Cypress Semiconductor (NASDAQ: CY) reported third-quarter results recently, letting investors know that it took in record revenue of $604.6 million in the three-month period. Revenues have been hitting records all year, and Cypress managed to report $0.03 per share of profit in the quarter after three consecutive quarters with a loss on that metric. The stock is up 64% over the past year.
If you're a Cypress investor or considering buying shares, here are three things from the latest quarterly report that you need to know.
1. Connected devices are the new building blocks
Over the last few years, Cypress has reimagined its business primarily through a couple of big acquisitions. The first was with rival memory chip business Spansion, which effectively consolidated those legacy operations to maximize profits over the long term. The second, Cypress' purchase of Broadcom's (NASDAQ: AVGO) Internet of Things (IoT) business, made the company a major player in the burgeoning world of internet-connected devices. where end markets include automotive, industrial, and consumer products.
Speaking to Cypress' work in that new area, CEO Hassane El-Khoury had this to say on the quarterly call:
After a strong second quarter, we continued to deliver record revenue with strength across our key markets. These results demonstrate we are delivering on our Cypress 3.0 strategy of selling embedded solutions into markets growing faster than the overall semiconductor industry. Our customers are relying on us for more bill-of-material coverage, with approximately 80% of our revenue generated by customers buying more than one product family across connectivity, microcontrollers and memory.
Revenue for the third quarter increased 2% over the second quarter to $604.6 million, led by a 4% increase in the embedded connections business. The legacy memory chip business decreased 1% compared with the second quarter. Overall, the company is well on its way to turn in record annual sales for the 2017 fiscal year.
Data by YCharts.
2. Profits are coming back
Cypress' string of acquisitions, while setting it up for the future, created some problems for the bottom line in the short term. The company has been running a net loss for some time, at least when not factoring for one-time items and things like depreciation, but that situation is beginning to change.
Gross profit margin improved to 41.8% from 39.8% last quarter, and the unadjusted bottom line was positive for the first time in a while. Earnings per share came in at $0.03.