San Francisco,
Jan 28 : Intel Corp forecast quarterly revenue that disappointed Wall
Street and a sharp increase in capital spending it plans for 2013 unnerved
investors already concerned about slow demand for personal
computers.
Shares of the world's leading chipmaker slid more than 5
percent in after-hours trade after it projected this year's capital spending at
$13 billion, plus or minus $500 million, exceeding many analysts' estimates for
about $10 billion.
Intel said $2 billion of its increased expenditures
would go toward expanding a facility for researching future manufacturing
technology. Some analysts worried that with PC sales already slow, expanding too
quickly may create excess capacity that could hurt the bottom
line.
"People are starting to freak out about the capex," said Sanford C.
Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon. "The concern is that if I spend a lot of money
and I build up my factories, I don't have enough demand to fill them. They have
very high fixed costs, and it pulls your margins down."
Outgoing Chief
Executive Paul Otellini, who plans to retire in May after a successor is
identified, said the investment in manufacturing would lower costs in the long
run.
"The leading edge capacity is the lowest cost for us on a per unit
basis," Otellini told analysts on a conference call. "Regardless of what you
think the size of the market is, the leading edge fabs are the single greatest
asset that we have."
Otellini said the higher capex is not intended to
bankroll a foundry or contract chipmaking business, but he did not rule out
manufacturing semiconductors for other chip companies as long as that did not
empower a rival.
Intel has agreed to manufacture custom chips on behalf
of networking equipment company Cisco Systems Inc, Bloomberg reported. An Intel
spokesman declined to comment.
In the fourth quarter, Intel's revenue was
$13.5 billion, compared with $13.9 billion a year earlier. Analysts had expected
$13.53 billion.
It estimated first-quarter revenue of $12.7 billion, plus
or minus $500 million. Analysts expected $12.91 billion.
Intel is used to
being king of the personal computer market, particularly through its historic
Wintel alliance with Microsoft Corp, which has led to breathtakingly high profit
margins and an 80 percent market share.
But it has struggled to adapt its
technology for smartphones and tablets, a market dominated by Qualcomm Inc,
Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Nvidia Corp. PC makers are struggling to stop a
decline in sales as consumers hold off on buying new laptops in favor of more
nimble mobile gadgets.
Microsoft's long-awaited launch of Windows 8 in
October brought touchscreen features to laptops but failed to spark a resurgence
in sales that Intel and many PC manufacturers had hoped for.
Intel's
hefty investment plans reflect its confidence in the future, even as Wall Street
worries about the chipmaker's struggle to gain traction in the mobile
market.
"Our core advantage really is our manufacturing leadership,"
Chief Financial Officer Stacy Smith said. "450 will give us a significant cost
advantage relative to others."
Intel is expanding its research fab in
Hillsboro, Oregon, to develop technology for manufacturing chips on 450 mm
silicon wafers, a complicated step up from the current 300 mm wafer
standard.
Larger wafers can translate into big savings because more chips
can be etched onto each of them. But building 450 mm plants is expected to be so
expensive that only a few industry leaders, including Intel, Samsung Electronics
and TSMC, are expected to have the necessary scale.
Some Wall Street
analysts gave Intel high marks for expected operating efficiency this
year.
"The revenue isn't going to be there, but the margin and expense
control is going to stabilize the bottom line," said Cody Acree, an analyst at
Williams Financial. "I think it's probably a success if you can be flat in an
industry that most people expect to be flat to down."
Intel foresees
first-quarter gross margins of 58 percent, plus or minus two percentage points.
Analysts on average expected gross margins of about 56 percent for the current
quarter.
It estimated a 2013 gross margin of 60 percent, plus or minus a
few percentage points. Analysts on average had expected 59 percent.
Net
earnings in the December quarter were $2.5 billion, or 48 cents a share,
compared with $3.4 billion, or 64 cents a share, year-ago
period.
Analysts had expected 45 cents, and said the surprisingly strong
performance was partly due to a lower effective tax rate of 23 percent. This was
below Intel's forecast of about 27 percent.
Still, shares of Intel fell
5.6 percent in after-hours trade to $21.43, after closing up 2.58 percent at
$22.68 on the Nasdaq.
"This is a company that is continuing to spend
money to participate in the market. That may concern some investors," said Doug
Freedman, an analyst at RBC Capital.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Intel's weak outlook, spending hikes unnerve Wall Street
Intel's weak outlook, spending hikes unnerve Wall Street
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