PC Sell-Through Surge ‘Quite Dramatic’ in June Quarter: Chipmaker AOS
“Sell-in” demand in the computing segment at Alpha & Omega Semiconductor (AOS) was “OK” for fiscal Q4 ended June 30, said Executive Vice President Stephen Chang on a Tuesday investor call. But the increased PC sell-through was “quite dramatic,” due…
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to widespread COVID-19 work-from-home and remote-learning, he said. AOS supplies power semiconductors for laptops, LCD TVs, smartphones and other applications and can be a bellwether of consumer tech demand. Many AOS customers that paused production in calendar Q1 through the pandemic’s factory lockdowns “were catching up in the June quarter,” said Chang. “End demand” in computing remained strong through the quarter, “and we were able to meet it with ramping supply” from the fab in Chongqing, China, he said. Revenue in the consumer segment increased 37.5% sequentially and 31.7% year over year, said Chang. “COVID-driven home-sheltering boosted sales of gaming, TVs and home appliances, enabling those segments to achieve healthy growth,” he said. AOS expects double-digit growth in its consumer segment for the September quarter, “driven by home entertainment, gaming and TVs,” said Chang. COVID-19 robbed 2020 of much of its “normal seasonality,” said Chang. Work-from-home and remote-learning mandates are putting the computing segment on a “very healthy” track for the September quarter, said Chang. “We really need to wait and see how demand changes, but right now, it still looks strong.” Smartphone OEMs didn't “pull back production until the June quarter,” said Chang. “But then coming into the September quarter, they're actually starting up production pretty heavily again in anticipation of possibly another factory shutdown” for the next wave of COVID-19 cases in the fall, he said. The stock closed 21.4% higher Wednesday at $13.88.