Earnings Call
Lumentum Holdings Inc. (LITE)
Earnings Call Transcript - LITE Q2 2021
Operator, Operator
Good day, everyone. And welcome to the Lumentum Second Quarter Fiscal Year 2021 Earnings Call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. Please also note today's event is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the conference call over to Jim Fanucchi of Darrow Associates. Sir, please go ahead.
Jim Fanucchi, Investor Relations
Thank you, operator. Welcome to Lumentum’s second quarter fiscal year 2021 earnings call. This is Jim Fanucchi from Darrow Associates, assisting Lumentum with its Investor Relations. Joining the call today from the company's management team, we have Alan Lowe, President and Chief Executive Officer; Wajid Ali, Chief Financial Officer, and Chris Coldren, Senior Vice President of Strategy and Corporate Development. Today's call will include forward-looking statements, including statements regarding the markets in which we operate and our position in such markets, the impact of COVID-19 and responsive actions thereto on our business and continuing uncertainty in this regard, trends and expectations for our products and technology, our markets, market opportunity and customers, our proposed acquisition of Coherent, and our expected financial performance, including our guidance as well as statements regarding our future revenues, our financial model and our margin targets. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our current expectations, particularly the risk factors described in our SEC filings, including the company's quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the fiscal quarter ended December 26, 2020, which the company expects to file later today and in Lumentum’s 10-K for fiscal year 2020 ended June 27, 2020. The forward-looking statements provided during this call are based on Lumentum’s reasonable beliefs and expectations as of today. Lumentum undertakes no obligation to update these statements except as required by applicable law. Please also note unless otherwise stated all results and projections discussed in this call are non-GAAP. Non-GAAP financials are not to be considered as a substitute form or superior to financials prepared in accordance with GAAP. Lumentum’s press release with the second quarter fiscal 2021 results and accompanying supplemental slides are available on its website at www.lumentum.com under the Investors section, and includes additional details about our non-GAAP financial measures and the reconciliation between our historical GAAP and non-GAAP results. Now, I will turn the call over to Alan for his comments.
Alan Lowe, CEO
Thank you, Jim. Good morning, everyone. Before getting into the details of our business results, I'd like to make some comments about the COVID-19 pandemic. There have been a lot of developments since our last earnings call. We have unfortunately seen the significant impact of the COVID-19 pandemic expand to millions of people around the globe. Our thoughts are with all of those affected, and the healthcare professionals who selflessly make a difference on the frontlines every day. Fortunately, we have also seen the development and early distribution of effective vaccines. This gives me optimism that the dark days we are living through will pass and there is a path to better days. We thank those who have developed and are now manufacturing these vaccines that are beginning to protect people. While I can't put us in the same category as these lifesavers, I am proud that Lumentum plays an important role in the critical infrastructure that helps people safely continue their work, education and life during these challenging times. Now on to our business and financial results for the second quarter. Increased demand in Telecom and Lasers added to the positive momentum from the prior quarter, resulting in record revenue, non-GAAP gross margin, operating margin and earnings per share. For the first time ever, we achieved gross margins in excess of 53% and operating margins above 35%. As pleased as I am with these results, and the progress we've made in driving towards our strategic and financial goals, I'm as excited as ever about the opportunities ahead. As I often say, the future is truly bright at Lumentum. We are well positioned to grow revenue and earnings into the future. We believe long-term market trends are very favorable. We also believe there are upcoming growth catalysts in each of our markets. The accelerating shift to digital and virtual approaches to all aspects of work and life describing staggering amounts of data in the world's networks and cloud data centers. To meet the challenges created by this digital transformation, our industry is poised for major new technology transitions that we believe are well served by our products and capabilities. These include higher speed telecom and datacom transmission solutions in the range of 400 to 800 gig, photonic solutions for 5G fronthaul and backhaul and newer advanced ROADMs and other telecom transport solutions. The computer vision revolution that is driving our 3D sensing and LiDAR business is in its early days. Computational photography and augmented and virtual reality should drive the expansion of world-facing 3D sensing across many new smartphone designs and into consumer electronic devices and wearables. The increasing use of LiDAR and in-cabin 3D sensing in automobiles and delivery vehicles significantly adds to our long-term market opportunities. We have made significant investments in R&D and developed a broad portfolio of new products and technologies that address both upcoming and long-term growth opportunities. This has been done in close coordination with our customers, and we have obtained many important design wins. We are now starting to scale up production of many of these new products. We have exited underperforming product lines that would have been a drag on future growth. We continue to lower our fixed costs, thus increasing operating leverage and profitability as we grow. Our second quarter results underscore all of these points with strong incremental profitability and an increasing level of new products in the revenue mix. Two weeks ago, we announced the Coherent acquisition which will expand and diversify our revenue and market opportunities. A motivating factor for this transaction is the significant role we believe photonics will play across the value chains, supporting many important long-term secular trends. For example, this includes the increasing role that lasers and photonics play in the manufacturing of the growing number of advanced semiconductors, displays and microelectronics that enable the digital transformation that I mentioned earlier. Another example is the increasing role of lasers and photonics in the manufacturing and supply chains of electric vehicles and energy storage solutions. This is an important and significant opportunity as the world transitions to these sustainable technologies to combat climate change. The Coherent acquisition will expand our market opportunities in fertile new areas for photonics, including in bioinstrumentation and aerospace and defense. It will also strengthen our innovation engine to better serve customers of today and tomorrow. In addition to the top-line growth opportunities I have outlined, we believe there are significant efficiencies and optimizations to be gained in the combination with Coherent. With our proven track record of execution, we are confident the combination will ultimately deliver financial performance consistent with the targets we set forth in our first quarterly earnings call last November. I look forward to a timely completion of this transaction and the welcoming of the talented employees of Coherent to the Lumentum team. While the future is truly bright at Lumentum, I believe it will be even brighter with the addition of Coherent. Now on some more details about our second quarter. Telecom and Datacom revenue grew 10% sequentially and 7% year-on-year, excluding revenue from the low margin product lines we have divested or discontinued, Telecom and Datacom revenue grew 17% year-on-year. The largest contributors to growth in the second quarter were ROADMs, high-speed 600 and 800 gig indium phosphide Coherent components, DCO modules, and submarine products. Late in December, one of our contract manufacturing partners in Malaysia temporarily suspended production to implement measures to protect employees from COVID-19. This impacted second quarter revenue by approximately $6 million. In Telecom, we continue to see our revenue mix shifting toward new products aligned with our customers’ next generation systems. In the second quarter we further ramped 400G and higher speed transmission solutions, and we qualified several new ROADM designs with major customers in the West and in China. As I mentioned earlier, the Telecom and Datacom industry is poised for a transition to next generation networks. We anticipate strong growth in the coming years as network operators deploy 400, 600 and 800 gig systems with new integrated transmission solutions and ROADMs. We believe this upcoming telecom technology upgrade cycle has been delayed by COVID-19, which should start to accelerate as global vaccinations increase over time. In our Datacom chip business, as expected, 5G fronthaul weakness in China impacted second quarter growth. Cloud demand remains very robust. Last quarter, we adjusted our wafer restart to better align with this new demand mix and expect to grow into the third quarter. We have a large and growing multi-quarter backlog. Market dynamics are favorable with increasing volumes and transitions to higher speeds, where we have very differentiated products. Revenue from high speed PAM4 EML has nearly doubled from year ago levels. And we recently introduced a breakthrough 53 gigabaud PAM4 DML as customers seek even more cost effective solutions to accelerate 400G growth and future 800G applications. Our wafer fab expansion plans are on track with meaningful capacity additions coming online later this calendar year. Looking to the third quarter we expect Telecom and Datacom revenues to be down sequentially due to seasonal factors and the anticipated timing of new end customer deployments. Industrial and Consumer revenue declined modestly quarter-on-quarter. We believe we have a larger 3D sensing opportunity this fiscal year compared to the last but it will be spread out more broadly in time. As such, we expect a lower seasonal decline in the third quarter compared with prior years. Within Industrial and Consumer, the contribution from Industrial is now approximately 5%, about half of where it has been over the past several years. This has been driven by a transition to selling chips versus modules. We are optimistic about growth in the 3D sensing market in the coming years. We believe the introduction of 5G is driving an accelerated smartphone upgrade cycle. New applications such as computational photography and augmented and virtual reality have the potential to drive world-facing 3D sensing capabilities, more broadly, especially across the Android customer base. We are working closely with major Android customers on world-facing 3D sensing capabilities for their future products as they seek to differentiate their offerings. We believe our experience and leadership in current high volume world-facing deployments positions us very well with these customers. We believe new customer devices and wearables that may reach the market in the coming years will benefit from 3D sensing capabilities and will drive additional market growth. Adding to this, customers in the security and access control market are looking for 3D sensing to enable higher security and touchless, contactless solutions. This is of increasing importance in a post-COVID-19 world. LiDAR and 3D sensing for automobiles and delivery vehicles add significantly to our long-term market opportunities. We believe our unmatched and invaluable photonics experience spanning 3D sensing, communications and industrial lasers gives us a competitive advantage as we pursue these new opportunities. We are closely engaged with a wide range of customers. These include autonomous and delivery vehicle manufacturers, major Tier 1 auto suppliers, and LiDAR solution providers. During our second quarter, we completed a number of design wins, some of which are targeting startup production during calendar year '22. In addition, we have many other customer engagements that are in various stages of qualification. Turning to Commercial Lasers, revenue grew 24% quarter-on-quarter. The largest contributor to growth was micromaterials processing, including 5G applications. We expect lasers growth to continue into the third quarter. But we believe that it will take several quarters before we get back to the revenue levels we saw in fiscal '20. We are cautiously optimistic that we have seen the worst of the impact from COVID-19. Lasers gross margin also grew quarter-on-quarter to 47.5%. We believe we are a leader in the lasers industry on this metric, despite having significantly lower scale than larger industry players. We believe this is because we have unique design and manufacturing experience and capabilities borne from our many years of leadership in the photonics market. We expect to leverage this experience and these capabilities when we are able to combine with Coherent. Throughout my remarks, I've highlighted how we are well positioned for continued top and bottom-line growth over the next several years. We have made significant investments in differentiated new technology and products for new customer programs, attained many key design wins and are on track for more. In each of our markets, there are significant catalysts for growth. We have a new generation of telecom and datacom solutions and customers who are poised to ramp them. We have the expansion of world-facing 3D sensing and mobile devices and wearables, and emerging LiDAR applications further add to our market opportunity. The broader lasers market we address is recovering from the impact of COVID-19. And we will benefit from this and additional growth driven by differentiated new products. We have exited underperforming product lines that would have been a drag on future growth. The Coherent acquisition brings a significant opportunity to create a larger, more diverse photonics technology company, one with leading capabilities well aligned with many important long-term trends and financial performance consistent with the targets we previously set for Lumentum. Before handing it over to Wajid to review the numbers, I want to thank and acknowledge all of our employees around the world. They have been incredible, especially so working through the pandemic. Our employees are absolutely the company's greatest asset. I would also like to thank our customers, suppliers and shareholders for their support and partnership during these challenging times. With that, I'll hand it over to Wajid.
Wajid Ali, CFO
Thank you, Alan. Good morning, everyone. Turning to the second quarter's numbers. Net revenue for the second quarter was $478.8 million, which was up 6% sequentially and 5% year-on-year. GAAP gross margin for the second quarter was 48%, GAAP operating margin was 24.1% and the GAAP diluted net income per share was $1.06. Second quarter non-GAAP gross margin was 53.4%, which was up 140 basis points sequentially and up 600 basis points year-on-year. The sequential and year-on-year growth was driven by improved gross margins in both the Optical Communications and Lasers segments. As Alan highlighted, this record gross margin performance demonstrates the improvements we have made in our financial model. Second quarter non-GAAP operating margin at 35.5% increased 180 basis points sequentially and 670 basis points year-on-year. These results were driven by gross margin improvements as operating expenses have increased due to increased investment in new capabilities. Second quarter non-GAAP operating expenses totaled $86 million or 18% of revenue. SG&A expense was $38.2 million R&D expense was $47.8 million. Second quarter non-GAAP net income was $155.7 million this includes $200,000 of net interest and other income and $14.4 million of tax expense. Other income is down sequentially as interest rates on our cash and short-term investments are lower overall and we are being more conservative in our investment portfolio. Non-GAAP diluted net income per share was $1.99 based on a fully diluted share count of 78.4 million. On the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with $1.7 billion in cash and short-term investments, up $90 million quarter-on-quarter. We have $1.5 billion in aggregate principal convertible notes and no term debt. Of these convertible notes, $450 million is due in 2024 and $1.05 billion is due in 2026. The total cash interest expense associated with these notes is approximately $6 million per year. Turning to segment details. Second quarter Optical Communications segment revenue at $449.1 million increased 5% sequentially due to growth in Telecom and Datacom and 10% year-on-year due to higher Telecom and Datacom, and Industrial and Consumer revenues. Optical Communications segment gross margin at 53.8% increased 130 basis points sequentially primarily due to higher ROADM volumes and improvements in manufacturing efficiencies and 580 basis points year-on-year due to a more favorable revenue mix, improved Telecom and Datacom margins and synergies from the Oclaro acquisition. Our Lasers segment revenue at $29.7 million increased 24% sequentially, but remains 39% down year-on-year due to COVID-19 impacting demand. Second quarter Lasers gross margin increased to 47.5% due to an increase in manufacturing volumes and mix favorability. Now onto our guidance for the third quarter of fiscal ‘21. Please note the outlook we are providing is on a non-GAAP basis and is based on our assumptions as of today. We expect net revenue for the third quarter of fiscal '21 to be in the range of $425 million to $440 million. This revenue projection includes Telecom and Datacom declining sequentially due to seasonality and the timing of end customer deployments, Industrial and Consumer declining due to seasonality and Commercial Lasers increasing quarter-on-quarter driven by further market recovery from COVID-19. Based on this, we project third quarter operating margin to be in the range of 27.5% to 29.5%, and diluted net income per share to be in the range of $1.31 to $1.46. At the midpoint, these projections incorporate an approximate $6 million increase in operating expenses, primarily related to the annual reset in payroll tax and benefits rates, new hiring and the additional payroll expense associated with our 14 week quarter. These projections also assume an approximate share count of 80 million, an estimated other expense of $0.8 million and an estimated tax expense of $12 million. During our first quarter earnings call last November, we provided a new target model for the company. While our second half fiscal '21 performance is still expected to be below the target model due to seasonality, given our first half performance, we believe we will meet or exceed our gross and operating margin targets for the full fiscal year. With that said, I should emphasize that we intend to grow our investments in R&D to lead the market in innovation and to expand our long-term market opportunities as Alan highlighted earlier. With that, I'll turn the call back to Jim to start the Q&A session. Jim?
Jim Fanucchi, Investor Relations
Thank you, Wajid. Before we start the question-and-answer session, I would like to ask everyone to keep to one question and one follow-up. This should help us get to everyone before the end of our allotted time. Operator, let's begin with a question-and-answer session.
Operator, Operator
Our first question today comes from Thomas O'Malley from Barclays.
Thomas O'Malley, Analyst
I just had a question on mix in the top-line. You started this year out talking about how this year December could be seasonally the peak for your largest customer and diving into the results here it looks like that might have even come down from the September quarter. Can you just describe what's going on there? Is that something about prebuilding units or has there been a shift in some shares, any details there would be helpful?
Chris Coldren, SVP of Strategy and Corporate Development
Hey, Tom, this is Chris. As we enter the first quarter, the situation is quite different due to the impact of COVID and shutdowns in Asia followed by a recovery phase. While I'm not entirely sure we can discuss any prebuilds specifically, we definitely shipped a significant amount of product during the September quarter. However, the end customers did not have access to those products until afterwards, indicating some accumulation on our side. Additionally, we acknowledge the ongoing concern regarding our market share, and we believe we still hold a strong position with our top customer. That said, we do expect increased competition and recognize that there might be some share loss in the December quarter. However, we remain confident that this won’t diminish our overall strong standing with our customer.
Thomas O'Malley, Analyst
And then on the follow-up, obviously, on the gross margins as well. The strong performance in December is indicative of some strength in the Telecom and Datacom core business. Can you talk about what drove that? You indicated some increased modem sales. And then you also talked about a Western customer coming on it. Is that something that's going to increase that gross margin profile as well as going forward and this higher rate kind of sustainable as you go through the end of the year? Obviously, you commented on hitting that fiscal year target. But just anything on the margins going forward at this higher rate?
Alan Lowe, CEO
Yes, Tom, I’ll share my perspective and then let Wajid provide any additional insights. Looking at the quarter, our chip business saw a decline while our margins improved. This reflects the gross margin enhancement in our Lasers, which we previously discussed, particularly in Telecom, driven by substantial growth in transport, including our ROADMs. We had a strong quarter for ROADMs, and I believe this success stems from our differentiated products. We plan to continue investing in R&D to provide our customers with valuable propositions that justify their willingness to pay, which in turn supports our margins. That summarizes my view. Wajid, do you want to chime in?
Wajid Ali, CFO
Yes, Thomas, if you look at our comments at the beginning of the quarter, we mentioned that we were developing a new business model with 50% gross margins and 30% operating margins. At that time, we didn't believe we would achieve that model for the full fiscal year and considered it more of a mid-term goal. However, based on our current script, we now expect to meet or exceed that model for the full fiscal year. Overall, things have improved for us, thanks to the new products Alan mentioned, our efforts to reduce fixed costs in our manufacturing facilities, and the growth in our Lasers business contributing positively to our operations. As Alan pointed out, even though the chip business has slightly declined, we have managed to maintain our gross margins, giving us confidence for the full year.
Operator, Operator
And our next question comes from Alex Needham from Needham and Company.
Alex Needham, Analyst
Oh, I wasn't aware that I was associated with Needham, that's a new one. That's really interesting. I wanted to revisit the 3D sensing topic. There seems to be significant concern regarding the competition in that area. Some individuals seem to believe that you might have overextended yourself regarding your allocation, market share, and pricing with your main customer, suggesting that price pressure may increase or that share loss could be steeper as one of your key customers adjusts their outlook. Can you address whether there is any validity to these concerns? Or is it an overstatement? Should we anticipate a substantial change in your market share allocation? Additionally, do you expect to maintain a growth trajectory in your 3D sensing business throughout calendar year 2021?
Alan Lowe, CEO
Yes, Alex. I think, as far as the share concern it’s hard to tell where we are. I would say that our focus is to really make sure that we continue to be the design house for not just our leading customer, but for all of our 3D sensing customers. And I'll tell you that the team is focused on allowing our customers to get to market with differentiated products like the world-facing that we ramped and shipped a lot of those units and doing quite well. So as far as share commitments and pricing, I'm not going to comment too much on that. Other than to say we do have long-term agreements in place that, we know what our share is going to be at a minimum, and we believe we're getting significantly more than that, especially as we ramp new products because of our leadership position, our ability, and a proven track record of ramping new products. Chris, do you have anything to add on that?
Chris Coldren, SVP of Strategy and Corporate Development
No, I think you've covered it well, Alan. I mean, I think certainly that as we look ahead, the computer vision revolution that this 3D sensing plays into is in its very early days. So as we look out to calendar ‘21 or our fiscal ‘22, there's plenty of growth catalysts in 3D sensing proper. And then obviously at least in our vernacular where we are wrapping LiDAR in our 3D sensing business unit, we've got world-facing capabilities, have emerged in our top customer and really are driven by photography applications. And that's been a killer app for smartphones for the past decade. And we have a lot of engagement and traction with Android customers who need to have that capability in order to have that top-notch world-class camera going into their future product cycles. Then you have things outside of phones and whether that be wearables or other devices that will ultimately incorporate 3D sensing. And as Alan highlighted on in his prepared remarks, the automotive ramp of LiDAR is in very early stages; we've got design wins that should start to ramp up to levels of production in our calendar year ‘22. So I think there's a long growth trajectory in our 3D sensing business, whether that's calendar ‘21, into calendar ‘22 and beyond.
Alex Needham, Analyst
So is that a yes? You expect growth in 3D sensing in calendar ‘21?
Chris Coldren, SVP of Strategy and Corporate Development
Absolutely.
Alex Needham, Analyst
The second question I had is really on the Android side. Obviously, these high-end Apple products have been much better than anybody had expected, and clearly the photography app in particular was a key piece of that. There was a discussion in the prior quarter that the Android manufacturers were worried about COVID and therefore were shifting more of the focus to the lower end of the margin, their product line and therefore were slower to adopt world-facing and some of the additional technologies implied. Has that shifted as a result of the significant success at the high end of the market that Apple experienced?
Alan Lowe, CEO
Yes, Alex, I think, whether it's shifted or not, I think we've been engaged with all of the Android suppliers on world-facing products. And I guess the flurry of activity has increased some, but until they announce a product or until they have a plan of record that includes world-facing 3D sensing, it's not part of the plan on record. And so our anticipation is that later this year, we'll start seeing that in a more meaningful way. And that's why we're very confident that calendar year '22 will see expansion beyond our lead customers into the Android world.
Operator, Operator
And our next question comes from Meta Marshall from Morgan Stanley.
Meta Marshall, Analyst
I wanted to ask a couple of questions. One, clearly the Telecom business is doing quite well. But just with one of your major customers, Ciena, kind of expecting a second half rebound in their business, just the timing of when you might see some further uptick in the Telecom business from resumption from major customers? And then the second piece is, clearly, the DCO business is doing quite well, as you noted in the transcript. With the Acacia transaction closing, is there any expected disruption to that partnership or you would expect that to continue for the DCO business?
Alan Lowe, CEO
Yes, I won’t comment on a specific customer, as that could lead to issues. However, I can mention that our latest products, including the 400, 600, and 800 gig systems, as well as our new ROADM, have been developed based on customer input and are ready for deployment. The only barrier to deployment is the need to install these new systems, which requires more effort than simply adding older technology. I believe that as vaccination rates increase globally, we will see more activity, and by the second half of the year, these deployments will become significant. We are preparing by adding capacity in anticipation of this uptick. Our outlook for the second half of the year is strong, with substantial deployments of the latest systems to support the ongoing digital transformation. Regarding DCOs, we are experiencing considerable growth with our DCO products and are actively working on the 400 gig DCO. The acquisition of Acacia shouldn't negatively affect us, as customers prefer not to rely on a competitor. In fact, we’ve gained more traction as an independent DCO module supplier in the last six months than before, which is encouraging from both angles.
Operator, Operator
And our next question comes from Samik Chatterjee from JP Morgan.
Samik Chatterjee, Analyst
I just wanted to start up, firstly, on the automotive LiDAR opportunity and see if you can talk about what you are seeing in relation to how the automotive LiDAR supply chain is developing? I'm just curious, because you mentioned you're working with OEMs, as well as some of the LiDAR solution providers? How critical should we think Lumentum's IP and design capabilities are? Or is there an opportunity for us on the LiDAR solution providers to kind of have their own designs and work with contract manufacturers directly? And I have a follow-up.
Alan Lowe, CEO
Yes. Thanks, Samik. That’s a great question, yes. So I would say that the value Lumentum brings to LiDAR in the automotive space in general is obviously the leadership we have in both 3D sensing and Telecom, and in our Industrial and Commercial Lasers business we bring a wealth of capability and technology to bear. And our strategy and goal is to be a partner of all the folks building LiDAR, whether that be, I think the LiDAR solution providers, if you will, the folks that are building modules, or the folks that are actually putting LiDAR into their automobile applications. And today, what's exciting about this opportunity, obviously, is over the long run, it can be very significant with the base number of, say 100 million, or at least the order of 100 million vehicles that are produced every year. Just having, perhaps at the laser chip level, tens of dollars a content, or at the module level, hundreds of dollars a content for automobile adds up to a pretty big market. And what we see today in terms of the supply chain is varied because there's a lot of new players in this and it's very transformational for the automotive industry, new technology, that’s not necessarily the traditional auto manufacturers, auto suppliers, being clear cut leaders in. So what I would say is our partnerships span from traditional auto manufacturers to autonomous vehicle manufacturers to folks that are building LiDAR modules, then supplying into those same supply chains. And in the nearer term, perhaps the delivery vehicle, autonomous vehicle is where we're seeing not only the most traction, but probably where you'll see the initial sales go into because they're able to move a little faster and ramp a little more quickly, whereas the consumer or passenger vehicles, if you will, that you or I would drive or hopefully not drive and sit in, let it drive itself are a little longer term. But probably the larger opportunity, and those get rolling probably a couple of years after the start of the autonomous vehicle and delivery vehicle applications.
Samik Chatterjee, Analyst
Got it. That's very helpful. Chris, if I can just follow-up on the Datacom side. I think you talked about the 5G fronthaul demand moderating in China. How should we think about capacity plans? I think you had outlined doubling capacity on the Datacom chipset side? Are we still kind of on track to do that given some of the moderation in demand? And then what are the broader implications here for the Telecom group? And should we expect to see some softness in Telecom as kind of broadly seeping through the weakness you're seeing in China in 5G rollouts?
Alan Lowe, CEO
Yes, this is Alan. What we mentioned in the last call was that we've observed a slowdown or pause in 5G deployment. Prior to this, there was a lot of excitement around the 5G rollout. Currently, we are experiencing some inventory depletion of Datacom chips and 5G infrastructure being deployed, particularly in China, though at a lower rate than we anticipated at the end of last year. However, I believe there will still be a substantial number of radio base stations shipped in China, and we expect to see a resurgence in 5G activity as this inventory is reduced. The demand from hyperscale customers remains very strong, especially for our distinct products in both EMLs and the DMLs at 53 gigabaud. We are seeing significant traction as hyperscalers transition to higher-speed Datacom transceivers that utilize our advanced EMLs and DMLs. We remain optimistic about the demand as this capacity comes online. As we noted two quarters ago, we are on track to double our wafer capacity later this year, and we believe it will be utilized, as we have a growing backlog that spans multiple quarters. We do have demand that we need to fulfill, and as we increase our capacity, our Datacom business is set to grow. Chris, would you like to address the Telecom aspect?
Chris Coldren, SVP of Strategy and Corporate Development
I don't believe the factors causing the softness in China's 5G market are necessarily the same as those leading to a slowdown in Telecom. In fact, as Alan mentioned, China aggressively pursued its 5G goals with national objectives for base station deployments. The Telecom companies are just trying to keep pace with this rapid progress. Regarding the current state of the telecom market, while there have been areas of strength over the past year, particularly in some ACO and 100-gig solutions, ROADMs have shown slower performance recently. However, we did notice an improvement in the past quarter, returning to levels similar to those from two years ago. We believe that, as Alan pointed out, the telecom market is poised for growth or acceleration once global travel resumes and new networks can be installed. The 5G challenges in China are likely temporary, and there is still significant 5G deployment ahead both in China and internationally to support global 5G initiatives.
Operator, Operator
Our next question comes from Rod Hall from Goldman Sachs.
Rod Hall, Analyst
I wanted to start off by discussing the $6 million manufacturing push and just double check that it was related to Telecom. Also, is that amount included in your guidance, and do you expect to recover the $6 million in your forecasts? I have a follow-up question.
Alan Lowe, CEO
Yes. It was Telecom and whether some of that demand went to other suppliers or not is not clear. I'd say that certainly on the ACO, which is a part of that, that just moves into the Q3 guidance. And so, yes, whatever we think is not gone to other competitors is contemplated in our guidance.
Rod Hall, Analyst
Okay. So it's something less than the $6 million balance, to be clear, I guess.
Alan Lowe, CEO
Yes. Yes.
Rod Hall, Analyst
Okay. And then the second thing I wanted to ask about was I just want to come back to the Coherent deal. One of the things that it looks to us like there's definitely manufacturing overlap, at least in some places. I'm curious if the synergies you guys have talked about contemplate consolidation of manufacturing? Or is it still too early to talk through all that in detail and that's still a possibility down the road?
Alan Lowe, CEO
Yes, I mean we have a synergy target that we talked about two weeks ago. And we said that two-thirds of that will come from COGS. We have to get through the integration planning process to really critically pinpoint the plans to get those synergies. I mean, some of them will come from supply chain, some will come from manufacturing overlap to your point. But the details of that still need to be worked out as we get closer to that integration planning phase of the deal. I think my excitement around the Coherent deal is around getting the combined larger company through that model that we talked about earlier. But it's also about putting two incredibly talented teams together to accelerate the innovation engine because photonics is really playing a key role in a lot of long-term megatrends. And I think the combination of the two companies really puts us at the forefront of that.
Operator, Operator
And our next question comes from John Marchetti from Stifel.
John Marchetti, Analyst
I just wanted to follow-up, Chris, on some of your comments around the ROADM business, particularly with the outlook in China as we're looking out here over the second half of the fiscal year. You mentioned some of the strength with the new Western vendors and some of the new ROADM business there. Curious how that business is now trending in China? And how we should think about that as a contributor on the Telecom side and looking out in the second half of the fiscal year?
Chris Coldren, SVP of Strategy and Corporate Development
Yes. As we've mentioned in previous calls, China has not traditionally used ROADMs in their domestic networks. However, we believe they will eventually make that shift, which is positively impacting our outlook with a wide range of customers in China. We anticipate this will contribute to growth. At the same time, we expect strong growth from our Western customers in the ROADM segment as well. ROADMs, along with optical amplifiers, are critical components for new network deployments. We foresee new telecom networks being established globally. This includes developments in both China and the West, starting in the latter half of this calendar year, though it will be a multi-year upgrade process in both regions.
John Marchetti, Analyst
And then I guess just as a quick little clean-up for that. Can you guys talk at all about maybe where Huawei was in the quarter and if there's any change to your outlook on them relative to what you gave last quarter as a kind of outlook for the second half of the year?
Chris Coldren, SVP of Strategy and Corporate Development
Yes, no problem, John. So last quarter or at least on last quarter's earnings call back in November given there was a change during the quarter in August with the regulations we provided a bit more commentary around our business with Huawei. And we indicated that, while sales would decline quarter-on-quarter, be less than 10% of total sales. That's what happened and consistent with our commentary. We continue to believe that our sales to Huawei in fiscal '21 will be down from our sales in '20, given the dynamics around that situation.
Operator, Operator
And our next question comes from Simon Leopold from Raymond James.
Simon Leopold, Analyst
First thing I wanted to see if maybe you could help us understand is how your mix is between world-facing and front-facing in the 3D sensing. Specifically, you've talked in the past about having better share in world-facing. If you could elaborate on that and whether or not you're starting to see Android trickle into the mix on the world-facing? And then I've got a follow-up.
Alan Lowe, CEO
Thank you, Simon. As with any new product launch, we expect to maintain a significant share, given our strong track record with customers. To address your point, our share in the December quarter for world-facing was quite substantial compared to front-facing, though that's speculative. It would be best to inquire further next week. Regarding Android, our presence is still small, but we are optimistic about future growth. This optimism stems from the increasing activity around world-facing technology and the traction gained in computational photography. Given our leading position in world-facing production, including volume, quality, and reliability, we believe we are well-positioned with major Android suppliers. As I mentioned earlier, we anticipate securing design wins and incorporating world-facing technology into these devices later this year.
Simon Leopold, Analyst
And then just as a follow-up, wondering if maybe you could offer us a timeline of when you would think the LiDAR opportunities could become material. And I'm really not looking for something by quarter. I'm thinking by year. But maybe help us think about the trajectory of how you envision that opportunity materializing?
Chris Coldren, SVP of Strategy and Corporate Development
Yes, Simon, this is Chris. So kind of as we said earlier that calendar ‘22 is really when I think we'll see the first start-up production and certainly we are shipping samples or very moderate volumes into niche applications for LiDAR. But until we get out into calendar ‘22 is when we start to see more meaningful revenue. And with that said, this is a market that not quite like the consumer electronics market, where there's a whole heck of a lot of revenue can be generated in a year because of the model, the turnover and customer models, the auto industry, we expect it to be a multiyear to evolve, kind of on the S curve, if you will. But I think as we look into calendar '22, the opportunity starts to become more meaningful, but it will take several years to get to the kind of levels that I talked about with the high penetration of that 100 million vehicle units per year.
Operator, Operator
And our next question comes from George Notter from Jefferies.
George Notter, Analyst
I guess I wanted to follow-up on the Huawei discussion. If we go back a number of quarters ago, the whole Huawei situation was flaring up. We talked about a safety valve of sorts in this business. And the idea was that you could ramp other Western vendors in terms of your sales. And I think also, you talked about how your dollar content was higher in some of those other vendors’ products relative to Huawei. So I guess a few quarters on now, I'm wondering if you're seeing that shift to other OEMs in your business? And any flavor you could give us for that would be super helpful.
Alan Lowe, CEO
Sure, George. Yes, as we said in the prepared remarks, we've started production and qualification of a Western company with MxN blade with other functionality that we expect to ramp up meaningfully. If you go back in time, Huawei was an early adopter of that leading-edge technology that's now going more broadly across the Western customers of ours. And as we look forward, when people can deploy these new networks in 400, 600, 800 gig and MxN ROADMs, I think we're optimistic that that demand will ramp up and be able to really see meaningful growth in our ROADMs and high-speed transmission products.
Operator, Operator
And our next question comes from Ananda Baruah from Loop Capital.
Ananda Baruah, Analyst
Hey, just two questions if I could. The first is about 3D sensing. Alan, you mentioned minimums in the longer-term agreements. Does that also include minimums for pricing? Additionally, I recall it was mentioned in the prepared remarks that seasonality is spread more throughout this year, specifically for 3D sensing growth. I just need clarification on that. Then I have a quick follow-up on Telecom.
Alan Lowe, CEO
Sure. I mean, customer agreements, we don't get into a lot of details, but certainly, in order to be committed to share, they're going to want to be committed to price. And so from that perspective, you would imagine that most of our contracts, if not all of our contracts have committed share and committed price for some duration. The comment around the seasonality spread was around, historically, we saw between the December quarter and March quarter, a more dramatic drop off. And then again, in the June quarter, even more, and we're saying that in the March quarter, we're not seeing that much of a dramatic drop off as compared to prior years. Looking forward into June, June is usually where the drop-off is more significant and as new models get ready for the shelves in the September quarter. So that was really the intent. Our fiscal year '21, we believe that our opportunity and our revenue for 3D sensing is going to be bigger than fiscal '20. And it's going to be more broadly spread out. And so that's what's contemplated in our guidance for the March quarter.
Ananda Baruah, Analyst
That's super helpful. And then just quickly on Telecom. Really, 5G dynamics in China when the stuff Huawei really kicked in, in the new way in the fall. I think the conversation was around over a number of months, the shifts from Huawei to other folks in China would sort of level out the dollar opportunity there. Can you just give us an update on, do you think that still is the case inside of China eventually? And when you think that could begin to occur?
Alan Lowe, CEO
Yes. We have a lot of traction with other Chinese customers of ours outside of Huawei. I think it's going to take a considerable time given the size differences between Huawei in China and the rest of the suppliers in China. Now our expectations is that those other companies continue to grow, and our traction with them is very strong. So I don’t know if it’s quarters or years but I think from that perspective we do have higher share of wallet, I would say, outside of Huawei with other Chinese customers as well as Western customers. And so if or when share moves from a Huawei network to another supplier network, we believe that's a tailwind for us.
Operator, Operator
And our next question comes from Ryan Koontz from Rosenblatt Securities.
Ryan Koontz, Analyst
I wanted to circle back on your comment on a robust outlook for hyperscale. And I'm wondering how you kind of contemplate the impact of ZR there? And as that starts to ramp late in the year and the impact to '22, if you could comment on your perceived market position?
Chris Coldren, SVP of Strategy and Corporate Development
Hey, Ryan, this is Chris. When we mentioned strong hyperscale demand, we were referring specifically to the data center segment. The chips we supply for transceiver manufacturers span from 100-gig to the increasing 400-gig range. Our demand remains robust due to our unique products, especially in the 200-gig, 400-gig, and higher categories. Regarding ZR, in our product classification, it falls under telecom products rather than data center products. We are actively pursuing and developing this area, as it aligns well with our capabilities in photonic integrated circuits using the indium phosphide platform, which was enhanced by our acquisition of Oclaro. We have high expectations for this product, alongside other indium phosphide-based products like higher performance ZR modules and ZR+ or DCO modules, all utilizing our indium phosphide photonic integrated circuits.
Ryan Koontz, Analyst
Thanks, Chris. I mean do you feel like you are engaged in some of the kind of early design cycles there? Or is that something you'll pick up say, as a kind of a round two?
Chris Coldren, SVP of Strategy and Corporate Development
I would say we have a long-term relationship with all our key customers. We are working with them to ensure that we have the right product, the right specifications, and that we are included in discussions as they allocate commercial business.
Operator, Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, that is all the time that we have for today. I'd now like to turn the conference call back over to Jim Fanucchi for closing comments.
Jim Fanucchi, Investor Relations
Thank you. That does conclude our call. We would like to thank everyone for attending, and we look forward to talking with you again when we report our third quarter fiscal ‘21 results. Have a good day.
Operator, Operator
And ladies and gentlemen, with that, we'll conclude today's conference call. We do thank you for attending. You may now disconnect your lines.