When you think about touch screens, the first name that
springs to mind might be
Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL). After all, the
finger-flicking goodness you see in the
iPhone and recent iPodshas brought on a veritable
revolution in
how we use mobile gadgets.
After that, you might think of
Synaptics (Nasdaq: SYNA). That's who
builds a lot of the actual touch-sensitive screens, from
the touch pad on your laptop to the interactive screens on
many a cell phone or
navigation device.
So far, so good. But when you lift the next curtain,
you'll find a plethora of chip designers fighting to
establish themselves as
thesupplier of touch-screen controller chips. That's
where you'll find
Cypress Semiconductor (NYSE: CY), and the
company is riding a wave of
resurgent gadget demandto 15% quarter-on-quarter sales
growth and a much-improved bottom line.
Cypress lost $0.13 per share in the third quarter on
$178.7 million of revenue. That's much better than the second
quarter's $0.32 loss per share and $155.8 million in sales.
And if you back out one-time charges and
stock-based compensation, you get a net profit of $0.10
per share, up from a loss of $0.03 per share three months
ago.
Management held up its TrueTouch touchscreen controller
products like that old baboon hoisting newborn prince Simba
to accept the kingdom's adoration in
The Lion King. "Customer acceptance of our new
products remains very strong and we are pleased with
high-profile design wins in many new end markets,"
CEOÂ T.J. Rodgers said. "We continue to achieve
significant proprietary product design wins -- especially
with our TrueTouch touchscreen products."
Just to name a few examples, publication DigiTimes reports
that TrueTouch is the multi-touch technology
Palm (Nasdaq: PALM) uses in the
Palm Pre smartphone.
Samsung picked it for the high-end Omnia HD
handset. Cypress is not without competition, as big boys like
Atmel (Nasdaq: ATML) and
Texas Instruments (NYSE: TXN) have their own
multi-touch touchscreen controllers, while
Maxim Integrated Systems (Nasdaq: MXIM),
which is a major player in the world of older but more
widespread single-touch pads, is working its way into this
new market too. But Cypress has an early lead and an
impressive range of technologies, including chips that allow
up to 10 inputs simultaneously, finally allowing you to play
piano sonatas on a single touchscreen.
Cypress has a few other products as well, including entire
programmable systems on a single chipand USB controllers.
But the company isn't head-and-shoulders above the rabble in
those sectors. If and when multitouch screens catch on in a
big way, bringing the revolution Apple started to its logical
conclusion, small-cap Cypress should be one of the biggest
winners along the way.
This article was originally published as
This Small-Cap Could Explode Any Dayon
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