Showing posts with label armada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label armada. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Marvell provides ARMADA CPUs to Dell

Dell announced today that it is experimenting with ARM processor based servers and shipping product to partners. The "Copper" servers will be used mainly for evaluation. ARM processors currently are limited to 32-bit paths, but almost all current servers run 64-bit software. ARM is planning to introduce a 64-bit CPU architecture, probably some time in 2013. Dell presumably would start selling commercial quantities of the ARM based servers in 2014.

ARM licenses its architecture to many semiconductor companies. What ARM processor did Dell choose for its preliminary designs? ARMADA XP by Marvell.

This critical detail is near the bottom of the Dell ARM Servers press release. In the more detailed Introducing Copper blog there is a a video of a talk with Christina Tiner, who points out the ARMADA CPUs about a minute and a half into the video.

There is also a Marvell Powers Dell Copper ARM Server release from Marvell.

It is probably no reason to buy or sell Marvell stock. ARMADA is getting a lot of traction, but you can bet other ARM processor makers like Texas Instruments will be gunning for the slot in the commercial run. Dell could even abandon the project if customers decide that ARM really is not all that great at running web workloads when compared to x86 based processors.

Still, it puts Marvell on the inside track to what may the next big wave in computer processing.

Disclaimer: I am invested in Marvell stock.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Marvell Technology Group Hones Edge

Marvell Technology Group (MRVL) was started by a young man, Sehat Sutardja, with a belief that he could make a better chip for controlling disk drives. 16 years later, Marvell dominates the market for hard disk drive controller chips, but now receives about half of its revenue from other market segments.

At the CES this year Marvell showed off some products that again put Marvell on the bleeding edge. I'll come back to those after providing some background for those of you not so familiar with the Marvell story.

For investors the last few year with Marvell have been tough. The stock pays no dividend. After splitting in 2004 and again in 2006, the stock price entered 2007 at well over $20 per share. At the 2008 bottom it hit a low around $4.48. Today it ended sharply up at $15.12 and representing a market capitalization of $8.8 billion.

These stock price gyrations exaggerated Marvell's changes in revenues and net income. Total 2006 (fiscal 2007) revenue was $2.24 billion, with slightly negative net income. Revenues for 2010 (fiscal year 2011, ending January 29) were up to $3.6 billion, with net income hitting $904 million. This fiscal year 2012 revenues are trending towards $3.45 billion, but with just $690 million net income.

A series of problems and even a catastrophe hid Marvell's growing profit potential in 2011. Aside from general global economic turmoil, one major problem was RIM's failure to recapture lost market share with its newer Blackberry smartphone models. This may or may not be temporary. Marvell makes the processors for some Blackberry models. Marvell did not get a slot in the new RIM PlayBook tablet, which sold poorly. It appears that the failures are largely RIM's, and often software related. The Marvell processors, when used, seem to work well.

The catastrophe was flooding in Thailand, which knocked HDD (hard disk drive) factories out of commission, and so the revenue for HDD controller chips will be low for the current quarter. Factories should be mostly back online by February 1 when Marvell's new fiscal year begins.

Meanwhile the main good news has been the rapid ramping of sales of Marvell-processor based smartphones in China. Marvell's chips not only include the processor, but most of the functions needed to run a smartphone (graphics, cellular modem, wi-fi, bluetooth). Thus while brand-happy Chinese are dying (almost literally) to get iPhones, the middle-class masses are buying Android based smartphones that run on a new high-speed, invented-in-China protocol, TD. The ramp in revenue from this in calendar 2012 will be substantial, and the baseline should be noted in the Q4 report due in early March.

Which brings us back to CES (and leaves out Marvell's leading enterprise-grade Wi-Fi and wired internet switch chips). I can only hit highlights, so many products were introduced.

Foremost, Google chose Marvell's ARMADA 1500 HD Media System-on-Chip (SoC) for the next generation of Google TV. While there is no guarantee that Google TV will become a mass market product, it does much to validate the hundreds of millions of dollars Marvell has invested in research and development for ARMADA and related technologies. ARMADA is ARM-based and contains many of the same technologies used with smartphones and tablets. Google has worked closely with NVIDIA, Qualcomm and other ARM-based chip designers; this is a clear sign Marvell is also in the inner circle. The ARMADA chip series has been adopted by OEMs for a wide range of consumer and business appliance applications. See also ARMADA and PXA application processors.

Plug computers are a Marvell invention: inexpensive, small but powerful computers that plug directly into electric sockets and can act as local servers. SMILE plugs are designed to connect a classroom of up to 60 students and complement the One Laptop per Child program and Marvell ARMADA based low cost, low power tablet computers. This is mainly for developing nations, but given funding shortages should be considered by U.S. schools as well.

In storage, much has been said about replacing hard drives with SSDs, and PCs with Flash-based tablets. Change has come slowly. Marvell already leads in SSD controller chips. Now it introduced a chip that attached through PCIe, an existing, faster port than the standard SATA disk port. Everyone agrees this will be popular. Alternately another chip allows for an SSD and hard drive to function together better to lower response times while keeping bulk storage costs low.

Consumer home connectivity and automation were addressed by several products. New models of Avastar wireless chips make it easier for all sorts of devices to connect, including Internet phones and video surveillance. Lighting with LEDs was specifically addressed with new, automation-ready chips. The Smart Energy Platform, a combination of a wireless microcontroller and management software, is aimed at lowering price points for energy-conscious appliances in the home.

Except for Google, OEMs will make their own announcements as branded products become available this year.

I will wait on management's Q4 fiscal 2012 in early March before trying to estimate directionality for the new year. Technology is rapidly evolving. More individual devices mean more information needs to be stored in the cloud, requiring in turn more HDD storage and connectivity. All these trends favor Marvell, but competitors will be gunning for the same revenue and profits.

What do I think would most enhance shareholder value? A dividend. As of last quarter Marvell had 2.4 billion in cash, no debt, and cash flow of $262 million. Marvell has used its cash mainly for stock buy backs, and is likely to continue to do so.

Disclaimer: I am long Marvell. I seldom trade the stock and won't for a week after this article is published.

Keep diversified!

Monday, March 8, 2010

Marvell Sees Inflection Point

Marvell Technology Group, Ltd. (MRVL) is led by Sehat Sutardja, who built the company on his invention of a better chip to enable hard disk drives. Marvell has been the leading (by market share) supplier of hard drive controller chips for years, and this segment still represented 50% of revenue for the latest quarter. Marvell has also branched out to a variety of newer areas, based on its ability to combine analog functions and digital functions on a single chip (called SoC, for System on Chip).

Marvell was hit hard by the recession: in fiscal Q4 2009, ending January 30, 2009, it had $512 million in revenues, down from a peak of $843 million in the quarter ending August 2, 2008.

Last week Marvell reported for fiscal Q4 2010, ending January 30, 2010, revenues of $842 million. GAAP net income was an amazing $205 million; cash flow from operations was $281 million.

But the future, while speculative, could be even more amazing. Sehat referred to a coming inflection point. An inflection point on a curve can be from going down to up or vice versa, but in this case he is talking about a dramatic increase is Marvell's revenue growth rate.

As I have pointed out in the past, Marvell spent a lot of money on research and development in the earlier part of this decade, and only cut back a little during the recession. This year new products that were sampled in 2009 are ramping into volume production, and new products sampling this year are going to ramp in 2011. What are those new products?

Most notable are "communication processors" for smart phones, particularly the oPhone beginning to be sold in China. In order to get a price point low enough for mass marketing in China, more features than ever before had to be integrated into a single semiconductor chip. Marvell is unique in being able to offer general application and signal processing, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, graphics, and cellular modem. Over 90% of oPhone models (there are several companies building them) use Marvell chips.

This alone could be sufficient to cause the inflection point. While the oPhones are far less expensive than models sold in the U.S., Marvell gets very good profit margins on the chips it makes for them. Start multiplying these per-chip margins by the 100s of millions of likely oPhone buyers in China, and you can see the potential.

But there is more. Marvell has become an increasingly prominent player in high-speed Internet switching chips. The competition there is intense, but intense competition has not impeded Marvell for very long in other fields it has chosen to enter.

Many of the newer products will be based on a microprocessor line called Armada. The thing about Marvell is that unlike Intel, they usually don't just make a microprocessor and sell it to customers who put it in a socket. Marvell works with manufacturers to integrate exactly what they need for their products on a single chip that incorporates the microprocessor. This gives faster execution and communication times and reduces costs, while leaving Marvell an ample profit margin.

Expect new products to be announced based on Marvell technology all though 2010 and 2011 (and likely well beyond).

While competition is intense and there are many pitfalls, it looks to me like Marvell is going to become the very center of the semiconductor chip industry during this decade. Of course others have already entered the SoC business, and stand-alone chips will continue to be manufactured for equipment with volumes insufficient to justify an SoC design. I'm not saying the engineers at Intel, AMD, NVIDIA, Broadcom, Microchip, etc. are not very good, and all these companies have plenty of financial ability to compete however they like. But Marvell seems to have found how to

I have owned Marvell stock since January 2005.

For detailed results from Marvell's latest reported quarter, see my

Marvell Technology (MRVL) Q4 2010 analyst conference summary

See also www.marvel.com