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May 10, 2015
Fung Business Intelligence Centre (FBIC) publication: Flextronics Investor Day Copyright © 2015 The Fung Group, All rights reserved.
D E B O R A H W E I N S W I G E x e c u t i v e D i r e c t o r – H e a d o f G l o b a l R e t a i l & T e c h n o l o g y F u n g B u s i n e s s I n t e l l i g e n c e C e n t r e d e b o r a h w e i n s w i g @ f u n g 1 9 3 7 . c o m N e w Y o r k : 6 4 6 . 8 3 9 . 7 0 1 7
May 10, 2015
Notes from Flextronics Investor Day: “Sketch-to-Scale” in the “Age of Intelligence” • We attended Flextronics’ recent investor meeting, in which the company outlined opportunities in the “Age of Intelligence,” in which things will be connected to the Internet
• Flextronics possesses sketch-‐to-‐scale capabilities: the ability to guide a new product from general concept all the way through volume manufacturing
• The company is also the leader in wearable wristbands and the connected home today and says it is also leading the “Next Big Thing,” with activity in many new areas
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May 10, 2015
Fung Business Intelligence Centre (FBIC) publication: Flextronics Investor Day Copyright © 2015 The Fung Group, All rights reserved.
Investor Day: “Sketch-to-Scale” in the “Age of Intelligence” Executive Summary
On May 6, we attended Flextronics’ annual investor meeting. In the meeting, the company discussed its strategy for the future and its commitments to delivering value to shareholders. In short, Flextronics is positioning its engineering and manufacturing capabilities to make itself a one-‐stop shop for the coming wave of objects connected to the Internet of Things, which it termed the “Age of Intelligence.” Flextronics has a unique capability take a basic product idea (a sketch) and assist the customer through the entire process of design, engineering, volume manufacturing (to scale) and logistics. The company is already the leader in products for the connected home and wearables, and it is now positioning itself as the future leader of the “Next Big Thing,” building on its ability to combine enormous innovation resources, cross-‐knowledge of technology in many sectors and supply-‐chain intelligence and knowledge. For its shareholders, Flextronics is improving its execution, operating discipline, and the company is pursuing attractive business models and generating cash that it is returning to its shareholders.
Analyst Day Overview
The well-‐attended afternoon meeting for analysts and investors was held on May 6 in New York. The meeting included a summary presentation from the CEO, which outlined the new opportunities that Flextronics sees in the Internet of Things (which it called the Age of Intelligence), followed by a view of its innovation activities, updates from its business segments and a financial update by the CFO. The opportunities from the Internet of Things emanate from many sectors—healthcare, consumer, agriculture, energy and transportation—in which Flextronics is a leader in manufacturing. The company sees itself uniquely positioned to deliver technology to these industries. Moreover, the company has a wealth of technology in product design, materials and manufacturing as well as extremely deep supply-‐chain capabilities. This enables it to take over many of these functions from those industries (“sketch to scale”), enabling them to focus more intensely on their core competencies. Finally, because quality metrics are essential in manufacturing, Flextronics also has applied many metrics to evaluate its performance, and the company is delivering on its promise to return cash to shareholders through steady share repurchases.
The Age of Intelligence Is Now
Flextronics management outlined four eras with associated growth in GDP per capita. The first three were the Industrial Age (from 1750 to 1850), when world GDP doubled every 100 years; the Modern Age (1850 to 1970), when world GDP doubled every 40 years; and the Information Age (1970 to 2010), when global GDP doubled every 25 years. We now find ourselves in the Age of Intelligence (2010 to present), in which global GDP is doubling every 15 years.
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May 10, 2015
Fung Business Intelligence Centre (FBIC) publication: Flextronics Investor Day Copyright © 2015 The Fung Group, All rights reserved.
Figure 1. Average World GDP per Capita (USD)
Sources: World Bank, Maddison Project, De Long-‐UC Berkeley, Flextronics IDC estimated that by 2020, the “Intelligence of Things” will result in 50 billion connected devices and a $7.1 billion total addressable market (up from 10 billion devices today.) McKinsey Global Institute estimates that adding intelligence to devices can create the following opportunities:
Figure 2. Market Opportunities from the “Intelligence of Things”
Market Opportunity Comments
Healthcare $2 trillion Can bring a 10–20% reduction in chronic disease
Consumer $1 trillion 100% growth in the number of connected devices
Energy $500 billion 2.5–5.0% reduction in operating cost
Transportation $200 billion A 25% reduction in vehicle damage cost
Agriculture $100 billion A 10–20% increase in yields
Source: McKinsey Global Institute
The World Is Changing
At the same time, Flextronics argues that the world of manufacturing is changing, a product of the complexity of global supply chains, higher regionalization, the growth of Asian original-‐equipment manufacturers (OEMs), faster product cycles, more disruptive products, new hardware OEMs, increasing innovation and concerns of corporate social and environmental responsibility, all leading to the Internet of Things (and playing to Flextronics’ strengths).
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May 10, 2015
Fung Business Intelligence Centre (FBIC) publication: Flextronics Investor Day Copyright © 2015 The Fung Group, All rights reserved.
Flextronics believes that it is uniquely positioned to supply to these markets, owing to its real-‐time information systems (which monitor visibility, risk and execution, and run on multiple platforms), its end-‐to-‐end services (including innovation, engineering logistics and knowledge of supply chains), and physical infrastructure (at a huge scale: 200,000 people working at more than 100 sites in more than 30 countries).
Sketch-‐to-‐Scale
“Sketch-‐to-‐scale” refers to Flextronics’ ability to take a general idea for a product (the sketch), design it, test it, prepare it for high-‐volume manufacturing and manufacture the product (using Flex’s scale). The idea of the Age of Intelligence is that products in a diverse group of industries will need to be connected to the Internet, and Flextronics can readily supply this technology. Products for which Flextronics managed the entire process from sketch to scale are a diverse group, including network products for Palo Alto Networks and FireEye, room cleaners for Bissell, coffeemakers for KitchenAid, connected whiteboards for SMART Technologies, handheld glucose testers for FreeStyle, fitness watches for Pebble and the ChromeCast video adapter for Google.
Sketch-‐to-‐scale also represents the endgame of Flextronics’ transformation from contract manufacturer to electronics manufacturing service (EMS) to end-‐to-‐end supply chain solution company with sketch-‐to-‐scale capabilities. In each stage, the total addressable market gets larger, from $524 billion as a contract manufacturer, to $950 billion as an EMS, to $1 trillion-‐plus currently. Its expected profitability is also higher.
Broad and Deep Innovation at Flex
Innovation was and remains major focus for Flextronics. For new product ideas, the company provides access to new technology building blocks, access to a development ecosystem, help in accelerating time to market, assistance in entering adjacent markets and access to its experienced design and engineering teams. Its investments and resources include more than 2,500 engineers, six product innovation centers, an innovation center and ICE segment, an interconnected technology center, a real-‐time supply-‐chain-‐monitoring system (in connection with software from Elementum) and numerous patents, technologies, and design wins, as well as more than $3 billion in revenue attached to new design wins.
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May 10, 2015
Fung Business Intelligence Centre (FBIC) publication: Flextronics Investor Day Copyright © 2015 The Fung Group, All rights reserved.
Figure 4. Investing in Sustainable Innovation
Innovation Investments
• 2,500+ engineers
• 6 product innovation centers
• Lab IX / ICE / strategic partnerships
• Interconnect Technology Center
• Real-‐time information solutions (e.g., Elementum)
Flextronics Impact
• 7 technology centers of excellence (CoE)
• 130 technology building blocks
• 270+ patent applications filed in FY15
• 330+ design customers in FY15
• 1,000 design wins in FY15
• >$3B FY15 revenue attached to new design wins with multiyear tail of ongoing revenue
Source: Flextronics
Its innovation ecosystem includes Flextronics’ Lab IX incubator, as well as relationships with industry consortia, universities, research institutions, centers of excellence, suppliers, OEMs and other startups.
Flextronics has technology centers of excellence in sensors and actuators, human-‐machine interfaces, connectivity, smart software, batteries and power, flexible technologies and miniaturization, and security and computing.
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May 10, 2015
Fung Business Intelligence Centre (FBIC) publication: Flextronics Investor Day Copyright © 2015 The Fung Group, All rights reserved.
To help its customers get their products to market, Flextronics offers experience and resources in design, prototyping, new product introduction, certification, manufacturing, distribution, reverse logistics, and tax and trade.
Finally, Flextronics’ industry experience and knowledge is extremely broad, enabling it to identify and leverage technologies from a diverse group of industries, including automotive, healthcare, machine-‐to-‐machine communication, connected living, consumer electronics, energy, fitness/wellness, communications, and aerospace and defense.
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May 10, 2015
Fung Business Intelligence Centre (FBIC) publication: Flextronics Investor Day Copyright © 2015 The Fung Group, All rights reserved.
New Markets—“Skating to Where the Puck Will Be”
“A good hockey player plays where the puck is. A great hockey player plays where the puck is going to be.” —Wayne Gretzky
Flextronics claims leadership of the connected home and wearable wristband markets, which are growing at compound rates of more than 81% and 300%, respectively. In wearable wristbands, Flextronics estimates its market share at 85%.
More importantly, Flextronics says it is also leading the “Next Big Thing,” with many new vectors under development, driven by the Intelligence of Things. There is also a huge opportunity in the mechanical world; in the future, many mechanical devices will also be connected to the Internet, particularly in the medical and automotive sectors.
Financial Presentation—Three and Five
In terms of financial performance, Flextronics has embraced three key commitments and five consistent financial principles. The three commitments are:
• 5–10% annual growth in net income
• Generating $3 billion–$4 billion in free cash flow during FY13–17
• And returning at least 50% of that cash to investors
Its five financial principles are:
• Revenue growth
• Expanding operating profits
• Increasing earnings per share (EPS)
• Generating strong cash flow
• Maintaining a solid capital structure
Thus far, one quarter into its fiscal 2016 business year, Flextronics is on track to meet or exceed all of these goals.
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May 10, 2015
Fung Business Intelligence Centre (FBIC) publication: Flextronics Investor Day Copyright © 2015 The Fung Group, All rights reserved.
Deborah Weinswig, CPA Executive Director—Head of Global Retail & Technology Fung Business Intelligence Centre [email protected] Cam Bolden [email protected] Marie Driscoll, CFA [email protected] John Harmon, CFA [email protected] Amy Hedrick [email protected] Aragorn Ho [email protected] John Mercer [email protected] Charlie Poon [email protected] Kiril Popov [email protected] Stephanie Reilly [email protected] Lan Rosengard [email protected] Jing Wang [email protected]