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Lam Research Corp

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Lam Research Corporation is a global supplier of innovative wafer fabrication equipment and services to the semiconductor industry. Lam's equipment and services allow customers to build smaller and better performing devices. In fact, today, nearly every advanced chip is built with Lam technology. We combine superior systems engineering, technology leadership, and a strong values-based culture, with an unwavering commitment to our customers. Lam Research is a FORTUNE 500 ® company headquartered in Fremont, Calif., with operations around the globe.

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A mega-cap stock valued at $336B.

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Market Cap$336.34B
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EV$291.35B
P/B34.11
Shares Out1.26B
P/Sales16.36
Revenue$20.56B
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Lam Research Corp (LRCX) — Q2 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

Apr 5, 202618 speakers8,328 words82 segments

Original transcript

Operator

Good afternoon and welcome to the Lam Research December 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Ram Ganesh, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

O
RG
Ram GaneshVice President of Investor Relations

Thank you, and good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to the Lam Research Quarterly Earnings Conference Call. With me today are Tim Archer, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Doug Bettinger, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. During today's call, we will share our overview on the business environment, and we'll review our financial results for the December 2024 quarter and our outlook for the March 2025 quarter. The press release detailing our financial results was distributed a little after 1 p.m. Pacific time. The release can also be found on the Investor Relations section on the company's website, along with the presentation slides that accompany today's call. Today's presentation and Q&A include forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties reflected in the risk factors disclosed in our SEC public filings. Please see accompanying slides in the presentation for additional information. Today's discussion of our financial results will be presented on a non-GAAP financial basis unless otherwise specified. A detailed reconciliation between GAAP and non-GAAP results can be found in the accompanying slides in the presentation. This call is scheduled to last until 3 p.m. Pacific time. A replay of this call will be made available later this afternoon on our website. And with that, I'll hand the call over to Tim.

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Ram, and thank you all for joining the call today. Lam closed out 2024 with another solid performance. December quarter revenue, gross margin, operating margin, and EPS were all above our guidance midpoints, reflecting strong and consistent operational execution. Wafer fabrication equipment spending for 2024 finished in line with the mid $90 billion range we guided earlier in the year. Overall, 2024 was a good year for Lam, even as NAND spending remained at muted levels. System revenues in both DRAM and Foundry Logic grew to record highs, and the size of our installed base increased to approximately 96,000 chambers. Our results show that we are making good progress on our strategy of broadening Lam’s exposure across end market device segments. It also demonstrates the increasing strength of our product portfolio as semiconductors move into the AI era. For example, gate-all-around and advanced packaging technologies are critical enablers for AI device manufacturing, including GPUs and high-bandwidth memory. They are also highly deposition and etch intensive. As a result, we saw Lam's shipments for gate-all-around nodes and advanced packaging each grow to exceed $1 billion in 2024. In calendar 2025, we see WFE spending rising slightly to approximately $100 billion. Again, we expect technology inflections to lead to faster growth for Lam as AI applications demand greater device and package level performance. In 2025, Lam shipments to gate-all-around nodes and advanced packaging combined should be well over $3 billion. Customer migration towards backside power distribution and dry-resist processing technologies will add further opportunity in the coming year. As we look forward, we view the increasing importance of deposition and etch technology as a differentiator for Lam and an opportunity to outperform. With this in mind, we have made strategic investments over the past few years to expand our R&D infrastructure, scale our organization, and transform our innovation process for greater speed. We are now seeing these investments yield important product advances. Our recently introduced Cryo 3.0 technology is winning at the leading etch, delivering best-in-class results for high-aspect ratio dielectric etch applications on our latest Vantex CX+ product and also helping extend the capabilities of our large flex installed base through Cryo upgrades. Our breakthrough dry resist capability for EUV is enabling patterning of extremely fine devices with greater precision, reduced defectivity, higher productivity, and reduced environmental impact. You may have seen that earlier today we announced that our Aether dry-resist solution has achieved a major milestone, having just been selected as the production tool of record for high-bandwidth DRAM at a leading memory customer. Technology inflections in DRAM and Foundry Logic combined with an upgrade-focused NAND environment create what we believe is a unique setup for Lam to outgrow WFE spending and strengthen our bottom-line in calendar 2025. In NAND, the industry is looking to transition the current installed capacity to higher layer counts to achieve better device performance at lower bit cost. Here, several trends play to our favor. One is the transition to Molybdenum or Moly. Lam's patented multi-station sequential deposition technology allows us to employ a differentiated liner and fill process sequence that is proving to be a winner with customers. The momentum for our new Moly product is strong. A second trend is the adoption of carbon gapfill to enable higher bit density and lower cost through multi-tier stacking. Our innovative PCVD-based pure carbon gapfill process provides high etch selectivity, superior mechanical properties, and simplified dry process removability. While we are in the early innings of these transitions and early in the industry upgrade cycle overall, we expect adoption of Moly and Carbon gapfill to drive several hundred million dollars in NAND shipments for Lam in calendar 2025. Lam's opportunity will grow even further in future years as more of the million plus wafer starts per month installed capacity converts to higher layer counts. The differentiation we're delivering for customers runs deeper than the process technology itself. Our Semiverse Solutions capabilities apply advanced modeling, simulation, data science, analytics, machine learning, and artificial intelligence to further enhance our equipment performance and reduce the time needed for process optimization. This is strengthening our competitiveness and most recently we used our Semiverse solutions capabilities to successfully defend the key dielectric etch application at a major memory manufacturer. Furthermore, we are leveraging these capabilities to help address the semiconductor industry's global workforce shortage. Through collaborations with universities in the United States, India, and Korea, Semiverse Solution software is already being used to educate the next generation of semiconductor industry innovators. And our goal is to provide access to Lam’s semiconductor simulation technology to tens of thousands of aspiring engineering students through the rest of the decade. In CSBG, our equipment intelligence and in-fab service automation solutions are seeing significant traction with customers. Last month, we announced the industry's first collaborative maintenance robot. Since then, we have shipped our Dextro Cobot to a third major memory manufacturer, and it is being installed in their fab as part of a multi-year services agreement. Over the next decade, the semiconductor industry is expected to witness a strong expansion of fab capacity globally, and cobot technology offers an important and cost-effective solution to enable precise and repeatable maintenance beyond what human workers alone can achieve. Lastly, our strategic investments in scaling our operations are paying off. Our Asia operations continue to ramp very efficiently and in 2024 help drive meaningful improvement in both our responsiveness to rising customer demand and our gross margin. Doug will provide some additional detail in his prepared remarks, but as a headline, I am pleased we delivered in calendar 2024, approximately 160 basis points of operating margin expansion, even as we invested heavily in new products and infrastructure to fuel future growth. So to wrap up, Lam is in a strong position as we enter the new year. Deposition and etch are becoming increasingly vital to semiconductor manufacturing, and we have made key investments to strengthen Lam's product portfolio. I look forward to sharing more on this at our upcoming investor day. Thank you, and I'll now pass it on to Doug.

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Great. Thank you, Tim. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining our call today during what I know is a very busy earnings season. We delivered strong financial results in calendar year 2024 with revenue of $16.2 billion and diluted earnings per share of $3.36. We're obviously pleased with the company's continued strong execution. For calendar year 2024, CSBG revenue increased 11% to $6.6 billion, exceeding our expectations. Gross margin came in at 48.2%, which was the highest annual result since Lam merged with Novellus in 2013. Let's look at the details of our December quarter financial results. Our revenue, gross margin, operating margin, and earnings per share were all above the midpoint of our guided range. Revenue for the December quarter was $4.38 billion, which was an increase of 5% from the prior quarter. Our deferred revenue balance at quarter end was $2 billion, essentially flat with the September quarter. I do believe our deferred revenue balance will trend lower into calendar year 2025, but will likely fluctuate from quarter to quarter. From a market segment perspective, December quarter systems revenue in memory was 50%, up from 35% in the prior quarter. Within memory, non-volatile memory increased coming in at 24% of our systems revenue, up from 11% in the prior quarter. This market segment has reached the high point since the end of 2022, driven by NAND spending on tech conversions from 1xx-layer class devices to 256 layer. We expect these conversions to continue in calendar year 2025. DRAM represented 26% of systems revenue compared with 24% in the September quarter. DRAM spending was focused on tech upgrades to the 1-alpha, 1-beta and some initial ramp of 1-gamma nodes to enable DDR5 and high-bandwidth memory. HPM investments in our tools enabling through silicon via capability continues to be strong. Foundry represented 35% of our systems revenue, a decrease from the percentage concentration in the September quarter of 41%. Growth for gate-all-around node spending partially offset the decline in mature node spending. The Logic and Other Markets segment was 15% of our systems revenue in the December quarter, down from the prior quarter level of 24%. The decrease was driven by reduced spending in both leading-edge as well as specialty technology nodes. Now I'll discuss the regional composition of our total revenue. The China region accounted for 31%, which was down from 37% in the prior quarter. Most of our China revenue continues to come from domestic Chinese customers. The next largest geographic concentration was Korea at 25% of revenue in the December quarter, an increase compared with the September quarter level of 18%. And finally, Taiwan and the United States rounded out the remainder of the top four regions. The Customer Support Business Group generated almost $1.8 billion in revenue for the December quarter consistent with the September quarter and 20% higher than the same period in 2023. Sequentially, growth in upgrade revenue largely offset the decline that we saw in Reliant Systems. While spares in the Reliant product line continue to be the two largest components of CSBG revenue generation, we achieved record upgrade revenue, demonstrating the strength of that growing installed base. Turning to gross margin performance. The December quarter came in at 47.5%, which was above the midpoint of our guided range but was down from the September quarter level of 48.2%. This was primarily a result of unfavorable customer mix, which we foreshadowed in the last earnings call. We've improved elements of our cost structure during the past two years and expanded the gross margin contribution from our Asia operation strategies by a little more than 100 basis points as we exited calendar year 2024. We expect incremental benefits to gross margins as we continue to scale production on a go-forward basis from this strategy. Operating expenses for December were in line with our expectations at $735 million, up from the prior quarter amount of $722 million. The increase was primarily due to higher incentive compensation tied to the company's increased profitability. R&D accounted for 67% of total operating expenses. Operating margin in the current quarter was 30.7%, a little bit below the September quarter level of 30.9% and near the high end of our guidance range, primarily because of that higher revenue and the stronger gross margin performance. I'd just reiterate what Tim mentioned that we delivered 160 basis point improvement in operating margin for calendar year 2024. Our non-GAAP tax rate for the quarter was 13.2%, within range of our expectations. Our estimate for the March 2025 quarter is for the tax rate to be in the low to mid-teens range. Other income and expense for the December quarter came in at $11 million in income compared with $13 million in income in the September quarter. The slight fluctuation in OI&E was due to lower interest income, which was somewhat offset by lower foreign exchange losses and a little bit of gain in equity investments. OI&E will continue to be subject to market-related fluctuations that will cause some level of volatility quarter to quarter. And as we sit here today, I do believe OI&E will have a slight negative bias in the March quarter. On the capital return side of things, we allocated approximately $650 million to open market share repurchases, and we paid $298 million in dividends in the December quarter. For the 2024 calendar year, we returned 98% of free cash flow totaling $4 billion, which was at the high end of our long-term capital return plans of 75% to 100% of free cash flow. For the December quarter, diluted earnings per share came in at $0.91. The diluted share count was roughly 1.29 billion shares, which was a reduction from the September quarter. During 2024, we repurchased nearly 34 million shares through our share buyback program, and we have $9.2 billion remaining on our board-authorized share repurchase plan. Let me pivot to the balance sheet. Our cash and short-term investments totaled $5.7 billion at the end of the December quarter, down from $6.1 billion at the end of the September quarter. The main driver of the cash decrease was obviously our capital return activity. This sales outstanding was 69 days in the December quarter, an increase from 64 days in the September quarter. Inventory at the December quarter end totaled $4.4 billion, a slight increase from the September quarter as we prepare for higher revenues in the March 2025 quarter. Inventory turns were 2.1 times flat from the prior quarter level. We will continue to manage inventory levels to the best of our ability to align with customer demand. We are pleased to announce that we upsized our revolving credit facility from $1.5 billion to $2 billion. Additionally, I just mentioned that we have $500 million of unsecured notes maturing in March this year, which we intend to simply pay off using cash on the balance sheet. We may choose to refinance this notional amount in the future, as we continue to monitor the interest rate environment. By bolstering our liquidity with the credit facility, we've created some optionality and flexibility here. Non-cash expenses for the December quarter included approximately $82 million of equity compensation, $83 million in depreciation and $13 million in amortization. Capital expenditures in the December quarter were $188 million, up $78 million from the September quarter. Spending was mainly centered on lab-related investments in the United States and Asia and manufacturing facilities supporting our global strategy to be close to customers' development and manufacturing locations. We ended the December quarter with approximately 18,300 regular full-time employees, which is an increase of approximately 600 people from the prior quarter. Growth was predominantly in field and factory roles to support increased tool installation as well as growing manufacturing activities. Now let's turn to our non-GAAP guidance for the March 2025 quarter. We are expecting revenue of $4.65 billion, plus or minus $300 million. Gross margin up 48%, plus or minus one percentage point. We anticipate roughly consistent levels of customer concentration. Operating margin of 32%, plus or minus one percentage point. This guidance accounts for the normal seasonal increase in operating expenses that we always see at the beginning of the calendar year. And finally, earnings per share of $1 plus or minus $0.10, based on a share count of approximately 1.29 billion shares. I would mention that as we look into 2025, we plan to continue to deliver incremental leverage to the bottom line. At the same time, we will be growing R&D and continuing to grow investment in a digital transformation project that we initially launched in 2023. Each of these investments is expected to enable future financial benefits to the P&L that we plan to show you in February. So let me wrap up. We executed well in calendar year 2024. We delivered 11% growth in CSBG and a 160 basis point improvement in operating margin, both of which exceeded our expectations from the beginning of last year. We've made key investments in our product portfolio to drive, served available market and share opportunity, and we've grown the global infrastructure to collaborate and deliver innovative solutions for our customers. We also grew spending in that digital transformation program. We look forward to sharing more details on the strength of our product portfolio, as well as an updated long-term financial model at our Investor Day in New York City on February 19. We hope to see you there.

Operator

We will now begin the question-and-answer session. Our first question today is from Tim Arcuri with UBS. Please go ahead.

O
TA
Tim ArcuriAnalyst

Thanks a lot. Doug, can you speak about the gross margin? The guidance is pretty good. And you talked about Malaysia now is turning to a tailwind. And I know that the China mix is basically reset. So how to think about the puts and takes for gross margin as you move March and through the rest of the year?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Tim, I think we are going to be in a pretty tight range kind of where we've been in the last quarter, plus or minus a little bit. And the puts and takes, as you know, because we've talked about this in the past. You're going to continue to see some headwinds from customer concentration. I think there is more headwind as we go through the year, most likely offset to a certain extent by that Asia operation strategy. So those are the things to think about. I wouldn't run away from where we are right now, though, in fact, maybe trim a little just a little tiny bit as we go through the year.

TA
Tim ArcuriAnalyst

Got it. Can you provide any details? I understand that WFE is expected to increase by possibly $3 billion to $5 billion year-over-year. However, can you break it down by end market? I've asked this before, but one of your competitors mentioned that NAND might double this year. Can you elaborate on that? Do you think there's a chance it could actually double this year? Thanks.

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Tim, maybe I'll unpack it just a little bit of color. We are not going to give specific details. But NAND will be up this year. I don't know if it's going to double necessarily. Understand also though that NAND spending, there will be a little bit of NAND spending that will occur in China with the customer we can't sell to. So that may be a little different from the peer you’re asking about. I think leading edge foundry is going to be pretty strong this year. I think that's pretty well understood. And DRAM will be, plus or minus, come up a very strong year last year. I think it will continue to be pretty strong this year.

TA
Tim ArcuriAnalyst

Thank you Doug.

Operator

The next question is from Krish Sankar with Cowen and Company. Please go ahead.

O
KS
Krish SankarAnalyst

Hi, thanks for taking my question. First one, Doug, I had for you was kind of, a, on China, what is kind of your visibility in terms of lead times? And also, can you help us quantify the impact of these recent China export controls for Lam in calendar 2025, and then I have a follow-up.

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Krish, our lead times really haven't changed too much. And I don't know you're asking specific to China, but China is no different than the rest of the world. Geographically, lead times are pretty much the same. And yes, obviously, in early December, there were some new regulations that came out restricting a handful of customers that certainly impacted us. The forecast we had from that group of customers was probably, well, I don't know, $700 million or so that obviously we won't be able to ship to those customers. And that revenue footprint when we were looking at the forecast originally would have been a little bit second half weighted in 2025. So that's the way to think about it. I don't know that that's all that different than what you've heard from our peers, Krish.

KS
Krish SankarAnalyst

Got it. That's very helpful for quantifying that, Doug. And then just a quick follow-up. You spoke about your WFE growing maybe 4%, 5% this year on a year-over-year basis. How do you think about the split between systems and CSBG in March and how that evolves through the rest of the year?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

I'm not going to get into the detail of kind of how much is CSBG and how much is systems. I would tell you that there's some headwinds in CSBG related to the Reliant grouping, right? I think that's pretty well understood. There's not a huge amount of spending in mature node outside of China. And then within China, we've got a handful of customers that, like I said, are not restricted. Offset, though, it's going to be a strong year for upgrades, and we've been talking about that, right? We believe NAND spending is going to be largely upgrade-related, and that's going to benefit the upgrade product line within CSBG.

KS
Krish SankarAnalyst

Got it. Thanks a lot Doug.

Operator

The next question is from C.J. Muse with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please go ahead.

O
CM
C.J. MuseAnalyst

Yeah. Thank you for taking the question. I guess to maybe piggyback on that question. Could you speak to if you had to rank order by product or upgrade or whatnot, how we should be thinking about what are the biggest kind of incremental drivers for you? I think you talked about gate-all-around and advanced packaging growing an incremental $1 billion in calendar '25. Could you kind of add to that in terms of NAND upgrades, moly? Anything else that is relevant that we should be thinking about in '25?

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, let me start with that. The most significant change year-on-year for us is NAND. It is starting to recover, and we have a strong position with every dollar spent on NAND upgrades. This applies to areas like etch tools that require enhancements. However, as I mentioned in the last call, around two-thirds of the bits are still being produced on nodes below 200 layers. Moving above 200 layers necessitates not only upgrading existing tools but also adding new tools to manage the complexity of that transition. That's why we reference the new carbon gapfill tool, which is essential for multi-tier stacking in the 200 and 300 layer generations. As we reach 300 layers and above, new tools like moly come into play. The situation varies depending on the customer and the specific transitions they are making. NAND upgrades and new tool shipments represent our most significant year-on-year difference. Additionally, our strong position in advanced packaging, as Doug noted, along with the growth in leading-edge foundry capabilities continues to show progress. I believe we have a favorable setup where the areas we have been investing in are truly starting to align this year.

CM
C.J. MuseAnalyst

That's very helpful. I guess as a follow-up, and Doug, I'm not sure you are going to want to answer this. But if I were to annualize implied shipments for March, that would suggest pretty meaningful top-line growth year-on-year relative to the WFE growth that you outlined. So should we be thinking about revenues lower in the second half? Or are you really highlighting tremendous outperformance in 2025?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, I don't know, C.J., I'm not going to answer that question. So you kind of answered your own question. I'm going to get into giving you a quarter-by-quarter guidance. Listen, WFE is going to grow a little bit. We're going to outperform WFE. We're confident about making those statements. We've been making it for a little bit of time now. The rest of it will depend on the profile of spending and so forth. I don't know if you just annualize March, if that's the right way to look at it. Like I said, we are going to guide one quarter at a time. You got to do a little of your own pencil work. Don't lose sight of what I did say, though, about the second half weighting of some of that China customer that all of a sudden, we can't ship to any longer, that would have been a little bit second half weighted. So comprehend that as you build your model for the year.

CM
C.J. MuseAnalyst

Great. Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from Harlan Sur with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.

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HS
Harlan SurAnalyst

Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. On advanced packaging and high bandwidth memory, I know you guys started last year with a view that your Advanced Packaging business would do about $700 million, $800 million in revenues on the April earnings call. You upped that to $1 billion, and then that number was further up to over $1 billion. Can you guys just show us up what was the actual revenue you drove in calendar 2024 on Advanced Packaging? And then with this demand growth for HBM targeted to grow 50%, 70% per year over the next couple of years, the move from 8 high to 12 high. You've got the move in advanced packing from 2.5D to 3D SOIC, like how should we think about your advanced packaging/HBM growth profile for this year? And in general, over the next few years, sort of how do we think about the mid-to-longer term growth profile?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Harlan, maybe I'll chime in and let Tim add on. Yes, I mean, I'm not going to give you a precise number, but in 2024, we finished above $1 billion. I don't think that surprises you. And I'm not going to give you a precise number for this year, but it is certainly going to grow again in 2025, and it is being driven by all those things you talked about, right, HBM3 going to 3D to potentially go into 4 at the end of the year, 8 going to 12, going to 16 die, we do all that TSV. So we're set up to do really well. We're pretty excited about it. I don't know, Tim, if you want to.

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

No. I think, Harlan, the only thing I’d add is that we've been saying for a while that, and I think you've been hearing it in the marketplace, advanced packaging and getting the yield and productivity right on these processes isn't easy. And so this is where Lam has a critical process supplier with expertise in things like copper plating and etching, where we're delivering value. So we feel very good about our positions, and we are going to continue to grow with that market and then do very well. So I can't put an exact number on it, but again, we did indicate we will grow again this year. And I think that's about all we can say.

HS
Harlan SurAnalyst

That's helpful. And then for Doug, this is the third, fourth consecutive quarter where your gross margins are coming in better than expected, continued strength on the guidance for the March quarter, right? Overall, sustainability and growth of our gross margins has been very, very solid. I've actually been surprised at how rapidly you've ramped your Malaysia manufacturing facility, a low-cost geography, you've got a strategically aligned supplier base in this region. At the same time, you guys have also, I think, consolidated a significant part of the higher-cost manufacturing base. So is it fair to assume that on incremental revenue growth going forward, most of this is flowing through Malaysia and so better incremental gross margin flow through? And maybe any way to help us kind of quantify that?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, I'm not going to quantify it. I mean I just gave you a number, right, that we've delivered over 100 basis points from the strategy already. There's a little bit more to go for sure. Don't lose sight of the fact, though, that we are going to have the headwind from customer mix that we've been talking about for a while. So I'm trying to telegraph that to you as well. I guess yes, listen, we are pretty pleased with our performance on gross margin. Frankly, this was all done by us, right? This was a proactive strategy, things turned down in early '23. We jumped on the horse and started riding down the trail. And frankly, the guys and gals in our global operations organization have done a phenomenal job here, right? So super happy with what's going on. We're going to keep driving this but don't run away with it too much right now because like I said, we've got that customer concentration headwind that we got to deal with here.

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

And Harlan, the only thing I would add is that I think that you should take away from this that Lam is committed to make investments to see a sustainable step-up in performance. And that's what we did. Doug, for many quarters was talking about how Malaysia was a headwind. That investment we're making as we ramped it and it wasn't yet up and going. And now you're seeing a little bit of the same thing with the investment we keep talking about digital transformation. There's going to be a period here where we are investing, but long-term, we have a view that this company and the semiconductor industry in general are going to be bigger, and we want to have fundamental improvements in our operations and in our cost structure. And so I think Malaysia is a great sign of what we’ve done. And I think the digital transformation is something that’s still yet to come, and it just shows that we have a very long-term commitment to improving the financials of this company.

HS
Harlan SurAnalyst

Yeah, thanks Tim, thanks Doug.

Operator

The next question is from Toshiya Hari with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

O
TH
Toshiya HariAnalyst

Hi, good afternoon. Thank you for taking my question. I have two inquiries. First, regarding your expected outperformance compared to the WFE this year, is this primarily due to the growth of dep and etch as a proportion of the overall WFE market? Or is it a combination of that along with your increased share in dep and etch? If it’s both, which applications do you anticipate will contribute the most to your market share gains?

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

It is both factors. As we've mentioned before, we often assess market share gains based on new applications that may not have existed previously. Therefore, it's not always about direct competition leading to one clear winner for an application. I referred to the carbon gapfill as an example of a new application created due to the increasing complexity of peer stacking in NAND. This ultimately contributes to share gain as indicated by our share of the Serviceable Available Market and our overall market share. There are several instances of this. We also discussed our Aether announcement today, which signifies a win through the expansion of our market presence into areas where we previously didn't compete, becoming the preferred choice due to our superior technology and product performance. It's a combination of many factors that explain our belief in our outperformance, but it really comes down to the importance of etch and deposition in constructing complex structures, including gate-all-around, advanced packaging, 3D structures, new DRAM architectures, and multi-tier stacking in NAND. All these applications require advanced, complex etch and deposition processes, in which Lam is a leader.

TH
Toshiya HariAnalyst

Got it. That's great. Thank you. And then for CSBG, maybe for Doug, I know you are not going to guide the full year. The spares part of the business upgrade part of the business. Historically, it's been obviously correlated with your chamber account, which continues to grow. Is there a way to think about Reliant in '25, on a year-over-year basis?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Reliant is probably going to be down year-over-year, Toshi, as I think about puts and takes. I don't think that's surprising, right? If you look at what's going on in specialty node investment, mature node investment in areas like analog and microcontrollers, there's not a lot of spending occurring outside of China. And then I think China WFE is going to be softer year-over-year, '24 to '25, and we lost a handful of customers as well. So that will contribute to all of that there relative to Reliant. Offsetting that, though, I think it's going to be a good upgrade year, right? We've been talking about that. Such that right now, if I was giving you a little bit of color to think about CSBG, we are probably flattish, again, plus or minus. And we'll keep giving you updates as we go through the year as things change.

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. And Toshi, the only thing I'd add on CSBG is obviously, we recognize that each of the different components of CSBG sort of move around. So maybe it's helpful to think about the areas that ultimately are long-term future growers. And the one we've highlighted recently that I talked about today is how you use equipment intelligence and cobots and other things to disrupt the way in which service is done inside the fab and therefore capture some of that value while still delivering a lot of productivity to the customer. So I think that's an area that still is less tapped, I would say, than our spares and upgrades and Reliant business that we talked about so much. And so there's still a lot of opportunity to come there as we start to roll out these new products onto new platforms and into fabs.

SP
Srinivas PajjuriAnalyst

Thank you, Doug. I just want to clarify your previous answer regarding CSBG. When you mentioned flattish, are you referring to calendar '24 or calendar '25? Or are you talking about fiscal periods or sequentially over the next few quarters?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Calendar '25. I never talk about fiscal year, almost never. It is year-over-year. You should think of CSBG in total as flattish.

SP
Srinivas PajjuriAnalyst

Got it. Thank you for that. And then my question maybe for Tim, is on Moly B, I know you said several hundred million dollars of contribution. I'm just trying to reconcile what we are hearing from your customers, Tim, obviously, demand is not great and the utilization levels are lower, and some customers are actually lowering their factory loadings. So maybe you can help us how broad-based of a transition are you seeing? Is it like a handful of customers? I know there are only a handful of customers, but yes. If you could give us some additional color as to how do you feel about the sustainability of Moly B as we go through the year? That will be helpful. Thank you.

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, I believe the focus is on sustainability. We have previously discussed the significant number of industry bits, with two-thirds still being produced under 200 layers. These are all nodes and bits being manufactured without moly. Over time, as we transition—this is a multi-year process—we will be shifting the million-plus wafer starts per month capacity toward higher layer counts. Different customers will have varying timelines regarding when they will incorporate moly based on specific layer counts, and I can't go into those details for each customer. However, we will see moly introduced as each customer reaches their transition point. Regarding the apparent contradiction of customers investing in higher layer counts and new technologies like moly and carbon gapfill while simultaneously expressing a desire to cut spending, I want to clarify that upgrades represent a very efficient way to advance technology. This reduced WFE provides a means to achieve higher layer counts. Higher layer counts lead to lower manufacturing costs for bits and improved performance, which is essential for certain end applications. This is not a widespread upgrade shift yet, but we are beginning to see early signs of improvement in our numbers. In the coming years, moly will increasingly contribute as the number of wafers produced at these higher layer counts continues to rise.

VA
Vivek AryaAnalyst

Yeah. Thanks for taking my question. Doug, Just one or 2 clarifications. Why will CSBG be flat this year? And then how should we think about OpEx growth in calendar '25?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Vivek, it's what I described. We're coming off a pretty strong year for the Reliant product line. That's probably going to be less strong next year. Offsetting that, I believe will be the spending on upgrades kind of based on what Tim just told you. Right? There's an aging set of equipment in NAND. There are upgrades other places, too. So that's the up and the down, I guess, is the way to think about it, Vivek that makes sense?

VA
Vivek AryaAnalyst

Yeah. And the OpEx growth?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, we're going to increase spending this year, right? I talked about we're growing R&D. We're investing in a digital transformation project that's going to deliver future financial benefit. But also listen to what I said in the scripted remarks, we plan to deliver some on the leverage this year too, right? We're going to deliver leverage to the P&L. So revenue should grow faster than OpEx is the way to think about it.

AM
Atif MalikAnalyst

Hi, thank you for taking my questions. First, a quick clarification that $100 billion WFE number is unrestricted WFE, meaning it includes your expectations about what are your indigenous competitors are going to learn in sales as well? That's the first question.

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Atif, it's all in. It's everything, right? There were restricted customers in '24. There were restricted customers in '25. We're describing it all in to the best of our ability.

AM
Atif MalikAnalyst

Okay. And then, Doug, you made a comment that you're expecting similar customer concentration in the March quarter. And I was wondering if you're expecting similar regional concentration as well. I'm just trying to see if China sales are going to come down again in the March quarter after the drop in the December quarter.

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

You got to listen to my euphemisms when I described stuff. Customer concentration actually is pretty tied to geographic concentration when I talk about it right now. So you should expect that to be roughly consistent December to March, roughly. I do believe, again we said this on the last call, again China concentration for a year will be down versus '24, in '25.

SR
Stacy RasgonAnalyst

Hi everyone, I appreciate you taking my questions. Doug, I don't want to dwell on it, but I need to revisit the CSBG outlet flat. On a run rate basis, it seems like you'd be down about $100 million per quarter compared to December. I'm confused because of the strength in NAND, which is upgrade-driven and presumably a lot of that would come from CSBG. I'm not aware that Reliant must be dropping significantly year-over-year for me to reconcile that outlook. I'm just trying to understand what I might be missing. Is there some conservatism included in that estimate? Or why is this not aligning?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

No, there's not conservatism. Reliant is going to be down, right? We just lost a bunch of customers in China that largely purchase Reliant systems. So that's part of what's going on, too.

SR
Stacy RasgonAnalyst

Okay. So that was the set like did you have $700 million in calendar '24 in CSBG for Reliant in China that goes away in 2025? Was is that so?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Stacy $700 million was our forecasted revenue for that set of customers, what they would have spent in '25. Now they're not spending. And a lot of that would have been Reliant, Stacy.

Operator

The next question is from Joe Moore with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

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JM
Joe MooreAnalyst

Great. Thank you. In terms of NAND being the strongest growth business, can you kind of characterize where we are from a NAND WFE basis? And I guess, it's a little surprising because we're seeing these utilization cuts and things like that. And I know you had alluded to technology transitions, but just maybe a little bit more color on why NAND is strong at a time when the economics of NAND seem to be softening?

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Well, I think that, one, we would characterize the NAND spending today very much as technology migration. And so I think that, as I said comes into play for different reasons. One is it does help reduce bit cost and also improve device performance. And so there are customers that are looking to make some changes there on certain lines they have. Now when we talk about the growth, we haven't obviously given a number for what NAND WFE will be in 2025, but it's coming off of, as you know, a very low base. If primarily all of the spending this year is on upgrades. Again, the strength in Lam, we spoke specifically about that being a strong grower for Lam, our strongest growing segment, then we would say that is because of our very high capture rate of WFE spent on upgrades. And so I can't speak to every customer and what they are going to be spending this year. But all we can say is that there is still a strong desire to move certain lines forward to higher levels of technology, and that's what we're seeing.

JM
Joe MooreAnalyst

That’s very helpful. Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from Vijay Rakesh with Mizuho. Please go ahead.

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VR
Vijay RakeshAnalyst

Hi, I have a quick question about the NAND segment. I apologize if this has already been asked, as I joined late. It's great to see the rebound. Looking ahead to the full year, considering the decline in NAND prices, what are your thoughts on the growth of NAND in calendar year 2025?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, we're not going to give you a number, Vijay. It's going to be up, though.

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

I mentioned in my prepared remarks about our Cryo 3.0 technology, which represents a significant advancement in performance for etching deep, vertical holes for NAND flash memory. This technology is also applicable to other devices like DRAM that require higher dielectric etching. We are pleased with the progress made. What makes it appealing is that our Cryo technology can not only be integrated into new tools but also used to upgrade existing systems in our installed base, which is financially beneficial for our customers.

JQ
Joe QuatrochiAnalyst

Yes. Thanks for taking the question. For the December quarter, the strength that you saw in NAND revenue, I just wanted to clarify, was there anything in there from the Chinese customer that you can do a longer shift to? I just want to kind of understand the strength that you saw is really the core NAND customer upgrades?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

No, there's nothing from a Chinese NAND, indigenous Chinese NAND customer, nothing.

JQ
Joe QuatrochiAnalyst

Okay, helpful. And as a follow-up, as we just think about the two-thirds of NAND capacity below 200 layers, I mean how should we think about like that trajectory exiting this calendar year in terms of that change of mix?

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

I believe this is a question we've encountered frequently during the call, specifically regarding our ability to predict the rate and pace of upgrades. What we can say with certainty is that, over time, a larger portion of our installed base will transition to higher levels of technology. It's important to consider the state of the NAND market, the specific requirements of each end application, and the associated device needs. These factors will provide some insights into the rate and pace of upgrades. However, at this moment, we can't provide specific details on that.

Operator

The next question is from Tom O'Malley with Barclays. Please go ahead.

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TO
Tom O’MalleyAnalyst

Hi, thanks for taking the question guys. Doug, I'll test you with one more NAND, one forgive me. I know you've gotten a lot here. So in terms of the upgrades really coming in strong, I think it's actually very impressive that you're able to guide CSBG kind of flattish for the year. Just I was under the assumption that Reliant was a bigger portion of that mix of the bucket. So to totally offset that is surprising, and I guess, very good. But when I look back at like the last three years with where NAND spend has been kind of like the high single-digit billions, I think people are give or take that. But you've seen the market struggle and you really haven't seen this take off in terms of spend. What's driving this above 200-layer upgrade this year? I guess I'm asking the question a bit differently. Like why the urgency just because the numbers you are describing for this next year need to be pretty robust. Just want to understand why that's happening so quickly. It's obviously a really good thing for you.

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Tom, I guess it's really what Tim described. The technology that’s out there two-thirds of it is sub-200 layer, it needs to get upgraded. Listen, it's not like we're back to the races at peak NAND spending; it's nowhere close to that. But you got enterprise SSDs evolving to need QLC, which needs the capability of structures that are beyond 200 layer, right? You got to get the circuit under the array. You need to have wafer bonding capability, and these technologies that are sub-200 layer don't enable that. That's what's going on. In addition to what Tim mentioned earlier, right, when you upgrade, you get a lower cost per bit. And so there's still economics that make sense there to a certain extent. And that's largely what we see going on this year. I don't know, Tim, if you'd add anything?

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, that's right.

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

That makes sense, Tom?

TO
Tom O’MalleyAnalyst

It does.

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Okay. You have a follow-up, Tom?

TO
Tom O’MalleyAnalyst

Yes. I guess I'll pivot over to the foundry logic side. Obviously, a smaller percentage of the business we haven't really focused on it much this call. You're kind of pointing to the NAND business being a leader in your growth outlook for this coming year. But just given the CapEx guide that we saw from TSMC, any view of the change in market share dynamics and how that may impact you next year? Obviously, the view is that some of the other leaders are losing out to TSMC. How does that impact? You've been asked this question previously, but I wanted to get your update after the print there?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, I'll let Tim talk about leading-edge foundry.

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

We want to clarify that we are not exclusively focused on NAND. We've been anticipating the NAND recovery for quite some time, and it seems to be reflected in our numbers as those upgrades are starting to materialize. However, I want to emphasize that our strategy to shift more research and development and product expansion towards DRAM and foundry logic is yielding positive results. We recently discussed our capabilities in gate-all-around nodes, which position us well in this evolving market. Furthermore, our expertise in advanced packaging is quite significant in leading-edge foundry logic, as this area is largely influenced by those advanced packaging capabilities. Therefore, as customers in the leading-edge foundry logic continue to invest, we see those as opportunities for market share growth for Lam at this time.

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Tom. Operator we're going to take one more. Yes. Thanks, Tom. Operator, we're going to take one more call.

Operator

And question is from Brian Chin with Stifel. Please go ahead.

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BC
Brian ChinAnalyst

Hi there. Good afternoon. Thanks for letting us ask a few questions. For trying to resist deposition in development, can you remind us of the SAM or maybe revenue potential per 10,000 wafer start per month? And then tied to that, what is the timing and magnitude of your revenue opportunity and this win? And where are you with other DRAM players?

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Listen, we're in a good position. We've talked about previously a DQR position, we've got hardware in everybody's R&D facility. Everybody is looking at this, that's using me, I guess, is what I tell you. We were super excited about this one because it's a production till a record decision, right? Is going around. It's not going to be huge dollars this year Brian, but it is going to certainly be generating revenue, but it was a really important milestone for us.

BC
Brian ChinAnalyst

Okay, that's great. Maybe for a quick follow-up. What factor does the introduction of wafer bonding on NAND road maps, I guess, have on your capture rate of NAND spending?

TA
Tim ArcherPresident and Chief Executive Officer

In an upgrade, we primarily focus on various aspects related to the stack. While there are tools that can be used in the wafer bonding area, we do not engage in wafer bonding ourselves. However, its impact is minimal. Our capture rate during the upgrade cycle remains very high. This is mainly because we are advancing our technology—such as with carbon gap fill—and upgrading other tools for higher aspect ratios. Additionally, we’ve been selling tools for years that help offset the stress from higher layer counts. The growing complexity of these devices, particularly with the addition of wafer bonding, presents many opportunities for us as a critical process supplier like Lam.

DB
Doug BettingerExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Awesome. Thank you, Brian. With that, operator, we're going to wrap the call up. Listen, Tim and I and the rest of the management team are super excited to see you guys in February 19 in New York at our Investor Day. I hope you are all going to be able to make it. We'll have some interesting new products to talk about. And as I said, we're going to update the financial model. So operator, with that, let's close off the call.

Operator

The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.

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