't cannibalize any of our small FPGA revenue. It was defined by our customers. Our customers can leverage the same software tools that we have today. As expected with Avant-E, our edge-optimized FPGA, we're engaged with customers today, they're designing it in. As Jim said, we expect initial revenue by the end of this year and to become more meaningful next year. I'm also excited to talk today and introduce Avant-G and Avant-X. Avant-G is our general purpose FPGA targeting for mid-range applications, and our Avant-X is our advanced connectivity FPGA for also mid-range applications. Both of which you're gonna hear a lot more of as we launch them at our developers conference in the H2 of this year. Let's talk about solutions. Solution stacks are really part of our core strategy.

Not only does it drive more value for our silicon, but it also helps our customers get to market faster, and it helps us win multi-generational designs. Working closely with our customers in the automotive market, we're gonna be introducing in Q3 Lattice Drive. Lattice Drive helps our customers adopt Lattice FPGAs in automotive applications around ADAS sensors and bridging and processing, as well as in infotainment bridging and processing, and a multitude of vehicle monitoring types of applications. We're excited that we're gonna be launching this in Q3, and we're excited to share that with you here today. Now let's talk about our core markets. We're positioned in growing markets. These markets have long-term secular growth drivers associated to each one of them. Our approach within Lattice is to identify Lattice specific growth drivers that go beyond just the market growth drivers.

We're driving additional attach rates. We're bringing in more functionality in each one of our core segments to drive higher value for our customers. What I'm gonna do is walk you through examples of those in each one of our core segments. Now, if we look at the communications, 5G wireless, we've talked about this before. This remains for us a long-term growth driver for Lattice. We're well deployed across the top OEMs, and we have leadership when it comes to control functions, when it comes to security functions, and some of the O-RAN functions with our small FPGA. With our mid-range introduction of Avant and working closely with these customers on their definitions, we've opened up opportunities around data path as well as additional opportunities around O-RAN. We expect to double our potential dollars with Avant in our 5G wireless segments.

It remains a long-term growth driver for us. What I also wanna talk about is data center networking. This is something that we've been engaged with over the last few years, and we've seen growth in this area, and we're actually seeing more opportunities as well. A lot of what we've been doing in the 5G wireless is applicable to data center networking. Customers are starting to adopt Lattice solutions for control function, security, and even data path with Avant in our data center networking applications. We're excited as this is a new area for Lattice to continue to grow. The key question is why Lattice? Why are they choosing Lattice? Why are they adopting Lattice in these communication applications?

Well, if you look at it, when I meet with the customers and we engage with them, you heard a bit of this at the Avant launch as well, power is really a challenge for them. They're constrained with the power of in their system. They have thermal challenges, they're trying to differentiate. They're also trying to drive performance as well. When you provide them a flexible programmable solution that not only delivers twice the bandwidth, but also at 2.5x lower power, that makes a difference for our end customers. Having the flexibility of our FPGAs and getting into data path, providing flexible front hall synchronization at that lower power helps them get to market much quicker. Our security solutions helps protect their systems, protects their IP. These are among the reasons why they're choosing Lattice in the communication segment.

Let's move on to servers. This is a market segment that's seen a lot of change over the past few years. If you go back to our first Investor Day back in 2019, we presented an opportunity in the server market, and we had 25% attach rate, and we said in every generation, our goal is to increase our attach rate and drive more functionality into this market. On our last Investor Day, we presented that we had an attach rate now over one, and we continue to drive higher attach rates in every generation and bring more functionality to our customers that drives an average ASP that's higher. What we see with our customers in the server market is becoming more heterogeneous and more modular as well.

For example, if you take a generative AI server and you open it up, what would you see inside today? You'd see a motherboard, you'd see multiple GPU plugin cards, you'll see multiple network interface cards, storage cards, and maybe more. It's becoming more modular. Each one of those cards and boards is an opportunity for Lattice, driving higher attach rate, driving more functionality. Even simple servers today, if you take a simple server today, there are architectures that modularize the motherboard, where the CPU is separated from the controller module. That drives more opportunities for Lattice to drive higher attach rates. When we look at the server market, what do we see today? We see opportunities where there's multiple sockets per board, but multiple boards per server now. The opportunities are increasing. Why Lattice? Why are customers moving towards Lattice?

Well, it starts off with the fact that we simplify their overall architecture because we are CPU agnostic. Doesn't matter if the customer wants to choose an Intel CPU, an AMD, an Arm or some other CPU, we simplify their overall architecture 'cause we're CPU agnostic. If you look at the servers that are being deployed in data center, whether it be a standard servers or for artificial intelligence, they'll all tell you that power is really important. They're just consuming lots and lots of power. Well, any part that provides you 2.5x lower power is significant. As these plug-in cards have different form factors, they're not all the same size, and they're trying to put more and more logic and complexity. The physical size of our device offering them the performance and that low power becomes very meaningful.

When we're 6x smaller, that makes a difference for them. With all these different form factors they've got on these cards. Also, our security is key as well. We're an FPGA, we're adaptable. We have security engines within our device. We're securing the servers for today, but we're also ready for the security that's needed tomorrow with post-quantum crypto. We provide them flexible solutions for security. These are among some of the reasons why they're choosing Lattice. Let's look at the client market. Really large system unit TAM here, 200 million-300 million units. Even a moderate attach rate is significant. Especially when you're talking about ASPs that can range anywhere from low to mid-single digits. That's significant. This market is starting to adopt Lattice FPGAs in new functionality, not just for security or image signal processing, but for artificial intelligence.

When we meet, and I meet with the engineers at these OEMs and the executives and even the marketing teams, we meet with the marketing teams because we want to understand where are they headed, what do they want to go do. They talk about the key is to improve the user experience of the client devices with the customers or their end users. They want to improve your experience on how you use these laptops. The best way to do that is through artificial intelligence, where you actually start to interact with your client device. By putting artificial intelligence there, the device can know when you approach it, wake on demand, wake on approach.

We can tell you when somebody is standing behind you at a coffee shop or an airport and looking at your screen, "Hey, shoulder surfing, someone's looking over your shoulder." We can improve the collaboration, as far as being in collaborations and meetings and making sure the individual is centered in the screen. If you're looking at a different screen, a different camera, just like a studio, let's move to the right camera. We can do a lot of things with artificial intelligence to improve that user interface. Wellness, your posture, how much real screen time, not just how much the screen is on, but how much time are you actually looking at the screen. There's a lot we can do with Lattice and around artificial intelligence in improving that interaction of the user and the client device. We've engaged with OEMs.

There are platforms today in the market launched with Lattice silicon and software solutions. We're engaged with more OEMs on future deployments of client devices as well. Why Lattice again? Why are they choosing Lattice for this? Well, a lot of our attention sensing and collaboration and use models that we provide them not only improve the user experience, but it actually saves battery life too. That's key when they're trying to differentiate. We can save up to one hour of battery life. That's significant for their end users. That's a differentiation for them, and that's a better experience for the end user as well. The privacy features, the security that we can bring, and then our adaptability of our FPGAs. You know, working with one of our customers, they actually coined this phrase for us called future-proof. What does that mean?

Well, a couple years ago, we were working on a proof of concept with one of our customers for a system that got deployed. While our AI engineers were working with their AI engineers, together, we discovered, hey, there's a better neural network that we can deploy in the FPGA to improve the efficiency and performance even more. We did that. We reprogrammed the FPGA and put that new algo in and got a lot more performance. What the customer told us was, "Wow, if we weren't using an FPGA, if we were using an ASSP or some type of an ASIC, we would have to respawn that silicon in order to get that new algo in." That's the beauty of an FPGA for these types of algorithms. They do it very well, but they're also future-proof.

They can deploy these use cases or these new algos real-time in the field with their customers. That's the beauty of an FPGA. That's among the reasons why customers are selecting Lattice hardware and software in the client market. Let's look at the industrial market. This has been a good growth driver for us for a few years. There's a lot of change, a lot of things happening in industrial market, and it continues to be pretty exciting. We've seen increased factory and warehouse autonomy. They're adding more intelligence to the robots and into industrial systems. They need to connect these devices not just to the local network, but also to the cloud to do, you know, real-time analytics, low latency. I mean, there's just a lot more data being collected in a factory than there was a decade ago.

Engaging with our customers, we estimate there's at least 100+ million robots and automation systems that are deployed on an annual basis. That's a large opportunity for us. In each one of those, we see more motors, more sensors, more cameras, even more displays. That's driving a need for even multiple FPGAs per system. The opportunity is very large for us. Again, why Lattice? Well, we do robotics and automation very well. If you take a simple robotic system, you think about how many different motors are on a robot, each one of those are socket opportunities for Lattice. We're driving that with our customer intimacy. Each of these motors requires precision, multi-axis, and FPGAs do that very, very well. In fact, they've outgrown some of the needs of the MCUs and now shifting more to FPGAs because of that.

It's not just the motors, they want to add intelligence. Everywhere there's a camera or a sensor, something has to be done. Our FPGAs are really good at adding intelligence to these systems, and that drives additional socket opportunities for us. Then they need to connect these to a network to do something, whether it's to control it or to collect analytics. Factory networking is something that we've done before very well, and we continue to do that for our customers. This identifies really multiple opportunities, even in a single system for Lattice. Being able to do these efficiently with low power, small form factor, are key to our customers. Let's talk about the automotive market. Lots of opportunities for growth. This is one of our segments that's been growing the fastest.

We've talked about that. What we see and everybody talks about, it's just more electronic content added into a vehicle. When we engage with the OEMs, this is their way to differentiate. They also want a good passenger experience. They want safety as well. That's driving more electronic content. They want this content to be scalable across different models. They want to reduce their bill of materials. They want single devices that can be programmed for the needs of different models and work across different models. That's good for FPGAs. What we're seeing is increase deployment of displays, sensors, cameras in every vehicle. They want the vehicles to be smarter, which also means our opportunities is such that there's multiple FPGAs per vehicle. Those FPGAs from an ASP can vary anywhere from $1 to over $100 per device.

again, why are they selecting Lattice? What's driving the growth? Well, here, let's take an example of an in-cabin experience. If you're in a car today, you're gonna notice that there's more displays being deployed in any vehicle. There's displays for the dashboard, for the entertainment system, for the navigation system. Even what was done mirrors before are now e-mirrors, and they're displays. There's displays in the rear seats now. There's just more and more displays. we do display connectivity really, really well, twice as fast than comparable devices. our FPGAs being flexible, it doesn't matter what the resolution of that screen is, doesn't matter the size of that screen. Our FPGAs are adaptable to whatever resolution you need and whatever size screen you need. You don't need a custom part for each one of those.

If you look at sensor aggregation, we do that very well. Architectures today, as vehicles have more and more sensors, you have to do something with those sensors. Where do they go? In old architectures, it was one or two sensors could go to a CPU. What if you have multiple sensors there? How many inputs do you have into your processing unit? They didn't expand that. Architectures today have to aggregate the sensor somewhere, pre-process it, or actually process it and do something with it, that's where FPGAs come in. Our flexible interfaces being programmable, we can bring in multiple sensors, we can pre-process that and help the new architectures that are being deployed. We do that very well. Those are among examples of why they're selecting Lattice in the automotive market.

We're positioned in growing markets, and these markets all have strong secular growth drivers that are long-term. What I just showed you was Lattice specific growth drivers that set us apart. I'm gonna take you back to what I think is key to Lattice's growth, and that's the product portfolio expansion. That product portfolio expansion drives new market opportunities for us with our customers. They help us define the products that we're bringing out to market, and they drive additional product revenues as well. That's the key. That's where it all starts. With that, I'm gonna hand it over to the next speaker, which by the way, she will be approaching her five-year anniversary a few months after me, but it's been a real joy working with her.

She always reminds me, "Discipline, Essam, discipline." She says, "If you want us to get better at something, make sure you're measuring it." She also always reminds me that if our products are very differentiated in the market, make sure we're driving the value of our products in the market. With that, I'd like to introduce Sherri Luther, our CFO.

Sherri Luther
Coperate Vice President and CFO, Lattice Semiconductor

Thank you, Essam. Welcome, everyone. We're very excited to be here at Nasdaq in person. If you recall back at our first Investor Day back in 2019, I talked to you about the opportunities that I saw when I first joined Lattice. Opportunities not only to grow top-line revenue growth, but opportunities to strengthen our financial position of the company, strengthen our balance sheet, make disciplined investments for the long-term growth of our company. I talked to you about putting clear goals and metrics in place to drive accountability because I believe that what gets measured gets done. Goals around revenue growth, gross margin expansion, our focus on cash and cash generation, and the return of capital to our shareholders.

As I look back on the nearly five years that I've been with Lattice, I am tremendously proud of the outstanding progress from a financial performance perspective that the company has made. The clear goals and metrics that we've put in place have allowed us to drive record financial results across all of the key metrics that you see here. Double-digit revenue growth, gross margin expansion of 810 basis points in only two years, and record operating income with our EPS growing at four times the rate of our revenue growth, and our free cash flow growing faster than the rate of our revenue than the rate of our EPS. As I look ahead, I see so much opportunity ahead for the company, and I'm very excited about that opportunity.

Let's start with revenue. Jim talked about raising our long-term revenue growth target to 15%-20%. Issam talked about the underlying secular growth drivers in our core strategic market segments of comms and computing and industrial and automotive. The sustainable multi-year revenue streams with product life cycles that are very long, some as long as 10 years-15 years. Also, the diversified revenue streams, not only in our markets, but in our customers and our applications. When you put all of this together, I see high-quality revenue. High-quality revenue with durable gross margins. Gross margin is an area where the company has made tremendous progress. In fact, we have increased our gross margin by 1,360 basis points since the end of 2018.

The progress we've made here is very exciting to me. I want to take a few minutes to talk to you about this on this slide. Back in 2019, we laid the foundation for our gross margin expansion strategy that had three main areas: pricing optimization, product mix, and product cost reductions. Let me take you through each of these areas a little bit. Pricing optimization. In 2019, when we looked at the way the company was pricing its products, we saw a lot of opportunity for a better correlation between pricing and volumes and customers and mix and applications. Look at our leadership product portfolio. With that leadership product portfolio that Jim talked about, six devices on our Nexus platform and our Avant launch at the end of our platform at the end of 2022 in December.

We put strategic analytics in place to ensure that we could price our products that add tremendous functionality to our customers. We're in this in five years now, five years, entering our fifth year of our gross margin expansion strategy, in particular, pricing optimization. It has become part of our DNA. It's the way that we think and the way that we do business. The second area, product mix. Jim talked about the strategic market shift towards our core market segments of comms and compute and industrial and automotive. Multi-year revenue streams with higher capability and greater capacity. All of that drives mix improvement. The third area, product cost reductions. This is where we work closely with our suppliers to generate operational improvements in areas such as yield times and cycle times.

We have also benefited from the strong multi-year relationships that we have with our suppliers. When you put all of this together, you have durable gross margins. From a gross margin perspective, we are going to continue to focus on that area. As such, we are raising our gross margin target to the low 70s as we continue to focus on expanding our gross margins and getting value for our products. Another area that has become part of our DNA is our disciplined approach to investing. We have made significant investments in our long-term portfolio and our product roadmap. From an R&D perspective, as Jim mentioned, the investments that we have made in our product portfolio represent the most rapid expansion in the company's history. We are going to continue to invest in our product roadmap, both hardware and software.

From an SG&A perspective, we have made a significant investment in demand creation and customer support, we will continue to invest in these areas. We are establishing our new OpEx target of 30% as we continue to invest in a disciplined way for the long-term growth of our company. What does this mean from a profitability perspective? With our double-digit revenue growth and our continued gross margin expansion, we have driven record profitability. In fact, our EPS has grown at a faster rate than our revenue growth. With our higher revenue targets, revenue growth targets of 15%-20%, our higher gross margin target of the low 70s, while continuing to invest in a disciplined way, we are raising our operating income target to the low 40s as we continue to drive strong profitability for the company. Strong profitability drives strong cash generation.

One of the great things about this business is its ability to generate cash. Our strong focus on record operating income and our disciplined approach to investing has driven strong free cash flow. With our free cash flow growing faster than the rate of our EPS. We are establishing a new target for free cash flow of greater than 30%. Our focus on cash and working capital metrics has also generated record cash generation. Record cash generation, a strong balance sheet with a focus on working capital. We have also worked on strengthening our balance sheet through our deleveraging our balance sheet. When I stood here back in 2019 at our first Investor Day, our leverage ratio was 3x . With our strong cash generation, we have significantly paid down our debt. In fact, our credit rating has been upgraded 3 times in the past three years.

Last year, in Q3 of 2022, we amended our credit agreement and turned it into a revolver with favorable credit terms, increasing our liquidity with access to a $350 million revolver. With our low debt balance, our leverage ratio is well below one. With a strong balance sheet, strong cash generation, we have executed on all aspects of our capital allocation strategy. From an organic perspective, we have invested significantly in our long-term product roadmap, the most rapid expansion in the company's history. We have also invested in demand creation and customer support for the long-term growth of the company. Organic investment is our number 1 priority. From an inorganic perspective, we acquired Mirametrix in November of 2021 as part of our software solution strategy.

From a debt paydown perspective, I talked about the significant progress that we've made there with a leverage ratio of well below one. We have also returned capital to our shareholders through our share repurchase program, where at the end of 2020, when at the inception of that program to date, we have bought back 3.6 million shares. That's reduced our dilution by over 2.5%. We will continue to execute on our capital allocation strategy for the long-term growth of our company. When you put all of this together, you see our new financial model, long-term model, where we have raised our revenue growth target to 15%-20% on our leadership product portfolio with underlying growth drivers in our core strategic market segments.

We have increased our gross margin target to the low 70s as we continue to execute on our gross margin expansion strategy. From an OpEx perspective, we'll continue to invest in a disciplined way with a target of 30%, and we have raised our operating income target to the low 40s. We have a new target for free cash flow margin on the strong results that the company has delivered to date of greater than 30% as we continue our focus on cash and cash generation. When you stand back and you look at this combination of revenue growth and operating income, this is a model that stands out in the industry. We will continue to execute toward this model for the long-term growth of the company.

We'll also execute on our key financial priorities, putting clear goals and metrics, because as I said, what gets measured gets done. With that, I thank you, and I will turn it over back to Jim Anderson, our CEO.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

All right. Thank you, Sherri. Sherri always keeps us focused definitely on the right metrics and keeps us disciplined too. Thanks. Just a few summary comments here before we open it up for Q&A. Hopefully you get a sense of why we're excited about the future of the company. I think when you look at, number one, the markets that we're positioned in, we are positioned in exactly the right markets for this company. Large growing markets, secular growth trends underneath them, and a great match for the type of solutions that we're bringing to the market. Even more importantly than that, what we're really excited about is we're in the middle of the biggest product portfolio expansion that we've ever done in the company's 40-year history. That is incredibly exciting to us, but very exciting to our customers as well.

We look forward to continuing to drive just, you know, tremendous shareholder value creation moving forward. With that, thanks again for being with us, and I'm gonna hand it back to Rick, and we'll open it up for Q&A. Thank you.

Rick Muscha
Vice President of Investor Relations, Lattice Semiconductor

Okay, great.

Thank you, Jim. We're gonna begin the Q&A session. I'll ask the team here to join me on stage. We have some nice comfortable chairs for you guys. There you go. We'll also have a couple of microphones floating through the audience, so your questions can be heard on the webcast, of course. I'll just one more requirement, before you ask a question, just state your name and your company so that can be heard on the webcast as well. Okay. Well, Mark, you raised your hand fast. Nice job. There's gonna be a mic coming to you.

Speaker 9

Great. This is on. Great. Thanks for the great presentations today. Really appreciate it. I actually had two questions. Jim, if you, if there's only one thing that we walk away with today, like, what would you like us to walk away with, just to make our writing of the note easier? That would be very kind of you. The second thing is, you guided for 15%-20% growth. Last I guess, two years ago, you got it for low double-digit growth. You delivered 2x that. What was the upside surprise driven by? And just, you know, in the hypothetical situation that you beat your targets this time, where might we expect that to come from? Thank you.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah. Thanks, Mark. On the first part of the question, if I had to pick one thing, I think I already said it in the summary, it would have to be the product portfolio expansion. I mean, if you look across the company's 40-year history, it's just the company's never done a portfolio expansion this big. I mean, just the rate of new products that we're bringing out to the market is so much faster than it was, say, five years, six years, seven years ago, and that's really exciting to us. I mean, I'm a product person. I love products, but we're a product company too. We're only as good as our products. I think that's not just exciting for us, but it's exciting for our customers as well.

You know, actually, Essam and I are headed to Europe next week. We'll be with some of our largest, most strategic customers in the industrial and automotive segment next week. We'll be spending time with them talking about, you know, future strategic collaboration, et cetera. Those discussions didn't happen five years ago when we first joined the company. That didn't happen. Now five years later, we're having great multi-generational discussions with our customers. The reason for that is just one reason. It is because of the product roadmap. It's because of the product roadmap that you see today that we shared and all of the other stuff that's in the development pipeline that still is not yet public, but our customers, but we're working on with our customers. That's what is really exciting to us.

I guess the research note should be about the product portfolio to your first question.

Esam Elashmawi
Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer, Lattice Semiconductor

Hardware and software.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Hardware and software, yes. On the second piece, yeah, we did significantly outperform our target that we gave two years ago. I would say, you know, kind of a combination of two things. Certainly, the end market itself was stronger than what we had thought, right? There's definitely a factor in there of the whole semiconductor market grew at a faster pace than what I think anybody was anticipating. Part of it's that. Another part of it is Lattice specific. We were surprised over the last two years at the rate at which customers switched our products. We saw a faster conversion from competitors' products to ours than we had anticipated.

In a lot of cases, you know, for instance, since I just mentioned industrial and automotive customers, like industrial customers switching much faster than what we had ever seen in the past. I think part of that is the software solutions. I think those software capabilities that we've introduced have made it much easier for customers to either switch from a competitor's device to our device or to design us into applications where they haven't used an FPGA before, right? So that surprised us. We've tried to start to factor more of that in moving forward, but those would be the two sources. Thanks, Mark.

Rick Muscha
Vice President of Investor Relations, Lattice Semiconductor

As you know, Mark, our goal is to do your job for you. I think you know that.

John Vinh
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, KeyBanc Capital Markets

Hi, John Vinh, KeyBanc Capital Markets. Thanks for the analyst day, guys. Very helpful. Now that you've had a little bit more time with Avant and are expecting to recognize revenues later this year, I was wondering if you could just talk a little bit more about where some of this initial revenues is coming from in terms of applications and end markets. Are most of these revenues coming from new applications and new platforms that your customers are developing, or are they coming from existing legacy platforms that your customers are using?

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Esam, do you wanna take that?

Esam Elashmawi
Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer, Lattice Semiconductor

I can take that one. For everyone, Avant again is our mid-range FPGA. We're really excited about it. We talked about the fact that we are engaged with more than 100 customers on the definition of Avant. The first product that we launched at the last December during our launch event was our Avant-E, that's really our edge-optimized FPGA. The initial revenue that we're gonna see at the end of this year becoming more meaningful, we talked about, is really on our Avant-E. However, we have two additional devices that today, for the very first time, we talked about, which is Avant-G and Avant-X. Your question, where is the adoption of the first Avant applications?

It's really around, edge-type applications. We see that in our industrial segment as well as other segments as well. That's where the initial revenue will come from, that Avant-E device.

Rick Muscha
Vice President of Investor Relations, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah. I think we have one over there, and then we'll come back over here as well.

David Williams
Senior Equity Research Analyst, The Benchmark Company

Good afternoon. David Williams from Benchmark. I really appreciate the analyst day today. It's been very, very helpful. I guess, Sherri, I wanna ask a question on the free cash flow. What's driving that confidence that you can continue to support that free cash flow? Then how do you think about that longer term, maybe mid to longer term, and what are the, I guess, drivers there?

Sherri Luther
Coperate Vice President and CFO, Lattice Semiconductor

Sure. Yeah. Thanks. Thanks, David, for the question. The best way to drive free cash flow is really, you know, with our record operating income, so driving a strong operating income, as well as our disciplined approach to investing. You know, we've have focused significantly on cash, our working capital metrics, putting clear goals and metrics in place, to really drive accountability and drive those results. We're really pleased with the results there on free cash flow. Very excited that we are putting out a target for free cash flow. Our results have been very strong on cash generation, as well as a free cash flow. Really pleased with that.

We look ahead, you know, certainly, you know, our higher revenue targets and our higher operating income targets are gonna, you know, drive that, but we'll continue to drive, and our target is over 30%. We'll continue to drive progress there.

Rick Muscha
Vice President of Investor Relations, Lattice Semiconductor

We have one from online. Jim, what is driving the higher ASPs on design wins with automotive software attach? Is it a higher price being paid for the same SKU, or are those customers buying higher ASP SKUs because of the software?

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah. It's not specific just to automotive. Well, I wanna clarify the first part of that question, is when I talked about the higher ASPs, we're seeing that across multiple markets and multiple applications. What we're seeing on average is when a customer adopts one of those five, soon to be six solution stacks, when we measure the ASP of that design win versus on average design wins that don't have a software attach, there's a significantly higher ASP. I think it's on the second part of the question, I would say that's mostly because of the software attach, because I think when we measured that, we measured kind of like for like silicon, right?

Esam Elashmawi
Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah, exactly.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah, that would be we're trying to isolate just the benefit that we're seeing from software. We measure it as or we believe it's purely the software benefit.

Esam Elashmawi
Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer, Lattice Semiconductor

The question, the full question wasn't very clear to me, but I also wanna point out that independent of the software, so think about this with or without software, we're also driving more functionalities and solving more challenging problems for our customers. That's being done with more, think about it as larger or more complex FPGAs, and we have a pricing optimization strategy that's really around value. As we drive and solve these more complex challenges that our customers have, that's also driving usage of higher ASP devices as well.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah, that's a good point. Even if you set aside the benefits of software attach, our ASPs are still going up because we're seeing a, over time, a shift in mix towards more capable, more functionality, devices within our portfolio. We're seeing a mix shift as well.

Rick Muscha
Vice President of Investor Relations, Lattice Semiconductor

Great. We're gonna have two right over here next to each other. That's convenient, right next to each other. Thank you.

Speaker 10

Hi. Thanks, guys. I'll ask one and pass it on. If you could perhaps talk about the early update for Avant. I think you previously talked about I think it was something like 90% of people already building on Nexus and migrating over using a lot of your software capabilities already. Maybe you can talk about how this is going. Is it on track or is it even better than you guys had expected thus far? Of your long-term revenue guidance, what percent of that, is it a third, belongs to Avant? Thanks.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah. Essam, why don't you answer the first one, I'll take the second one.

Esam Elashmawi
Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer, Lattice Semiconductor

Sure. From an Avant perspective, we've been engaging with customers even before the launch event. The way we look at the revenue and our forecast is we model it based on history and based on anything else that we can put into that particular model. How are we doing on Avant today? We're actually doing really, really well on Avant. In fact, if you look at Avant from launch to date, and you compare that to Nexus, which we're very pleased with Nexus ramp and traction in the market, Avant is actually exceeding the metrics where Nexus was for the same point in time after the launch. As far as how we doing on Avant, we're doing really, really well on Avant.

If you model it based on what we modeled before, we're actually doing slightly above that.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

I think the second question was around the contribution of Avant out in time to the company's total revenue. We talked about a target of 15%-20% growth over the coming three years-four years. If you go out to that end part of the window, three years-four years, we would expect Avant at that point to be contributing, say, 15%-20% of the company's total revenue by that kind of three-year to four-year window. There was one chart that I showed in my section that kind of shows you qualitatively how we're thinking about it. Quantitatively, that's kind of the gauge of where we're thinking it'll be at. Yep.

Matt Ramsay
Managing Director and Senior Semiconductor Analyst, TD Cowen

Thank you, guys. It's Matt Ramsay from TD Cowen. I have two questions. The first one's on products and a longer-term one, and then a little bit of a shorter-term question. On the product side, I don't know if Jim or Essam, competition, I wanted to explore that a little bit. There's, I don't know, essentially been four FPGA companies for the last 30 years, and there's still four. And I think that shows some level of barriers to entry in this market. Some of those have been going through different transitions as being acquired by larger companies.

As you move into the mid-tier with Avant, maybe you could give a little bit of a, I don't know, summary of how you're seeing the competitive landscape change as you move into the mid-tier. Are those competitors reacting, microcontroller companies getting more supply after we were tight for a long period of time? I just kind of wanted you to explore, like, what do you see in competition? Then the nearer term question, I get all of the three other FPGA companies just had record quarters. You guys did as well. Some of those are talking about the market potentially softening a bit in the back 1/2 of the year.

Maybe you could just walk us through what you're seeing in the nearer term cleanliness of the channel, cleanliness of inventory at customers, if you could explore that a little bit. Thanks, guys.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah, sure. On the first part of the question, maybe I'll start, and Assum, you should comment, too, since you've spent how many decades in this industry?

Esam Elashmawi
Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer, Lattice Semiconductor

Too many.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Too many to count. On competition. I, let me start by saying from day one, when myself and Essam joined the company, Essam and his team are responsible for all product definitional competitive analysis. But from day one, when we joined the company, our approach has always been to just assume there's gonna be robust competition in every one of our markets, in every one of our product categories. That's the way we build our roadmap. We build our roadmap assuming we're gonna see robust competition. Then, hey, if we do see robust competition, we're ready for it. If we don't, upside, right? That is the philosophical approach we take to planning our product roadmap. Do you, do you wanna talk about just in mid-range, anything you're seeing?

Esam Elashmawi
Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah. Just to add onto that as well. When we assume there's competition, we scenario plan. We go through all that. If a competition were to come, what would they do? We put in place sales strategies, marketing strategies, and even product definitions and innovations that are very, very distinct. That's why when you look at mid-range products from Lattice Avant, they're very differentiated. I'm talking 2.5x lower power, 6x smaller form factor. We're really making sure that these products are differentiated and put into a position that if competition were to come, these are still very differentiated products. The other thing that helps protect us is not just that our products are very differentiated, it's the software tools that we bring with our products.

The solution stacks are also a competitive advantage for us. They help us on multi-generational designs. The third one I'd point out is the customer intimacy. You know, the fact that we are going to Europe and meeting with all these top industrial C-level executives is because their roadmaps are now aligning with Lattice roadmaps, and that's really, really important as well, 'cause they believe we're building the right products for their future needs. Those are the things that we look at from a competition perspective.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah, we definitely don't take anything for granted. I think we feel pretty well positioned competitively given the strength of the product. I think the second part of your question was around just near term, what do we see through the rest of the year. You know, we don't provide annual specific quantitative annual guidance. You know, you have. We provided guidance for Q2. We guided up sequentially. If you take the midpoint of Q2, we guided up sequentially. I think that, you know, look, over the multi-quarter, multi-year period, we, you know, obviously as we talked about today, we feel good about the long-term growth prospects of the company. I think you asked about channel cleanliness as well.

One of the things that I think we did well over the last 12 months-24 months is we tried to be very careful to make sure that our distributors and channel did not get overloaded with product. I think there were a number of semiconductor companies that actually got kinda caught with too much product sitting in their distributors. We tried to be very, very careful about that. You know, if I look at the most recent quarter where we ended in Q1, our distributor inventory was relatively unchanged from Q4 to end of Q1. And that distributor inventory, if you look at it relative to historic normal range, we're still a little bit below our historic normal range. If anything, we're a little lean in the channel in our distributors.

I think, you know, we're not feeling like there's too much inventory sitting in the channel. We're obviously focused on continuing to drive all of our growth factors. Hopefully that helps a little bit, Matt. Yep.

Speaker 11

Hi, Sherri. I was wondering if you could talk about the looks like the operating and gross margins are gonna increase another over 4% from 2022. It looked like the free cash flow target was about flat or you'd already outperformed that in 2022. Could you maybe elaborate on how, you know, was there some one-time benefits that were going on last year that aren't gonna replicate in cash flow in the future? Is that an easy target to beat? How do you look at the free cash flow metric relative to the expansion of the other targets?

Sherri Luther
Coperate Vice President and CFO, Lattice Semiconductor

Well, we certainly feel very, you know, very excited and very really good about our free cash flow target of greater than 30%. I mean, you know, we have generated record cash generation, as you mentioned in 2022. There, you know, there can be fluctuations quarter-over-quarter in just in terms of the timing of certain items, certain investments, for example, that could drive different cash generation. Overall, you know, we feel very confident in our free cash flow target. I mean, certainly higher Operating income. Everything is higher, right? Operating income, Gross margin, Revenue growth, all of that, really enabling continued strong free cash flow.

Speaker 11

You're gonna keep the target?

Sherri Luther
Coperate Vice President and CFO, Lattice Semiconductor

It's our long-term target over multi years, and we feel very good about that target.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

To be fair, I think you did have a greater than sign.

Sherri Luther
Coperate Vice President and CFO, Lattice Semiconductor

I do have a greater than sign. Thank you.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Sorry.

Sherri Luther
Coperate Vice President and CFO, Lattice Semiconductor

It did have a greater sign. Yep.

Rick Muscha
Vice President of Investor Relations, Lattice Semiconductor

We have another one from online. If you could give some more color on how the $10 billion addressable market breaks down.

Esam Elashmawi
Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah. We have a market opportunity which we talked about as our SAM is $10 billion, and we broke that down by our core markets as well as our categories of FPGAs. When you look at it by our core strategic markets, 60% of that was industrial and automotive, 40% was comms and compute. If you break that down by our small and mid-range FPGAs, 55% of that was in mid-range FPGAs, 45% in small FPGAs.

Which says, again, we have plenty of headroom to grow in our small FPGAs, which have demonstrated over the last couple of years, strong double-digit growth. Lots of opportunities for our mid-range product to add additive revenue on top of the growth of our small FPGA.

Rick Muscha
Vice President of Investor Relations, Lattice Semiconductor

Great. Thanks, Esam. Yep, there's one right here.

Speaker 12

Hey, guys. Ian from Wallanmore. I was thinking through the numbers of your last few years this morning, one thing that wasn't mentioned was the regional diversity-

Of your revenue.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Mm-hmm.

Speaker 12

For example, last quarter is the Q1 you've had less than 60% revenue in Asia. Can you talk about how the revenue differs between the different markets, and why it's tending now away from Asia and towards Europe and America?

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah. The way I would characterize it is it's actually that it's not so much tending away from Asia as our growth in North America and Europe has been very strong over the last, especially over the last couple years. I would also remind you that the revenue by geo is ship in revenue, so that's where our product is shipped to, but that's not necessarily where that product is actually consumed in terms of the end geography, right? For instance, easiest example is, you know, most of our server revenue is shipped into Asia for assembly, and then those servers are shipped right back out to North America, Europe or obviously Asia as well. You gotta keep that in mind. There can be fluctuations, kinda quarter-to-quarter, fluctuations in our geo mix.

I do think it's safe to say that we have seen, over the last, definitely over the last two to maybe even three years, really robust growth in North America and Europe. I actually think if you go back further from when we first joined the company, I really believe the company was severely under-penetrated actually in North America and Europe accounts. We believed at that time we could be doing much better with large strategic customers in North America and Europe as well. We completely, in those markets, we completely rebuilt our sales force in 2019. We had largely a third-party rep sales force when I joined in North America and Europe. We totally changed that model. We now have direct sales force. It's significantly bigger than it was five years ago.

I think part of that accelerated faster growth is us just kinda catching up to the share that we should have in that market just because we were under-penetrated, but also you're seeing the benefits of all of those investments we made in go-to-market for or five years ago. Yeah.

Rick Muscha
Vice President of Investor Relations, Lattice Semiconductor

Thanks, Jim. I think the mic-- Yeah.

Quinn Bolton
Managing Director of Equity Research, Needham

Hi, Quinn Bolton with Needham. Two questions. First, on the software attach, I think you said, today your design wins have a 50% or greater than 50% attach rate. Can you give us a sense, where are you on a revenue basis? I mean, are your design wins leading?

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah.

Quinn Bolton
Managing Director of Equity Research, Needham

that you're shipping today by 10 points, 20 points?

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah. That's, yeah, that stat was on design wins. Let me start with... Those design wins, say over the last 12 months-18 months, those start to convert to revenue over the next 12 months-24 months, right? We'll start to see the benefits of that in revenue, moving forward, right? Now there are design wins that we won 3+ , three, four years ago that had software attached that have already entered revenue. I don't have the breakdown of how much revenue is based on software attached, but it's much smaller than the 50% at this point. The, that 50% of design win software attached, that's a leading indicator of where the revenue would be over time, right?

As those design wins convert to revenue, we would expect the amount of our revenue that's benefiting from that software attached to continue to grow and eventually start to equalize with that design win number.

Quinn Bolton
Managing Director of Equity Research, Needham

The question is.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah.

Quinn Bolton
Managing Director of Equity Research, Needham

Sorry. If that's the case with, you know, it's been a leading indicator that the margins-

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah.

Quinn Bolton
Managing Director of Equity Research, Needham

-for software attached, you talked about the ASPs being-

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah.

Quinn Bolton
Managing Director of Equity Research, Needham

significantly higher. I assume the margins are also significantly better.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

That's right. Yeah.

Quinn Bolton
Managing Director of Equity Research, Needham

It feels like there'd be a pretty good tailwind as those design wins convert to revenue. What's the offset on gross margins since, you know, you're already above 70%, you're targeting low 70s? Is there a drag on margins that sort of offsets some of the benefits from software attached?

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

No, the software attach is definitely beneficial to margins.

Quinn Bolton
Managing Director of Equity Research, Needham

Okay.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

When we're paid that higher ASP, the COGS of the software is effectively 0, right? That additional ASP is pure margin, pure additional margin $, right? That means that the design wins with software attached are generally higher gross margin than the design wins without software attached. As those design wins convert into revenue, that helps. That's a tailwind to our gross margin over time.

Quinn Bolton
Managing Director of Equity Research, Needham

Thank you.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Thanks.

Speaker 13

We're actually gonna have time for one last question here.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Okay.

Speaker 13

Might be online.

Rick Muscha
Vice President of Investor Relations, Lattice Semiconductor

We actually have another one from online. Can you guys discuss how the 50% greater content in servers breaks down between ASPs and units? Is the 50% greater content tied to the new server platforms ramping this year versus the prior server generation?

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah. I think that was in your section. I'll let Esam take that.

Esam Elashmawi
Chief Strategy and Marketing Officer, Lattice Semiconductor

Yeah. You know, we talked about in the server market, because of the new architectures where they're becoming more modular, that opens up more opportunities for Lattice. As these servers get deployed, there's more cards, plug-in cards, more boards. These are driving more, higher attach rate for Lattice, and these systems themselves are becoming more complex. That's also where we're driving more functionality and capabilities for our server customer. The combination of both of those drive for us a higher ASP over time. Dollar content per server, I should say.

Rick Muscha
Vice President of Investor Relations, Lattice Semiconductor

Anything else? Is that it? All right. Thanks, everyone. This is, this has been great. We always appreciate your interest and support of Lattice Semiconductor. Thanks again.

Jim Anderson
President and CEO, Lattice Semiconductor

Thank you.

Powered by