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Cypress Reports Fourth-Quarter and Year-End 2006 Results.


* Fiscal 2006 revenue increased 23.1% over 2005

* Adjusted-GAAP EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) A PostScript file format used to transfer a graphic image between applications and platforms. EPS files contain PostScript code as well as an optional preview image in TIFF, WMF, PICT or EPSI, the latter being an ASCII-only format. 1 for 2006 increased by $0.64 over 2005, to $0.51

* Record quarterly PSoC([R]) revenue; 99.1% growth year-on-year

* SRAM See static RAM.

SRAM - static random-access memory
 quarterly gross margins and earnings at highest level since Q1 2001

* Cash and short-term investments from semiconductor business increased $210 million year-on-year

* SunPower contributed significantly to revenue and EPS

SAN JOSE San Jose, city, United States
San Jose (sănəzā`, săn hōzā`), city (1990 pop. 782,248), seat of Santa Clara co., W central Calif.; founded 1777, inc. 1850.
, Calif. -- Cypress Semiconductor Cypress Semiconductor is a semiconductor design and manufacturing company. It began operations in 1982 and listed publicly in 1986. Two years later, the company shifted over to the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol, (NYSE: CY).  Corp. (NYSE NYSE

See: New York Stock Exchange
:CY) today announced that revenue for the 2006 fourth quarter was $287.0 million, down 1.1% from prior-quarter revenue of $290.2 million--a figure that included $5.4 million in revenue from the PC clock group, which was divested in October 2006. Fourth-quarter revenue increased 20.3% from year-ago fourth-quarter revenue of $238.5 million.

Adjusted-GAAP net income for the 2006 fourth quarter--earnings that exclude charges for stock-based compensation, acquisition-related charges and other special charges and credits--totaled $26.1 million5, or diluted earnings per share diluted earnings per share

An earnings measure calculated by dividing net income less preferred stock dividends for a period by the average number of shares of common stock that would be outstanding if all convertible securities were converted into shares of
 of $0.151. This compares with the prior quarter's diluted earnings per share of $0.161. Diluted earnings per share in the year-ago fourth quarter was $0.041.

Cypress recorded GAAP GAAP

See: Generally Accepted Accounting Principles


GAAP

See generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).
 net income of $15.8 million in the 2006 fourth quarter, or diluted earnings per share of $0.09. This compares with last quarter's diluted earnings per share of $0.06. Diluted loss per share in the year-ago fourth quarter was $0.02 per share.

Consolidated gross margin on an adjusted-GAAP basis4 for the fourth quarter was 42.5%, down 0.9% from the previous quarter primarily due to product mix. On a GAAP basis, gross margin was 41.6%, down 1.0% from the prior quarter. Semiconductor margin on an adjusted-GAAP basis4 for the fourth quarter was 48.2%, down slightly from the previous quarter due to product mix, and up 4.1% from 44.1% in the year-ago fourth quarter.

For the fiscal year 2006, Cypress posted total revenue of $1.09 billion, an increase of 23.1% from fiscal year 2005 revenue of $886.4 million. On an adjusted-GAAP basis, Cypress's fiscal year 2006 diluted earnings per share1 were $0.51, compared with a diluted net loss per share of $0.13 in 2005. On a GAAP basis, including a first-time FAS123R stock-based compensation expense, Cypress's fiscal year 2006 diluted earnings per share was $0.25 compared with a diluted net loss per share of $0.69 in 2005.

Cypress President and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  T.J. Rodgers said, "Cypress achieved more than $1 billion in annual revenue for the first time since the boom of 2000, propelled by a solid overall fourth quarter that featured a record revenue quarter for PSoC, resulting in a year-on-year doubling of PSoC revenue. We are structurally a substantially more profitable company than we were a year ago, driven by strong overall direct margins, a stable ASP environment and significant contributions from SunPower and our SRAM division.

"Cypress's business remains fundamentally solid with a book-to-bill ratio Book-to-Bill Ratio

The technology industry's demand-to-supply ratio for orders on a "firm's book" to number of orders filled.

Notes:
This ratio tells whether the company has more orders than it can deliver (if greater than 1), has the same amount of orders that it can
 of 0.96 and 86% of the first quarter booked, going into the quarter. We expect routine seasonality in our core semiconductor business, and are seeing some softness in certain communications-related markets--especially cell phone basestations--but we currently do not anticipate any significant or prolonged slowdown in 2007."
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Consumer and Computation Division (CCD CCD
 in full charge-coupled device

Semiconductor device in which the individual semiconductor components are connected so that the electrical charge at the output of one device provides the input to the next device.
)

CCD revenue was $79.9 million in the fourth quarter, down 10.9% from the prior quarter in large part due to the sale of the PC Clock business unit. Record PSoC quarterly revenue was offset by slowing demand for communications-based, general-purpose clocks in the fourth quarter. CCD accounted for 27.8% of Cypress's quarterly revenue. First-quarter revenue is expected to be slightly down due to seasonality.

CCD posted a gross margin of 43.8%4 in the fourth quarter, down from 45.7%4 in the third quarter. The division contributed $0.011 earnings per share to the company's adjusted-GAAP net income in the fourth quarter, compared with $0.031 in the third quarter. CCD's contribution to earnings per share is expected to remain relatively flat in the first quarter due to aggressive investments in PSoC.

Fourth-quarter highlights for the division include:

+ Cypress grew its PSoC customer base to 3,371 customers for the quarter, representing a gain of 68% year-on-year.

+ Cypress trained 1,500 engineers on PSoC in the fourth quarter, and more than 4,200 engineers over the course of the year, through a series of live, hands-on seminars, focusing mostly on the new PSoC Express[TM] software tool. PSoC Express is a revolutionary, visual embedded development tool that allows engineers to develop microcontroller-based designs without having to write even one line of computer code.

+ Cypress introduced five PSoC development kits to accelerate embedded designs that involve SD flash memory cards, I2C I2C Inter-Integrated Circuit
I2C Intelligent Interface Controller
I2C Intelligent Controller
 port expanders, capacitive-touch-sense interfaces and lighting controls based on the latest light-emitting diode technology. Each of the kits helps engineers to debug To correct a problem in hardware or software. Debugging software means locating the errors in the source code (the program logic). Debugging hardware means finding errors in the circuit design (logical circuits) or in the physical interconnections of the circuits.  hardware and software in PSoC-enabled applications.

+ Cypress launched PRoC[TM] LP, a low-power, Programmable Radio-on-a-Chip[TM] that reduces the bill of materials The list of components that make up a system. For example, a bill of materials for a house would include the cement block, lumber, shingles, doors, windows, plumbing, electric, heating and so on.  and simplifies the coding and layout of human interface devices, including computer keyboards, mice and remote controls. The solution integrates Cypress's 2.4-GHz WirelessUSB[TM] transceiver with a PSoC chip, allowing almost any peripheral device See peripheral.

peripheral device - peripheral
 to be easily connected wirelessly to a PC with just a few days of engineering time.

+ Cypress launched the industry's first I2C-programmable clock chip with four phase-locked loops Phase-locked loops

Electronic circuits for locking an oscillator in phase with an arbitrary input signal. A phase-locked loop (PLL) is used in two fundamentally different ways: (1) as a demodulator, where it is employed to follow (and demodulate) frequency or
 (PLLs), targeting digital entertainment applications and other devices requiring multiple frequencies. The programmable interface enables end-product designers to make frequency changes with software commands even after the clock has been soldered Pronounced "sod-erd." Permanently attached by a hard metal bond. In order to replace a chip soldered to a circuit board, it requires heating the soldering joints until they melt. Contrast with socketed.  onto the circuit board.

+ Hitachi Ltd. selected a Cypress programmable clock chip for use in its Wooo[TM] 9000 series of high-definition digital televisions. The chip replaces multiple crystal oscillators and provides Hitachi with the flexibility to make changes throughout the design and production cycles.

+ Cypress and Unigen introduced the industry's smallest precertified wireless modules, combining WirelessUSB with Unigen's LETO module family. The solutions eliminate the need for costly, time-consuming RF certification by the FCC (1) (Federal Communications Commission, Washington, DC, www.fcc.gov) The U.S. government agency that regulates interstate and international communications including wire, cable, radio, TV and satellite. The FCC was created under the U.S. , speeding the development of wireless links in home automation, medical, industrial and consumer-electronics systems.

+ Cypress and Winbond introduced a demonstration board for wireless Voice over IP (VoIP) headsets. The board combines the exceptional interference immunity of WirelessUSB LP with the clean signal delivery of Winbond Electronics' W681360 CODEC and improves customer time-to-market.

+ Cypress announced that its MoBL-USB[TM] TX2 high-speed USB USB
 in full Universal Serial Bus

Type of serial bus that allows peripheral devices (disks, modems, printers, digitizers, data gloves, etc.) to be easily connected to a computer.
 2.0 transceiver and MoBL[R] ADM See add/drop multiplexer.

(language) ADM - A picture query language, extension of Sequel2.

["An Image-Oriented Database System", Y. Takao et al, in Database Techniques for Pictorial Applications, A. Blaser ed, pp. 527-538].
 dual-port interconnects have been adopted in Marvell Technology Group's new PXA3xx application processor platform used in mobile handsets, PDAs and portable music players See digital music player and Portable Media Center. . The low-power devices provide reliable and efficient access to multimedia content.

+ Cypress introduced a small-form-factor, high-speed USB 2.0 hub controller that enables bus-powered designs and reduces overall bill-of-materials costs in standalone hubs, monitors, docking stations, keyboards and other end products.

+ Cypress and UPEK UPEK User Password Encryption Key  introduced two USB reference design kits that enable fingerprint security for USB Flash disk drives and external hard disk drives.

Data Communications data communications, application of telecommunications technology to the problem of transmitting data, especially to, from, or between computers. In popular usage, it is said that data communications make it possible for one computer to "talk" with another.  Division (DCD (Document Content Description) An XML schema language from Textuality, Microsoft and IBM that is implemented as an RDF vocabulary. It supports data typing and schema reuse and is the successor to XML-Data. See XML schema, RDF and XML. )

DCD revenue was $27.9 million in the fourth quarter, down 22.9% from the prior quarter, below our expectations. The revenue decline was due primarily to a greater-than-expected slowdown in the basestation market. DCD accounted for 9.7% of fourth-quarter revenue. Divisional revenue is expected to remain flat to slightly down in the first quarter.

DCD posted a gross margin of 62.6%4 in the fourth quarter, down from 67.7%4 in the third quarter. The division contributed $0.021 earnings per share on an adjusted-GAAP basis to net income in the fourth quarter, compared with $0.061 in the third quarter. DCD's contribution to earnings per share is expected to remain stable in the first quarter.

Fourth-quarter highlights for the division include:

+ Cypress introduced the West Bridge[TM] Antioch[TM] peripheral controller See control unit. , the first in a family of devices that enables users to talk on the phone while downloading music from their PC. The device leverages Cypress's Simultaneous Link to Independent Multimedia[TM] (SLIM[TM]) architecture to free the phone's processor from USB and storage-management tasks and to enable high-performance data transfers.

Memory and Imaging Division (MID)

MID revenue was $91.7 million in the fourth quarter, up 6.6% from the prior quarter, exceeding expectations. Demand increased across all MID business units during the quarter. Divisional revenue accounted for 32.0% of fourth-quarter revenue. First-quarter MID revenue is expected to be flat to slightly down compared to Q406.

MID posted a gross margin of 43.0%4 in the fourth quarter, compared with 39.3%4 in the third quarter as SRAM ASPs and margins remained strong. The division reported net earnings per share of $0.081 on an

adjusted-GAAP basis in the fourth quarter, compared with net earnings per share of $0.041 in the third quarter. MID's contribution to earnings per share is expected to remain stable in the first quarter.

Fourth-quarter highlights for the division include:

+ Cypress achieved its first nonvolatile memory See non-volatile memory.  (NVSRAM NVSRAM Non-Volatile Static Random Access Memory
NVSRAM Non Volatile Storage Ram
) product revenue with the shipment of new 1-Mbit and 256-Kbit products. NVSRAMs are typically used in RAID controllers, industrial automation controllers, set-top boxes, copiers, multifunction printers, and point-of-sale terminals.

+ Cypress's IM103 CMOS image sensor A CMOS-based chip that records the intensities of light as variable charges similar to a CCD chip. Although initially used in less expensive digital cameras, the quality of CMOS sensors has improved steadily.

CMOS sensors have advantages over CCDs.
 was named the industry's most innovative image sensor An image sensor is a device that converts a visual image to an electric signal. It is used chiefly in digital cameras and other imaging devices. It is usually an array of charge-coupled devices (CCD) or CMOS sensors such as active-pixel sensors.  by the consulting firm Noun 1. consulting firm - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee
consulting company

business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a
 Semiconductor Insights.

SunPower Corporation

Revenue from Cypress's SunPower subsidiary was $74.5 million in the fourth quarter, up 14.1% from the prior quarter and up 154% from the fourth quarter of 2005, driven primarily by higher worldwide unit sales unit sales

Sales measured in terms of physical units rather than dollars. Unit sales data are often used by financial analysts when evaluating the health of a company.
 of solar panels. SunPower accounted for 26.0% of Cypress's fourth-quarter revenue. Revenue is expected to increase markedly in the first quarter based primarily on the acquisition of PowerLight.

SunPower posted an adjusted-GAAP gross margin of 26.2%4 in the fourth quarter of 2006, compared with 25.3%4 in the third quarter of 2006. The company reported an adjusted-GAAP pretax profit of 19.2%6 in the fourth quarter. SunPower contributed adjusted-GAAP diluted earnings per share of $0.051 in the fourth quarter, compared with earnings per share of $0.051 in the third quarter. SunPower's contribution to Cypress's earnings per share is expected to increase in the first quarter of 2007.

Fourth-quarter highlights include:

+ SunPower acquired PowerLight Corp., a leading provider of large-scale solar-power systems. The acquisition and related future stock compensation, valued at $329.1 million in cash and stock, closed on January 10, 2007. The PowerLight addition is expected to accelerate SunPower's revenue growth by $250 million to $300 million in 2007 and to expand its technology portfolio related to solar systems products. SunPower acquired some key, patented, proprietary products to add to its line of high-efficiency solar modules, including SunTile([R]) residential roof tiles to create solar roofs on new houses, PowerGuard([R]) interlocking interlocking /in·ter·lock·ing/ (-lok´ing) closely joined, as by hooks or dovetails; locking into one another.
interlocking Obstetrics A rare complication of vaginal delivery of twins; the 1st
 solar tiles that are the industry standard for low-cost commercial applications (e.g., Cypress's solar roof), and PowerTracker([R]) systems that tilt solar panels to follow the sun--often used in large solar plants like the 11-megawatt installation commissioned by General Electric in Serpa, Portugal.

+ SunPower announced the SPR-315, the first solar panel made from its 22-percent-efficient Gen2 solar cells and by far, the highest wattage wattage

the output or consumption of an electric device expressed in watts.
 panel available from any source. The panels offer a larger footprint and deliver more power per square meter Noun 1. square meter - a centare is 1/100th of an are
centare, square metre

area unit, square measure - a system of units used to measure areas
, compared with standard solar panels. Customers will benefit from the faster, more-efficient installation of approximately half the number of panels for a given wattage system.

+ SunPower signed a $20 million silicon ingot ingot

Mass of metal cast into a size and shape such as a bar, plate, or sheet convenient to store, transport, and work into a semifinished or finished product. The term also refers to a mold in which metal is so cast.
 supply agreement with REC SiTech AS, a leading supplier of monocrystalline ingots to the solar industry.

+ SunPower President and Chief Technology Officer Dick Swanson received a Wall Street Journal Technology Innovation Award for his career contributions to the commercialization of solar power.

Other Developments

+ In January, Cypress's Board of Directors authorized a new stock buyback Stock buyback

A corporation's purchase of its own outstanding stock, usually in order to raise the company's earnings per share.


stock buyback

See buyback.
 program of up to $300 million.

+ Cypress signed a global agreement with Premier Farnell This article or section is written like an .
Please help [ rewrite this article] from a neutral point of view.
Mark blatant advertising for , using .
, a U.K.-based distributor, under which Farnell will sell PSoC and other Cypress products to customers worldwide. Online and catalog sales through the distribution channel are a key part of Cypress's effort to expand its PSoC customer base.

+ Cypress launched a $160,000 global university competition to encourage engineering students to design with Cypress products. First-place winners and their professors in six global regions will compete for $10,000 cash prizes and the inaugural T.J. Rodgers Innovation Trophy.

+ Cypress donated computer equipment and the use of a 1,960 square-foot computer lab at its San Jose headquarters to the nonprofit California Alliance of African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race.  Educators, an organization that produces extraordinary college acceptance rates for African-American students enabling them to pursue careers in math, science and technology.

+ Cypress won its 15th consecutive Holiday Food Bowl Challenge trophy from the Second Harvest Food Bank of Santa Clara Santa Clara, city, Cuba
Santa Clara (sän`tä klä`rä), city (1994 est. pop. 217,000), capital of Villa Clara prov., central Cuba.
 and San Mateo San Mateo (săn mətā`ō), city (1990 pop. 85,486), San Mateo co., W Calif., on San Francisco Bay; inc. 1894. It is a commercial and retail center with some high-technology manufacturing. San Mateo, Spanish for St.  Counties by donating 961,680 pounds of food, or 1,330 pounds per Cypress employee--a per-capita donation that topped all other companies in Silicon Valley.

Conclusion

Rodgers concluded: "Cypress succeeded in its focus on improving investor returns in 2006. Our goal is to continue to do so in 2007. Our stock price appreciated by 18.4% in 2006, outpacing the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (SOXX) by 21 percentage points. Cypress's stock appreciated by 21.5% in 2005.

"In Q4, Cypress made public our new mission: 'To transform ourselves from a traditional, broad-line semiconductor company to the leading supplier of programmable system solutions.' This mission is the focus of a restructuring effort begun two years ago - one that has included the sale or divestiture The breakup of AT&T. By federal court order, AT&T divested itself on January 1, 1984 of its 23 operating companies, which became known as the Regional Bell Operating Companies (RBOCs).  of businesses that do not align with our long-term plan, our successful shift into flexible manufacturing ("No More Moore") and the addition to our management team of senior executives with broad experience defining and bringing to market new generations of high-performance programmable products.

"As a result, we exited 2006 with our most focused product portfolio ever, which helped to drive design wins to an all-time record. We expect to grow faster than the overall semiconductor market and to achieve record revenue in 2007."

About Cypress

Cypress delivers high-performance, mixed-signal, programmable solutions that provide customers with rapid time-to-market and exceptional system value. Cypress offerings include the PSoC Programmable System-on-Chip, USB controllers, general-purpose programmable clocks and memories. Cypress also offers wired and wireless connectivity solutions ranging from its WirelessUSB radio system-on-chip, to West Bridge and EZ-USB FX2LP controllers that enhance connectivity and performance in multimedia handsets. Cypress serves numerous markets including consumer, computation, data communications, automotive, industrial, and solar power. Cypress trades on the NYSE under the ticker symbol Ticker Symbol

An arrangement of characters (usually letters) representing a particular security listed on an exchange or otherwise traded publicly. When a company issues securities to the public marketplace, it selects an available ticker symbol for its securities which investors
 CY. Visit Cypress online at www.cypress.com.

Statements herein that are not historical facts and that refer to Cypress or its subsidiaries' plans and expectations for the first quarter of 2007, revenue for 2007, and the future are forward-looking statements forward-looking statement

A projected financial statement based on management expectations. A forward-looking statement involves risks with regard to the accuracy of assumptions underlying the projections.
 made pursuant to the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PSLRA) implemented several significant substantive changes affecting certain cases brought under the federal securities laws, including changes related to pleading, discovery, liability, class representation and awards fees and  of 1995. We use words such as "believes," "expects," "future," "plan," "intends" and similar expressions to identify forward-looking statements that include, but are not limited to, statements related to demand for our PSoC devices, CapSense devices and other products, the functionality and features of our new products, the strength of our product portolio, the stability of our ASPs, the softness in communications-related markets, our prices, growth, shipments, profit and revenue. Such statements reflect our current expectations, which are based on information and data available to our management as of the date of this release. Our actual results may differ materially due a variety of uncertainties and risk factors, including but not limited to the business and economic conditions and growth trends in the semiconductor and solar power industries, the state of the global economy, the actions of our competitors, our ability to develop and roll-out new products, our ability to execute on our flexible manufacturing plan, whether our products perform as expected, whether our investment in PSoC is fully realized, customer acceptance of Cypress and it's subsidiaries' products, factory utilization, seasonality in the markets we serve, our ability to maintain and improve our gross margins and realize our bookings, the financial performance of our subsidiaries, including SunPower's ability to integrate PowerLight, meet demand and obtain a sufficient amount of polysilicon, SunPower's production levels and module sales, and other risks described in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We assume no responsibility to update any such forward-looking statements.

To supplement the consolidated financial results prepared under GAAP, Cypress uses adjusted-GAAP measures, which are adjusted from the most directly comparable GAAP results to exclude charges for stock-based compensation, acquisition-related charges and other special charges and credits. Management does not consider these charges part of the day-to-day business or reflective of the core operational activities of the Company as they result from corporate transactions outside the ordinary course of business. Management uses these adjusted-GAAP measures internally to make strategic decisions, forecast future results and evaluate the Company's current performance. Most analysts covering Cypress use the adjusted-GAAP measures as well. Given management's use of these adjusted-GAAP measures, Cypress believes these measures are important to investors in understanding the Company's current and future operating results as seen through the eyes of management. In addition, management believes these adjusted-GAAP measures are useful to investors in enabling them to better assess changes in Cypress' core business across different time periods. These adjusted-GAAP measures are not in accordance with, or an alternative for, GAAP and may be different from adjusted-GAAP measures used by other companies.

Cypress, the Cypress logo, PSoC, and MoBL are registered trademarks of Cypress Semiconductor Corporation. PSoC Express, Programmable System-on-Chip, PRoC, Programmable Radio-on-a-Chip, MoBL-USB, EZ-USB FX2LP, WirelessUSB, enCoRe, HOTLink hotlink - A mechanism for sharing data between two application programs where changes to the data made by one application appear instantly in the other's copy.

Under System 7 on the Macintosh the users establishes a hotlink by doing a "Create Publisher" on the server and
, SLIM, Simultaneous Link to Independent Multimedia, West Bridge and Antioch are trademarks of Cypress Semiconductor Corporation. SunPower is a registered trademark of SunPower Corporation. PowerLight, PowerGuard, SunTile and PowerTracker are registered trademarks of PowerLight, a subsidiary of SunPower Corp. Wooo is a trademark of Hitachi Ltd. All other trademarks or registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
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COPYRIGHT 2007 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Article Type:Financial report
Date:Jan 25, 2007
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