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Micron Technology, Inc. (MU) Q3 2018 Earnings Conference Call Transcript

Logo of jester cap with thought bubble with words 'Fool Transcripts' below it
Logo of jester cap with thought bubble with words 'Fool Transcripts' below it

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Micron Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ: MU)
Q3 2018 Earnings Conference Call
June 20, 2018, 4:30 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks

  • Questions and Answers

  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good afternoon. My name is Brian. I will be your conference facilitator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Micron Technology's third quarter 2018 financial release conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question-answer period. If you would like to ask a question during that time, please press * and number 1 on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, press the pound key. Thank you. It is now my pleasure to turn the conference over to your host, Shanye Hudson. You may begin your conference.

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Shanye Hudson -- Head of Investor Relations

Thank you, Brian, and welcome to Micron Technology's third fiscal quarter 2018 financial conference call. On the call with me today are Sanjay Mehrotra, president and CEO, and Dave Zinsner, Chief Financial Officer. Today's call will be approximately 60 minutes in length. This call including audio and slides is also being webcast from our investor relations website at investors.micron.com. In addition, our website contains the earnings press release filed a short while ago. Today's discussion of financial results will be presented on a non-GAAP financial basis unless otherwise specified. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures may be found on our website, along with a convertible debt and capped call dilution table. Both the prepared remarks from this call and webcast replay will be available on our website later today. We encourage you to monitor our website at micron.com throughout the quarter for the most current information on the company, including information on the various financial conferences that we'll be attending. You can also follow us on Twitter @MicronTech.

As a reminder, the matters we will be discussing include forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from statements being made today. We refer you to the documents we file with the FCC, specifically our most recent form 10K and form 10Q for a discussion of risks that may affect our future results. Although we believe that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements are reasonable, we cannot guarantee future results, levels of activity, performance, or achievements, and we're under no duty to update any of the forward-looking statements after today's date to conform these statements to actual results. I'll now turn the call over to you, Sanjay.

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Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Shanye. Good afternoon everyone. Micron continues to perform exceptionally well, achieving record revenue and profitability and generating strong operating cash flow in the third quarter. Our focus on structural improvements and consistent execution is driving improved financial performance. First, we are accelerating advanced technology development and rapidly deploying it into production to meet our supply growth and product cost reduction targets. Second, we are gardening our portfolio of high-value solutions to drive increased profitability and strengthen our customer relationships. And third, we announce a capital return program to repurchase up to 10 billion of our shares outstanding starting in fiscal 2019. These initiatives underscore our commitment to enhancing long-term shareholder value.

Turning to our businesses, we delivered strong results across the breadth of our end markets. We were particularly pleased with our mobile business where we increased revenue by 12% sequentially, setting a new company record. Revenue from high-value mobile NAND nearly doubled quarter-over-quarter enabled by the lamp of MMC and eMCP products to multiple smartphone OEMs. 85% of managed NAND gigabytes that we shipped in fiscal Q3 were lower cost to TLC NAND as compared to virtually no TLC NAND just one year ago. Memory and storage content for phone continues to rise, creating ongoing demand for our mobile solutions. We are strategically shaping our mobile portfolio to put us in the best competitive position, including the production launch of our one vine nanometer low power DDR four memory and several new 64-layer TLC USS and eMCP managed NAND solutions all later this year.

Data center trends are always driving momentum for Micron's DRAM and NAND solutions with combined revenue of 87% year-over-year. In the third quarter, ongoing demand for our memory and storage solutions in cloud computing was a key highlight. Our DRAM and NAND revenue from cloud customers increased sequentially by 33% and 24% respectively. This performance was enabled by our improving execution, ability to expand share, and strengthening relationships with key customers in this rapidly growing segment. We stand to benefit from the significant investments cloud service providers are making to build our IT infrastructure. Cloud CapEx is expected to be 50 billion in 2018 and as we shared during our investor event, analysts project this CapEx to reach 108 billion by 2021. We achieved record revenue across all market segments of our embedded business, enabled by shifts to higher value products and continuing healthy demand. Growth was vertically robust in consumer and industrial markets driven by trends in home and industrial automation, drones, and IOT.

We completed qualification of a 64-layer 3D NAND surveillance grade micro-SD card, which is designed for smart surveillance deployments that move AI capabilities to edge devices. We also had notable design NAND activity on low power automotive DRAM and see growing a portion of these in the near term for our portfolio of entertainment, dashboard, and ADAF solutions.

We studied multiple new products for customer qualification this quarter, including the first one next nanometer low power automotive DRAM and the GDDR6 solution for ADAF and autonomous applications. These advanced new products extend an industry-leading portfolio of unique automotive and industrial solutions that coupled with long-term customer relationships has held the embedded business unit delivers consistent, profitable growth for Micron. All in all, we continue to strengthen our product portfolio as we shift our mix away from components and toward high-value solutions. We are outpacing competitors in the high-value graphics market and our graphics revenue more than doubled year-over-year. We also set another company record in overall SSD sales, increasing our revenue by 37% versus a year ago. We've begun volume production shipments of our 64-layer 3D NAND enterprise SATA SSD and ship the world's first QLC based SSD, a high capacity drive ideal for read-centric applications like streaming media servers. This QLC SSD is built on our industry-leading 64-layer 3D NAND, utilizing the first ever terabyte NAND industry.

As we continue to introduce new SSD solutions on lower cost, next-generation technologies, we believe that we can unlock new pools of demand that are currently being served by HIDDs. Our technology and operational execution continue to pay dividends. As we recently shared, we achieved yield maturity and production output crossover on our 64-layer 3D NAND ahead of schedule. We still expect to have production shipments on our 96 layer 3D NAND in the second half of the calendar year 2018. We are also making good progress on the development of our fourth generation 3D NAND, which will utilize our novel replacement gate technology. In DRAM, we are on track to reach bit crossover on our 1X technology and to begin production shipments on our 1Y technology, both in the second half of the calendar year 2018. As we noted at our analyst event, we have a strong product and process roadmap for DRAM bit 1z and 1 elf development programs already under way.

Turning to 3D XPoint technology, as you know, we have partnered with Intel in the development and manufacturing of 3D XPoint. As part of that ongoing relationship, we have been discussing the commercial terms of our future generation 3D XPoint collaboration. Our goal in these discussions is to ensure that Micron has a path to strong auto-y for our investments and technology contributions. We will provide updates as appropriate as this discussion progress further.

As we highlighted at our investor day, we are excited about the potential for 3D XPoint technology to create a new tier of memory and storage between DRAM and NAND flash with a main focus on our 3D XPoint product development and are on track to introduce our first products in later calendar 2019 with meaningful revenue in 2020.

In summary, we continue to see strong market demand for memory and fast storage products due to the value these solutions provide in an economy where data and fast access to that data is increasingly important. Growing capabilities in the data center has enabled greater functionality at the edge, increasing users, and creating more data. And in turn, driving a portion of these for expanded, higher value data services. We believe this virtuous cycle has driven the secular growth patterns we are currently seeing across nearly all of our markets and believe that this will persist into the foreseeable future. I will now turn the call over to our CFO Dave Zinsner to provide details on our third quarter results and outlook for the remainder of fiscal 2018.

Dave Zinsner -- Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Sanjay, and good afternoon everyone. Micron's relentless focus on execution is evident in our third quarter results. We set new records for revenue, gross margin, operating income, and earnings per share. In addition, we delivered on our goal of achieving a net cash positive position with our cash balance nearly $350 million above GAAP debt position.

We are on the strongest financial footing in company's 40-year history, allowing us to make investments that will capitalize on the secular growth trends driven by the data economy. Our focus on growing high-value solutions, including managed NAND and low power DRAM products for the mobile market, SSDs for the cloud market, as well as graphics DRAM, drove our fiscal third-quarter results. We also saw the benefit of strong execution on technology transitions. Total revenue was $7.8 billion, up 6% from fiscal second quarter and 40% from the prior year. Non-GAAP gross margins for the period expanded to a record 61%, up 250 basis points from the prior quarter and up from 48% in the prior year.

A robust business environment, more favorable mix, and good execution on cost reductions drove significant gross margin expansion. It's important to note that we were able to achieve record gross margins while we continue to incur underloading charges in advance of volume ramp of our 3D XPoint solutions, which will follow product introductions that are targeted for late calendar 2019. We estimate that these charges impacted gross margins by approximately 100 basis points. Our record revenue and gross margin performance drove strong profitability in the third quarter.

Operating income grew to $4 billion on a non-GAAP basis, representing 52% of revenue. This compares with operating margins up 49% in fiscal second quarter and 37% in the year-ago period. Non-GAAP operating expenses came in at $733 million, up approximately 10% from fiscal second quarter and in line with our planned investments in technology and product development. Moving forward, we expect to increase our OPEX from the current run rate, particularly for R&D as we continue to accelerate the development of new products and technologies.

Now turning to the performance by business unit. We achieved record revenue for the compute and networking business unit, up $4 billion in the third quarter, up 67% year-over-year and 8% from the prior quarter. Every CMBU business contributed to this growth except the client business, as we directed supply to customers in markets experiencing robust demand. We saw broad-based demand for our memory solutions with sales of both cloud server and graphics memory products, more than doubling year-over-year.

Operating income for CMBU increased by 12% sequentially to 2.6 billion or 66% of revenue and more than doubled on a year-over-year basis. Revenue for the mobile business unit increased to a record $1.8 billion up 12% quarter-over-quarter and 55% year-over-year. We are experiencing ongoing momentum for our managed NAND products with multiple customer qualifications under way for our eMCP solutions. We also continue to see healthy demand for our industry-leading low power DRAM products. The benefits of shifting more of our supply to these high-value mobile products are evident in our profits. Operating income increased to $860 million or 49% of revenue, up from $689 million last quarter and $304 million in the year-ago period.

The embedded business unit continues to deliver solid results with record revenue of $897 million up 8% versus fiscal second quarter and up 28% year-over-year. Growth was driven by demand for consumer and industrial applications, including set-top boxes, factor automation, and industrial drones. ADAF and in-vehicle experience applications supported record automotive sales for the quarter. Fiscal third-quarter operating income was $386 million, which translates to a healthy 43% of revenue, roughly flat with the prior quarter and up by 600 basis points from the prior year.

And finally, turning to the storage business unit, third quarter revenue was $1.1 billion, which is comprised of SSD NAND components and 3D XPoint sales. We continue to build momentum with our SSD portfolio and set a new record for SSD revenue, which now represents over 50% of total SBU revenue. Consistent with our strategy and as we shared at our investor event, we're shifting more of our NAND supply away from components and to high-value products such as managed NAND, which are targeted for our mobile and embedded markets, as well as SSDs. This shift in NAND supply and lower 3D XPoint sales to our partner resulted in a 9% sequential decline in our storage business unit revenue.

The underutilization costs associated with 3D XPoint production that I previously mentioned, had a negative impact on SBU operating margins of approximately 700 basis points in the third quarter. Our resulting SBU operating income was $156 million or 14% of third quarter revenue compared with 20% in fiscal second quarter. Today, a majority of our SSD sales are based on 32-layer 3D NAND. As Sanjay pointed out earlier, we're starting to ramp SSD solutions built on our 64-layer 3D NAND, initially targeting consumer and cloud customers. Our SBU cost structure will benefit from this transition to lower cost 64-layer SSDs.

Moving to performance by product line, DRAM represented 71% of total company revenue in the fiscal third quarter. DRAM revenue was up 6% from the prior quarter and 56% year-over-year reflecting strong execution on our strategy and a robust market environment. ASPs increased in the mid to upper single-digit percentage range, supported by broad base demand and a richer mix of high-value sales including server and graphics DRAM products. Shipment quantities were relatively flat quarter-over-quarter and our resulting non-GAAP gross margin was 69%, up from 66% in fiscal second quarter and 54% from the year-ago quarter.

We achieved $1.9 billion in trade NAND revenue, representing 25% of total company revenue for the fiscal third quarter. Trade NAND revenue was up 8% quarter-over-quarter and 14% year-over-year, reflecting healthy demand for our products. While on a like for like basis, NAND pricing declined modestly sequentially. Our overall NAND ASP increased in the mid to upper single-digit percentage range, driven by a richer mix of high-value solutions in our NAND portfolio. We ramped eMCP solutions to our mobile customers, which tend to carry higher ASPs relative to other NAND products.

Trade NAND shipment quantities remained relatively flat compared to the prior quarter and trade NAND gross margins were 47% on a non-GAAP basis up 50 basis points from the prior quarter and up 600 basis points from the year-ago quarter. Our solid execution and healthy industry environment led to a record non-GAAP earnings per share of $3.15 up 12% from the prior quarter and 94% from the prior year. We generated $4.3 billion in cash from operations representing 55% of revenue. Capital spending net of third-party contributions was $2.1 billion in the third quarter. We expect the full fiscal year 2018 CapEx to be approximately $8 billion, which includes previously discussed investments associated with our clean room expansions in Singapore and Hiroshima.

Our resulting free cash flow was $2.2 billion flat with the prior quarter and nearly double that of the year-ago period. We ended the quarter in a net cash positive position with approximately $7.7 billion in cash, marketable investments, and restricted cash, and $7.3 billion in GAAP debt, including approximately $300 million of incremental debt incurred in the third quarter by our jointly owned 3D XPoint fab. We're very pleased to have achieved a net cash positive position one quarter earlier than we had originally committed.

We reduced our gross debt position by approximately $2 billion in the fiscal third quarter and we expect to reduce our debt by another $2 billion in the fiscal fourth quarter. We also used $1.1 billion in cash in the third quarter to settle the debt and equity components of our convertible notes. In addition, we received another 550 million of convertible note redemptions in the third quarter, which we will cash settle early in the fourth quarter. Combined these convert notices equate to roughly a 20 million share count reduction. This is a great start to our strategy of reducing our fully diluted share count, which we expect will continue in fiscal 2019 when we begin utilizing at least 50% of our annual free cash flow to repurchase shares under our $10 billion share repurchase authorization.

Turning now to non-GAAP guidance for the fourth fiscal quarter. The market for our products continues to be robust and we are executing well on our strategy. We, therefore, expect sequential revenue growth again in the fourth quarter. We expect revenue to be in the range of $8 billion to $8.4 billion. Gross margins to be in the range of 59% to 62%. Operating expenses are expected to be $750 million plus or minus $25 million. And based on a share count of approximately 1.23 billion shares, these results should drive EPS of $3.30 plus or minus $0.07. I'll now turn the call over to Sanjay for some concluding remarks.

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Dave. We recently introduced our vision for the new Micron. We have been undergoing a fundamental transformation driven by changes in our markets, our industry, and within our company. Starting with our markets, data on the applications are driving secular growth for memory and storage solutions. Importantly, our customers recognize the essential added value that memory and fast storage provide for the solutions they deliver to their end customers. Second, the industry we operate within is structurally different than in the past. Technology transitions require more CapEx and for wide less bit gain in the face of those transitions has slowed, given increased process complexities.

The result is a more consistent and stable supply demand outlook. These structural changes have also resulted in improved auto y over the last several years. Finally, a laser sharp focus on executing our strategic objectives has allowed Micron to better capitalize on our excellent technology portfolio, product breadth, manufacturing scale, customer leech, and deep team expertise. We are chasing a culture of increased urgency, crisp execution, and accountability that will enable us to consistently deliver against these strategic objectives and create positive results for all stakeholders. We will now open for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen: At this time, if you would like to ask a question over the phone lines press * then 1 on your telephone keypad. To everyone participating in today's Q&A session, we ask in interest of time that you please limit yourself to one question and a follow-up. If your questions have been answered and you wish to remove yourself from the queue, press the # key to remove yourself. And our first question will come from Romit Shah with Nomura. Your line is now open.

Romit Shah -- Nomura -- Analyst

Okay, thanks. And thanks for leaving the guidance at the end of the presentation; it really kept us on our seats here. Great results. I had a question about NAND pricing, the like for like pricing you mentioned in NAND was down modestly and based on guidance it seems like the NAND business, as well as DRAM, will be healthy again in August. There have been several reports about your largest competitor seeing significant ASP weakness in their NAND business and I'm just having a hard time trying to reconcile while Micron isn't seeing this weakness as well.

Dave Zinsner -- Chief Financial Officer

I won't comment on the fourth quarter guidance and what's built into it but I think right now what you're seeing is a pretty healthy mix of the higher value solutions. We're getting increasingly a higher mix of that component into our NAND business. And that's really helping kind of keep the pricing healthy.

Romit Shah -- Nomura -- Analyst

You did say though that even absent mix that it seems like NAND pricing was down far less than it was in the prior quarter, correct?

Dave Zinsner -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes.

Romit Shah -- Nomura -- Analyst

Okay, so again, kind of the same question: How do we reconcile the performance of the NAND business in pricing like for like it seems like the ASP declines are fairly modest with what seems to be bigger and broader weakness from some of your competitors?

Dave Zinsner -- Chief Financial Officer

I think in one case in the second quarter when you looked at the pricing, there was a bit of an aberration given that we had in the first quarter a high REFP lift as it related to one time MLC sales. I actually think when you strip that out if we had done it like for like I don't think we made a comment on that in second quarter. You would've found that those ASP declines were relatively modest as well.

Romit Shah -- Nomura -- Analyst

Okay. And if I could just follow-up on --

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

I just want to point out that as Dave said in his remarks that the mix of our NAND business has improved substantially given successful execution on our strategy of shifting our products to were at high-value solutions. Multi-chip packages, which have bought NAND and DRAM and carry higher ASPs on the sequential basis we doubled our sales of those solutions in the market. And of course, we did well on SSD as well, which hit a record. So all that mix nearly drew our strong performance on the ASP front for the NAND business.

Romit Shah -- Nomura -- Analyst

And this is a follow-up I noticed for both DRAM and NAND -- there really wasn't much bit growth for each of those businesses. Are you still comfortable with your bit growth targets for both DRAM and NAND for calendar '18?

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes, we are comfortable with our targets. As we said, we are proceeding well with our 64-layer transition into production actually achieved better bit cross over one quarter earlier than planned. And on the DRAM side, continue to do well with our 1X nanometer and the quality transition between, which we said will have better bit cross over by the end of the calendar year and similarly, with progress in terms of our 1Y nanometer DRAM. So yes, with respect to our overall bit growth targets for the year, as we have said, that we believe that the industry will be in the range of 40% to 45% for NAND and we'll be some more higher, that remains the case.

And with respect to DRAM, we have said in calendar year 2018 industry supply bit growth will be approximately 20% and will be in range and that stays the same as well. I'll just point out that in FQ3 the shipment growth being flat for DRAM and NAND that you were questioning; that really is just related to the normal ebb and flow of the business in terms of qualifications of our products in those new technology nodes as wells as ramp up in production of those technologies.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question will come from the line of CJ Muse with Evercore. Your line is now open.

CJ Muse -- Evercore -- Analyst

Hey, good afternoon, thank you for taking my question. I guess first question on gross margins and if we take the midpoint down just a smidge of Q1Q so curious: Should we be thinking about changes to mix on both DRAM and NAND as driving that? Or perhaps a slow down in cost down given some of the challenges ahead with the 64, 96 1Y et cetera? Would love to hear your thoughts on that.

Dave Zinsner -- Chief Financial Officer

We probably won't get into too much detail about our guidance other than to say we did give a range -- the high end of the range of 62% so that would actually be an improvement from this quarter so that's certainly a scenario and that would encompass a more robust mix of higher margin products for sure. And this is somewhat mix dependent in the business so we factor in that might happen and that creates a bit of a range for us. I wouldn't look too much into the fact that the midpoint is slightly below.

CJ Muse -- Evercore -- Analyst

Okay. I was just trying to get more color on the mix so thanks for that. I guess larger picture question for DRAM: In the last few months, we've heard about real-time push outs of select capacity, which I think is a first when the industry's enjoying such margins as you are today. I guess can you speak to this new rational profitability focused market? And would love to hear your thoughts for the market today and to year-end and beyond.

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

So we just said that at length at our investor day and as we had highlighted, the markets today are structurally different compared to whatever in the past. First, they are evermore diversified. Markets are not just about DC and DRAM. Data center is driving large growth for DRAM. The AI trends which we are very early innings of requires more and more DRAM in order to deliver high-performance competition that AI applications rely on. So AI applications are driving growth in the data center as well as through more intelligent devices on the edge. Smartphones certainly with features such as AR and VR and AI getting implemented into these phones, along with the high-resolution cameras, they require more and more DRAM as well.

So the demand drivers are diverse, they are secular in nature; memory has become essential in terms of delivering the value proposition of the end market applications. So this is what is really driving the overall robust demand drivers for our industry for DRAM and better data centers or in mobile or in graphics or automotive applications. All of these need more memory and memory is now really enabling higher value as well to the end market applications. So yes, this all bodes well for the long-term healthy industry fundamentals. And all of this reflects in our guidance as well, which speaks for itself. It's already robust, strong guidance that we provided for the third quarter.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question will come from the line of John Pitzer with Credit Suisse. Your line is now open.

John Pitzer -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Good afternoon and congratulations Sanjay and Dave on the strong results. Dave, I guess my first question just revolves around the profitability levels in the SBU. Just kind of curious when you think about the underutilization charges for XPoint; have those now peaked on sort of a quarterly basis? Or how should we think about that? And then you mentioned in your prepared comments that the move from 32 to 64 should help profitability there and I guess just as we think longer term notwithstanding what you're selling to Intel, that sort of cost, how do we think about the long-term operating margin trajectory of this business compared to your other business units?

Dave Zinsner -- Chief Financial Officer

Just going back to the prepared remarks. The underutilization charge associated with 3D XPoint was about 700 basis points as it hit to the SBU operating margins. We sold very little of 3D XPoint to our partner so it certainly was at a relatively high level. Hard to say if this is indeed the piece but it's certainly close to the peak if not the peak. I think longer term from an underutilization perspective we could continue to sell way first to our partner and that certainly would mitigate the underutilization charges.

So I wouldn't dismiss the likelihood of that happening. And then on top of that, as Sanjay mentioned earlier in the call, we are expecting 3D XPoint products toward the end of the calendar year 2019 and they'll ramp into 2020 and that certainly will help improve the underutilization aspect of this thing and have that go away. Having said that, we're looking to try to improve the cost structure of the storage business unit. Certainly, as we transition more and more of the way first from 32-layer to 64-layer, that will have a meaningful improvement to the cost structure of SBU.

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

And I'll just point out that it's only a very short period of time, just a few quarters, so we eventually we have really driven tremendous momentum in our SSD sales in SBU. And yes, they are mostly 32-layer driven but 64-layer is starting DRAM. And as we focus on bringing our next generation of products into the market with such as MDME solutions, as well as more 64-layer based solutions for cloud applications, that will help improve the cost structure and certainly will bode well for the health of our SBU business moving forward.

So we are very excited fortunately, the both are very cost effective NAND die and technology and very focused on continuing to assimilate our product and productions and get the benefit of advanced technology nodes as well as reduce the overall cost of SSD builds because you know in SSDs there's more than just memory that goes into building SSDs, so we are extremely focused on all of those and that bodes well for the cost structure of our SSD solutions. As well as both of the SSD devices.

John Pitzer -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

As my follow-up, I know that you guys have sort of rightfully tried to get away from giving us quarterly bit growth and cost down projections for DRAM and NAND but a little bit more generally: As you think about for DRAM the transition to 1X and NAND the transition to 64-layers, which quarter do you think you're gonna get the maximum benefit? Is there more of a benefit in the August quarter or is it more of the November quarter? How should we think about that for both DRAM and NANDs?

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

In terms of cost we are continuing to ramp in DRAM our 1X technology into production and as we said in the later half of this year, we will achieve the bit crossover and then that 1X technology node will continue to ramp into production even during the course of next year, just like our 20 nanometer ramp were seven quarters as well. So that will on an ongoing basis continue to provide us cost benefits and same story on the NAND side, right? We are focused on continuing to go beyond bit crossover with 64-layer NAND to continue to increase the mix of 64-layer technology into production and then as we ready our 96 layer technology, which in my prepared remarks, I said we will be having in the second half of this year, as we ramp that up it will then continue to provide additional cost benefits on an ongoing basis. So you really can't say which quarter is the cost reduction peaking in general. This is gradual over the course of future quarters.

And please do not forget: When I'm talking about NAND here, I'm talking about the NAND technology level cost reduction capabilities. Of course, NAND cost is also a function of mix, right? MCP solutions tend to carry the costs of the DRAM in them as well so they tend to be higher cost when you measure it as a cost per gigabyte of NAND. And similarly, SSD solutions because they have other costs, also tend to be higher cost. So don't confuse the reported cost changes quarter-over-quarter with the underlying technology capability of cost reductions. The mix plays a role in the deported margin numbers that we talk about.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question will come from the line of Joe Moore with Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open.

Joe Moore -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Great, thank you. I wonder if you could talk about the capital spending. You've talked about the low 30s as a percentage of sales; obviously, sales are coming in a lot better than at least I expected this year. And you'll be at that sort of high 20s. Does the low 30s comment mean that you think you're sort of spending less new at this year? And just any indications you can give us on what that means for next year?

Dave Zinsner -- Chief Financial Officer

The low 30s is more of a longer-term model. Clearly, some years will be under the low 30s, some years we might be a little bit above the low 30s. This is a very robust year from a revenue perspective and we had a plan of where we wanted to make investments both in DRAM and NAND plus clean room space we talked about in Hiroshima and Singapore. And then also some capital investments in our D organization. I think the fact that we had a bit more revenue and we had an opportunity to make some more investments we did take advantage of that this year. But clearly, it's below our model. I tell you next year, which I'm assuming Joe is the real source of your question is to try to figure out what next year might look like. I don't know the exact number yet. We're still working up the operating plan for next year.

I think Sanjay and his discussions with all of you at the analyst day made a great point about the capital intensity of these businesses going up, which is why we thought the low 30s as a percent of revenue made sense. I think if you wanted to make a guess, you'd certainly suggest that CapEx will be up next year. The magnitude of that and exactly how that would all breakdown I think is yet to be determined by us. And we'll go through the process this quarter in a very granular fashion and make sure we're getting a good ROI on everything, every dollar we put into CapEx. And then I think at the end of the fourth quarter when we're providing guidance we'll give you a very specific number in terms of CapEx.

Joe Moore -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

That's helpful. And then I wonder if you can -- there's been a bunch written about antitrust concerns here. It's not obvious to me that there would be any. I'm just wondering if you can provide any context around those articles or those things?

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

We can't really comment much on it other than the authorities in China had visited our offices had on May 31st I believe it was and had request certain information and of course we are cooperating with that and I would just like to point out that we absolutely do remain focused on disciplined and operating with a higher syndicated methods.

Operator

And our next question will come from the line of Blayne Curtis at Barclays. Your line is now open.

Blayne Curtis -- Barclays -- Analyst

Hey, guys, thanks for taking my question. I was just curious; in DRAM you saw a nice uplift in ASPs. I think you've seen them probably in or at least it was swapped, pricing comes down. Just curious -- a little more color on that mix that helped you there? And I think you mentioned servers and graphics. Just curious your outlook for those segments as you look into the second half of the calendar year?

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

I think servers and graphics we continue to see strong growth in those areas. And again, these are long-term trends. As we described earlier with cloud and all the billions of devices on the edge, all of them becoming more intelligent in terms of AI. They're absolutely driving more and more demand. We shared at the investor day, for example, AI training driven compute workloads have 2x the amount of DNAM and 6x the amount of SSD. So these trends are really secular in nature. We are at the very beginning. And same way in mobile in terms of our low power DRAM that we have very strong position. DRAM content requirements are continuing to increase and certainly graphics in console and gaming as well as some crypto-driven demands it continues to be long-term strong trend as well.

Blayne Curtis -- Barclays -- Analyst

Thanks. And maybe just a question for Dave, I just wanted maybe a clarification. Just on the NAND side: ASPs were up with mix, it looks like costs were up and I just wanted to make sure, is that just a function of selling more higher value parts and modules and such, just curious?

Dave Zinsner -- Chief Financial Officer

Sanjay even mentioned that the mix of multi-chip products into mobile was very healthy this quarter and they do have a NAND and DRAM component. Their ASPs are very high; their margin accretive I would point out. But the cost is actually higher, so the cost in ASPs did both go up but it did expand the margins on the NAND side by about 50 basis points.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question will come from the line of Srini Pajjuri with Macquarie. Your line is now open.

Srini Pajjuri -- Macquarie -- Analyst

Thank you. And let me echo my congrats as well. I guess, Sanjay, just a quick question on the server demand that you talked about. You said data center DRAM and NAND grew 87%. I can see why the NAND business is outgrowing the market, but I'm just curious, you seem to be outgrowing DRAM overall server demand, server market as well. So I'm just curious as to what's driving those share gains? If you can comment on that and then I have a follow-up.

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

I think our strong execution with our products is enabling us to really broaden and deepen our reach with our cloud customers. And over the course of last few quarters, in cloud, where we used to be underrepresented with respect to our total shares -- when you look at our total share of the DRAM industry and you look at cloud, we used to be underrepresented but with strengthening execution, our share has increased and is in line with rest of the overall DRAM industry share.

So, it is really sheer execution on our product roadmap, our ability to work closely with those customers to understand the requirements in terms of the technology, in terms of the product, and certainly understanding them in terms of supply as well. And being able to fulfill their requirement successfully. This is an important area of focus for us and I am very pleased with the performance of the company, both on the DRAM side as well as on the NAND side in this high growth market.

Srini Pajjuri -- Macquarie -- Analyst

Great. And then maybe for Dave. Dave, on the CapEx, the low 30% CapEx guidance that you talked about. You talked about expanding cleanroom, both in NAND as well as in DRAM -- I believe it was 10% in DRAM and 35% in NAND. I guess if you assume that the NAND and DRAM bit growth will sustain at the current levels, when do you think you'll need more clean room space? And whenever that is, what are the implications for the CapEx?

Dave Zinsner -- Chief Financial Officer

Difficult to predict when we would need additional cleanroom space. Obviously, these node transitions are requiring more footprint, more floor space as we move increasingly to more and more higher technologies. I'm not sure I could predict exactly when we'll need that. What we're trying to do is carefully build supply consistent with what Sanjay indicated as our long-term expectations around industry growth rates.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question will come from the line of Amit Daryanani with RBC Capital markets. Your line is now open.

Amit Daryanani -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Thanks a lot for taking my question, guys. I guess two for me as well. First of all, the 100 basis point headwind that you mentioned from 3D XPoint that's impacting you in May quarter, how do I think about that number in August quarter? What do you have baked into your guide with regard to that number and when do you see that getting to a neutral level essentially?

Dave Zinsner -- Chief Financial Officer

As I mentioned earlier, it's roughly in the same range for next quarter, assuming that we do not sell any 3D XPoint to our partner. I wouldn't rule that out as I said before. And that could happen in any quarter or multiple quarters, quite honestly, where we do sell product to our partner. And that would certainly reduce or mitigate that under loading charge. Absent that, I think the expectation is as I mentioned, that 3D XPoint products would start to be introduced in late calendar 2019 and the expectation is they would start to ramp shortly thereafter. And we'll start to see the benefits of that in terms of bringing our underutilization charges down over time.

Amit Daryanani -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Got it. And then if I could just follow-up. Cloud server demand, especially the hyper-scale side has been fairly robust for you guys. I think it's across DRAM and NAND both. And I understand all the medium to long-term dynamics that you guys have outlaid. But in the near term, I guess, is there a concern that perhaps some of the strength you have seen these customers prebuying or buying ahead and you may see a period of digestion over the next couple of quarters as a use for the capacity they've taken up. So, I guess from where you sit, do you have visibility and comfort that whatever you have shipped into these hyper-scale OEMs is getting used and absorbed and not just prebuying from their end?

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

As I pointed out earlier, we work closely with these customers and really are building strong relationships across the board. We do not see trend of building or holding product. We don't see that. The demand in cloud applications has continued to increase. You have heard cloud operators, the major cloud operators, increase their CapEx in Q1, calendar Q1 '18 over Q4 '17, by more than 20%. And on a year-over-year basis in calendar Q1, CapEx spend by major cloud holders increased by -- cloud operators increased by over 100%. And of course, meaningful part of that total cost CapEx from cloud operators is certainly going toward compute and storage and memory. And we are playing a good role in terms of supporting the needs of these customers.

So no, we do not see these trends. We work closely in assessing overall their demand requirements and expectations. And keep in mind that this is a global trend in terms of cloud data centers growth and there are several large operators around the world. And we are well engaged with most of them. So if ever there is any pause from anyone of them, it doesn't overall matter because the total trend is one of continuous growth. Again, given the value that memory and fast storage brings to the end market applications that these cloud providers are enabling for consumers as well as for businesses.

Operator

And our next question will come from the line of Harlan Sur with JP Morgan. Your line is now open.

Harlan Sur -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

Good afternoon and good job on the quarter execution and strong diversification in the business. Given the normalization in NAND pricing, is the team starting to see price elasticity effects starting to kick in? In other words, as you guys work with your customers on their second-half product launches, are you seeing SSD attach rates and notebook PCs increasing? And are you seeing more content per application in areas like smartphones and IOT devices?

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes, certainly, we do see that average capacities of NAND continue to go up in smartphones; we discussed that at the investor day as well. And certainly, for DRAM, keep going up as well. In the high-end smartphones, 6 gigabyte DRAM is being used. And that average capacity over time, even phones getting introduced in the future with 8 to 10 gigabyte, even 12 gigabyte. And similarly on the smartphone side, certainly average capacity of NAND content is continuing to increase nicely. I think at investor day we had pointed out that there is a smartphone introduced in China that has, in fact, a terabyte of flash content. So average capacities are continuing to increase. And yes, certainly, with the benefit that 64-layer technology has brought to the industry in terms of enabling lower manufacturing cost, it certainly is enabling content growth. Not only in the mobile market but also in SSDs. And last year in SSDs, somewhat average capacity growth had somewhat stalled, given the supply constraints that existed last year. And now with the benefit of 64-layer, certainly average capacities are expected to continue to increase over the course of the next several years. And yes, replacing HDDs as well both in client computing applications as well as in enterprise applications with increasing attach rates and average capacity increases as well.

Harlan Sur -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

Great. Thank you for the insights there. There have been some reports of your competitors struggling on advanced DRAM node transitions. Sanjay, can you just confirm that the Micron team is -- you guys are hitting your cost per bit targets at the 1X nanometer node? What do the initial yield and manufacturabilities look for as a team? And then as you ramp initial production volumes of 1Y in the second half of this calendar year, can you just talk about also your ability to hit your cost targets and manufacturability targets? Thank you.

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

We are executing very well on our 1X as well as 1Y technology for DRAM. I think we had already indicated that how on 1X DRAM technology we had RAM to mature yield much faster than the previous generation technology node and we have talked about that on 1X, we are on track to achieve bit output crossover in our supply in second half of this year. So, we're absolutely on track there and very pleased with the progress on 1Y technology node in DRAM as well, which we will begin production of in the second half of this year, of course following customer qualifications.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question will come from the line of Karl Ackerman with Cowen. Your line is now open.

Karl Ackerman -- Cowen -- Analyst

Hi, good afternoon everyone. I had a follow-up to the last question. So, it is widely reported that one of your competitors is struggling with yields on not just 1X but also 1Y. So do you still expect to have 10% of wafers out on 1Y this calendar year? And I guess, would you expect to have a more measured pace of the capacity expansion plans, or perhaps is your guidance for fiscal '18 capacity expansion plans in part acknowledging some of this pause from the 1Y yield ramps or yield learning on 1Y? And I have a follow-up, please.

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

I don't think we have stated the core in terms of our 1Y technology mix. What we have said is that in the second half of this year we will begin production of this technology following customer qualifications. Of course, that will then ramp up gradually over period of time, and of course, we will then be focused on ramping up the production yields of the technology as well. I think you are confusing the 10% with what we have said regarding the Hiroshima space expansion. What we have said is we're expanding the cleanroom space in Hiroshima by 10% in order to implement the 1Y transition of the install capacity there. That does not mean that we will have 10% of our DRAM production in 1Y technology. That is not the case. So I hope I clarified that with you. But as I said earlier, we are pleased with the progress that we're making with our 1Y technology development and really pleased with the execution focus of our entire team on accelerating our technology development and focus on deploying these technologies into production in order to enable us to catch up on the cost competitiveness in the industry.

Karl Ackerman -- Cowen -- Analyst

Fair enough. I tried my luck on 1Y. Perhaps more of a longer-term discussion. There are several new memory fabs announced in China in Yangtze Memory I think seems to be the furthest along. While it appears these indigenous fabs may struggle near term to access IP beyond lagging edge NAND technologies, thus limiting any real impact on supply. I was curious to hear your thoughts on how you think about the opportunity to sell supply agreements to indigenous Chinese companies in exchange for perhaps large upfront prepayments that could be used for both investment and capital return? Thank you.

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

Again, as we have said, we are focused on executing to our strategy in terms of accelerating technology development and cost competitiveness and executing well on our products. We see strong demand trends for our products in our end markets, in the well-diversified market that we have talked about. I think this is what we're focused on and this is the best way for us to focus on high ROI return on our investments, and that's our focus here.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question will come from the line of Steven Fox of Cross Research. Your line is now open.

Steven Fox -- Cross Research -- Analyst

Thanks. Good afternoon. Just one question for me. You guys early in the call mentioned multiple qualifications were under way on the eMCP products. I was curious if you could put a little color around that and whether you're referring to the rest of this year, into next year, and maybe types of customers, geographic regions et cetera that you may be seeing most demand from. Thanks.

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

With respect to eMCP, we are engaged with a broad set of customers in terms of getting our products qualified. The shipments that we have made with respect to eMCP are with 32-layer and as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, we are also focused on qualifying 64-layer based eMCP product. And just would like to point out that along with eMCP products, we are of course also focused on qualifying our 64-layer based UFS and MMC products with our customers as well and seeing good traction there. This is all part of our strategy of shifting our portfolio toward high-value solution. Having both DRAM and NAND in those eMCP solutions gives us a unique capability to provide a strong value proposition to our customers. And of course, these solutions are also, as we pointed out in our embedded markets, automotive markets. So there is a broad set of customers that we engaged with for our eMCP and discrete managed NAND solutions.

Operator

Thank you. And our last question will come from the line of Vijay Rakesh with Mizuho. Your line is now open.

Vijay Rakesh -- Mizuho -- Analyst

Hi, guys, thanks for the opportunity. Good quarter and good guide. Just one question: As you look at the 96 layer and 1X, can you talk about what kind of cost reduction you see once it gets to steady levels?

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

We do not provide cost reduction for these technologies. For competitive reasons, we don't disclose that. But I can tell you that in NAND if you look at our track record and Micron's capabilities of CMOS under the array, we have produced the smallest die in the industry with our 3D NAND. And on the DRAM front, we are continuing to focus on bringing in next-generation technology nodes to narrow the cost gap that we have currently in the industry. And we are making very good progress as you can see in our results of FQ3 as well as in our guide of FQ4. We're making very good progress on all those fronts.

Vijay Rakesh -- Mizuho -- Analyst

Last question here. When you look at the second half, obviously first half has been very strong. As we go to the half, where do you see inventory levels in both DRAM and NAND?

Dave Zinsner -- Chief Financial Officer

So inventory, as you probably noticed, was up a little bit this quarter. I'd point out that finished goods inventory was actually down by about $50 million. It was all up in whip and that was driven by this crossover on 64-layer and the ramp-up of the 1X technology that drove the inventory up. Early to make a prediction on next quarter, but maybe what I tell you more holistically is as Manish talked about in the analyst day. We really are looking at inventory and intend to make good progress on just refining our ability to manage with lower days. So that's kind of our goal but that'll happen over time.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes our question and answer session today. Thank you for your participation on today's conference. This will conclude our program and we all may disconnect. Everybody, have a wonderful day.

Duration: 64 minutes

Call participants:

Shanye Hudson -- Head of Investor Relations

Sanjay Mehrotra -- Chief Executive Officer

Dave Zinsner -- Chief Financial Officer

Romit Shah -- Nomura -- Analyst

CJ Muse -- Evercore -- Analyst

John Pitzer -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Blayne Curtis -- Barclays -- Analyst

Srini Pajjuri -- Macquarie -- Analyst

Amit Daryanani -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Harlan Sur -- JP Morgan -- Analyst

Karl Ackerman -- Cowen -- Analyst

Steven Fox -- Cross Research -- Analyst

Vijay Rakesh -- Mizuho -- Analyst

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