SunTrust Still Bullish on Chips for 2017 Despite Huge Run Last Year

January 4, 2017 by Lee Jackson

It seems like it would be safe to say that when 2016 started nobody saw the huge run coming in the semiconductor stocks, especially the ones that were more skewed to industrial applications. But rip they did, and investors that were long got a very nice — in some cases huge — payback. The question now is whether they can sustain another year like 2016, or is the big move over?

SunTrust Robinson Humphrey analysts deserve a victory lap as they called the industrialization of the sector at the start of last year, and in new research they picked some strong winners for investors. Here’s the analyst’s overall take in a new report:

In early 2016, we formalized our Industrialization of Semis thesis, which argued that semi investors have placed too much emphasis on safety metrics, and not enough on growth metrics. Revisiting that thesis one year later, we reiterate that growth is still undervalued in semis.

Three stocks remain favorites at the firm, and they all still look good for aggressive growth accounts.

Broadcom

This stock has been on a roll over the past year and is expected to trade even higher. Broadcom Ltd. (NASDAQ: AVGO) is a leading designer, developer and global supplier of a broad range of analog and digital semiconductor connectivity solutions. Its extensive product portfolio serves four primary end markets: wired infrastructure, wireless communications, enterprise storage and industrial and other.

Applications for the company’s products in these end markets include data center networking, home connectivity, broadband access, telecommunications equipment, smartphones and base stations, data center servers and storage, factory automation, power generation and alternative energy systems and displays.

The company produces radio frequency (RF) front-end for LTE-enabled Apple products. Wall Street estimates that the company does 15% of its total business with Apple. Top Wall Street analysts like the leadership in the mobile, data center and broadband markets, and especially in the RF arena. Many on Wall Street see a cyclical rebound in industrial and communications demand.

Top analysts on Wall Street think the Brocade acquisition could be materially accretive to Broadcom earnings once the deal closes in late 2017. While purchase accounting rules, acquisition and restructuring costs, and potential divestitures could muddle Brocade’s contribution to Broadcom during the first year after the deal closes, on a normalized run-rate basis, some estimate that Brocade would contribute $1.40 or so to Broadcom’s earnings per share in calendar year 2018, estimated when the $250 million in run-rate synergies are fully achieved, resulting in about 10% accretion to current earnings per shares estimates.

SunTrust noted this:

Broadcom is our favored way to invest in our industrialization of semis theme – Rolling valuation to use our 2018 model; no change to estimates or price target. Broadcom continues to exemplify our industrialization of semis theme: we expect acquirers to outperform as they consolidate the cost base in the still-too-fragmented semi industry. Despite recently doubling its dividend and raising its dividend payout ratio target to 50%, we believe the company’s cash flow can continue to fund meaningful acquisitions.

Shareholders receive a 2.31% yield. The SunTrust price target for the stock is $227, and the Wall Street consensus target is $211.68. The stock closed yesterday at $178.34.

Analog Devices

This stock is still trading way below levels printed in the summer of 2015. Analog Devices Inc. (NASDAQ: ADI) is a leader in the design, manufacture and marketing of analog, mixed-signal and digital signal processing integrated circuits for use in industrial, automotive, consumer and communication markets worldwide. It offers signal processing products that convert, condition and process real-world phenomena, such as temperature, pressure, sound, light, speed and motion, into electrical signals.

The company recently introduced a highly integrated polyphase analog front end with power quality analysis designed to help extend the health and life of industrial equipment while saving developers significant time and cost over custom solutions. Achieving extremely accurate, high-performance power quality monitoring typically requires customized development, which can be expensive and time consuming.

The analysts cited in their report:

Favored way to invest in our industrialization of semis theme – Expect catalysts from the Linear Technology Corporation (NASDAQ: LLTC) acquisition to drive outperformance in 2017. Analog Devices has increasingly embraced our industrialization of semis theme by using financial leverage and acquisitions to maximize earnings growth (rather than just high GPM). We expect the company to outperform in 2017 on LLTC-related catalysts.

Investors receive a 2.31% dividend. SunTrust has an $86 price target. The consensus target is $78.70, and shares closed Tuesday at $72.50.

Microsemi

This company could benefit from the continued industrial demand. Microsemi Corp. (NASDAQ: MSCC) offers a comprehensive portfolio of semiconductor and system solutions for communications, defense and security, aerospace and industrial markets.

Products include high-performance and radiation-hardened analog mixed-signal integrated circuits (ICs), power management products; timing and synchronization devices and precise time solutions, setting the world’s standard for time; voice processing devices; RF solutions; security technologies and scalable anti-tamper products; Ethernet solutions; Power-over-Ethernet ICs and midspans.

At the company’s most recent Investor Day, Microsemi raised some of its long-term financial forecasts. It expects business to grow organically at 6% to 8% a year and revenues to increase more than $2 billion by 2020. The company also increased its gross and operating margins expectations to 60% or more and 35%, respectively, from 60% and 30% projected earlier.

The company also reviewed a few key areas of growth, and it now expects storage and data center, Ethernet, precise timing ICs, optical transport network processors, aerospace and field-programmable gate arrays to be the catalysts for future continued growth.

While it hasn’t actually announced a deal, the company is said to be running a sale process after receiving takeover interest from Skyworks Solutions. According to people familiar with the matter, Microsemi has hired Bank of Montreal to run a broader auction after Skyworks offered to buy the company. The process appears to be in the early stages, no deal is imminent and a transaction may not occur.

SunTrust raised its price target to $67. The consensus target is $60. The shares closed yesterday at $54.58.

These are three red-hot chip stocks that investors can still buy when many top companies at current trading levels appear close to fully valued. They are only suitable for very aggressive accounts, but despite their solid 2016 results, they could still have room to run.

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