zk1211040.htm


FORM 6-K

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

For the month of February 2012 No. 6

TOWER SEMICONDUCTOR LTD.
(Translation of registrant's name into English)

Ramat Gavriel Industrial Park
P.O. Box 619, Migdal Haemek, Israel 23105
(Address of principal executive offices)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover Form 20-F or Form 40-F.

Form 20-F x   Form 40-F o

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant by furnishing the information contained in this Form is also thereby furnishing the information to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Yes o   No x
 
 
 

 
 
On February 16, 2012, the registrant filed presentation following its Q4 and 2011 financial results release.
 
 
 

 
 
SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

 
TOWER SEMICONDUCTOR LTD.
 
       
Date: February 16, 2012
By:
/s/ Nati Somekh Gilboa
 
   
Name: Nati Somekh Gilboa
 
   
Title: Corporate Secretary
 
 
 
 

 
 
1
2011 Results
and Growth Engines
February 16, 2012
 
 

 
2
Safe Harbor and Disclaimers
This presentation contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the “safe harbor” provisions of the Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based on management’s current expectations and beliefs and are subject to a number of risks,
uncertainties and assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements.
All statements other than statements of historical fact are statements that could be deemed forward-looking statements. For example,
statements of expected synergies from Tower’s merger with Jazz or TowerJazz Japan, customer benefits, costs savings, financial guidance,
industry ranking, execution of integration plans and management and organizational structure are all forward-looking statements. The
potential risks and uncertainties include, among others, that expected customer benefits, synergies and costs savings will not be achieved or
that the companies are unable to successfully execute their integration strategies, as well as other risks applicable to the companies’
business described in the reports filed by Tower and Jazz with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) and, in the case of Tower,
the Israel Securities Authority. These filings identify and address other important factors that could cause the companies’ respective financial
and operational results to differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements set forth in this document. Accordingly,
no assurances can be given that any of the events anticipated by the forward-looking statements will transpire or occur, or if any of them do
so, what impact they will have on the companies’ results of operations or financial condition. Tower is providing this information as of the
date of this presentation and Tower does not undertake any obligation to update any forward-looking statements contained in this
document as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
A more complete discussion of risks and uncertainties that may affect the accuracy of forward-looking statements included in this
presentation or which may otherwise affect the companies’ business is included under the heading "Risk Factors" in Tower’s most recent
filings on Forms 20-F, F-4, F-3 and 6-K, as were filed with the SEC and the Israel Securities Authority and Jazz’s most recent filings on Forms 10
-K and 10-Q, as were filed with the SEC. Actual results may differ materially from those projected or implied by such forward-looking
statements. Tower and Jazz do not intend to update, and expressly disclaim any obligation to update, the information contained therein.
 
 

 
3
Outline
 2011 FY and Q4 Financials Results Overview
 Business and Strategy Overview
 Past, Present, Future
 
 

 
4
2011 FY and Q4
Financials Results Highlights
 
 

 
5
Q4 & FY 2011 Financial Results Highlights
§ FY 2011: $611M, up 20% Y/Y vs. $509M in 2010 and up 2X vs. $299M in 2009
§ Q4 2011: $175M, up 29% vs. $135M in Q4 2010
Revenue
§ EBITDA of $187M in FY 2011, a 31% EBITDA margins
§ In Q4 2011 achieved EBITDA of $40M with $30M Positive cash from operations
Profitability
 § After $100M principal payment for bonds in last 3 months
§ 1.7X Net debt/EBITDA ratio, based on 2011 EBITDA, vs. 2.3X in 2010
§ $175M positive shareholders’ equity vs. $118M on Dec’ 31, 2010
§ Strong & solid financial ratios
Balance Sheet
 
 

 
6
Business and Strategy Overview
 
 

 
7
The Big Question
The world is going digital… correct?
So why is TowerJazz focused on analog?
 
 

 
8
Market Leading Smart Phones
 
 

 
9
Apple iPhone4 - a Closer Look
Apps Processor
+ DRAM
NAND Flash
NOR Flash
Quad
Baseband
Logic/Memory
4 Chips
Power
Audio
Display
Touch
PA
Switch
Controller
ESD
Discretes
Gyroscopes
Compass
Analog
Many Chips
 
 

 
10
Another example..
Deep digital is the brain..
BUT without analog:
It won’t turn on
Screen won’t display
No wireless, among others…
Analog
Inside!
 
 

 
11
The Answer
The world is going digital… correct?
So why is TowerJazz focused on analog?
Because the world is going digital
BUT without analog it won’t work!
 
 

 
12
Emerging microelectronics : Two Roads to Follow 
350nm-130nm technology nodes
Moderate investments (tens of millions US $) +
lots of Innovation and Creative Thinking
Specialty products : More than Moore
Specialized Image
Sensors
Specialty IC for mobile
applications:
Power Management Ics
(drivers, converters,etc.)
MEMS
ICs for space applications
Example: TSMC
High-performance microprocessors, CPUs, GPUs
(graphic processing units), etc; High Volumes
Plain vanilla CMOS; Moore’s roadmap
45nm -22 nm technology nodes
Multibillion US $ investments
Only very large IDMs and huge foundries
(TSMC , UMC, GF, SMIC) can follow this road
Source: Global Foundries
 
 

 
13
 Capacity Capex
High
Low
 Technology Capex
High
Low
 Product Lifetime
Short
Long
 Customer Engagement
Typically multi-source
Sole or limited source
 Technology Differentiation
At leading edge only
Across process technologies
 Segment Sizes
Large
Many niches through mid-size
 Process Technologies
CMOS
SiGe, BiCMOS, MEMS, CIS
 Technology Nodes
65nm-22nm
350nm-110nm
Digital Moore’s Law Foundries
Specialty Analog Foundries
Two Types of Foundries
Specialty Foundry Enjoys Several Advantages
 
 

 
14
Annual Revenues 2005-2011
 
 

 
15
1. Source: IC Insights, Company reports, SemiMD January 2012
Foundry Revenue Landscape: Consistent superior performance
 
 

 
16
Specialty Foundry
CMOS SPECIALTY
 
 

 
17
Total 8” Equivalent Capacity of
~1.7M WPY
 
 

 
18
HPA/RF
CMOS
TOPS-IDM
Corporate Business and
Applications
Power
CIS
 
 

 
19
RF and HPA Applications and Technology
 RF CMOS and SiGe BiCMOS
 § Cell Phone, WiFi TxRx
 § Basestation, Specialty Wireless
 § TV, Satellite, STB Tuners
RF and Tuners
 SOI Switch and SiGe Power Amplifiers
 § Power Amplifiers
 § Antenna Switch
 § PA Controllers
 § IPD
Front-End Modules
 High Performance SiGe
 § Optical Fiber Networks
 § Automotive Radar
 § 60 GHz WiFi, 24GHz Backhaul
 § Light Peak and Thunderbolt
mmWave
 Complementary BiCMOS
 § Line Drivers DSL, HomePlug, ATE
 § HDD PreAmp
 § OpAmps, DAC, ADC
High Performance Analog
Best-in-Class SiGe, RF CMOS, RF Models and Design Enablement
 
 

 
20
Front-End Module
 
 

 
21
Switch Market shift to SOI
SOI Wafer Foundry Revenue TAM ($M)
SOI TAM going from ~$30M in 2011 to ~$200M in 2014
Technology Split (%)
Source: company analysis
 
 

 
22
Drivers of Demand : Front End Module
Market Trend
GaAs Switch => SOI technology
GaAs PA => SiGe PA for several applications
Silicon based IPD
PA controller advances but remain RFCMOS
TowerJazz advantages
Long term customer relationship with FEM
leaders
Best of class SiGe technology
Qualified SOI technologies
IPD customer alignment
Hence - Gen+2 market leader
development engagements.
 
 

 
23
Power: Key Growth Markets
 § Voltage requirements vary
 by make and Model: Scalable
 20 to 80V and low layer count
 are the primary advantage
FPD DC/DC, LED Backlighting
 § 1.8V CMOS combined with
 the High voltage module
 provides the correct balance
 of performance and cost for
 medium currents
Digital Controlled Power - PMIC
 § High Power with isolated
 buried layer Provides the
 noise Immunity required
 for >2 Amp applications
High Power/Motor Driver
 § AC to DC conversion
 § Industrial LED lighting
 § High side driver for FETs
AC to DC up to 700V
Enabling our customer base to compete with incumbent solutions with a
Modular Platform optimized to cover large voltage range and power requirements
 
 

 
24
TowerJazz can take market
shares over all three segments
Drivers of Demand : Power Electronics Market
20 Billion US $ today; Stable ~ 8% market growth rate
Substantially higher foundry growth rate
TowerJazz PM platforms advantages:
180nm technology (most competitors
are at older nodes
)
Unique 700V devices
Unique low-cost embedded NVM
Original isolation technologies
Flexible integrated solutions
World-class modeling
Hence - Gen+2 market leader
development engagements.
 
 

 
25
Samsung Selects TowerJazz’s “unrivaled” 700V Power Technology
Platform for its Next Generation High Voltage Products
Power Management IC Market Estimated at $14.6B in 2013 according to iSuppli
Samsung Electro-Mechanics Vice President Dr. Jae Shin Lee
and TowerJazz Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Russell Ellwanger
MIGDAL HAEMEK, Israel and SEOUL, Korea, September 5, 2011 - TowerJazz, the global
specialty foundry leader, and Samsung Electro-Mechanics, today announced they have
signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to develop and volume produce a variety of
product families based on TowerJazz’s 700V (TS100PM) power management process.
“We chose to work with TowerJazz on our next-generation
of high voltage products because of their
superior 700V
technology
which is unrivaled by other foundries. We
were looking for a
true partner who would be committed to
our success and provide excellent support and the required
manufacturing capacity,”
said Samsung Vice President
Dr. Jae Shin Lee
. “TowerJazz is well-known in Korea,
especially in the power management market, and we are
looking forward to our collaboration on many high volume
products.”
 
 

 
26
CIS Key Markets
 § Highest requirements for image quality
 § Large sensors, very high
 resolution, demanding frame rate
 § Very low defect count allowed
 § Very high sensitivity,
 dynamic range & low noise
Professional Photography
 § Market Leader for dental
 x-ray CMOS
 § Supplying all Tier-1 vendors
 § Smallest endoscopy solution
Medical & X-Ray
 § 2D and line sensors
 § High speed and high accuracy
 § “Intelligent” pixels
Industrial Cameras
 § Linear HDR for color imagers
  Reverse & parking assist
  Airbag inflation control
  Dimming mirrors
  Night vision / Obstacle Detection
Automotive & Security
Technology, Flexibility, Experience and Commitment allows our
customers to bring to the market the best in class products
 
 

 
27
TowerJazz market focus is
specialty CIS
Drivers of Demand : CMOS Image Sensor Market
 6 Billion US $ today; stable ~ 7-8% growth rate
TowerJazz CIS advantages:
Ultra-low noise and dark current
Specialized solutions for high-end
applications
Large area images employing unique
stitching technology
The smallest in the world CIS camera
(<1mm size)
Flexible pixel development environment
, extremely advantageous for foundry
customers
Source: HIS iSuppli
Hence - Gen+2 market leader
development engagements.
 
 

 
28
 
 

 
29
Jazz Semiconductor
Newport Beach, California, USA
 Converted to 200mm wafers in 1994
 Expanded to 25K WPM in 2010
Geometries
 0.5um-0.13um
Technologies:
SiGe, BiCMOS, MS / RF
Representative customers:
Skyworks
RFMD
Entropic
Marvell
A&D US
Employees: 650
 Fab 1 built in 1984 - running at full utilization
 with fundamentally same equipment set(1)
 Fab 2 built in 2001 - became operational in
 2003 - Expansion Capex through 2011
Geometries
 Fab 1 - 1um-0.35um
 Fab 2 - 0.18um-0.13um
Technologies:
CIS, PM, MS / RF, MEMS
Representative customers:
Vishay
IR
Samsung
Qualcomm
Ikanos
Nuvoton
Employees : 1,200
World Headquarters
Migdal Haemek, Israel
Fab 1 & Fab 2
TowerJazz Japan
Nishiwaki City, Japan
 Built in 2 segments of 30K wafer capacity in
 1992 and 1997
Geometries :
 0.18um-0.095um
Technologies:
DRAM transfer into CMOS and PM
Representative customer:
Micron
Employees: 1,300
Fab 4
Fab 3
Facilities Overview
Sole source with diverse geographic back-up
 
 

 
30
Japan Acquisition
 Micron 3 years take-or-pay
 Already gained business from multiple Japanese IDMs
 Announced Japanese government grants for CapEx
 
 

 
31
"Significant progress has been
made in our talks with
potential contenders.“
R. Chandrashekhar, secretary of India's
Department of Information Technology.
India 300mm wafer fab decision
 
 

 
32
India Government Sponsored 300mm Factory
 Signed binding MOU with a leading Indian infrastructure
 conglomerate, to build and operate a 300mm facility in India.
  Roadmap to long term 300mm wafer size, 90nm analog technology
  Enables companion chips in deep submicron technologies (65-45nm)
  High $$ revenue stream
 Presented to empowered government committee as 3-way
 consortia with Indian conglomerate, TowerJazz and a WW
 leading technology provider.
 We believe our consortia is strong, but cannot predict outcome
 of government selection.
 Note: Tower has already been successful in India in government fab project
 
 

 
33
Pursuit of Excellence
 
 

 
34
Pursuit of Excellence
 We are going through every group in the company asking:
 1. Define excellence in your group in 4-5 bullets
 2. Present the top 3 initiatives to achieve it
 
 

 
35
Pursuit of Excellence
 We are going through every group in the company asking:
 1. Define excellence in your group in 4-5 bullets
 2. Present the top 3 initiatives to achieve it
 There is a common theme for excellence - which boils down
 to 3 things:
   Personal capability
   Adequate work tools
   Passion.
 
 

 
36
Pursuit of Excellence
Mediocrity
 
 

 
37
Pursuit of Excellence
Waste
 
 

 
38
Pursuit of Excellence
Frustration
 
 

 
39
Pursuit of Excellence
 We are going through every group in the company asking:
 1. Define excellence in your group in 4-5 bullets
 2. Present the top 3 initiatives to achieve it
 There is a common theme for excellence - which boils down
 to 3 things:
   Personal capability
   Adequate work tools
   Passion.
We are creating an environment in which we have a worldwide
impassioned employee base
What excites our customers - impassions our employees -
1st time success!
 
 

 
40
Summary
 We have been the #1 growth foundry over the past 5
 years AND became the #1 specialty foundry by revenue
 in 2010 and expanded the lead in 2011.
 We target to continue to lead the specialty market over
 the next years by
 1. Growing specialized capabilities in sync with our customers
 immediate to long term needs
 2. Providing an environment enabling impassioned employees
 3. Innovative business initiatives
 § Successful execution of Nishiwaki Fab into high volume foundry
 § Materializing the presented India opportunity and/or other such
 opportunities
 § Asian market - with special focus on Korea
 
 

 
41
2011 FY and Q4
Financials Results Overview
 
 

 
42
Q4 & FY 2011 Financial Results Highlights
§ FY 2011: $611M, up 20% Y/Y vs. $509M in 2010 and up 2X vs. $299M in 2009
§ Q4 2011: $175M, up 29% vs. $135M in Q4 2010
Revenue
§ EBITDA of $187M in FY 2011, a 31% EBITDA margins
§ In Q4 2011 achieved EBITDA of $40M with $30M Positive cash from operations
Profitability
 § After $100M principal payment for bonds in last 3 months
§ 1.7X Net debt/EBITDA ratio, based on 2011 EBITDA, vs. 2.3X in 2010
§ $175M positive shareholders’ equity vs. $118M on Dec’ 31, 2010
§ Strong & solid financial ratios
Balance Sheet
 
 

 
43
TowerJazz Balance Sheets (in millions of $)
 
Dec. 31,
2011
Dec. 31,
2010
CURRENT ASSETS
Cash, short-term deposits & designated deposits
Trade accounts receivable
Other receivables
Inventories
Other current assets
 
101
75
5
69
16
 
198
68
5
43
8
 
 Total Current Assets
Long-term investments
Property and equipment, net
Intangible assets, Net
Goodwill
Other assets, Net
266
13
498
59
7
14
322
31
376
54
7
12
 TOTAL ASSETS
857
802
CURRENT LIABILITIES
Short-term debt
Trade accounts payable
Deferred revenue
Other current liabilities
 
48
112
6
64
 
122
49
40
39
 Total Current Liabilities
Long-term debt
Employees related liabilities
Other long-term liabilities
230
301
98
53
250
360
27
47
 TOTAL LIABILITIES
682
684
Shareholders’ Equity
175
118
TOTAL LIABILITIES & EQUITY
857
802
 
 

 
44
Q4’11 Financial Statements (vs. Q3’11)
Fully detailed footnotes are available at the press release as filed on February 16, 2012 by the Company
 
 

 
45
Fully detailed footnotes are available at the press release as filed on February 16, 2012 by the Company
 
 

 
46
We Know How to Create Value
 Jazz Pre acquisition:
 § $15M/ year EBITDA, negative net profits
 Jazz post acquisition:
 § $60-90M / year EBITDA run rate
 Ebitda growth by 4X to 6X in 3 years
 Added benefits:
 § New technologies and new customers from Tower to Jazz (e.g CIS)
 § New technologies and new customers from Jazz to Tower (e.g RFMD, SiGe)
 § Cost reduction synergies
 § Satisfied Jazz employees and increased employee count
 § Satisfied customers
 § Dual sourcing from MH & NPB fabs
 § Enabled >$500M revenue, #1 specialty foundry
Our Ambition is to Duplicate the Success with
the Recent Japan Fab Acquisition
 
 

 
47
Jazz US Debt Summary
Security Type
Linked to
Outstanding
principal ($M)
Key Terms
Wells Fargo Bank
Credit Line
$
15
 
Bonds due 2015
$
94
 
TowerJazz Debt Summary | January 31, 2012
Tower Israel Debt Summary
Security Type
Linked to
   
Series A+B+C
 
0
 
Series D
Israeli price
index
30
 
Series E
Israeli price
index
27
Principal is due Dec’ 2012; Convertible into ordinary shares until Dec’
2012; last annual coupon of 8% is to be paid in Dec’2012
Series F
$
110
7.8% coupon payable twice / year; convertible into ordinary shares
commencing Sept’ 2012; principal is due in 2 installments on
Bank Loans
$
131
 
 
 

 
48
Debt/ Balance Sheets Metrics
* These charts are based on an assumption that Ebitda in 2012 and on will be the same as 2011
 
 

 
49
Future Debt Payment
Assuming no conversion of any bond series
 
 

 
50
Future Debt Payment
Assuming conversion of all bond series
 
 

 
51
Future Debt Payment
Assuming conversion of all bond series
 
 

 
52
Past, Present, Future
 
 

 
53
Past
 2008 - major shift from digital 2nd source to analog
 value add provider
 
 

 
54
Present
 of premier 1st tier customers
 (such as Samsung) creating
 greater than $100M cash
 from operations.
 We now supply to the top market leaders in every
 one of our chosen business segments.
 Nishiwaki factory, purchased with a sound business
 model, provides capacity for large customer growth.
 
 

 
55
Future
 Continue market growth within FEM, power
 management, high end image sensor, IDM transfer
 and JDPs and within specific MEMS opportunities.
 Entrance into 300mm with the presented India deal
 or other such initiatives.
We are the #1 Israeli Seller of
Commercial Hi-Tech Hardware
 
 

 
56
THANK YOU!!
WWW.TOWERJAZZ.COM
 
 

 
57