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Synaptics (SYNA) Q3 2019 Earnings Call Transcript

Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.
Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Synaptics (NASDAQ: SYNA)
Q3 2019 Earnings Call
May. 09, 2019, 5:00 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks

  • Questions and Answers

  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:


Jason Tsai

[Audio gap]on Synaptics' third-quarter fiscal 2019 conference call. My name is Jason Tsai. I am the head of investor relations at Synaptics. With me on today's call are Kermit Nolan, our interim CFO and chief accounting officer; and Saleel Awsare, senior vice president and general manager of our IoT division, corporate marketing and investor relations.

This call is also being broadcast live over the web and can be accessed from the Investor Relations section of the company's website at synaptics.com. In addition to a supplemental slide presentation, we have also posted a copy of these prepared remarks on our Investor Relations website. The supplementary slides have also been furnished as an exhibit to our current report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC earlier today and add additional color to our financial results. In addition to the company's GAAP results, management will also provide supplementary results on a non-GAAP basis, which excludes share-based compensation, acquisition-related costs and certain other noncash or nonrecurring or recurring items.

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Please refer to the press release issued after the market closed today for a detailed reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP results. Additionally, we would like to remind you that during the course of this conference call, Synaptics will make forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements will give our current expectations and projections relating to our financial conditions, results of operations, plans, objectives, future performance and business. Although Synaptics believes our estimates and assumptions to be reasonable, they are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties beyond our control and may prove to be inaccurate.

Synaptics cautions that actual results may differ materially from any future performance suggested in the company's forward-looking statements. We refer you to this company's current and periodic reports filed with the SEC, including the Synaptics Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2018, for important risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statement. Synaptics expressly disclaims any obligation to update this forward-looking information. I will now turn the call over to Saleel Awsare.

Saleel?

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

Thanks, Jason. And I'd like to welcome everyone today to the call. I'm happy to be speaking to you today on behalf of the board and our executive leadership committee. I will first discuss the opportunities that lie ahead for Synaptics and update you on our business and then I will turn the call over to Kermit to discuss our financial results and outlook.

Synaptics is undergoing a corporate transformation, focused on driving innovation, unlocking untapped potential within our extensive portfolio of technologies and expertise and aligning the business toward better profitability long term. Our board and the executive leadership committee is committed to improving shareholder returns by carefully evaluating the opportunities ahead in the markets we serve and making the right investment choices to further improve our gross margin. We are thoroughly reviewing our product portfolio to better leverage our best-in-class solutions with an eye toward positioning the company for higher gross margins and profitability longer term. We are moving quickly to strengthen our performance and address the challenges we face.

With that said, let me now share a few product and customer highlights. For our IoT division, Synaptics is laser-focused on innovating at the Smart Edge, and we are very pleased to share that our new AS3-hundred family of SoCs, announced at CES earlier this year, has already begun shipping millions of units to a major customer, a full quarter ahead of schedule. The AS3-hundred family is at the heart of our Smart Edge AI AudioSmart solution, the world's first commercially available, fully integrated SoC that incorporates machine learning, neural network acceleration, a proprietary Wake Word engine and highly advanced far-field voice processing. This is also our first shipping design in 22-nanometer, enabling a broad variety of voice-enabled Smart Home devices including hubs, Wi-Fi repeaters, speakers and appliances.

We are the leading solutions provider for intelligence at the edge, and we expect to capitalize and extend this lead. Smart Edge requires innovative technologies and integrated platforms that support full range of consumer needs. Synaptics is building on its legacy as the leader in human interface technology to deliver a broad range of differentiated integrated solutions that encapsulate voice and audio, video and display, AI, as well as security and consumer privacy. The market and adoption of these solutions are still in their infancy, and our differentiated portfolio will deliver best-in-class capabilities to the entire ecosystem and drive meaningful growth for our business over the next several years.

We will continue to leverage our industry-leading technology and will launch some very exciting new products later this year that will further drive integration of our human interface portfolio. In the mobile space, we continue to win major OEM smartphone designs for both LCD and OLED displays. In LCD, we are enabling more infinity displays with our full-HD TDDI COF solutions, including two new design wins from Huawei and additional wins with other large OEMs. Our low-power full-HD TDDI solution also has flagship design wins at OPPO and Vivo.

In OLED, we continue to win share in the high-end segment of the market and expect to see upcoming flagship devices from leading handset OEMs continue to be supported by our best-in-class OLED discrete DDICs and touch sensors. While OLED solutions will continue to be strong growth driver for our mobile business, we anticipate that LCD-based smartphones will remain a vital part of our customers' portfolio for the next few years. We are seeing ongoing development with our largest customers for LCD-based handsets for the next-generation flagship and mainstream smartphone. We are excited by the progress we are making and are dedicated to supporting all of our large handset OEM customers as they ready their next-generation devices that will launch later this year, whether it be LCD or OLED.

Smartphone headsets are transitioning from analog to digital, and we continue to leverage our best-in-class digital audio SoCs for this rapidly emerging USB Type C headset market. With that, we are very pleased to announce a new USB Type C headset design win with an additional top three smartphone OEM for the upcoming flagship smartphone that will be included in every box worldwide. We will ship a few million units in the current quarter for this new design win and it is expected to grow throughout the rest of the year. This follows our previously announced digital audio headset and dongle solution shipping in the box with Google Pixel 3, and with multiple Huawei phones.

The market for digital audio is growing very quickly and our technology leadership in this space has enabled us to capture meaningful wins at the world's largest OEMs. We are very pleased with our progress and expect to see the wearables segment grow strongly for us as digital audio and active noise cancellation adoption for smartphones continues to expand. On the topic of wearables, at the recent HP Reinvent World Partner Forum, HP unveiled its cutting-edge virtual reality headsets featuring Synaptics' ultrahigh resolution VR display technology. Our industry-first breakthrough display technology supporting higher resolution per eye has enabled OEMs to design a new generation of VR headsets with meaningfully better visual capabilities, bringing users a more immersive and better experience than before.

Other VR headset makers that have recently announced products using our display technology include Pico's G2 4H headset and Acer with its ConceptD OJO. Worth noting is that Synaptics is the only company delivering an end-to-end GPU to display pixel solution by leveraging our VR bridge. Just a quick note on our Automotive business. We are pleased to have secured many design wins with our TDDI and fingerprint-based solutions, both of which position us well as cars begin to roll off the assembly lines over the coming years.

We continue to execute on our long history of delivering best-in-class human interface innovation to the world's leading technology companies, and we are very excited by our strong pipeline of new products and design wins that will ramp later this year and across all of our different products. Lastly, I want to provide an update on our search for a new executive leadership at Synaptics. The board has engaged an executive search firm and interviews for the CEO position are already under way. The priority is to fill this role before resuming the search for our next CFO.

Given Synaptics' proven track record of technology innovation and market leadership, we expect to attract world-class talent and will update you as quickly as possible on our progress. With that, Kermit will now discuss our results and outlook.

Kermit Nolan -- Interim Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer

Thank you, Saleel. And hello, everyone. Synaptics posted third-quarter results with revenue of $334 million, down 22% sequentially and slightly below our guidance range. Weakness in the quarter was primarily attributed to softness in the smartphone market, particularly in China, as well as the temporary impact of product transitions within our IoT business, partially offset by continuing stability in our PC products.

As reflected in the presentation materials released in advance of this call, revenue from mobile, IoT and PC products was approximately 61%, 19% and 20%, respectively. During the quarter, we had three customers above 10% of revenue, at 17%, 16% and 10%. For the March quarter, our GAAP gross margin was 34.7%, which includes $15.2 million of intangible asset amortization and $700,000 of share-based compensation costs. GAAP operating expenses in the March quarter were $119.8 million, which includes share-based compensation of $15.1 million, acquisition-related costs of $3.3 million consisting primarily of intangibles amortization and some transitory compensation program costs.

Our year-to-date GAAP tax rate was a negative 49%. In the March quarter, we had GAAP net income of $6.7 million or $0.19 per diluted share. On a non-GAAP basis, our March quarter non-GAAP gross margin of 39.5% was above our guidance range and primarily reflects an overall positive product mix. This was our seventh consecutive quarter of non-GAAP gross margin improvement.

March quarter non-GAAP operating expenses were $99.2 million, which was lower than expected primarily reflecting a reversal of variable compensation accruals from the first half of fiscal '19. Our year-to-date non-GAAP tax rate was 12%. Non-GAAP net income for the March quarter was $29 million or $0.83 per diluted share, a 10% decline year over year, compared with $32.4 million or $0.92 per diluted share in the March quarter of last year. Turning to our balance sheet.

We ended the quarter with $324 million of cash, an increase of $41 million from the preceding quarter, which reflects approximately $47 million of cash flow from operations net of $7 million used for capital expenditures during the quarter. Depreciation for the quarter was $8 million. Receivables at the end of March were $267 million and DSOs were 72 days, reflecting a back-end-loaded quarter. Inventories were $153 million and inventory turns were 5.3.

Further, while we did not repurchase shares in the third quarter, we do have $148 million remaining in our share repurchase authorization and intend to opportunistically repurchase shares. Now I will make a few comments regarding our quarterly outlook. Based on our backlog of approximately $210 million entering the June quarter, subsequent bookings, customer forecasts, product sell-in and sell-through timing patterns, as well as expected product mix, we anticipate revenue for the June quarter to be in the range of $300 million to $320 million. For the June quarter by product, we expect our IoT revenue to grow sequentially.

We expect our mobile revenue will decline sequentially as a customer works through inventory in their supply chain. And our PC revenue is expected to be stable. Revenue mix in the June quarter from mobile, IoT and PC products is expected to be approximately 55%, 25% and 20%, respectively. During the second half of the calendar year, we expect growth in IoT and mobile revenue, while PC revenue is expected to remain stable.

We have taken a cautious approach to our guidance considering the impact of existing supply chain inventory levels. We anticipate that the level of product currently in the supply chain will be sufficient to meet the reduced demand for certain of our high-end display driver products from a leading smartphone OEM, which we believe will clear in the first quarter of fiscal 2020. I will now provide GAAP outlook data for the June quarter and will follow with non-GAAP outlook data. We anticipate stock-based compensation charge in the fourth quarter will be in the range of $16 million to $17 million.

In addition, June quarter GAAP expenses will include noncash charges of approximately $18 million related to intangibles amortization, of which approximately $15 million will be reflected in cost of sales. I will now provide non-GAAP outlook data for the June quarter. Based on our overall revenue mix, we expect non-GAAP gross margin in the June quarter to be between 37.5% and 38.5%. Gross margin is expected to decrease slightly sequentially due to product mix within mobile.

We expect non-GAAP operating expenses in the June quarter to be in the range of $102 million to $106 million. Our opex is expected to be stable sequentially if you exclude the one-time reversal of compensation accruals in the March quarter. We anticipate our non-GAAP long-term tax rate for fiscal 2019 to be in the range of 11% to 13%. Non-GAAP net income per diluted share for the June quarter is anticipated to be in the range of $0.20 to $0.45 per share.

Let me finish with some commentary around what Saleel addressed. As we look to transform the company, we are reviewing options to drive profitability, align costs and increase cash flow as we manage through short-term challenges. We will evaluate each of our product offerings carefully and look at opportunities with a much greater focus on profitability to drive investment choices. As we complete the process, our goal is to emerge with a business that will drive our overall corporate gross margins into the 40s percentage range while aligning spending to improve operating margins and drive our business toward greater long-term profitability.

With that, I will hand the call back over to Saleel.

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

Thanks, Kermit. While we continue to work through some residual supply chain issues that are impacting our short-term financial results, we remain keenly focused on executing on our strengths and delivering on the untapped potential of our product platforms. This will entail an even more pronounced effort to reshape our portfolio toward higher-margin products with the goal of achieving meaningful better gross margins longer term. We already have the building blocks and customer wins in place to execute across our IoT platform where we expect to return to growth and to drive even greater momentum across the portfolio.

We will couple this with smart, targeted investments in key product and market opportunities as well a focus on spending alignment to conform with the product areas that we choose to focus on over time. We are intent on delivering consistent, improved profitability for Synaptics over the long term. We are in the initial phases of this process to directionally improve our long-term profitability and plan to keep you updated on our progress regularly. I'm confident that we are making the necessary changes and focused on the right priorities to accelerate Synaptics into a stronger future.

Finally, we are participating in a few key trade events this month where we will demonstrate our latest innovations. This includes Display Week, which is next week in San Jose, and Computex in Taipei at the end of the month. If you are attending, we will welcome you to stop by for a demo. With that, I will now turn the call over to the operator to start the Q&A session.

Operator?

Questions & Answers:


Operator

[Operator instructions] I see we have our first question from Kevin Cassidy with Stifel. Please go ahead.

Kevin Cassidy -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst

Thank you for taking my question. The gross margin decline due to revenue mix within smartphone. Can you say is there other certain products that are more -- getting more challenged on gross margin? Or is it simply because of the inventory that you had discussed?

Kermit Nolan -- Interim Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer

Yes. Kevin, I'll take that one. So in terms of the mix and the impact on mix in the fourth quarter in mobile, it's really our integrated-type products that are going to be impacted -- going to impact the margin or push the margin down relative to our discrete products, which of course, the volume of the discrete products would be down in the fourth quarter.

Kevin Cassidy -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst

OK. And then maybe as you are thinking of the transformation of the company. Is it possible to stay in the handset business and generate over 40% gross margins? May be if you could talk a little bit about your thoughts around that. It's kind of -- seems like it's a trade-off of large markets versus gross margin.

Kermit Nolan -- Interim Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer

What we find is our products -- I guess you could say in the general market, things tend to get commoditized. But being a leader in technology, we see a path to continue down this -- in the mobile market, for what we think is a fairly extended period of time. And then of course, working with certain key customers. So we do believe that there is a path to improving those margins.

Again, the overall mix of revenue -- sorry, of gross margin is going to be pushed into the 40s. And again, IoT will help support that. Again focusing on --

Kevin Cassidy -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst

OK. Great. OK. I'll get back in the queue.

Operator

Thank you very much. [Operator instructions] We'll take our next question from Rajvindra Gill with Needham & Company. Please go ahead.

Rajvindra Gill -- Needham and Company -- Analyst

Yes. Thanks for taking my questions. And so a follow-up on the strategic investment that you had mentioned, evaluating different options so you could get to the target of 40%. But as you look at the different products within mobile, OLED, discrete, TDDI and then to a lesser extent, fingerprints and you look at PC and IoT, how do we think about that conceptually in terms of the mix of those businesses and the goal to get to 40%? Should we expect to see more OLED revenue within mobile and more discrete and less integrated? Or how do we think about that in terms of the longer-term direction of 40%?

Kermit Nolan -- Interim Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer

So good question, Raji. So we would say, the way we would look at it, we do believe OLED has a path to higher overall gross margins. And the discrete products we believe will maintain some good gross margins. Obviously, the integrated products do drag down the gross margins somewhat.

But it doesn't necessarily make them a bad investment especially it could be on the leading edge in terms of delivering products. And of course, within the mix, we intend to grow IoT. And Saleel, if you wanted to add.

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

Yeah. Hey, Raji. This is Saleel. As you know, IoT, as I've said early in my prepared remarks will start growing in the second half of calendar year in double digits.

And the gross margins in IoT continue to be very healthy and we see that going forward. And just to add to what the PC area is where we've maintained our margins and we feel good about that as we move forward. So just adding to what Kermit said, we are directionally working toward this and move our gross margins into the 40s range.

Rajvindra Gill -- Needham and Company -- Analyst

Thanks for that. And for my follow-up. In the mobile business, you had mentioned a customer working through to clear inventory, you're helping to clear in fiscal Q1. I was wondering if you can provide some color with respect to that.

Was it share loss? Was it just a drop in demand in China? Was it a transition? I'm just trying to get a sense of the big mobile drop-off quarter over quarter in September. Thank you.

Kermit Nolan -- Interim Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer

OK. So we believe we've got -- there's a lot of background noise. Anyway, we believe that we are maintaining market share in the mobile space. We've secured meaningful new design wins in OLED and LCD with numerous top handset OEMs.

And we believe both the flagship, as well as the mainstream phones will help us maintain our share and increase share.

Rajvindra Gill -- Needham and Company -- Analyst

And do you expect that inventory to be cleared by September?

Kermit Nolan -- Interim Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer

Yeah. Yeah. No. That inventory in the supply chain should be cleared in the September quarter.

Yes.

Rajvindra Gill -- Needham and Company -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

I see we have our next question come from Anthony Stoss with Craig-Hallum. Please go ahead, sir.

Anthony Stoss -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

Hi, guys. A couple of questions, Saleel. I'm curious for you, you guys do suggest that your PC business is likely going to be flat in September. Even normal seasonality would call for that to probably up.

I'm curious what you're seeing there. And secondly, may be you could comment related to the mobile market on the pricing environment, if it's more aggressive than what you've been expecting or have seen in the past. Then I have a follow-up after that.

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

Yeah. So Tony, on the PC business, let me just understand your question, you're asking why we expect it to be flat in the September quarter, just to be clear?

Anthony Stoss -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

Yes.

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

There's a couple of reasons. I mean, we feel good about where we are at with the business. We have been gaining share in some segments that we've talked about in the past, specifically in some of the commercial PC that we are well engaged with. So we feel really good.

And it's a mature market, so we don't expect big, any gyrations in this. And we are very well-positioned, and we are the leader in this space. So we understand the market well, and we feel good about it for the September quarter. Your second half of the question was on mobile pricing, is that correct?

Anthony Stoss -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

That's correct.

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

Kermit? Mobile pricing, do you expect more challenges?

Kermit Nolan -- Interim Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer

At this stage, I think, it's fairly stable. I wouldn't expect there to be significant challenges. Again, our goal is to continue to come out with leading edge products for our mobile customers.

Anthony Stoss -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

Then as a follow-up, guys, and maybe not to put you on the spot without a CEO or CFO, do you expect your fiscal-year '20 rev -- do you have a shot at that growing year over year? And then also to put you in the spot without a CEO or CFO, what can you do to cut costs? Are you hamstrung before you bring in a CEO to see what he wants to do?

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

Yeah. So we are not commenting on our 2020 -- fiscal 2020 revenue specifically. But to your second half of the question, we have executive leadership committee that we've put in place. We have an Executive Chairman.

And I don't believe we are hamstrung. We are evaluating all of our businesses closely and making sure that we are spending and investing wisely. We are investing in higher-margin products that's going to drive better profitability longer term. We will have a better sense as to these actions, and we will need to take.

And we will continue to work through our internal evaluation, but I'll let you know we are doing that with urgency. And stay tuned, I will give you a lot more clarity at next quarter's call.

Anthony Stoss -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

OK. Thank you.

Operator

We have our next question from Christopher Rolland with Susquehanna International Group. Please go ahead, sir.

David Haberle -- Susquehanna International Group -- Analyst

Hey, guys. It's David Haberle on behalf of Chris Rolland. Thanks for taking our question. I guess to start out on the IoT win -- or the USB-C win, rather.

May be you can talk about how this ramps throughout the year? And how material this will be kind of on an annual basis? And then secondly there, is this a different win or a different OEM than wins you've had for USB-C designs in the past?

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

So let me start with the second half of the question. It's definitely a different win. A new top three smartphone OEM is going to put our solution in box, shipped with every phone that's coming out. And it's a flagship phone by the way.

So stay tuned when you see it. Is it materially going to be meaningful? I don't want to get into the ASPs or any of that. But we did say that we are shipping millions of units this quarter. And we will grow throughout the year and the gross margins are higher than our corporate gross margins.

David Haberle -- Susquehanna International Group -- Analyst

Got it. Thanks for the color there. And then on the OLED side, how is capacity coming along at the Chinese OEMs there? Like, OLED, you have a couple of wins again this quarter. It seems like you're progressing nicely.

Is there anything holding you back from a capacity standpoint at this point?

Kermit Nolan -- Interim Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer

So I think when we were talking before last quarter on capacity limitations, I think we were really referring to our TDDI products I think, and the comp products. But if your question is on OLED, no, I don't believe there's anything that is holding us back. I think there's a lot of opportunity in OLED. And in particular, certainly, the second half of this calendar year.

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

Yeah. And let me add a little more color, please, Kermit. The non-Korean OLED market is going to be around 60 million to 80 million units, doubling from last year. The industry analysts are expecting non-Korean OLED market to increase even faster next year, and we are extremely well-positioned with our solutions with the non-Korean OLED panel makers.

So we feel good about it as we go forward.

David Haberle -- Susquehanna International Group -- Analyst

Great. Thank you.

Operator

[Operator instructions] We will take our next question from Charlie Anderson with Dougherty & Company. Please go ahead.

Charlie Anderson -- Dougherty and Company LLC -- Analyst

Yeah. Thanks for taking my questions. First question, Saleel, on the AS3-hundred family. It sounds like you've had your first win there that's shipping now.

Under kind of same question as the USB-C question before, is that an existing customer or a new customer? And then I'd be kind of curious how you feel like that ramp is going to go in the back half? How much is that a contributor with that product to some of the growth and what types of end uses are customers utilizing our products? Then I've got a follow-up.

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

Yeah. So let's take the AS3-hundred product family. As we said in the prepared remarks, we shipped a few million units early, earlier than we had planned because our lead customer wanted to ramp. And we see a ramp throughout the whole year.

And Charlie, the thing that really excites me about this is it's not one form factor, it's going to multiple different form factors. So I see utilization in more than just one kind of product. So we feel -- I feel good about it as we go throughout the year.

Charlie Anderson -- Dougherty and Company LLC -- Analyst

OK. Great. And then second question on opex. I know you kind of talked about it a little bit.

But I know Synaptics has sort of worked with an envelope of kind of a range in the 20s, let's call it of opex as a percent of revenue over the past several years. If you talk about 40s being optimal at some point for gross margin, can you speak to what's an optimal level as opex as a percent of revenue, maybe R&D as a percent of revenue as a starting point?

Kermit Nolan -- Interim Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer

Yeah. That's a good question. I mean at this stage, of course, we're just evaluating all the businesses very closely within Synaptics and making sure that we're spending and investing wisely. We haven't made any final decisions about what those spends should look like in terms of the R&D and the SG&A dollars/opex dollars.

But certainly, we will have a little more color that we could share with you on next quarter's call.

Charlie Anderson -- Dougherty and Company LLC -- Analyst

OK. Fair enough. Thanks so much.

Operator

[Operator instructions] We will take our next question from Kevin Cassidy with Stifel. Please go ahead.

Kevin Cassidy -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst

Hey, thanks for taking my follow-up. Just again going back to the goal of going over 40% gross margin. Would some of that strategy include maybe selling or discontinuing some of the low-end products?

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

Kevin, thanks for the question. This is Saleel again. As you know, our gross margin has improved already seven quarters in a row, right? And we have been focused on that here. And we are continuing to evaluate all the businesses with a focus toward really investing in products that generate high margins for the company and driving growth from these products.

So currently, I don't want to get into details because as I said we are working with urgency in the organization. We will be able to give you more color the next time we all get on the call together. But you just have to stay tuned for it with us.

Kevin Cassidy -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst

OK. Thank you.

Operator

There are no questions in the queue at this time. [Operator instructions] It does appear that there are no further questions at this time. I'd like to turn the call back over to Saleel for any final comments.

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

I just want to take the opportunity to thank all of you for joining us for this call, and we will talk to you in three months. Have a great day. Bye-bye.

Duration: 45 minutes

Call participants:

Jason Tsai

Saleel Awsare -- Senior Vice President and General Manager, IoT Division

Kermit Nolan -- Interim Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer

Kevin Cassidy -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst

Rajvindra Gill -- Needham and Company -- Analyst

Anthony Stoss -- Craig-Hallum Capital Group -- Analyst

David Haberle -- Susquehanna International Group -- Analyst

Charlie Anderson -- Dougherty and Company LLC -- Analyst

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