Is Skyworks Solutions a Buy?

In This Article:

Few stocks offer as much promise and risk as Skyworks Solutions (NASDAQ: SWKS), the producer of innovative analog semiconductors and RF solutions that enable the wireless connectivity that many of today's most popular mobile devices need to function. The company is fraught with geopolitical and international security risks caused by rising tensions between the U.S. and China, as it supplies some of the companies most impacted by the tariffs. It is also on the cusp of being one of the companies to benefit most from the coming 5G wireless revolution.

Skyworks Solutions' stock price has already taken investors on a wild ride this year. From the turn of the year to mid-April, its shares have rocketed up 40%, only to give up almost all of those gains in the weeks since. Let's take a closer look at what has caused this extreme volatility and at the company itself to see if it makes for a good investment today.

A city's night skyline with 5G in the top right corner.
A city's night skyline with 5G in the top right corner.

Skyworks Solutions believes it will sell 40% more content for 5G-capable smartphones than it does in 4G sets. Image source: Getty Images.

Crunching the numbers

In Skyworks Solutions' second quarter, revenue dropped to $810 million, an 11.3% decrease year over year, and non-GAAP earnings per share (EPS) shrunk to $1.47, a 10.4% decrease year over year. The company's adjusted gross margin held steady at 50.7%, but the adjusted operating margins contracted to 34.1%, a dip of 2.2 percentage points from last year's second quarter. The guidance for next quarter was not much better, with management again projecting year-over-year declines in both revenue and earnings. The weakness in the top and bottom lines, management said, was driven by soft mobile sales, particularly in China, where Skyworks supplies many of the major smartphone manufacturers.

The company did repurchase almost $80 million of shares in the quarter and, at its current price, supports a dividend yield of about 2.15%.

Based on the company's trailing 12 months of EPS, shares are currently trading at a P/E ratio of about 10.2, meaning that a lot of bad news is already baked into the company's cake. Let's try to determine if this is justified.

Why Skyworks is grounded

There are three primary factors hurting Skyworks right now:

  1. The current state of the smartphone market. Many analysts now believe we are at "peak smartphone," meaning that the market has largely matured, with most global consumers who want one and can afford one now owning one. The market is also inherently lumpy, with major product launches spread out over several years.

  2. Skyworks is a casualty in the trade war between the U.S. and China. Many of Skyworks' largest customers are directly impacted by the tariffs, including Apple, which accounted for more than 40% of Skyworks' sales in its 2018 fiscal year.

  3. Finally, earlier this month, President Trump issued an executive order that seemingly banned Huawei equipment from supplying U.S. networks due to cybersecurity concerns. Huawei is a major customer of Skyworks, and the news drove Skyworks' stock price down hard this month. Oddly enough, though, the situation is not completely unprecedented. In April 2018, the U.S. Commerce Department announced a seven-year ban on U.S. companies selling to ZTE, a Chinese smartphone maker, for violating sanctions in place against Iran and North Korea. Skyworks' stock price plunged almost 15% that month but, as ZTE entered negotiations to make a deal with the U.S. government, Skyworks' shares began to recover and had made up the losses by early summer.