By Stephen Nellis and Chavi Mehta
(Reuters) – Chip designer Qualcomm forecast first-quarter sales and profits above Wall Street targets on Wednesday as a smartphone sales slump finally starts to ease, especially in China, and a renewed contract with Apple helps boost its outlook.
The San Diego, California-based company forecast current-quarter revenue of $9.1 billion to $9.9 billion, with a midpoint above analysts’ expectations of $9.2 billion according to LSEG data. Qualcomm predicted current-quarter adjusted profits of $2.25 to $2.45 per share, beating expectations of $2.23 according to LSEG.
Qualcomm shares rose 3.4% after the results were released.
On a conference call, Qualcomm Chief Executive Cristiano Amon told investors smartphone companies had finally worked through most of their existing inventory and were starting to put in fresh orders.
“We’re happy that the inventory dynamics that we have seen within the Android business are largely behind us right now,” Amon said.
For the just-ended fiscal fourth quarter, Qualcomm reported sales of $8.67 billion and adjusted profits of $2.02 per share, both above analysts’ estimates of $8.51 billion and $1.91 per share, according to LSEG data.
Qualcomm is facing new competition from Huawei Technologies, which has resumed producing its own smartphone chips after relying on the U.S. company for the past several years.
Amon said he does not expect Huawei’s re-entry into the market to affect its relationship with Chinese smartphone companies, and Chief Financial Officer Akash Palkhiwala estimated a 35% quarter-over-quarter increase in sales to Chinese smartphone customers.
Analysts also expect major Qualcomm customer Samsung Electronics to resume using some of its own in-house chips after using all Qualcomm chips in its most recent devices. Amon said the company expects to retain a “majority share” of the chips in Samsung’s forthcoming S24 line of phones.
A broader turnaround in key consumer electronics markets could overcome those concerns. After large declines for several quarters, global smartphone shipments fell only 0.1% in the quarter ended September, thanks to strong emerging market demand and a resilient premium phone market, according to analysts at research firm IDC.
“For Qualcomm, it is a recovery in Android demand mostly driven by significant growth in demand from Chinese OEMs,” said Logan Purk, analyst at Edward Jones. “This recovery would eventually happen but appears to have materialized sooner than expected, driving solid results and improved guidance for the next quarter.”
Qualcomm said in September it signed a fresh supply agreement with iPhone maker Apple that runs to 2026. Last week it disclosed plans for a renewed push into the laptop market with backing from Microsoft.
Fourth-quarter sales in Qualcomm’s chip unit were $7.4 billion, beating analysts’ estimate of $7.26 billion according to FactSet data. In Qualcomm’s intellectual property licensing business, sales of $1.26 billion were in line with estimates of $1.25 billion according to FactSet data.
In its chip business, Qualcomm said fourth-quarter revenue from smartphone handsets was $5.46 billion, beating analysts’ expectations of $5.34 billion according to FactSet data.
Automotive chip sales were $535 million in the fourth quarter, above estimates of $482 million according to FactSet. Overall, Qualcomm said its automotive chip business was up 24% for fiscal 2023 at $1.9 billion.
(Reporting by Chavi Mehta in Bengaluru and Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Richard Chang)