Intel’s Q1 2021: PCs Up, Data Center Revenue and Profit Plummets

Source: Tom's Hardware added 23rd Apr 2021

  • intel’s-q1-2021:-pcs-up,-data-center-revenue-and-profit-plummets

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Intel’s new CEO Pat Gelsinger helmed his first full earnings call for the company yesterday, echoing other industry leaders in saying that the ongoing industry-wide chip shortages could last several more years. Intel also reported that it set a quarterly record for the most notebook PC chips sold in its history, but also reported a sudden slump in data center sales that found revenue dropping 20%, a record for the segment, as the number of units shipped and average selling prices both declined dramatically. Intel also posted its lowest profitability for its server segment in recent history, which surely is exacerbated by AMD’s continuing share gains and Intel’s resultant price cuts.

Intel’s first-quarter 2021 results were strong overall; the company raked in $18.6B in revenue, beating its January guidance by $1.1B (and analyst estimates). However, the impressive quarterly revenue is tempered by the fact that gross margins dropped to 58.4%, a 6.1 ppt decline year-over-year (YoY).

Chips shortages are top of mind, and Gelsinger said he expects the industry-wide chip shortages to last for several more years. A shortage of substrate materials and chip packaging capacity has hamstrung the industry, and Gelsinger said that Intel is bringing some of its chip packaging back in-house to improve its substrate supply. That new capacity comes online in Q2 and will “increase the availability of millions of units in 2021.”

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Intel’s Client Computing Group (CCG), which produces both notebook and desktop PC chips, posted record notebook PC sales that were up 54% YoY. However, average selling prices (ASPs) dropped a surprising 20% YoY, which Intel chalked up to selling more lower-end devices, like low-end consumer and education (Chromebooks). Competitive pricing pressure from AMD’s Ryzen 5000 Mobile processors also surely comes into play here.

Meanwhile, desktop PC volumes dropped 4% YoY while average selling prices dropped 5%, a continuation of an ongoing trend that’s exacerbated by tough competition from AMD’s Ryzen 5000 processors. All told, that led to CCG revenue being up 8% YoY. Intel’s consumer chips now account for 59% of its revenue.  

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Intel’s Data Center Group (DCG) results were far less impressive. The unit’s $5.6B in revenue was down 20% YoY, and Intel also shipped 13% fewer units than last year. Intel chalks this up to cloud inventory digestion, meaning that companies that ordered large numbers of chips in the past are still deploying that inventory. This is the second quarter in a row Intel has cited this as a reason for lowered revenue.

Intel formally launched its Ice Lake Xeon processors earlier this month, and it isn’t unheard of for large customers to pause purchases in the months before large product launches that bring big performance and efficiency gains. A complex mix of other factors could also contribute, like cloud service providers moving to their own chip designs and possible continued market share gains by AMD. Still, Intel expects its server chips sales to rebound in the second half of the year. We’ll learn more when AMD releases its results, also with the market share reports that will arrive in a few weeks.

Intel’s average selling prices for its server chips also dropped 14%. Intel cites an increase in sales of lower-cost networking SoCs as a contributor, but the company has also cut pricing drastically to compete with AMD’s EPYC processors, which ultimately has an impact. 

DCG operating margins weighed in at 23%, a record low for a segment that typically runs in the 40% range, with Intel citing the impact of its 10nm Xeon ramp as a contributor. It’s also noteworthy that 10nm is less profitable than Intel’s 14nm process, so moving from 14nm Cascade Lake to 10nm Ice Lake will further impact margins.

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Intel is moving forward with its plans to invest $20 billion this year as it expands its manufacturing capacity, with a good portion of that dedicated to its Intel Foundry Services (ISF) that will make chips for other companies, much like we see with other third-party foundries like TSMC. Gelsinger says Intel is engaging with 50+ potential customers already.

Gelsinger also noted that Intel has onboarded 2,000 new engineers this year and expects to bring on “several thousand” more later in the year. However, he didn’t provide a frame of reference as to how that compares to Intel’s normal hiring rate, which is an important distinction in an engineering-heavy company with over 110,000 employees.

Intel expects to ramp up its investments, and noted that it would reduce its stock buybacks as it plows more money into its investments. Intel guides for a 57% gross margin for the second quarter on $17.8B and a $1.05 EPS. 

Read the full article at Tom's Hardware

brands: 110  AMD  First  Intel  It  Mobile  New  other  party  Recent  Strong  Unit  WAS  
media: Tom's Hardware  
keywords: Cloud  Mobile  notebook  PC  Ryzen  Server  

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