SAN JOSE -- Sanmina-SCI Corp.'s fourth-quarter sales fell 2% to $2.77 billion
versus last year, the company said last night. The company provided preliminary results but did not release full
results due to an ongoing restatement of past financial reports, It said it expects to post
between a penny-per-share loss and profit of 1 cent per share,
excluding one-time items.
For the year, sales fell 6% to $10.96 billion.
On a conference call with analysts, Sanmina guided for first-quarter sales of $2.7 billion to $2.85
billion and for fiscal 2007 sales of $11.8 billion to $12.3 billion. The company forecast operating margins of 7 to 7.5%.
In a research note,
Deutsche Bank analyst Carter Shoop called the fiscal 2007 guidance "bullish," adding, "We believe the low-end of guidance will prove difficult to achieve."
DB pegged Sanmina's 2007 sales at $11 billion on gross margins of 6.4%.
Sanmina management also said it would end its ODM business acquired
three years ago. According to Shoop, the firm "appears to be shopping
around its PC business."
For the
quarter, inventory turns fell 0.3 times sequentially and 2.5 times
year-on-year to 7.8 turns. It was the seventh straight quarter than
inventory turns declined. The firm blamed the results on its exiting of the ODM business, soft demand for settop boxes and PCs, sluggish PCB shipments and inventory and warranty charges.
Sanmina-SCI
has said it will take additional expenses of $125 million to $150 million for errors in its stock option
practices dating back to 1997.