Good afternoon, and welcome to SiTime's fourth quarter 2021 financial results conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. At the conclusion of today's conference call, instructions will be given for the question and answer session. If anyone needs assistance at any time during the conference call, please press the star key followed by zero on your touchtone phone. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded today, Wednesday, 2nd February 2022. I would now like to turn the call over to Brett Perry of Shelton Group Investor Relations. Brett, please go ahead.
Thank you, Liz. Good afternoon, and welcome to SiTime's fourth quarter 2021 financial results conference call. On today's call from SiTime are Rajesh Vashist, Chief Executive Officer, and Art Chadwick, Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I would like to point out that during the course of this call, the company may make forward-looking statements regarding expected future results, including financial position, strategy and plans, future operations, the timing market, and other areas of discussion. It's not possible for the company's management to predict all risks, nor can the company assess the impact of all factors on its business or the extent to which any factor or combination of factors may cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statements.
In light of these risks, uncertainties, and assumptions, the forward-looking events discussed during this call may not occur, and actual results could differ materially and adversely from those anticipated or implied. Neither the company nor any person assumes responsibility for the accuracy and completeness of the forward-looking statements. The company undertakes no obligation to publicly update forward-looking statements for any reason at the date of this call to conform these statements to actual results or to changes in the company's expectations. For more detailed information on risks associated with our business, we refer you to the risk factors described in the Form 10-K filed on 16th February 2021, as well as the company's subsequent filings with the SEC. Also, during this call, we refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures which we consider to be an important measure of company performance.
These non-GAAP financial measures are provided in addition to and not as a substitute for or superior to measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP. The only difference between GAAP and non-GAAP results is stock-based compensation expense and related payroll taxes. Please refer to the company's press release issued today for detailed reconciliation between GAAP and non-GAAP financial results. With that, I'd now like to turn the call over to Rajesh. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Brett. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining on today's call. 2021 was an exceptional year for SiTime, with 88% year-over-year revenue growth. We continue to believe these results are a new phase of sustained high growth and a fundamental acceleration at SiTime. There are a number of secular trends that have served as driving factors and will continue to drive revenue in our target markets. In Q1 2021, I referenced our large opportunities in communications, especially in 5G radios and small cells. We see growth in our comms enterprise market and have accelerated new product introduction for these applications. In 2021, we laid out our strategy to quadruple our SAM, or served market, by 2024 to $1.3 billion through new products for the comms enterprise market.
We're on track to introduce six new products in 2022, which is twice as many as in 2020, with more to come in 2023. Some of these new products will actually start contributing to revenue this year, 2022. SiTime continues its mission to be a leader in precision timing by launching innovative new products that are category creators. Recently, we announced XCalibur, which is our first product for a new category, that of active resonators. This opens up a market with a served market or SAM of at least $200 million for SiTime. In a portion of the $4 billion resonator market, XCalibur offers advantages of performance and ease of use that customers value. Unlike the current solutions, there is no need to do circuit matching, specialized testing, or repeated qualifications for different frequencies, which saves the customer months of development time.
Additionally, XCalibur is also 10-20x more reliable than existing resonators. In Q2 2021, I mentioned that our automotive business would generate over $100 million in a few years. We're well on our way to that, with automotive revenues expected to double in 2022 over 2021. Precision oscillators and clocks are replacing passive resonators driven by technologies such as radar, lidar, and high-speed RF required to transfer data in real time at high rates. In 2021, we also expanded our focus to automotive semiconductor companies, and here we are engaged with over 10 leaders for a variety of applications in automotive. This gives us additional visibility into trends, it accelerates adoption, and helps us build ever more compelling products. In Q3 now, I mentioned that data center business would grow to $100 million.
Again, we're well on our way, and data center revenues are expected also to more than double in 2022. As enterprises embrace cloudification, our high reliability, high-performance timing solutions are critical in increasing bandwidth and reducing latency. Design activity in this market is ramping, and the wins in high performance computing, optical modules, and NIC cards are coming in. We're also seeing new applications such as active electrical cables, where high performance electronics and precision timing is embedded inside the cable that enables high-speed connectivity. Again, here we're expanding our engagement with semiconductor leaders and closely engaged with over 15 companies in this space. We believe that in diversity there is strength, and we believe SiTime is the most diverse semiconductor company to go public in the past decade. An example of that is that we have more than 300 applications across six segments.
Looking back at incoming opportunities in 2021, the industrial segment led in the number of new opportunities, while the comms enterprise segment had the highest annual dollar value, which was more than double the next segment. Another aspect about the diversity of our business is that our unit price ranges from less than $1 to hundreds of dollars in volume depending on the application and use case. Our diverse pipeline consists of design wins that'll go into production this year, next year, and as far out as 2024. In the longer term, there are several unique high-volume mainstream applications in the future, such as smart clothing, health monitoring, precision time and navigation, also called PNT, and Internet of Things or IoT. There are common themes in all these applications. Each of them requires higher precision, smaller sizes, reliable operations, again, in very tough or environmentally harsh conditions.
All of these play to the natural strengths of SiTime solutions. Specific to supply chain dynamics, SiTime has continued to benefit at the expense of alternatives due to our fabless model and product programmability, combined with our supportive suppliers that view SiTime as a strategic growth opportunity. Over the last year, we have further partnered with the assembly and test houses, resulting in the doubling of our test capacity to meet anticipated demand for 2022 and 2023. In closing, even when considering the tremendous growth we have achieved in the last year, I believe that SiTime's story is still in the very early innings. The world of timing is truly enormous, and there are numerous areas we have yet to penetrate. As the only semiconductor company which is focused exclusively on timing, we believe that SiTime is uniquely positioned to achieve outsized growth for many years to come.
With that, I will now turn it over to Art Chadwick, our CFO.
Thanks, Rajesh, and good afternoon, everyone. Today, I'll provide a quick financial summary of 2021, then discuss fourth quarter results and provide some guidance for the first quarter. I'll focus my discussion on non-GAAP financial results and refer you to today's press release for a detailed description of our GAAP results, as well as a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP results. To begin with, 2021 was a truly great year for us. We significantly advanced our technology, expanded our product portfolio, increased our worldwide workforce, and generated record revenue and profit. Revenue grew 88% from $116 million in 2020 to $219 million in 2021. Non-GAAP gross margins increased a full 14 points from 51% in 2020 to 65% in 2021.
Operating margins expanded from 8% in 2020 to 30% in 2021. In addition, we raised $460 million during the year from our two stock offerings. All around, a great year. In Q4, we continued to experience exceptional strength in our business. It was an all-time record quarter on multiple fronts. We saw continued strong revenue growth, increased gross margins, increased operating margins, record net income, and positive cash flow. Revenue for the quarter was $75.7 million, up 20% sequentially and up 88% over the same quarter last year. Revenue increased sequentially and year over year in all three of our major market categories. Sales into our mobile, IoT and consumer segment, which consists of sales into mobile phones, wearable devices and consumer products, were $41.9 million or 55% of sales.
This was up 31% sequentially and up 53% over the same quarter last year. Sales into our industrial, automotive and aerospace segment, which includes sales into automotive, industrial, medical, aerospace, military and broad-based sales were $22.9 million or 30% of sales. This was up 9% sequentially and up 232% year-over-year. Sales into our communications and enterprise segment, which consists of wireless infrastructure, including 5G, data center and networking, were $11.0 million or 15% of sales. This was up 7% sequentially and up 80% over last year. Sales to our largest end customer accounted for 18% of sales, which more than 90% was non-phone. Gross margins increased again this quarter. Non-GAAP gross margins were 69.4%, up 250 basis points sequentially.
This uptick in gross margins was due primarily to some unexpected short-term high margin business. Non-GAAP operating expenses were $23.1 million, comprised of $12.1 million in R&D and $11.0 million in SG&A. Non-GAAP operating margins were 39%. Non-GAAP net income was $29.2 million or $1.32 per share. Stock-based compensation expense and related payroll taxes were $9.4 million, up from $8 million in Q3 due to new hire grants and a higher stock price. I expect stock-based comp expense will increase an additional few million dollars a quarter in Q1 due to new hire and other grants. Receivables were $38.4 million with DSOs of 46 days. Inventory was $23.6 million, up from $19.6 million last quarter. In November, we completed our second stock offering of the year.
We sold 1.3 million shares at $225 per share, netting $279 million after fees. In addition, MegaChips sold 1 million shares, reducing their ownership in the company to just under 25%. In regards to cash flow, we generated $24.7 million in positive cash flow from operations, invested $11.3 million in equipment and assets, added $279 million from our stock offering, and ended the quarter with $559 million in cash and no bank debt. I'd now like to provide some guidance for 2022. We expect 2022 will be another great year for the company. Our customers continue to book orders well in advance, giving us excellent visibility into the year.
Market trends that require precision timing are stronger than ever, including growth in 5G, data centers, networking, automotive, medical, aerospace, and other markets we serve. Given our backlog visibility, strong market trends, and new product ramps, we believe we can grow revenue in 2022 by at least 35%. As we experienced in past years, we will see some seasonality in Q1. Revenue will be less than Q4, but substantially higher than the year-ago quarter. We expect revenue in Q1 will be approximately $65 million ±, which at that midpoint would be up 83% over the same quarter last year. We expect Q1 non-GAAP gross margins will trend to a more normalized 65% ±, since we do not expect a repeat of the short-term high-margin business we had in Q4.
As I mentioned on our last call, wafer and other manufacturing costs will increase this year. For example, TSMC is raising prices by 20% or more across the board on the nodes we use. These increased costs will negatively impact gross margins by 2-3 points beginning in Q2. I'd like to offer a few additional comments about gross margins. Longer term, gross margins should expand as new products become a larger portion of our overall sales, since our newer products are generally higher performance, higher ASP, and higher gross margin. However, in the meantime, we are targeting gross margins to be in the 60%-65% range. We could be more aggressive on pricing and drive margins higher, but there are trade-offs between higher gross margins and top-line growth.
Our intention is to find that right balance that keeps gross margins in the low- to mid-60s while maximizing top-line growth. For Q1, we expect non-GAAP operating expenses will be between $24 million and $25 million, up sequentially due to increased headcount and beginning of the year payroll taxes. Basic share count in Q1 will be approximately 21.0 million shares. The dilutive effect of employee RSUs will add an additional 2.0 million shares, taking the total diluted share count to approximately 23.0 million shares. Based on this guidance, we expect first quarter non-GAAP EPS will be between $0.65 and $0.85 per share. With that, I'd like to turn the call back to the operator for Q&A. Thank you very much.
As a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question at this time, please Press the Star and the number one key on your touchtone telephone. To withdraw your question, press the pound key. Our first question comes from Blayne Curtis with Barclays.
Good afternoon, guys. This is Tom O'Malley. I'm for Blayne Curtis. Really nice results. I guess the first question is, out of all the outstanding things you saw in Q4, the margins really stand out. You talked about some short-term business that was higher margin. You talked about TSMC raising prices with a 200-300 BP impact. But you're guiding them down a bit more than that. Do you think that there's some sustainability in the higher margins that you know you're giving yourself some cushion on? Or could you just walk through the puts and takes of, you know, why this shouldn't end up somewhere in the middle versus, you know, down a bit more sequentially? That'd be really helpful to start.
Sure. As I mentioned, Q4 was an exceptional quarter. We had some short-term, very high margin business that I don't expect to continue into Q1. That kind of brings the margins back to the mid-sixties. If we were not expecting increase in wafer and other manufacturing costs, I think that would be kind of what we'd be looking at through the course of the year, somewhere in the mid-sixties. As I mentioned, we could push margins higher by being more aggressive on pricing, but we think that's not the right trade-off here. We're in high growth mode. We wanna continue to be in high growth mode. You know, we're gonna maintain you know, the right balance there. That being in the mid-sixties with the cost increases, that drops margins by a few points.
I think that's the right way to think about it. Now, as we walk through the year, it's very possible that we will get, you know, more high margin business and margins could be higher than that. What I also think is important, and I mentioned this in my script, is that longer term, you know, we do expect gross margin expansion. You know, we've got a lot of new products that we've recently introduced. We've got a lot of products in the pipeline. All of these products are much higher performance, generally higher ASP and higher gross margins than our current products. So as those new products become a larger and larger percentage of our sales going forward, and I'm talking, you know, next year, the year after, the year after that, the year after that, I would expect a general expansion of our gross margins.
Those are kind of the puts and the takes. You know, we'll update folks as we walk through the year.
That's helpful. Just to check in, you guys have talked about the supply chain, and you're benefiting at the expense of alternatives. Can you talk about the traditional quartz crystal suppliers? You know, you've seen some struggle there. Are you seeing any effort to ramp capacity there? Is there any, you know, tangible effort there that's having success? Can you just talk about where your position versus that traditional competition, and if you think that there's any capacity coming online anytime soon?
Yeah, I do think that I anticipate, I don't have any data around it, but I anticipate that there'll be more capacity coming on. I particularly think that in general, with the large expansion of all component capacity in China, in mainland China, I think they will also be expanding. But to me, I don't know if I think of that as competition because our products are significantly differentiated from those products to really matter. As an example, the XCalibur product, the active resonator product, is a very, very distinct product. In fact, its own category, as I mentioned. So I don't know how much that impacts us directly. It impacts us in the general way that that customers have come to us because of shortages. Maybe that gets a little bit slower.
On the other hand, I think because of the products that I mentioned that we are coming out with, the pace of new customer acquisition gets higher. net-net, I think we're in a good place.
Great. Thanks again, and congrats, guys.
Great. Thanks.
Our next question comes from John Pitzer with Credit Suisse.
Yeah, good afternoon, guys. Thanks for letting me ask the question. Art, I just wanna go back to your comments about increasing cost hitting gross margins starting in the June quarter. I mean, TSMC is raising pricing kind of across the board. We're hearing that with many of their customers, but the vast majority of them are just being able to pass those costs along. I'm kinda curious, given that you've exhibited perhaps stronger pricing power than a lot of other chip players in calendar year 2021, why all of a sudden this is an issue this year, and why you just can't pass those cost increases along?
Yeah. I think there's a couple pieces to the answer there. First of all, these wafer cost price increases began at the beginning of the year. We did not have to worry about that last year. I can't speak to 2023 'cause we don't know what'll happen there. In 2022, wafer prices are going up, and they went up at the beginning of the year. You don't see in our P&L in Q1 because essentially, the finished goods that we're selling in Q1 is coming from wafers we bought in Q4. That's why it doesn't impact Q1, but it starts impacting in Q2. That's a real cost increase. It's solid, it's real. Your question is, why can't we increase pricing? We have increased some pricing.
As I mentioned, we could increase pricing even more, but there's that trade-off between increasing pricing to our customers and growth. You know, we're trying to find the right balance there. The 2-3 point decrease, that incorporates some increased pricing. You know, if you look at our wafer costs and other manufacturer costs going up 20%+, that's more than just 2-3 points. The 2-3 points is kinda net of price increases that we're anticipating. Not all customers will accept price increases. If you just look at some of our large customers, you can imagine how they would say, "You know, we're really not interested in that." I don't know if that helps answer that, but that tries to add a little flavor to it.
Yeah. Also I'll add to that you said all of a sudden. I don't think this is all of a sudden. We've been saying this all through that the sweet spot of a gross margin is a few points lower than this because I think it's a very appropriate trade-off between growth and margins. At the position that SiTime is right now in our history, I think growth is paramount at very nice, very solid gross margins. We'd like to sort of do that. Remember that we are single-sourced with the vast majority of our customers, and I think that a partnership-oriented price increase is better off for the longer term than just purely passing it on to our customer just because they're single sourced with us.
John, I'll just add a little math to this to help folks. If, for example, our material cost was 30% of revenue, right? That would be 70% material margins. If our costs did go up 20% across the board for all manufacturing costs, that would be 6 points of margin. My 2-3 points is kinda halfway in between. That says that about half of that cost increase we are able to pass on, and about half we're not passing on, either by choice on our side or by choice on our customer's side.
Yeah.
I think longer term, what is important, and I'll repeat what I said earlier, our newer products are gonna be much higher margin than our legacy products. Longer term, we do expect further gross margin expansion, you know, a year from now, two years from now, three years from now. I think that's quite relevant to our long-term strategy here.
No, that's helpful, guys. Then I appreciate the color on the full-year revenue growth. I'm wondering if you could give us a little bit more sort of qualitative, you know, detail around that. I mean, if you just take the midpoint of your March guidance and grow $7 million a quarter, you kinda get to that full-year growth rate of 35%. I'm assuming things aren't gonna be that linear, but maybe they are. Maybe if you can give us some color there. I guess importantly, as you look at the three major kind of segment categories, where do you expect growth to be sort of fastest to slowest within that 35% full-year growth?
Sure. Fair question. Well, first of all, nothing in the world is totally linear, but it is clear that the back half of this year we expect to be higher than the first half of this year. That's been the case for the last few years, and that'll be the case, I believe, for this year. The growth longer term comes from our comms and enterprise market. We're putting a lot of development dollars into products to address that market. As Rajesh mentioned, you know, we've been talking about a SAM in that market of $500 million going to $1.3 billion in the next couple of years. That should drive significant growth for us, both this year and in following years.
I think, as a percentage, that's where we expect a lot of our growth. Obviously, those segments are lower amount of our total sales today, but that's I think the right way to think about longer term growth.
Thanks for the question, John. I appreciate the asking for what is the pattern of growth. As you know, the three markets that we are deeply interested in, one is comms enterprise data center, the second is automotive, and the third is mil-aero. I'm happy to say that all of these three are going to grow significantly in the year. The other three, which are mobile IoT, consumer and industrial, are also going to grow, and probably the slowest growth is going to be pure play consumer. I think if I was to rank order them as a percentage, I would say, mil-aero, comms enterprise, automotive, and at the bottom would be consumer.
Yes, thanks. That's great color. I'll get back in the queue and let somebody else ask.
All right. Thanks, John.
Our next question comes from Alessandra Vecchi with William Blair.
Hi, this is Sabrina on for Alex. Thanks for taking my question. In regard to the new product releases, you mentioned six this upcoming calendar year. How should we think about the new product releases split between resonators, clock ICs, and oscillators? Are these products targeting specific end markets?
Yeah. I think the end markets point is back in, you know, they're heavily focused on comms enterprise market, followed by the IoT and mobile market. I think we're sort of we've talked before about sort of that products that we develop for the comms enterprise market today are used a little bit later in automotive, and a little bit later again in mil-aero, as well as industrial. In other words, think of the comms enterprise market as the sort of feeder for these other markets. On the other side, the products developed for mobile IoT are also feeders into automotive, feeders into consumer, feeders into industrial. The second category that we're bringing products out for is mobile IoT.
As far as splitting it up by clocking and oscillators, the bulk of the products are oscillators, followed by clocks. At this point, we are not focusing, as I said before, that much investment on the resonators, primarily because they're the lowest priced product. They're typically priced below 0.20 in comparison to our other products, which are anywhere from $1-$20. We think bang for the buck, that's the way to go.
Thank you. That's helpful.
Great. Thanks, Sabrina.
Our next question comes from Quinn Bolton with Needham.
Hey, guys. Wanted to sort of follow up on the gross margin question. I you know realize you're not guiding beyond the March quarter, but as we think through some of the dynamics, the higher wafer pricing gets sort of captured in inventory in Q1 doesn't really start to hit the income statement until Q2, as you mentioned. I'm wondering, does it all hit in Q2, or do you see sort of an additional pressure into the third quarter? I ask because typically in the second half, you noted the stronger second half revenue, and you tend to see better absorption. All things equal, you know usually your gross margin has a lift in the second half of the year just with revenue. I'm just trying to think through the puts and takes for gross margin as you look into Q2 and Q3.
Yeah. Fair question. Yeah, I mean, the full brunt of the cost increases hit in Q2 because essentially, you know, we run with about a quarter's worth of inventory, so it takes about three months to go from, you know, a wafer all the way to finished goods and shipment. The full brunt in Q2. What happens in the back half of the year? You know, I don't wanna be that specific yet. You know, it's only the beginning of February, but your comment is valid in that with the higher expected revenue, that will give us more leverage on our manufacturing overhead. All else being equal, that would argue for some improved margins in the back half of the year, at least compared to Q2. Let me leave it at that.
As we march through the year, I'll be a lot more specific on our guidance and where we think it goes. Bottom line, you know, I don't think we're too worried about gross margins. Again, you know, we've got some flexibility to raise prices if we choose to. We've chosen not to in many cases. I think we're looking at some very high growth rates this year. As I mentioned, we expect to grow revenue at least, and I'll emphasize the at least 35%, and that means that it could be higher than that, and that also would improve gross margins. So a couple of different concepts in there, but very fair question.
Got it. Thanks. Just, Rajesh, you mentioned XCalibur active resonator product line. Wondering if you could give us some sense, one, timing. When do you think these might start to contribute to revenue? Perhaps more importantly, you'd mentioned, I think, in answer to another question that you're tending not to focus on resonators because they tend to be lower ASP and margin. I'm wondering, with the XCalibur line, the fact that they're active resonators, are these gonna sort of meet your new product, you know, margin characteristics where they could come in actually above your corporate average?
Yeah. First off, let me be clear, SiTime will do resonators as standalone products. We already did one. We are shipping one. We're just choosing to put our expenses, R&D expenses into oscillators and clocks because they are much higher priced and higher dollar margin. Now, active resonators are kind of a call it a smart way or a cunning way, if you would, to address the resonator market while not making resonators. You know, the XCalibur product is a new category, as I mentioned. It's an active resonator, so it behaves like a oscillator, but it looks and feels to the designer pin-out and so on as a resonator, so it gives them a backup to go get resonators for that. Now, for that value, SiTime is always about value.
For that value, SiTime does charge a fair price, which gives us our corporate gross margin. We don't break out whether one product is higher gross margin or not, but suffice it to say that it'd be very difficult for us to introduce products that won't meet corporate guidelines in margin, or higher. I think XCalibur is gonna be extremely profitable, and we will start shipping this year. This is one of those products that I said, you know, that we have been building that'll actually do well this year. I think we're gonna be in good shape, and I'm very, very, very excited about this.
Thanks, Rajesh.
Thanks, Quinn.
Our next question comes from Tore Svanberg with Stifel.
Yes. Thank you. Congratulations on the strong results, and no need to apologize for 60%-65% gross margins. My first question is on the topic that you mentioned, Rajesh, about partnering or working with other semiconductor companies. I know you talked about that when addressing automotive. I think you mentioned about 10 players there and then about 15 in the data center space. You know, just wondering what that means contextually for your business. I mean, does it open up the door for you know, more new customers that you may not have been able to address in the past? Or is there even a sort of reference platform to some of those engagements?
Yeah. It's exactly that. The easy answer is that it's a leveraged strategy. As we know, semiconductor companies that do chips for various markets, they build reference platforms that customers consume and buy according to that. Obviously, a key part of the strategy is to be part of that. We have just taken it to a higher level, with a significant amount of our resources now being spent upon that. We have a decent-sized sales force that's working on it. What all of that allows us to do is not only to answer products needs for today, but go further upstream in time and get products that are going to be introduced in later years, later in 2022, later in 2023, later in 2024, so it becomes important.
There's also a category of products where semiconductor companies actually ship for revenue with our product, not as references, but ship product for revenue. That's another category that we are playing in, and that's very valuable. Where, again, the shortage has helped is because these companies, these semiconductor companies, are experiencing shortages of timing devices just like end customers are. It's very helpful for us to be there for them. Being semiconductor companies, they see the value of our product, which is a semiconductor product over the existing solution, which of course, as you know, is a non-semiconductor passive product. We talk their same talk, and we're able to solve their problems, and we're able to go further out in time.
Yeah, thank you for that perspective. My follow-up is on supply. There's a lot of talks about, you know, TSMC, which is obviously a silicon supplier, but you know, there has not been a whole lot of discussions on your MEMS suppliers. Just wondering how things stand there from a capacity perspective. You know, is it tight? You know, do you feel like the capacity you're getting from your partner there is in very good shape?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sorry.
I'll answer that. Just to recap, right? Our MEMS is manufactured at Bosch. It's our process, and we have not had any issue in getting the wafers, the MEMS wafers that we need to support our revenue or our expected revenue this year. TSMC, of course, those are the CMOS wafers that are the analog chips that our resonators get attached to. Again, as everybody knows, wafer supply is tight, but we're a good customer of TSMC, and they've been able to satisfy our need, and we believe that we will be able to get the supply we need to support our expected growth rate this year. Bottom line, yeah, it's a little bit tight out there, but we believe we're in good shape.
You also have to remember, you know, we're not that large, and we get a lot of die on a wafer. You know, the wafers that we get from TSMC, we get something like 10,000 die on them. The MEMS die that we get on our Bosch wafers are like 100,000 die. We get a lot of product with not that many wafers. Bottom line, we feel like we're in reasonably good shape.
Really helpful. Thank you all.
Thank you, Tore Svanberg.
Our next question comes from Suji Desilva with Roth Capital.
Hi, Rajesh. Hi, Art. Congrats on a strong 2021. Just another question on gross margin, if you don't mind. You know, I'm just trying to understand, are there any segments that are relatively harder or easier to pass the cost increases along? I'm just trying to get some color on the challenges you're having there.
Yeah. I think generally speaking, pricing, the ability in shortages to price high is quite high. In other words, it doesn't really go by customer categories or markets. It really goes by which are the customers we want to have solid long-term relationships with, which is the bulk of them. Because of that, I think customers understand that times are tight, so they understand pricing and so on. In some cases, we choose to hold back that pricing. Some cases we choose to be more aggressive on pricing. It's really quite a case-by-case basis. SiTime, as a premium company in this market, knows how to do this very well.
I think, while I understand the focus on the gross margin lowering, my recommendation would be to look at that as a little bit of a distraction and to focus on where the growth is really coming from.
Yeah, it sounds strategic, and that point definitely come across, Rajesh. Also just a question on the cash balance. You have a very strong cash balance now. Obviously strong funding position and cash flow. Just can you remind us your cash strategy, acquisition strategy, and if buybacks are in the cards or that's. It's a little early for that versus organic investment?
Yeah. I think buybacks are too early to contemplate that. We just put out some more stock. I think the stock can do with more liquidity, not less. As far as acquisitions, we've talked about it, we are always looking at either solutions that further our product line that we don't possess, technologies that we don't possess, and going after that or in the area of clocks or clocking, I think is particularly one area where it is dispersed among existing semiconductor companies whose names you are very well familiar with, and they're not focused on them. It's either cash cow or it's neglected. That makes it a bit of a challenge to do those acquisitions. But to the extent that we are able to, we certainly would like to wherever we can.
Okay. Very helpful. Thanks, guys.
Thanks, Suji.
Our next question comes from Melissa Fairbanks with Raymond James.
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I was just wondering if you might be able to give us some color on expectations by segment for the March quarter. You know, obviously consumer is probably seasonally down the most, but just wondering if you could give us a little bit of guidance there. Also, in the recent quarters, you've been giving us kind of expectations what the contribution from your largest customer would be. Just looking for any kind of color.
Sure. Yeah, I talked about the seasonality briefly.
Mm-hmm
in my discussion. Bottom line is, I think the decrease from Q4- Q1 is gonna be primarily consumer, right?
Okay.
That's not surprising, and that's really what drives the seasonality. Then in terms of our largest customer, you know, they were at 18% of our sales in Q4, and I think that percentage is gonna stay relatively constant in Q1.
Okay, great. Just as a quick follow-up, the short-term high-value revenue that you were able to capture in the December quarter, are you able to tell us what segment that came in on?
You know, I would prefer not to.
Okay. No problem.
It's across all segments, but, yeah, that, I think that's just a little more detail than we need to go into, if that's okay.
No problem at all. Thanks very much, guys. That's all for me.
Thanks, Melissa.
Thank you.
That concludes today's question and answer session. I'd like to turn the call back to management for closing remarks.
I think that we closed out an absolutely stellar year in 2021. I'm looking to consolidating those gains in 2022 and growing the company significantly per our guidance. I'm very, very bullish on how we see the future.
On that note, I guess we'll conclude our call. Thank you everybody for spending the time. We really appreciate it.
Thank you all. Bye-bye.
This concludes today's Conference Call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.