Optical component specialists Lumentum Holdings (NASDAQ: LITE) and Finisar (NASDAQ: FNSR) have enjoyed similar catalysts and business conditions this year. Both companies have seen their revenue decline due to tepid demand for optical component products in China, but the hope of a design win at Apple for 3D sensing chips has given investors in both optimism, though that is now leaning in Lumentum's favor.
At Finisar, execution issues have reportedly delayed any new-iPhone-related gains.
Therefore, investors have preferred Lumentum since it has promised a major spike in 3D sensing revenue given its $200 million order pipeline, mainly from a single customer. But is this reason good enough to bet on Lumentum instead of Finisar? Let's take a look.
The case for Lumentum
Lumentum has built a sizable revenue pipeline from 3D sensing products and reported just over $1 billion in total revenue in the recently concluded fiscal year. And most of the gains from the 3D sensing opportunity are yet to be realized, as the company generated just $5 million in revenue from these chips last quarter. Therefore, sales of 3D sensing chips to Apple could significantly boost Lumentum's top line.
Furthermore, Lumentum is busy increasing its manufacturing capacity in light of increased demand for 3D sensing chips. Additionally, the chipmaker is trying to improve manufacturing yields.
Last quarter, Lumentum's revenue fell close to 8% from the prior-year period thanks to a decline in optical component sales. More specifically, the chipmaker lost almost $15 million in revenue from this segment in the fourth quarter, which means that its 3D sensing opportunity could be enough to mitigate any weakness here.
Moreover, the optical component business could stabilize on the back of inventory restocking by Chinese telecom companies, helping Lumentum bring its revenue growth back on track as 3D sensing orders start materializing.
Finisar is in a spot of bother
Finisar had drummed up a lot of hype earlier this year when management dropped hints that it was in the running to supply vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL) chips to Apple for enabling 3D sensing applications. This wasn't surprising as Apple was supposed to tap multiple suppliers for 3D sensing chips, and Finisar looked like one of the beneficiaries.
But the company's latest quarterly report revealed that it has run into production issues with the 3D sensing chips, so any shipments to Apple would be delayed by a quarter. Optimists might say that Finisar's iPhone-related gains have been delayed by a quarter. But it could lose a share of the pie if other suppliers shore up their production capacity and get bigger contracts from Apple.