Categories Earnings Call Transcripts, Technology
NXP Semiconductors N.V. (NXPI) Q3 2021 Earnings Call Transcript
NXPI Earnings Call - Final Transcript
NXP Semiconductors N.V. (NASDAQ: NXPI) Q3 2021 earnings call dated Nov. 02, 2021
Corporate Participants:
Jeff Palmer — Vice President, Investor Relations
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Bill Betz — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Ross Seymore — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Vivek Arya — Bank of America — Analyst
John Pitzer — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Stacy Rasgon — Bernstein — Analyst
William Stein — Truist Securities — Analyst
Chris Caso — Raymond James — Analyst
Blayne Curtis — Barclays — Analyst
C.J. Muse — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the NXP Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]
And now, I would like to turn the conference over to Mr. Jeff Palmer, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Jeff Palmer — Vice President, Investor Relations
Thank you, Dexter, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to the NXP Semiconductor’s third quarter 2021 earnings call. With me on the call today is Kurt Sievers, NXP’s President and CEO; and Bill Betz, our CFO. The call today is being recorded and will be available for replay from our corporate website.
Today’s call will include forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties that can cause NXP’s results to differ materially from management’s current expectations. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, statements regarding the continued impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our business, the macroeconomic impact on the specific end markets in which we operate, the sale of new and existing products and our expectations for the financial results for the fourth quarter of 2021. Please be reminded that NXP undertakes no obligation to revise or update publicly any forward-looking statements. For a full disclosure on forward-looking statements, please refer to our press release.
Additionally, we will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures, which are driven primarily by discrete events that management does not consider to be directly related to NXP’s underlying core operating performance. Pursuant to Regulation G, NXP has provided reconciliations of the non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures in our third quarter 2021 earnings press release, which will be furnished to the SEC on Form 8-K and is available on NXP’s website in the Investor Relations section at nxp.com.
Before we start the call today, I’d like to remind everyone of our upcoming Analyst Day on Thursday, November 11, 2021. We are hosting a hybrid event. We will be in-person in New York City, but also simulcasting the event from our website for virtual attendees. After the event concludes, we will post the slides to the Investor Relations website.
Now, I’d like to turn the call over to Kurt.
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Thanks very much, Jeff, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining our call this morning. I will review our quarter three results and then discuss our guidance for quarter four. Overall, our quarter three results were better than the midpoint of our guidance with the mobile end markets stronger than planned as a result of improved supply. At the same time, the trends in the Auto, Industrial & IoT and Communication Infrastructure markets were all in line with our guidance. Taken together, NXP delivered quarter three revenue of $2.86 billion, an increase of 26% year-on-year and $11 million above the midpoint of our guidance range. These are very good results given the constrained supply position we knew we would face entering the quarter. And we continue to view our channel and on-hand inventory metrics below our long-term targets. We exited quarter three with our distribution channel supply metric at 1.6 months, almost the full months lower than our long-term target and we expect this to be the situation in quarter four again as well.
Our non-GAAP operating margin in quarter three was a strong 33.5%, which is 770 basis points better than the year ago period and 50 basis points above the midpoint of our guidance. Operating profit dollars were $19 million better than guidance, driven by higher revenue and lower spend.
Now, let me turn to the specific trends in our focus end markets. Starting with Automotive, quarter three revenue was $1.46 billion, 51% up versus the year ago period and in line with our expectations. In Industrial & IoT, quarter three revenue was $607 million, up 18% versus the year ago period and again in line with our expectations. In Mobile, quarter three revenue was $345 million, up about 2% versus the year ago period and above our expectations. Lastly, in Communication Infrastructure and Other, quarter three revenue was $454 million, about flat versus the year ago period and in line with our expectations.
With this, let me move straight to our outlook for quarter four. We expect the midpoint of quarter four revenue to be $3 billion, up 20% versus the fourth quarter of 2020 within the range of up 17% to up 23% year-on-year. From a sequential perspective, this is up 5% at the midpoint versus the prior quarter. And we again anticipate demand outstripping available supply in our quarter four outlook. At the midpoint of this range, we anticipate the following trends in our business. Automotive is expected to be up in the high 20% range year-on-year and up in the mid-single-digit range versus quarter three 2021. Industrial & IoT is expected to be up in the high 20% range year-on-year and up in the mid-single-digit range versus quarter three 2021. Mobile is expected to be down in the mid-teens range year-on-year and up in the low-single-digit range versus quarter three 2021. And finally, Communication Infrastructure and other is expected to be up in the high-teens range versus the same period a year ago and up in the low-single-digit range versus quarter three 2021.
Over the course of the last few quarters, investors continue to ask how to reconcile the revenue performance of NXP’s Automotive business with that of the global vehicle production numbers as they are reported by IHS. Specifically, NXP’s Automotive segment revenue is expected to be up over 40% in 2021. Against this, the auto OEMs continue to struggle to match supply to strong consumer demand with the auto industry likely not able to meaningfully grow unit production versus 2020.
Now, let me make a few observations which may help you understand this divergence. First, the auto supply chain is very extended and complex with multiple points of product transformation across the globe. This extended supply chain needs to coordinate the timing and delivery of up to 30,000 parts and up to 1,500 different semiconductors from hundreds of suppliers to build just one single car. During normal periods, from the time at which NXP ships the finished component to when the final assembly is fitted into a finished car, it takes up to six months, and this is on top of the moment semiconductor manufacturing cycle times of three to six months. At each step of the transformation thousands of parts move through a complex global network of suppliers. For the process to work efficiently it is essential that all of the components needed to complete a car are available exactly where and when they are required. Now, we believe the extended auto supply chain significantly depleted on-hand inventory of all types of products, including semiconductors already by the beginning in the second half of 2018 and continuing through 2019 and most of 2020. That depletion was a result of global car production declining 6% in 2019 and another 16% in 2020, while NXP’s auto business, despite content increases, declined by 7% into 2019 and by another 9% into 2020.
Now, let me illustrate the impact by using the NXP distribution channel as a proxy for overall auto supply demand trends and how we have been directly affected. We consistently monitor and measure all component movements in inventory data at our distribution partners at the end market level. Throughout 2021 these metrics for Automotive has been at record low levels with on-hand inventory being above the one month below our long-term target of 2.5 months with demand in the intermediate term being consistently greater than our ability to rebuild inventory back to normalized levels.
In our and my personal daily discussions with our customers throughout the auto supply chain, we hear the consistent message that they want significantly more product. And in some cases, Tier 1s are struggling to assemble tool kits and in other cases, the OEMs choose to build partially completed cars or hold their production lines altogether. For NXP, lead times for about 75% of our automotive products continue to be above 52 weeks. Against this backdrop, our customers are placing NCNR orders to assure long-term supply. We in turn are making long-term supply commitments to our supplier partners.
In summary, we think the automotive supply-demand equation will continue to be out of balance through 2022. In addition, as a learning out of the current material shortage situation, and in order to mitigate the impacts the auto OEMs are experiencing today, our Tier 1 partners explicitly demand that more supply and inventory will be needed in the extended supply chain, which we believe cannot be broadly achieved before 2023.
Now, with this currently dysfunctional supply chain as a backdrop, there are very clear and very positive trends that have simultaneously increased the demand for auto semiconductors industry-wide as a consequence of content growth. We have seen multiple OEMs prioritize to production of premium vehicles, which require upwards of twice the semiconductor content from NXP and others. And another clear and emerging secular content driver for the auto semiconductor markets is the fast acceleration of full electric and hybrid electric vehicles, which combined have moved from 8% of global production in 2019 to about 20% of production in 2021. This is very impactful since the average semiconductor content in an xEV is about $900, which is roughly 2 times that of an equivalent ICE vehicle. These trends have resulted in industry-wide content per vehicle increasing at 10% per year over the last three years. And on top of all of this, NXP is consistently gaining share in our focused growth areas and increasing content. These content gains includes 77 gigahertz radar safety systems, multiple electrification system opportunities beyond just battery management and new domain and zonal processing, as well as others.
Now, for NXP, it’s of course, not just automotive driving our performance, within the Industrial and IoT market, we see our ability to provide complete turnkey connected edge processing solutions consisting of processes, connectivity, security and analog, all leading to increased customer traction. These are all just a few examples that underpin our confidence in our Company-specific growth. As Jeff mentioned earlier, we plan to go into much greater detail at our Investor Day on November 11 next week in New York.
In summary, we continue to execute very well in a strong demand environment notwithstanding the industry-wide supply challenges. From a Company-specific perspective, NXP is experiencing very positive customer traction of our newest products and solutions. Putting it altogether, we are highly confident that the Company-specific drivers within our strategic end markets will continue to build also beyond Q4 into Q1, as well as over the intermediate term through 2022.
Now, before we move to the financial details of the quarter, I’d like to make a few remarks in the context of our recent announcement of Bill Betz, as our new CFO. I have personally worked with Bill as a business partner and one of Peter Kelly’s key finance leaders for over eight years. Bill brings both a strong track record and career in the semiconductor industry, as well as truly intimate knowledge of NXP and consistency to his new role. I personally drove the evaluation and interview process in the viewing of wide number of external candidates, as well as Bill. And I concluded Bill is the right person to lead our NXP finance organization, and I am personally truly excited to work with Bill and drive NXP’s profitable growth going forward. At the same time, I’d like to highlight the outstanding contribution Peter Kelly has played in the strategic evolution of NXP. Peter first came into the Company in an operations role over a decade ago and then quickly moved into the CFO role to drive the financial discipline our stakeholders have all come to expect. He has been a clear thinking, strategic advisor to myself and a highly valued mentor to many on the NXP management team, obviously, including both Bill and Jeff. We wish Peter the very best in the next phase of his life and hope he gets to spend more quality time with his family.
And with that, I would now like to pass the call to you, Bill, for a review of our financial performance. Bill?
Bill Betz — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Kurt, and good morning to everyone on today’s call. As Kurt has already covered the drivers of the revenue during Q3 and provided our revenue outlook for Q4, I will move to the financial highlights. Overall, our Q3 financial performance was very good. Revenue was above the midpoint of our guidance range and we drove an improvement of non-GAAP gross profit and non-GAAP operating profit, both of which were at the high-end of our guidance range.
Now, moving to the details of Q3. Total revenue was $2.86 billion, up 26% year-on-year and above the midpoint of our guidance range. We generated $1.62 billion in non-GAAP gross profit and reported non-GAAP gross margin of 56.5%, up 640 basis points year-on-year and near the high-end of our guidance. Total non-GAAP operating expenses were $657 million, up $107 million year-on-year and up $31 million from Q2. This was $8 million below the midpoint of our guidance due to lower material and mass spend during the quarter. From a total operating profit perspective, non-GAAP operating profit was $959 million and non-GAAP operating margin was 33.5%, up 770 basis points year-on-year. This was also at the high-end of our guidance range as a result of better fall-through on higher revenues.
Non-GAAP interest expense was $94 million with cash taxes ongoing operations of $86 million and non-controlling interest was $7 million. Taken together, the below the line items were $8 million better than our guidance. Stock-based compensation, which is not included in our non-GAAP earnings was $81 million.
Now, I would like to turn to the changes in our cash and debt. Our total debt at the end of Q3 was $9.59 billion, flat on a sequential basis. Our ending cash position was $2.3 billion, down $607 million sequentially due to higher capex and robust capital returns during the quarter. The resulting net debt was $7.29 billion and we exited the quarter with a trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA of $3.92 billion. Our ratio of debt to trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA at the end of Q3 was 1.9 times and our 12-month adjusted EBITDA interest coverage ratio was 11 times. Our liquidity continues to be excellent and our balance sheet is very strong.
During Q3, we repurchased 1.16 billion of our shares and paid $152 million in cash dividends for a total of $1.31 billion of capital return to our owners. Subsequent to the end of Q3, between October 3 and November 1, we repurchased an additional 300 million of our shares via 10b5-1 program resulting in a total of $4 billion returned to our owners’ year-to-date.
Turning to working capital metrics. Days of inventory was 85 days, a decline of three days sequentially. Our DIO continues to be below our long-term target of 95 days. We continue to closely manage our distribution channel with inventory in the channel at 1.6 months, flat sequentially and below our long-term targets. Both metrics reflect the continuation of strong customer order rates and a tight supply environment. We continue to believe it will take multiple quarters before we’re able to rebuild on-hand and channel inventories to our long-term target levels. Days receivable were 31 days, down four days sequentially and days payable were 83, a decline of nine days versus the prior quarter. Taken together, our cash conversion cycle were 33 days, an increase of two days versus quarter.
Cash flow from operations was $924 million and net capex was $200 million, resulting in non-GAAP free cash flow of $724 million.
Turning to our expectations for Q4, as Kurt mentioned, we anticipate Q4 revenue to be $3 billion plus or minus $75 million. At the midpoint, this is up 20% year-on-year and up 5% sequentially. We expect non-GAAP gross margin to be about 56.5% plus or minus 50 basis points. Operating expenses are expected to be about $680 million plus or minus about $10 million, consistent with our long-term model. Taken together, we see non-GAAP operating margin to be about 33.8% at the midpoint. We estimate non-GAAP financial expense to be about $94 million and anticipate cash tax-related to ongoing operations to be about $100 million. Non-controlling interest will be about $9 million. For Q4, we suggest, for modeling purposes, you use an average share count of 270 million shares, which is down 15 million shares from a year ago period as a result of the consistent execution of our communicated capital return policy.
Finally, I have a few closing comments I’d like to make. First, demand trends continue to be strong across our target end markets and customer interest in our newest products continues to be very robust. At the same time, we are closely working with our customers and our suppliers to address order requests in the timely manner. Second, our Q4 guidance reflects the clear potential of our business model, both in terms of revenue growth, as well as the significant profit fall through, which will enable us to consistently drive our non-GAAP gross margin above the midpoint of our gross margin targets. Thirdly, our business continues to generate significant free cash flow and we are committed to our capital return policy and we’ll return all excess free cash flow to our owners, so long as our leverage ratio remains at or below 2x net debt to trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA.
I’d also like to take this opportunity to thank Peter Kelly for his significant contributions to NXP since he joined the Company in 2011. Not only did Peter guide NXP from a financial perspective, but he truly help lead the Company and drive the strategy that made NXP what it is today. And on a personal note, I consider Peter a great leader, a mentor, and a friend and I will always be grateful for his support.
And then finally, I’d like to thank all my colleagues across NXP for their outstanding work and dedication. We shouldn’t forget that we are all still working under strict pandemic protocols.
So with that, I’d like to turn it back to the operator for questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Ross Seymore. Your line is open.
Ross Seymore — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Thanks for let me ask the question. And Bill, congratulations on the new role as CFO. My first question is for Kurt and that’s one on customer behavior. You gave a great deep dive into the apparent disconnect between the auto revs you have in production and all those explanations. But I really want to get into, are the customers changing their behavior? And if so, is it just with longer visibility for you, greater certainty? Or is the profitability that all the auto semi production companies are going to be able to garner from this sector starting to improve as well?
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Hi. Good morning, Ross. Indeed, a couple of changes. So first of all, very tactically, and I just have to highlight that because it sits on top of my agenda every day in and out. There continues to be no change in pressure to get more product. So expedites, escalation calls, all sorts of weird actions to try to get products faster to their manufacturing locations has not slowed down by an inch. So we see that continuing.
From a more strategic and say, learning perspective, I would say, clearly, the whole auto industry has realized now and that’s for me a step function and the reset at the same time has realized now how big the significance and importance of semiconductors is for their future, today, but also years out. I mean, that’s about innovation, but obviously, it’s also about being able to build complete cars. And that has led to much closer and better relationships between us and directly the OEMs. In terms of understanding both their innovation needs, but also the — from a more tactical perspective, their product supply needs in the near- and mid-term. All of that leads then to a number of significance, I would say, quite significant changes. We are seeing longer-term orders so we get these so-called, NCNR orders, which easily reach out for the entire next calendar year. These are coming from the Tier 1 customers of us, but of course, they do this, since they get similar behavior from the OEMs. But we also get greater visibility into the longer-term, which I find the very, very important perspective which reaches then over to innovation because the intimacy, which we can build with the OEMs now, to think about future systems is a great help for us to construct the right roadmaps.
Ross Seymore — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Great. Thank you for that color. And, I guess, as my follow up just shifting gears quickly to a little bit of a near-term potentially question and that’s on the Mobile business. It’s good to see that it upside surprised in the third quarter versus your original guidance. But, I guess, if I put the two quarters together, I know, supply is tight and maybe you’re just doing some allocation. But the Mobile business is a bit weaker seasonally than we would have expected in the combination of the quarters and I had thought that that was supposed to snap back a little bit in the third or in the fourth quarter, excuse me. So, can you just talk about what’s driving the relative weakness on a year-over-year basis in that business?
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, it’s clearly supply or the lack thereof, Ross. So, as we — when we went into quarter three, I think we talked about a sequential decline, which we could avoid. So we could pull in some supply and that’s the whole reason why we actually ended up in Mobile better than guidance. So there is no difference in sockets or anything. It was just that we had a somewhat better supply capability and we continue to forecast now a similar thing into the fourth quarter. But overall, if you take the full second half of this year, we are unfortunately significantly constrained in supply into the mobile market. It is gradually getting better, which is why we have this performance I just quoted, but if you hold it just in total, it is pretty significantly suffering.
Now, from a year-on-year perspective, Ross, it’s a more difficult compare. Last year Q3, we had the ban on Huawei coming into play, which artificially bumped up quarter three and quarter four, one of our very large mobile customers needed a lot of product, which also had to do with the phasing of the quarters last year, which was later than normal. So that’s why the year-on-year comparisons, both for Q3 and Q4 need some bridging given those two specific customer events. All in all, I just want to absolutely reconfirm, we haven’t lost a single socket there. So everything is going as we had planned. We are supply constrained. But the bigger drivers being the adoption of mobile wallet attach rates and also the early penetration of ultra-wideband secure — ultra-wideband solutions are fully on track with earlier targets in the earlier planning.
Ross Seymore — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Next we have Vivek Arya. Your line is open.
Vivek Arya — Bank of America — Analyst
Thank you for taking my question and good luck to both Peter and Bill. Kurt, on the automotive industry, if one had told you that auto production would be flat this year, but your auto sales would have been up 40%, would that have been predictable? And if not, what do you think surprised NXP other than some of the bad weather and the fab shutdown effect? Was it mix that surprised you? Was it pricing? Was it content? What specifically was the surprise this year to create this big gap between production and sales?
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Hi, Vivek. I mean, very transparently and honestly, with the knowledge of today, of course, we could have predicted it. With the knowledge at the time, no. So no, we didn’t know. And now what you call surprises is what actually happened a few things: one, clearly, the mix change to premium vehicles, which is an optimization to higher profit on the OEM side. Clearly, it’s something we had not foreseen. I think nobody had anticipated that and that has a significant impact on semiconductor consumption, given the premium vehicles can easily have twice the semi content of a mass volume car.
And on the same note, again, the xEV penetration, which I think is a result of the big focus in the growth on CO2 targets, but also a lot of government subsidies in various countries to boost actually more electric vehicle. Those two elements, so the mix to premium and the much stronger penetration or faster penetration of xEVs, those have significant positive impacts on the content increase for semiconductor. So, even if the car production is flat, the content goes up massively. Again, think about that both of these elements, each one on its own right are potentially bringing the semi content of a car to a factor of 2x. So that’s a — I mean, this is just outstripping any car production by far.
The third element, which I would say, I use your language surprised us, I would rather say, we gained more insight is the enormous depth and complexity of the extended automotive supply chain, which means how many stages and companies sometimes are between us after we ship a product before that product ends up in a car. And if that supply chain is enormously depleted as it has been the case after 2019 and 2020, it becomes incredibly dysfunctional, and we are still in the process of refilling that supply chain just to normalized levels. So really important, this is not about building any strategic inventory, it’s just getting back to more normalized levels which allow for proper operation of that supply chain. And that we didn’t see either. I would say, we had no idea how far it has been depleted, how deep it has been depleted, nor how deep it is, which means, how much elasticity is in there to be refilled in first place to make it — to try to make it functional. Again, it is still dysfunctional at this stage.
Vivek Arya — Bank of America — Analyst
Got it. And for my follow-up, Kurt, just to kind of continue that line of discussion, so you mentioned over the last few years that content delta, right, between units and sales have been — for the industry has been about 10 points with NXP doing better. If I look at the current IHS production forecast for next year and I know they keep on changing all the time, but right now it’s about 10% to 11% unit growth. So assuming that happens, what is the crystal ball thing in terms of that rough delta for the industry next year? Do you think it’ll be that — at that 10 points or it will be closer, right, to the much bigger number we saw this year? Thank you.
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, Vivek. So, first of all, you just mentioned another very important element, which is obviously our performance in all of this. I mean, what I described to your earlier question was, is how we think the industry surprised us all. The third element, clearly, it’s the NXP-specific, Company-specific content gains where we grew share which makes it even faster. Now, how that all goes into what it means for the next year and the next years from both the content growth perspective, as well as a NXP-specific revenue growth perspective? I just ask you to wait for a week — next week when we have our Investor Day in New York, we will give you the detail you’re looking for. So we will guide the next three years, both how we think the semi market in auto is going to develop, as well as our performance relative to that. So, please hold your horses until next week.
Vivek Arya — Bank of America — Analyst
Thank you, Kurt.
Operator
We have a question from John Pitzer. Your line is open.
John Pitzer — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Yeah. Good morning, guys. Thanks for let me ask the questions and congratulations on the solid results. Kurt, I think we all appreciate all the details you gave in your opening comments about the complexity around the auto supply chain. I’m kind of curious if you could spend a couple minutes just talking about your ability to grow supply from here, both internally, externally, both on the wafer side and on the back end and test. I’m assuming the nice sequential jump in autos means that some of the weather events in the first half of the year have reversed themselves but specifically as you look over the next several quarters, would you expect to your ability to grow supply to be relatively linear or is it going to be chunky and is there a point in time where your ability to grow supply kind of accelerates in 2022?
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Thanks, John. Let me give you a few pieces on this. The one is indeed the negative impact from the [Technical Issues], which we had some, I think, early Q2 in Texas is indeed behind us. So, I mean, it just puts us to file both factories which were impacted are running very much at pre-storm levels and we are good. Another element I have to mention here because it has impact on the industry, you’ve seen that over summer, there have been quite a few factory shutdowns of second test in assembly sites in Malaysia. I just want to highlight that we have been in a very disciplined position to organize and manage our own factories in such a way that our shutdowns were very immaterial. So we had a few days, but by and large, we had very little negative impact from those shutdowns on our revenue. So when you think about what we shipped in Q3, assume there was hardly any negative impact from COVID factory shutdowns from Southeast Asia and/or specifically, Malaysia.
Now, going forward, we will clearly see improvements on the wafer side. We talked about earlier that we are entering into long-term supply commitments with our supply partners and that’s largely on the wafer side which is going to start benefiting us next year, but also the years after, and again, this is in balance against the NCNR orders, which we are collecting from our customers. The back-end test and assembly, which largely is in-house for NXP. We are forced to put all the capex and all the investments in place to make sure that any wafer we get our hands around will also find enough capacity in-house to be tested and assembled into finished product. So, think about the test and assembly increase in capacity as pretty gradual because it is something which we are putting in tune with the wafers coming in. On the wafer side, it is in a way more discrete but it’s not stumpage [Phonetic] on because we have obviously several wafer suppliers and they don’t improve all at the same time. So from that perspective, what comes out into the revenue, think about something which is gradual which doesn’t have huge step functions at any specific point in time. However, the result of all of this is that, clearly, our supply capability as it has done through this year, will continue to grow also through next year.
Now, finally, I should say, this is clearly not a comment, which is in any way or form specific to Automotive. This is a broad comment because the supply shortages, which we are facing is across all markets. We discussed earlier, briefly mobile, anyway, anybody knows about automotive. But we have the same negative impact on our Industrial and IoT business and partially in the content of our business. So all of these improvements will help and build support revenue growth across all of our end market segments.
John Pitzer — Credit Suisse — Analyst
That’s really helpful color, Kurt. And then maybe for my follow-on, one for Bill. First, congratulations. Looking forward to working with you in your new role. I’m just kind of curious on the gross margin line, another really solid gross margin quarter. Given some of the logistic inflationary costs out there, oftentimes it’s hard to — within a quarter to get all of that rate relative to pricing. Was there anything holding back gross margins from a cost side in the quarter? And, I guess, more importantly, as you look out across these LTAs, can you help us understand how they’re being constructed relative to kind of your gross margin goals? I would assume it’s much easier to price to value in this sort of environment, does that mean we could see some tick-ups here in gross margins over the next several quarters?
Bill Betz — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Thank you for your question. Let me give a bigger picture on the margin and more color about it. So, as mentioned on our previous calls, our gross margin had improved drastically versus last year, driven by the higher volumes and improved internal utilizations from our factories. For example, if I try to remember, I think Q3 utilizations last year were in the mid-60s and today, we’re in the high-90s. And from a guidance standpoint, as you saw, we were slightly better from a quarter-over-quarter basis by 20 bps, 30 bps related to the improved product mix. Now, as we move forward over the next several quarters, it’s going to be really difficult to have that additional fall through on our internal factories and basically they running full out, I’d say.
To address your question on pricing, we are only passing on the increases of our input costs from our suppliers to our customers and we’re not having any of our margins in this process as we value on a long-term relationships with our customers, I’d say, and we’re really equally sharing the pain together. As you could see in Q4, we are guiding our gross margins to be flat quarter-over-quarter and any additional margin expansion, I’d say, will come in the short-term will be driven by that continued product mix and more longer-term will be really driven by the expansion of our new NPIs. I’d say, overall we’re very proud of achieving these levels, and we look forward to continue delivering toward that higher end financial state of model 57% as we go forward.
John Pitzer — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Thanks, guys.
Operator
Your next question is from Stacy Rasgon. Your line is open.
Stacy Rasgon — Bernstein — Analyst
Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to follow-up on that pricing question. I know you’re not trying to extract more, but I think to play devil’s advocate a little bit, like given the shortages out there, why not? I mean, you’re in a period of time right now where the supply period is probably tighter than it ever has been and ever will be. And there is demand for your products that’s off the chart, you’re locking customers in like at this point like why is this is not the time even on a selective basis to try to extract more, especially given it seems like some of your peers actually are going down that path, like why not you guys?
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Hi, Stacy. There is a very clear answer to this, which is, we are not in the commodity business. The very, very vast majority of our portfolio is application-specific. And with that portfolio, we are in very deep, longer-term relationships with our customers. So what we do is, as Bill said, we pass on the input cost, which is already, in some cases, a pretty significant element to digest for our customers, but we want to be transparent and we want to have long-term relationships, which are built on trust with our customers and in that context, we absolutely consider it the right thing to pass on the input costs, but not use it to pad on our margins. I would personally say from being in different markets in the past, commodity market that works different, but that’s not the kind of market environment we are moving in. And I’m very, very sure that this will pay off positively in the long-term relative to the customer relations which we need to continue to build our business.
In that context, it is also important to note that the whole environment, clearly, has a lot of input cost, which is going up for our customers. I mean, it’s not just on semis, a lot of other things are also moving. So it’s a tough environment for all the participants, where I think consistency, transparency and trust into the long-term relationships is a big value and that’s something where we do differentiate.
Stacy Rasgon — Bernstein — Analyst
Got it. Thank you. I guess, for my follow-up, even the follow-up on that a little bit. The historical pricing practices, at least at the high level, especially in Automotive was to have long-term price downs that were sort of built into the contracts and you’d be sort of fighting that every year. I guess, understanding that we’re maybe coming off a higher base now, at least on raising price because of the input cost increases, do you foresee like a similar type of long-term kind of pricing behavior that are built into the long-term contracts? Are we — are you still going to be fighting a couple of hundred basis points of margin compression every year just off the higher base like as part of these long-term contracts? Or is the general pricing structure like long-term of these contracts different than it was in the past?
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, Stacy. That’s indeed the other side of this discussion. I mean, I can’t discuss any customer or very segment-specific trends here, but the overall situation indeed is a reset, and that is important and positive. And with recent what I mean is that, the step function, which we have to take is something which is here to last. And that comes with, I think, I made the comment earlier with the realization of all the industries we are serving, that’s not just for Automotive of how important semiconductors are. It just represents a different value to them. And from that perspective, I think we make a step here, which is a reset which is here to stay. How that goes then in individual cases on individual prices year-on-year is hard to anticipate. But I don’t think it will go backwards.
Stacy Rasgon — Bernstein — Analyst
Got it. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from William Stein. Your line is open.
William Stein — Truist Securities — Analyst
Great. Thanks for taking my questions. First, I think you just spoke about this a moment ago, but can you talk about the magnitude and duration of your purchase commitments to foundry and your customer purchase commitments to NXP?
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, Bill fill in maybe was a bit more detail, but I’d say, in general, it really varies. I mean, we have some of them on the NCNR side, which is the customer orders. They would typically easily cover next year. So, now getting on order which stretches all the way until the end of next year. If you think then on the other side, which is the agreements with our foundry and supply partners, I think we actually published a new number which, if I remember right, is between $4.3 billion and $4.4 billion of agreed and signed supply commitments, which we have entered into with our supplier base. The vast majority of that is, obviously, in wafers. But mind you, this is not just for one year. This stretches out over multiple years to come. $4.4 billion to give you a feel.
William Stein — Truist Securities — Analyst
That helps. Thank you. And, Bill, I want to offer some congratulations in your new role. Of course, you have some pretty big shoes to fill given Peter’s very strong performance and that the Company’s strong performance in the last 10 years or so. I’m hoping you might give us a preview of what you might say next week, at least in terms of your priorities as the new CFO. Thank you.
Bill Betz — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. Thank you for your question. First off, I’m very honored and thankful for the role. I’ve been in the semi industry for about 20 years. Prior to NXP, I’ve worked with Fairchild LSI, Agere Systems. And really no change, as you have to remember, I’ve been with NXP for about eight years supporting the Company’s financial strategy alongside Peter, Kurt and Jeff and the entire management team. I’d say, my style is a bit different than Peter’s, but our principles are the same, focus on delivering, like you mentioned, these commitments and driving the long-term value to our customers, employees and shareholders.
Related to Analyst Day, yes, I’ll share that next week related to our long-term financial model. But we really like to save that for next week and not address that in this call.
Operator
We have a question from Chris Caso. Your line is open.
Chris Caso — Raymond James — Analyst
Yes, thank you. Good morning. First question, I wonder if I could just ask about those long-term agreements that you’re signing with your customers now, can you tell us what sort of commitments have your customers made to you under those agreements? And it sounds like you’re using those agreements from your customers to backstop the agreements that you’re making with your suppliers, is that for specific volume commitments over a certain amount of time? And is pricing committed to in those agreements as well such that you have visibility on both volume and pricing?
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
So, since I really can’t go into great detail on this, as you will understand, Chris, but the headline is indeed in line with what you were saying. Those customer agreements would typically cover volume and price for, say, for example, a period of until end of next calendar year and they even fix it by quarter. So it’s not just one number for the whole year, but in many cases it even goes to binding it two quarters.
Chris Caso — Raymond James — Analyst
Okay. It’s very helpful. And if I could follow-up pricing as well. And clearly, over the past couple of quarters, you’ve been passing along, as you’ve said, those price increases you’ve gotten from suppliers. Can you give us a sense of the magnitude of the pricing benefit you’ve seen out of the sort of 26% year-on-year increase you’ve seen in revenue? How substantial has price been in that calculation? And then as you go forward, are you expecting, as you go into next year, there is still to be a pricing tailwind as the input cost rise?
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, it’s generally as we discussed before, we will continue to match the rising input cost with adjusting the prices accordingly such that, yes, since input cost will continue to go up also next year, they will also continue to be a pricing adjustment into next year in general terms.
For the rest of your question, I really cannot and don’t want to go into greater detail in how much is what piece. It’s really just important that the leading concept and philosophy of all of this is that, the price increase is just matching the input cost increase and that’s it. But that is something which indeed we have this year and which is going to follow us next year too.
Chris Caso — Raymond James — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Next question is from Blayne Curtis. Your line is open.
Blayne Curtis — Barclays — Analyst
Hey. Thanks for taking my question and offer my congrats to Peter and Bill as well. Just going back on the auto side, I just wanted to be clear. So, you’ve heard from some other companies that they are seeing their customers started to be more selective, trying to get kits together, you — thanks for all the detail, Kurt, on that supply chain seems very complex. So I’m just kind of curious, are you seeing that same behavior may be seeing offsetting strength elsewhere. Or are you bit different given the Company-specific, the weather in Texas, etc., is on the secular growth that you’re not seeing that selected behavior in certain parts? Thanks.
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Blayne, I think what you try to ask me is, am I seeing a slowdown, and the clear answer is no. We absolutely don’t see a slowdown. And you can imagine that that especially the car companies with a pretty significantly negative impact to their car production numbers of this year and the ambition to grow them next year by, I don’t know, 10%-plus over this year, they clearly need more semiconductors and that is not limited to one product or one technology. I think I also made the very open comment earlier that 75% of the product portfolio in our Automotive business still has a lead time of above 52 weeks. I think that says it all.
Blayne Curtis — Barclays — Analyst
This is amazing stat. Thanks. Maybe you can just — we — no one asked on the Industrial, IoT, maybe just kind of discussion about the — what the areas of strength are for you and maybe you could describe the supply chain as well for the back half of the year here? Are you — is it just as tight, that would be helpful. Thanks.
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, Blayne. It is very tight too. I would say, no different to Automotive. Also, by the way, the impact of not shipping enough product is, at least as significant as in Automotive. It just catches less headlines in newspapers. But if you think about the impact on Industrial, Automation, which are huge — which is huge machinery which cannot be built if there is not enough semiconductor supply or in the smart home. It’s equally drastic as it is in Automotive, just catching less headlines.
Now, our big differentiator, more and more is our capability to offer complete solutions. Complete solutions around the processor. We’ve had that leadership in the — in a very wide range and portfolio of processing solutions into Industrial, but it’s now very nicely complemented by connectivity, security and analog attach, which really differentiates us from our competitors. I would dare to say it’s a very unrivaled position and offering here, which by the way is also going to be very much in the spotlight of our Investor Day next week to give you much more detail what we have and why we think that makes us grow so much in the time to come.
Now, from a supply chain or channel perspective, a lot of that business indeed is going through distribution, which is because it goes to thousands, literally thousands of small customers, and this is exactly why that solution capability of NXP makes such a big difference because many of these companies, which we are serving there through distribution, don’t have the capability themselves to deal with the complexity of these connected edge applications. So when and if we can offer them a complete solution, then that has a huge advantage for both time to market, but also from an R&D perspective for them. That’s actually what I think is really a very, very significant differentiator for us.
Now, another element in the equation is, we do have a relatively strong exposure to China. So, if you think about the Industrial business, a lot is going through distribution and a lot is going into China. And just to anticipate the question, we do not see a slowdown there in China. But again, mind you, it’s also that we are — we continue to be supply capped. So, as I said earlier, also in Industrial, we could certainly run higher revenues if only we had more supply. Good news is, also there, our supply capability, as we discussed with John earlier is improving every month so that over time also there we hopefully get into a better place.
Blayne Curtis — Barclays — Analyst
Good.
Operator
Okay. Our last question is from…
Jeff Palmer — Vice President, Investor Relations
Hey, Dexter, we’ll take one last call.
Operator
Okay. And our last question is from C.J. Muse. Your line is open.
C.J. Muse — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Yeah. Good morning. And thanks for squeezing me in. I guess, first question for you, Kurt. In your prepared remarks you talked about auto supply-demand balance probably not achieved until 2023. And so, curious, as you contemplate that, what kind of assumptions are you making in terms of what kind of the future inventory management will look like, both at the Tier 1s and OEMs? I imagine there’s more of just in case as opposed to just in time. So would love to hear your thoughts on kind of that evolution, that is likely coming I had for the auto industry.
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes, C.J., absolutely. I did indeed say that I don’t think there is, broadly speaking, enough supply next year to already start building those additional inventories because that’s exactly what you’re asking for. Yes, we clearly see a demand by the OEMs to the Tier 1s and other participants in the extended supply chain explicitly not the semi companies but in-between between us and the OEMs that demand and the requirements to build more inventory. A typical — if you want to size this, a typical ask is somewhere between three and six months, sometimes longer and it has a very simple reasoning, that’s the manufacturing cycle time for a semiconductor product. So, in a very simple way, they say, okay, if this is the additional inventory then that puts us may be on the safe side for more flexibility. And yeah, this is something, which I don’t see the industry has the capability to build that next year, but that’s then for 2023.
C.J. Muse — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Very helpful. And then, I guess, my follow-up question, obviously, we’ve seen positive mix shift on the EV side which you spoke to earlier. I’m curious, as we’re seeing more and more OEMs target kind of full platforms, moving over to EV or hybrid as well, I’m curious, how that has kind of played with your full solution, which kind of, I would think would fit nicely into that. Would love to hear your thoughts there.
Kurt Sievers — President and Chief Executive Officer
We love it, C.J. I mean, we talked a lot about our capability from a — actually, also from a solution perspective and battery management solutions, which is greatly benefiting from this faster and accelerated penetration. We will open the kimono [Phonetic] next week a little bit more in the Investor Day and give you insight in what else we do in electrification because we are not only with BMS exposed to this accelerated trend. So it’s a very good thing for NXP and it goes beyond battery management. By battery management itself, obviously, is benefiting very greatly.
Jeff, I guess, with this we come to the end of the call, which maybe gets me in a position just to summarize very briefly. I mean, it’s a turbulent time out there, but I’m really proud that we could deliver what I think is a very good quarter three, have a strong guidance into quarter four. But even more so, we continue to have excellent momentum also into next year, which means continued strong demand across our end markets, no inventory build out there and we see that our supply capability is getting better and better and better to start matching that demand in the future.
So with that, I thank you very much for your attendance today and I hope to hear and see quite a few of you also next week when we have our much more extended Investor Day in New York. Thank you.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
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