ROCHESTER, MN, Dec. 16 -- Pemstar Inc. today named Roy A. Bauer president and chief operating officer. The EMS firm also named Bauer to its board of directors.
He succeeds Al Berning, who remains chairman and chief executive officer.
Bauer was executive vice president and chief operating officer of Pemstar.
"We brought Roy on board in 2001 for his extensive industry and global operational experience. He's a tremendous asset and promoting him to president is recognition of his performance, abilities and potential," said Berning, in a press release.
Bauer was chief executive of Key Teknowledgy Corp., and spent 20 years at IBM in manufacturing, product development and quality management.
Bauer has a bachelor's degree in industrial science from the University of Wisconsin-Stout.
Pemstar is a provider of engineering, product design, manufacturing and fulfillment services.
MINNEAPOLIS, Dec. 17 -- EMS provider Nortech Systems today provided improved guidance for its fourth-quarter and fiscal 2004 revenue, saying that it expects sales of $19 million to $20 million. However, the company lowered its year-end earnings outlook, citing diminished margins and expenses for labor and raw materials.
Last year, Nortech reported fourth-quarter revenue of $15.6 million.
The firm guided for earnings of $0.05 to $0.07 per diluted share for the quarter ending Dec. 31, compared to a loss of $0.06 per diluted share last year.
Year-end revenue is expected to increase by 21 to 24% over 2003, to $70 million to $72 million, slightly above previous guidance. Nortech guided for fiscal year earnings to be in the range of $0.20 to $0.22. It previously guided for $0.26 to $0.29 expected earlier. Last year Nortech Systems earned $0.25 per diluted share.
"While we're pleased with our sustained revenue growth, we continue to face margin pressures impacting our profitability," says Mike Degen, President and CEO. "The fourth quarter earnings are being negatively impacted by a mix of lower-margin product, material cost increases and higher than anticipated labor costs and expenses related to some of our domestic and international operations."
SAN JOSE, Dec. 17 -- The 90-day-moving average orders for North American-based semiconductor gear manufacturers was $1.35 billion in November, 2% below the revised October levels, but 46% above last year.
"Total orders for semiconductor equipment have declined about 16% from the peak observed in June, though they remain well above levels reported one year ago," said Stanley T. Myers, president and CEO of SEMI. "The North American equipment book-to-bill ratio increased in November as billings declined at a steeper pace than bookings based on a three-month average."
The orders average matched the 90-day average for shipments, good for a book-to-bill ratio of 1.0, said the trade group SEMI.
The three-month average of worldwide billings in November was $1.34 billion, down 6% from the revised October level and up 53% from November 2003.
The SEMI book-to-bill is a ratio of three-month moving averages of worldwide bookings and billings for North American-based semiconductor equipment manufacturers. Billings and bookings figures are in millions of U.S. dollars.
The site, located in Peachtree City, GA, will be cut to a single building, from 300,000 sq. ft. and four buildings over the next nine months. The staff will be reduced to 100 workers from the current headcount of 600.
"This change to the physical presence of Photocircuits in North America results from the changing competitive landscape for printed circuits," the company said in an unattributed statement. "More and more customers demand the economic advantages of sourcing in Asia."
Photocircuits will maintain print-and-etch operations in Peachtree City, plus sales and technical services, logistics and inventory management.
Backlogs will be sent to Photocircuits' facility in Glen Cove, New York, and factories in China, where the PCB maker partners with Japan-based CMK.
The company estimates that realignment of the site will last about nine months.
2004 has been unkind to Photocircuits, one of the oldest PCB firms in the world. The company, once the largest board shop in the U.S., is in the hands of outside management and two of its longtime owners -- John Endee and Steve Wohlgemuth -- have been let go. The company had sales of $234 million in 2003, according to PCD&M contributing editor Hayao Nakahara, making it the 32d largest PCB company in the world.
ST. PETERSBURG, FL, Dec. 20 -- Electronics manufacturing services provider Jabil Circuit Inc. today reported record first-quarter net revenue rose 21% to $1.83 billion year-over-year.
For the quarter ended Nov. 30, GAAP net income increased to $55.9 million, from $42.5 million last year.
In a press statement, president and chief executive Tim Main said, "While the end-markets and the economy are just beginning to show signs of improvement, Jabil clearly has the strong trend for electronics companies to outsource in its favor."
Jabil guided for second quarter net revenue of $1.65 million to $1.75 billion and core earnings per share of 26 to 28 cents per diluted share. Estimated GAAP earnings per share are 22 to 24 cents per diluted share. The February quarter is typically hurt by lower consumer spending.
First quarter core earnings -- core earnings as GAAP net income before one-time charges and amortization of intangibles -- increased 26% to $65 million.
Gross profit for the first quarter of fiscal 2005 increased 16% to $154.9 million or 8.4% of net revenue.
On a GAAP basis, operating income rose 32% to $70.3 million.
The company expects to end the February quarter with significantly less inventory, officials said on a conference call with analysts.
Cash flow from operations was lower, at $35 million. Inventory turns were nine. Capital expenditures were $55 million, up nearly 100% over the second quarter. The company said it would stabilize R&D spending at that levels.
Return on invested capital rose to 17% during the quarter. Officials said they aim for ROIC of 15 to 20% longterm.
Three customers made up more than 10% each of Jabil's Q1 sales. Main said the firm plans to reduce its dependence on its top 10 customers.
The company is not ruling out future acquisitions. "We could do deals; we've got the bandwidth and the money to do it," Main said. "There are opportunities in the pipeline."
Jabil maintained previous fiscal 2005 guidance of net revenue of $7.2 billion to $7.4 billion and core earnings per share to be in a range of $1.20 to $1.24 per diluted share. "We're looking for end-markets to grow in the 4 to 5% range," the firm said. It said it expects gains from vertically integrated industrial OEMs who are considering outsourcing manufacturing.
STAMFORD, CT, Dec. 16 — Worldwide semiconductor capital equipment spending is on pace to grow 61% in 2004, but next year's spending is projected to drop 15, according to Gartner Inc.
"The emergence of excess inventories, macroeconomic uncertainty and slowing end-user demand casts a shadow over the outlook for 2005," said Klaus Rinnen, vice president for Gartner's semiconductor manufacturing and design research group. "Device production has slowed in recent months, and with it semiconductor manufacturers have readjusted their capacity ramp-up and equipment purchase plans."
All major segments of the capital equipment market are forecast to decline in 2005 except for the automated test equipment market, which is expected to grow 3%, followed by a 30% drop in 2006. Gartner analysts said the industry is in a downcycle, but this period will be shorter than the prior one in 2001.
"Given more modest-capacity investments during the cycle, the supply-demand imbalance will be far less severe than in the prior two cycles," Rinnen said. "Consequently, the approaching downcycle will be mild, allowing for a return to positive annual investment growth possibly as early as 2006."
Worldwide semiconductor wafer fab utilization rates peaked in the second quarter at 94.9% before dropping to 91.3% at the end of the third quarter, as semiconductor manufacturers trimmed production levels in response to excess inventories.
"By the middle of 2004, capacity caught up with demand, and excess capacity started to emerge," Rinnen said. "However, any excess capacity during this down period will be considerably less than in prior downward cycles, and utilization rates will decline only to about 85% before starting a gradual increase through 2006."
The packaging and assembly equipment market will fall 22% in 2005, to about $3.5 billion. Growth will be limited to packaging lithography and flip-chip bonder tooling. Packaging utilization rates will likely bottom out in the second half of 2005, giving way to a pickup in orders by the end of the year or very early in 2006.
Gartner analysts said the automated test equipment market will experience a slight increase due to the continued growth of test outsourcing, and the remaining strength of semiconductor assembly and test services providers.