Micron yet to regain license to sell to Huawei, pressuring sales
Micron Technology has not yet obtained new licenses needed to sell its memory chips to China’s Huawei, which will cut its sales over the next two quarters, company executives said on Tuesday.
Boise, Idaho-based Micron, one of the world’s biggest makers of DRAM chips, said it had previously obtained licenses from the US government to sell chips for mobile phones and servers from its factories outside the United States to Huawei, which has been the target of US restrictions on chip sales since last year.
Huawei accounted for about $600 million of Micron’s $6.06 billion in sales for the fiscal fourth quarter ended September 3, or just under 10%.
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But a new round of restrictions that took effect in September barred sales of any chip made using US tools or software, which rendered Micron’s earlier licenses invalid and halted sales on September 14.
“The manufacturing equipment in those fabs are obviously from US-based companies,” Micron’s chief business officer, Sumit Sadana, told Reuters in an interview. These included Applied Materials Inc and Lam Research Corp.
Sadana said Micron has applied to the US government for new licenses to sell to Huawei but does not yet have them and does not know if or when they will be approved. The company is shifting to selling to other smartphone customers but the shift will take until Micron’s fiscal second quarter to complete.
“As soon as we get the license, we would work with Huawei to determine how we can resurrect the business,” said Sadana.
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Micron shares, which were volatile in extended trading, were down 2% at $49.84 after the company disclosed the Huawei hit.
Revenue jumped over 24% to $6.06 billion in the fiscal fourth quarter, beating analysts’ estimate of $5.89 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.
The company expects fiscal first-quarter sales to be $5.2 billion, plus or minus $200 million, while analysts on average were expecting $5.31 billion.
Net income attributable to the company rose to $988 million, or 87 cents per share, in the last quarter, from $561 million, or 49 cents per share, a year earlier.
Excluding items, Micron earned $1.08 per share, beating analysts’ estimates of 99 cents.