QRVO February 2, 2026

Qorvo Third Quarter 2026 Earnings Call - Android Exit Shrinks Revenue, Shifts Mix Toward Higher‑Margin Defense, Targeting >50% Gross Margin

Summary

Qorvo reported a steady December quarter with $993 million in revenue, a 49.1% non-GAAP gross margin, and $2.17 of non-GAAP diluted EPS, while laying out a deliberate, short-term hit to top line in pursuit of healthier margins. Management is deliberately exiting low-margin, mass-tier Android revenue and expects roughly $300 million of Android decline in fiscal 2027, a move that, combined with defense and aerospace strength, should lift mix and drive FY27 gross margins above 50% and EPS approaching $7.

The company balances that strategic pivot with operational housekeeping. Cash stands at about $1.3 billion, long-term debt near $1.5 billion, inventory down to $530 million, and free cash flow of $237 million in the quarter. Q4 guidance is cautious: revenue $800 million plus or minus $25 million, gross margin 48% to 49%, and EPS $1.20 plus or minus $0.15. Key execution items to watch are smartphone content shifts at the largest customer, continued HPA/D&A ramp, manufacturing transitions, and any further memory-driven volatility in Android builds.

Key Takeaways

  • Q3 fiscal 2026 results: revenue $993 million, non-GAAP gross margin 49.1%, non-GAAP diluted EPS $2.17.
  • Largest customer accounted for ~53% of revenue in the quarter; management expects that customer’s revenue to be approximately flat in the upcoming fiscal year.
  • Qorvo is deliberately reducing exposure to low-margin, mass-tier Android, expecting approximately $300 million of Android revenue decline in fiscal 2027 versus fiscal 2026.
  • Company-wide, management forecasts a mid-single-digit decline in full-year fiscal 2027 revenue, driven by the Android reduction, CSG roughly flat, and HPA double-digit growth.
  • Portfolio shift: defense and aerospace (D&A) and HPA growth will make the defense business larger than Android in FY27, improving product mix and margins.
  • Management targets full-year FY27 gross margins above 50% and EPS approaching $7, driven primarily by mix improvement and cost discipline.
  • Q4 (March quarter) guidance: revenue $800 million ± $25 million, non-GAAP gross margin 48% to 49%, non-GAAP diluted EPS $1.20 ± $0.15, and projected OpEx $240M–$250M.
  • HPA strength: expected D&A sales of approximately $500 million in FY27, NDAA-related platform tailwinds, AESA and SATCOM demand, and enterprise SSD PMIC tape-out completed.
  • ACG detail: content gains in select flagship platforms offset by lower share on ultra-high-band PADs; won high-band PAD placement for cellular-enabled iPad as a new content milestone.
  • ET PMICs benefit from a multiyear structural tailwind as platforms shift to internal modems, supporting higher-value content per device.
  • CSG progress: first production orders received for automotive ultra-wideband with a leading Tier 1, Wi-Fi 7 traction, first Wi-Fi 8 samples delivered, and MEMS sensing business divested to improve profitability.
  • Manufacturing actions: Costa Rica facility closed ahead of schedule, SAW filter transfer from Greensboro to Richardson Texas on track, and greater use of external partners to reduce capital intensity.
  • Cash flow and balance sheet: cash and equivalents approx. $1.3 billion, long-term debt ~$1.5 billion with no near-term maturities, operating cash flow ~$265 million, capex $28 million, free cash flow $237 million in the quarter.
  • Inventory improved: net inventory $530 million, down $75 million sequentially and $111 million year over year.
  • Risks and operational notes: utilization remains below target though no underutilization charges were taken this quarter; memory pricing and availability are an accelerating headwind to mass-tier Android builds and influenced the faster-than-previously-stated Android exit.

Full Transcript

Conference Operator: Good day, and welcome to the Qorvo, Inc. Third Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today’s presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on a touch-tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note that this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Douglas DeLieto, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Douglas DeLieto, Vice President of Investor Relations, Qorvo: Thanks very much. Hello, everyone, and welcome to Qorvo’s Fiscal 2026 third quarter earnings call. This call will include forward-looking statements that involve risk factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from management’s current expectations. We encourage you to review the safe harbor statement contained in the earnings release published today, as well as the risk factors associated with our business and our annual report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC, because these risk factors may affect our operations and financial results. In today’s release and on today’s call, we provide both GAAP and non-GAAP financial results. We provide this supplemental information to enable investors to perform additional comparisons of operating, operating results and to analyze financial performance without the impact of certain non-cash expenses or other items that may obscure trends in our underlying performance.

During our call, our comments and comparisons to income statement items will be based primarily on non-GAAP results. For a complete reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures, please refer to our earnings release issued earlier today, available on our investor relations website at ir.qorvo.com under Financial Releases. Lastly, for detailed information regarding the Skyworks and Qorvo combination announced on October 28th, I encourage you to review the press release, investor presentation, Qorvo merger proxy, and related materials available on our investor relations website at ir.qorvo.com under Events and Presentations. Today’s call will focus on our fiscal third quarter results as well as our outlook for the March quarter, and we will not be commenting on the proposed business combination. Joining us today are Bob Bruggeworth, President and CEO, Grant Brown, CFO, Dave Fullwood, Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing, and other members of Qorvo’s management team.

With that, I’ll turn the call over to Bob.

Bob Bruggeworth, President and CEO, Qorvo: Thanks, Doug, and welcome everyone to our call. In our fiscal third quarter, Qorvo delivered solid financial performance with notable strategic achievements across each operating segment. We continue to pursue our long-term growth strategy while executing on restructuring actions to optimize profitability and reduce capital intensity. In ACG, we are supporting the world’s leading smartphone OEMs with best-in-class products for their highest value, flagship and premium-tier devices. In CSG, we enjoy broad representation in Wi-Fi applications, and we are expanding our reach in automotive, enterprise, industrial, and other customer segments with our ultra-wideband technology. In HPA, we are growing across a range of customer applications, such as defense and aerospace, satellite communications, power, and infrastructure. Within our factory network, we closed our Costa Rica facility in December, a few months ahead of schedule, and have transitioned to external partners.

The transfer of SAW filter production from Greensboro, North Carolina, to Richardson, Texas, remains on track. With these actions, we will be able to operate more efficiently with reduced capital intensity, and we will continue to differentiate our products with onshore manufacturing of GaAs, GaN, BAW, SAW, and advanced multi-chip modules. Turning to quarterly highlights. In ACG, December quarterly revenue declined sequentially, in line with the view we provided last quarter and consistent with typical seasonality. At our largest customer, content gains on their ramping platform helped to support double-digit revenue growth compared to last December. We supply a diverse portfolio of high-performance discretes, tuners, ET PMICs, and integrated modules to our largest customer, not all of which have been awarded on the upcoming platforms. However, at this time, for the upcoming fiscal year, we expect revenue at our largest customer to be approximately flat.

For our ET PMIC, increasing internal modem adoption provides a multiyear structural tailwind as platforms transition away from third-party modems. With regard to integrated modules, on the ultra-high-band PAD, we received lower share in the upcoming phone models than last year, and we expect our ultra-high-band PAD revenue to decline year over year. This is a placement where we have demonstrated success across multiple generations. We remain confident in our highly differentiated technology and our ability to compete effectively over subsequent generations. In our largest customer’s cellular-enabled iPads, we were awarded the high-band PAD, representing a product and technology milestone and new content for Qorvo on that platform. We are extremely pleased to have secured this placement. The win gives us the opportunity to demonstrate capability and execute at scale on that platform, consistent with our long-term investment strategy. Turning to Android.

We remain a leading supplier in premium and flagship smartphones, while we continue to reduce our exposure to low-margin, mass-tier smartphones. In the December quarter, total Android revenue declined sequentially in the low double digits. In the March quarter, we expect a greater than seasonal decline in Android revenue. For fiscal 2027, we expect Android revenue to decline by approximately $300 million versus fiscal 2026, driven primarily by our actions to reduce exposure to lower-margin segments, and secondarily, by the impact of memory pricing and availability on mass-tier Android build plans. Qorvo enjoys broad participation across smartphone OEMs, and we are not seeing signs of memory pricing or memory availability impacting the flagship and premium tiers. With our largest customer expected to be approximately flat, ACG revenue is expected to decline in fiscal 2027 by the reduction in Android revenue.

This is an intentional resizing of our Android business. We are reducing exposure to lower margin segments while continuing to serve Android’s high-volume premium and flagship tiers. We expect the improvement in product mix to support a higher gross margin in ACG. Additionally, with ongoing OpEx reduction efforts, we expect to deliver expanding operating margins in ACG on the healthier revenue mix. In CSG, we’re on track with an automotive ultra-wideband program with a leading automotive Tier 1. Regarding this platform, we are very pleased to announce we did receive our first production orders during the December quarter. This program will span multiple years and support multiple OEMs. We continue to see expansion of our engagements across the automotive customer base. Use cases for Qorvo’s automotive ultra-wideband technology includes secure access, digital key, child presence detection, and short-range radar sensing.

We are supplying both our ultra-wideband and Wi-Fi 7 solutions in collaboration with multiple Tier 1 manufacturers of network access points. We’re seeing strong customer demand, and initial deployments include hospitals, factories, and other enterprises requiring ultra-precision indoor navigation and location awareness. Our Wi-Fi portfolio is proudly represented in flagship smartphones, fiber gateways, mesh networks, client devices, and SatCom ground terminals, and we continue to expand our Wi-Fi, FEM, and filter portfolio to enable higher bandwidth, lower latency, interconnected networks. We delivered first Wi-Fi 8 samples during the December quarter, and customer engagement in Wi-Fi 8 is increasing. Regarding the CSG restructuring discussed last quarter, these actions remain on track. During the quarter, we successfully divested our MEMS-based sensing solutions business. While this represents a headwind to year-over-year CSG growth next fiscal year, it is one of multiple initiatives we are undertaking to improve CSG’s profitability.

Turning to HPA, we continue to see multiyear tailwinds in D&A, data center power, and infrastructure markets. In D&A, the passage of the fiscal 2026 NDAA includes top priorities such as Golden Dome, the F-47 fighter, and the Navy’s next-generation fighters, warships, and drones. Qorvo is a beneficiary of new platforms, upgrade cycles, RF content growth, and increases in defense spending. As an example, Golden Dome is a multilayer defense system that requires significant RF content. For the full fiscal year 2027, sales in D&A markets are expected to total approximately $500 million. In power management, our strategic emphasis on PMIC for enterprise-class SSDs has been met with continued data center growth, where customer demand has been very strong. During the quarter, we taped out our first chip for our next-generation enterprise SSD platform. Other power opportunities for Qorvo includes AESA radars, drones, robotics, wearables, and smartphones.

There is strong interest globally in Qorvo’s AESA solutions, combining our FEMs, beamforming ICs, power management, and power control. In infrastructure markets, there are increased content requirements in DOCSIS 4.0 systems that align well with our amplifier and control portfolios. Qorvo is a leading supplier of broadband amplifiers for DOCSIS 4.0, and we are well positioned with all major suppliers. We’re also a market leader in small signal, receive, and transmit components used across the RF chain of 5G radio access network. While these products have historically been deployed in terrestrial 5G infrastructure, we are increasingly seeing the same RF building blocks adopted in adjacent applications, such as drones and low Earth orbit satellite communications, including direct-to-cell satellite architectures. We are sharply focused on growing our highest-performing businesses, and we are divesting or exiting businesses that underperform.

In fiscal 2027, we forecast a mid-single-digit decline in full-year revenue for the company as ACG declines and becomes more profitable, CSG is approximately flat, and HPA continues its double-digit growth. As we move through fiscal 2027, we expect our defense and aerospace business will be larger than our Android business. That’s a meaningful shift in the portfolio that reflects both the strategic resizing of our Android business and continued growth in HPA. This increasingly favorable mix positions us to deliver full-year FY 2027 gross margins above 50% and EPS approaching $7 per share. These outcomes reflect continued operating expense discipline, a structurally improved portfolio mix, and our sustained commitment to innovation and operations excellence. And with that, I’ll turn it over to Grant.

Grant Brown, CFO, Qorvo: Thanks, Bob, and good afternoon, everyone. Qorvo’s fiscal third quarter revenue of $993 million, non-GAAP gross margin of 49.1%, and non-GAAP diluted earnings of $2.17 per share, all compared favorably to guidance. During the quarter, our largest customer represented approximately 53% of revenue. On the balance sheet, as of quarter end, we held approximately $1.3 billion of cash and equivalents and approximately $1.5 billion of long-term debt outstanding, with no near-term maturities. We ended the quarter with a net inventory balance of $530 million. This represents a sequential reduction of $75 million and a decrease of $111 million compared to where we ended last fiscal year.

During the quarter, we generated operating cash flow of approximately $265 million and incurred $28 million of capital expenditures, which resulted in free cash flow of $237 million. Regarding our outlook for Fiscal Q4, our guidance reflects continued momentum in HPA, offset by our strategic pivot from lower-margin mass-tier Android and the normal seasonal decline at our largest customer. Our expectations for the March quarter are as follows: revenue of $800 million ± $25 million, non-GAAP gross margin between 48% and 49%, and non-GAAP diluted EPS of $1.20 ± $0.15. Gross margin continues to improve on a year-over-year basis. In Q3, non-GAAP gross margin increased approximately 260 basis points versus last fiscal year, and we expect a similar improvement year-over-year in Q4.

This improvement is a direct result of multiple initiatives. We’ve actively managed our product portfolio and pricing strategies to reduce exposure to mass-tier Android 5G. We’ve positioned the company to benefit from growth in D&A, which is margin accretive. We’ve divested or exited margin diluted businesses, and we continue to manage factory costs aggressively as we have consolidated our manufacturing footprint. We project non-GAAP operating expenses in the March quarter to be between $240 million and $250 million. Below the operating income line, non-operating expense is expected to be between $8 million-$10 million, reflecting interest paid on our fixed rate debt, offset by interest income earned on our cash balances, FX gains or losses, along with other items. Our non-GAAP tax rate for fiscal 2026 is expected to be approximately 15%.

We continue to monitor the situation as changes to tax policy in the U.S. and internationally may evolve over time. At this time, please open the line for questions. Thank you.

Conference Operator: We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touch-tone phone. If you’re using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our queue. The first question comes from Thomas O’Malley with Barclays. Please go ahead.

Thomas O’Malley, Analyst, Barclays: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. So thanks for the color on the content. I think, Bob, you mentioned the ultra-high band, potentially not having as much content there in this generation, but you have some of the ET coming back in. If you look at the next several generations of content, it looks like with this dual sourcing, you’ve seen a lot more swimming in other people’s lanes, is the way I think I’ve heard it talked about in the past, where, you know, one guy would compete in, you know, a couple sockets, and now you’ve seen that proliferating to some other sockets, which has just kind of increased the competition, and you guys have called out a couple of areas where you’re seeing that. Maybe talk about the content roadmap on a go-forward basis.

Like, do you think that there are other sockets—you obviously talked about the high band or the mid-high band and the iPads. Like, do you see other sockets where you could have some more traction? Or do you feel like the wind’s behind you or in front of you in terms of content over the next several generations? Thank you.

Grant Brown, CFO, Qorvo: Yeah, thanks a lot. Appreciate the question, Tom. And, you know, as you know, we don’t like to comment on future generations or even architectures, but I will say that, you know, there continues to be opportunity for us to continue to grow our footprint there, no doubt about it. You know, it, it’s been, as you know, a lot of it was sole sourced. As you can see, it does appear they’re multi-sourcing more, or at least dual sourcing, I should say, more sockets in the future. And, you know, we’re investing in R&D to continue to grow at our largest customer.

Thomas O’Malley, Analyst, Barclays: Helpful. Then just a clarification on the second one. I think you mentioned into March, Android would be down more than seasonal. I’m sure there’s a million different ways, five, 10, 15 years, you can look at seasonal. But in terms of what I have here, Android was actually up in the March quarter. I know you’ve seen some different seasonality. What do you mean by down more than seasonal? What is normal seasonal for March in Android?

Grant Brown, CFO, Qorvo: Yeah, I appreciate the question, Tom, and you’re exactly right. Typically, Android has been up in the March quarter, and as we’ve been strategically exiting a lot of that lower margin business, and we talked last quarter about even some of the Android ramps and other phones that, you know, we’re not participating as much. Again, due to our strategic emphasis on, you know, making sure we’re getting paid for the value we bring, and this year it’s gonna be down quarter over quarter. So that’s the big swing. You’re correct.

Conference Operator: The next question comes from Peter Peng with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.

Grant Brown, CFO, Qorvo: Are you there, Peter?

Peter Peng, Analyst, JPMorgan: Oh, hi. Hi, thanks for taking my question. But just for the Android business, I think the prior expectation was, you know, you’re gonna exit by about $200 million, and now you guys are saying $300 million. So maybe just talk about whether that is just expedite exit. Is it the memory impact? What drove the, you know, accelerated pace? And then, you know, as we think about longer term, what is the business revenue run rate, you know, after you’re finishing, you know, exiting on this business?

Grant Brown, CFO, Qorvo: Hey, Peter, this is Grant. Let me take that one, and then Dave can fill in some more detail. So we’ve said that it’ll be a multi-year event as we exit the lower margin or lower-tier Android businesses. It could run approximately $150 million-$200 million in our fiscal 2026, and then again in our fiscal 2027. Last quarter, we had mentioned that we expected the larger portion of that in our fiscal 2026 to hit in the second half, and especially impacting the March quarter, and that’s exactly what we’re seeing in results.

Then in fiscal 2027, instead of the $150 million-$200 million, we’re taking that estimate up to $300 million that we could exit in fiscal 2027, and that’s fully due to our strategic exit from the business, as well as some of the memory pricing and availability constraints that are impacting customers’ build plans.

Peter Peng, Analyst, JPMorgan: Perfect. And then just on the gross margin, you talked about potentially getting to the, you know, the 50%. Maybe you can kind of lay it out on how, you know, we should think about that margin profile over the course of the 2027?

Bob Bruggeworth, President and CEO, Qorvo: Yep. Peter, we’re getting a lot of background noise when we’re talking. I don’t know if it’s on your end or not.

Peter Peng, Analyst, JPMorgan: Let me-

Bob Bruggeworth, President and CEO, Qorvo: All right, go ahead.

Grant Brown, CFO, Qorvo: Sure. So I think your question was around margin profile, so as we look out into fiscal 2027?

Peter Peng, Analyst, JPMorgan: That, that is right, that is right.

Grant Brown, CFO, Qorvo: Okay. Yeah, so the biggest driver for margin as we look out in fiscal 2027 is mix. That’s both business mix, as HPA becomes a larger percentage of the total, which is margin accretive, as well as product mix inside of the segments, especially within ACG. We’ve talked at length about the exit from the lower-tier Android business, which is having a sizable effect. Obviously, our utilizations aren’t where we’d like them to be, but you know, the biggest gains in gross margin for the moment are coming from that business mix I talked about. So there’s still further headroom, you know, as we add additional volumes over time. You know, I would compliment the operations team.

They’ve, you know, done a considerable job of pulling costs out while maintaining the capacity that we need to strategically target very important pieces of business all while transferring multiple lines of production, which is not a small feat, as Bob commented earlier, you know, both on Costa Rica as well as the North Carolina transition to Texas.

Peter Peng, Analyst, JPMorgan: Thank you, guys.

Conference Operator: The next question comes from Gary Mobley with Loop Capital. Please go ahead.

Gary Mobley, Analyst, Loop Capital: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question, and thanks for the explicit guidance, Bob, for fiscal year 27, and specifically on Apple. You’re calling for revenue to be flat in fiscal year 27, with perhaps some content loss in the upcoming iPhone 18, you know, in aggregate. So is that more or less one part volume growth, offset equally by some content decline? Maybe you can just help us out there in terms of, like, your volume assumption for iPhone units, I guess, you know-

Bob Bruggeworth, President and CEO, Qorvo: Yeah

Gary Mobley, Analyst, Loop Capital: -that assumption.

Bob Bruggeworth, President and CEO, Qorvo: Yeah, thanks, Gary, and we’re not going to comment on our largest customers’ volumes or expectations. We’re just giving you an indication of what we think our revenue is going to be, given everything we know at this time.

Gary Mobley, Analyst, Loop Capital: Got it. Got it. Okay, and then looking at your fourth quarter revenue guide, it’s down about $70 million, roughly, on a year-over-year basis. How much of that decrease is a function of business divestments? I believe there might be two significant business divestments, you know, within that year-over-year comparison, and I would assume the rest is mostly Android related.

Grant Brown, CFO, Qorvo: That’s correct. The vast majority of it is Android related. You know, it’s relatively small from the, the divestitures that we’ve made. And the Android component of that, obviously, we’ll see how that exactly plays out. We’re seeing, you know, both our strategic exit as well as some of the, customer forecast driven by some memory pricing concerns, which is just starting to find its way into the customer dialogue.

Gary Mobley, Analyst, Loop Capital: Got it. Thank you, guys.

Conference Operator: The next question comes from Christopher Rolland with Susquehanna. Please go ahead.

Christopher Rolland, Analyst, Susquehanna: Thanks so much for the question. So I think previously you guys were quite optimistic around integrated modules and ramping integrated modules. Obviously, this dual sourcing is a setback, but perhaps if you can talk about your products here, how you feel about them and how you feel about your prospects moving forward, particularly for integrated modules.

Bob Bruggeworth, President and CEO, Qorvo: Yeah. And, Gary, just to be clear, the ultra-high-band has been a dual-sourced part for many, many years, probably five or six years. We’ve always had content in it. We just have less this year than prior years. And, you know, I talked about the high-band PAD, and, you know, that’s an area we hadn’t been, so the dual sourcing is actually helping us in that case. So that’s how I’d actually answer your question.

Christopher Rolland, Analyst, Susquehanna: Okay.

Grant Brown, CFO, Qorvo: Maybe, Gary, in terms of, in terms of revenue, maybe, you know, there’s always a considerable number of variables to consider in addition to content, gains and losses, including the, the timing of certain different awards, as well as the volume of, of, specific SKUs, the mix, launch cadence across those models. You know, but at least from a modeling perspective, in terms of our assumptions, I think the key point is that all of our, our underlying assumptions are, are fully reflected in the, the fiscal 2027 outlook that Bob provided earlier.

Frank Stewart, Qorvo: Thanks, Chris.

Christopher Rolland, Analyst, Susquehanna: Yeah, sorry, me. Yeah, and just maybe, maybe just following up there, you, you did have some comments about not being, I think, totally decided for the year, but you—it sounds like you guys have pretty good visibility here, and we probably shouldn’t be expecting any more surprises, either positive or negative versus your flat guide year-over-year. Is that fair?

Dave Fullwood, Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing, Qorvo: Yeah, that’s fair. There’s always certain components, you know, particularly around tuners, that are awarded later in the cycle. But, yeah, everything’s kind of reflected in the guide that Bob gave.

Christopher Rolland, Analyst, Susquehanna: Excellent. Thank you, guys.

Dave Fullwood, Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing, Qorvo: Thanks, Chris.

Conference Operator: The next question comes from Krish Sankar with TD Cowen. Please go ahead.

Christopher Rolland, Analyst, Susquehanna0: Hello, this is Robert Mertens on the line for Krish Sankar. Thanks for taking my questions. You mentioned that Android sales are expected to decline roughly $300 million next year, and walk us through how the exiting of the low-end space will impact the business. But could you just walk us through a little bit more about how the current higher memory prices and costs are affecting your mobile business, and how you think that might play out next year?

Dave Fullwood, Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing, Qorvo: Yeah, this is Dave. Yeah, so that decline we’re talking about is primarily as a result of the ongoing intentional resizing of the Android business that we’ve been talking about for almost a year now. Secondarily, what we’re seeing related to the memory pricing and availability, as OEMs adjust their build plans to react to that, it definitely pressures the mass tier as customers prioritize the supply that they get towards the higher end devices. So this has an acceleration effect on our strategy, but it really doesn’t change the end result. But that, that’s why you’re seeing, you know, the higher $300 million decline that we called out for FY 2027 versus what we had called out earlier.

Grant Brown, CFO, Qorvo: And maybe I’ll just add to that a little bit, Dave, as far as the profile of our revenue throughout the year. You know, as you, as you start to think past March and into June, the dynamic that Dave was describing will play out. You know, it’s a little too early to put too fine a point on it, since we only guide in any detailed way for the next quarter. But, you know, it’s worth pointing out that historical seasonality, even in June, say, down 5%-10% sequentially, no longer applies for the reasons were mentioned and the strategic actions around Android are, you know, strategically managing down our Android exposure in the mass tier, as well as a seasonal downtick in our revenues from our largest customer.

Normally, those would offset, and we’re not gonna see that. You know, we hadn’t seen it in March, we won’t see it in June. And then secondarily, you know, as we’ve talked about our D&A business, on a year-over-year basis, we continue to see a considerable strength there, but it’ll be down as we look into June, which is pretty typical, coming off of a very strong March. So, you know, as D&A has grown to be a larger contributor to our top line, the impact on June seasonality has also grown. So the profile of our business will change because of, you know, to a large degree, the Android exit, as we were communicating earlier.

Christopher Rolland, Analyst, Susquehanna0: Got it. Thank you. That’s helpful and makes sense for our customers to prioritize the higher end. Just real quick, in line with that, are you seeing any sort of changes in terms of inventory level at customers, or this in line or higher or lower than what you would typically expect at this time of year?

Dave Fullwood, Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing, Qorvo: Yeah, I wouldn’t say we’ve seen anything abnormal as it relates to inventory. It’s just more of a reaction to how they’re adjusting their build plans, given the situation that’s going on with the memory.

Christopher Rolland, Analyst, Susquehanna0: Okay. Thank you.

Conference Operator: The next question comes from Edward Snyder with Charter Equity Research. Please go ahead, sir.

Edward Snyder, Analyst, Charter Equity Research: Thank you very much. Bob, you said you’d have lower share in the high band. Obviously, the iPad isn’t gonna be a big driver for unit volume, but the mix should favor your ET, and that’s like $1.80 extra content. And apparently, that’s gonna be a significant shift, given what we saw last year versus what we saw this year. So doesn’t this imply that you’re seeing significant share loss in ultra-high band, or are there other parts that we don’t know that you haven’t mentioned, that you’re not gonna be on the new phone? I know Dave talked about tuners always get added towards the end of it, but plus or minus on that isn’t gonna be,

I wouldn’t think, correct me if I’m wrong, I wouldn’t think you’re in the dollar range of content. So I’m just trying to get my arms around this shift, ’cause the wind should be at your back in the forward, just for ET itself, and it doesn’t sound like that’s the case at all.

Frank Stewart, Qorvo: Yeah. Hey, Ed, this is Frank Stewart. Maybe just to reiterate, the things that we’re excited about is the high-band PAD win that we got. The headwind that we have is the loss of share in UHB. Working very hard to get that back in the following generation. We agree that as the internal modem is used on more SKUs, that is a tailwind for us. When you put it all together with all of our estimates of how all that plays out, again, we can only talk to our expectations for revenue. When you play that out over our fiscal year, it comes together with about flat year-over-year.

Edward Snyder, Analyst, Charter Equity Research: Okay. I just wanted to be sure we had all the moving parts together. But it’s- you’re still gonna be in the ultra-high band, you’re just gonna see lower share.

Frank Stewart, Qorvo: Yes.

Edward Snyder, Analyst, Charter Equity Research: You’re not gonna get kicked out of that.

Frank Stewart, Qorvo: Yeah, that’s right. That’s right.

Edward Snyder, Analyst, Charter Equity Research: All right. Yeah, I just wanna make sure that’s the case. And then, Grant, underutilization charges, it sounds like, especially if you’re gonna be flat, et cetera, did you incur any this quarter? Do you expect any coming up? Is that mostly past at this stage? ’Cause I know you’re gonna be shipping more BOS because all I know you guys call it the high band, but historically, it’s been called the mid-high band, uses a lot of BOS. Doesn’t use a lot of BOS. I mean, you’re going into a different product here, so maybe it doesn’t, actually. Maybe, maybe you don’t even have nearly the number of bands you have to deal with before. So one, underutilization charges, and two, have things improved utilization-wise in BOS, or do you anticipate they’ll improve this year?

Grant Brown, CFO, Qorvo: Thanks, Ed. It’s, you know, utilization is obviously not where we’d like it to be, so we still have ample headroom, you know, to support some of these strategic areas that we’re going after at our largest customer and elsewhere. But, you know, there are no specific underutilization charges or period charges in the quarter. And, you know, the ops team on our side has done a terrific job of managing costs, as we’ve been, you know, shutting down factories or we’ve been moving them, you know, from North Carolina to Texas and all of the other activity they have going on that we’ve discussed. It’s a considerable effort, and at the same time, pulling out enough costs in order to support the gross margin improvements that we’ve been showing is a significant effort.

Edward Snyder, Analyst, Charter Equity Research: Okay. Thanks.

Frank Stewart, Qorvo: Thanks, Ed.

Conference Operator: This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to management for any closing remarks.

Frank Stewart, Qorvo: I wanna thank everyone for joining us today, and I hope everyone has a great evening. Thank you.

Conference Operator: The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.