Apr 30, 2015
Executives
Steve Schwartz – Chief Executive Officer Lindon Robertson – Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts
Edwin Mok – Needham Ben Rose – Battle Road Patrick Ho – Stifel Nicolaus Amanda Scarnati – Citi Farhan Ahmad – Credit Suisse
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Brooks Automation Second Quarter Financial Results Conference Call.
During the presentation, all participants will be in a listen-only mode. Afterwards, we will conduct a question-and-answer session.
[Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded Thursday, April 30, 2015. I would now like to turn the conference over to Lindon Robertson, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
Please go ahead.
Lindon Robertson
Thank you, Grant, and good afternoon, everyone. We would like to welcome each of you to the second quarter financial results conference call for the Brooks fiscal year 2015.
We will be covering the results of the second quarter ended on March 31 and then we will provide an outlook for the third fiscal quarter ending June 30 of this year. A press release was issued after the close of the markets today and is available at our Investor Relations page of our website, www.brooks.com, as are the illustrated PowerPoint slides that will be used during the prepared comments during the call.
I would like to remind everybody that during the course of the call, we will be making a number of forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Litigation Securities Act of 1995. There are many factors that may cause actual financial results or other events to differ from those identified in such forward-looking statements.
I would refer you to the section of our earnings release titled Safe Harbor statement, the Safe Harbor slide on the aforementioned PowerPoint presentation on our website and our various filings with the SEC, including the Form 10-K for the fourth quarter ended September 30, 2014. We make no obligation to update these statements, should future financial data or events occur that differ from the forward-looking statements presented today.
I would also like to note that we may make reference to a number of non-GAAP financial measures, which are used in addition to and in conjunction with results presented in accordance with GAAP. We believe that these non-GAAP measures provide an additional way of viewing aspects of our operations and performance, but when considered with GAAP financial results and the reconciliation of GAAP measures, they provide an even more complete understanding of the Brooks business.
Non-GAAP measures should not be relied upon the exclusion of the GAAP measures themselves. On the call with me today is our Chief Executive Officer, Steve Schwartz.
We will open with his remarks on the business environment and our second quarter highlights. Then we will provide an overview of the second quarter financial results and a summary of our financial outlook for the quarter ended June 30th, which is our third quarter of the fiscal year 2015.
We will then take your questions. And during these prepared remarks, we will from time-to-time make reference to slides I mentioned, available to everyone on the Investor Relations page of our Brooks website.
With that, I’d like to turn the call over now to our CEO, Mr. Steve Schwartz.
Steve Schwartz
Thank you, Lindon. Good afternoon everyone, and thank you for joining our call.
We’re glad to have the opportunity to report the results of the second quarter of our 2015 fiscal year. Over the past years, you’ve seen us make investments in growth market opportunities.
In vacuum automation and automated systems, we are benefiting from the share gains we’ve earned, because of the boom and deposition in etch process steps. We’ve captured more than two dozen design wins for backend and advanced packaging automation applications, which are now beginning to bear fruit.
We identified and invested in another new growth segment in the automated wafer and radical carrier cleaners and radical storage systems [indiscernible] market that is ramping as [indiscernible] align with shrink below 20 nanometer. And we’ve established a position in Life Sciences which utilizes our core technology strengths of automation and cryogenics.
We’ll capitalize on the market opportunities of that business and continues to launch new products. We’ve crafted this product, market and technology portfolio by design to focus resources on high growth opportunities.
In the March quarter, we were able to see the results of these investments on all fronts, as Q2 was a robust quarter in terms of revenue and earnings growth. Almost all segments of the business contributed above Q1, only our services business which delivered record profitability in Q1, came in slightly lower.
All in, revenue was $139 million, up 14% quarter-over-quarter, mostly led by expansion from semiconductor frontend demand. Our Life Sciences business grew by 5% even as we took actions to reduce cost and restructure the business around efficiency and consolidation of assets.
Bookings in March were $135 million, up 5% from December and consistent with our forecast for a solid June quarter. Q2 was a particularly strong quarter for our semiconductor and related business.
We saw a significant growth in our Product Solutions business that came from both automation and cryogenic vacuum products. Total BPS revenue was up 19% from Q1.
By market segment, we saw a semi front-end up 23% in the quarter and back-end in advanced packaging was up 30%. Overall, our automation business was very robust.
Our strong position with Tire 1 OEMs for deposition and etch drove our vacuum robots business to yet another record quarter. Most of the outperformance came from growth from shipments for existing customer platforms, where we also began to ship in volume on two new Tier 1 OEM product platforms.
One for a new CBD system and one for a legacy platform, which was converted to our vacuum robot from their own or internally designed and manufactured robot. We previously announced both of these designed – design wins, but in Q2 we saw the first volume shipments for production units.
We continue to pursue these new and conversion opportunities with great success. Our vacuum systems revenue jumped up 41% in the quarter as we’re seeing some increase from our Korean OEM customers and we see continued strength in the June quarter.
We saw more than 35% increase in atmospheric systems driven by backend advanced packaging demand, returning our backend business to an approximately $25 million annual run rate above where we were a year ago. We remain very positive on the prospects for this sector as the customer platforms hit perfectly with our business model where we adopt our automation to their specific needs and their volumes are good for us, but not large enough for them to move in-house.
Similar to the last few quarters, the contribution from atmospheric robots was about flat and consistent with our sustaining position on this product line. In terms of market segments, we recognized a 37% increase in fab solutions driven by some of our oldest and some of our newest products as we continue to see significant 200-millimeter product demand for MEMS and sensor applications, and we recognized revenue for some tools placed for 10-nanometer product qualification.
We delivered another good quarter in our contamination control solutions business, we’re beginning to realize the growth potential as customers drive technologies below 20-nanometer line widths. Revenue for – per CCS was $9 million, up 25% from Q1.
Based on customer activity and the $10.5 million in bookings we received in the quarter, we remain confident that CCS will be at least a $40 million business for us this year. Again, makers of logic chips are the biggest users of our automated proof cleaners, but memory makers are also beginning to show significant interest and need to this technology as well.
Our cryogenic vacuum products also delivered strong growth in the quarter, increasing by 13% from Q1. Cryopump revenue was up almost 8%, driven by a 20% surge in ion implantation.
Revenue for our Polycold mixed gas Cryochillers increased by 30% in the quarter, which is consistent with seasonal patterns we observed related to the demand for active displays for mobile devices. We anticipate continued strength from Cryo vacuum products into Q3.
Beyond semi vacuum applications, we continue to expand our cryotechnology capability into other applications. In the quarter, we saw a significant uptick in large refrigerator application for our cold chuck.
We’ve also leveraged this large refrigerator technology to develop the ability to pump Xenon. We ship Xenon pumps to customers in China, and working with another customer in the UK for a similar application.
As [indiscernible] an aside, but an important consideration, in the quarter, we also completed our testing of the Polycold MaxCool Cryochiller as a refrigeration source for our large capacity Twin Bank BioStore System. The adaptation of our own technology into our Life Sciences products gives us a reliable cryogenic cooling source and meaningfully reduces the cost of goods on our Twin Bank Systems.
It’s this type of synergy that we continue to leverage for the benefit of our entire product portfolio, the first of these MaxCool powered systems will ship to a Scandinavian customer this summer. I’ll now turn to Life Sciences.
First, I’ll give an update on the actions we described to you last quarter, followed by a summary of performance for the quarter. And then, I would like to give a brief preview of our new product launch and the exciting opportunity that it brings to Brooks.
As I mentioned on our last call, we had embarked on a significant restructuring of our Life Sciences business, both to rationalize our global footprint and to create a physical structure that more efficiently supports the go forward business. We’re consolidating all of our large stores for compounds and bio samples into our Manchester UK site.
Manchester will be our center of excellence for large store products where we will leverage an experienced team of very capable engineers and manage the outsourced manufacturing of the major system modules. The resulting large stores business will have a much more efficient footprint and will not have constraints on growth because of facility limitations as modules will be fully tested at our suppliers and final systems will be assembled and verified at the customer locations.
As a result, we plan to significantly downsize our current sites in Spokane, Washington and Poway, California by the end of September. We will retain some essential engineering and customer service personnel at these two locations, but most of the prior operations will be stopped and all manufacturing at these sites will be discontinued and transferred to Manchester and here in Chelmsford.
Additionally, our next generation cryogenic storage and workflow product activity will be centered in Chelmsford, as this is already the site of product development for the bio store cryo system, which we announced this week. This reorganization of the division makes us much leaner and more efficient.
It allows us to shorten the time required for faster market moves, reduces cost significantly and leaves us with a size and structure that’s more optimal for this business. We anticipate that as a result of these actions, we are on track to achieve a $1.5 million per quarter run rate savings by the end of September, leaving us on much stronger footing.
In addition to the major restructuring activities in the quarter, we also had some notable highlights including strong performance from our consumables business or once again the FluidX team achieved an all-time record for sales, and the remainder of our consumables and instruments business was strong. Additionally, we completed the sign-off of the remainder of the eight large stores we installed at the UK Biocentre.
And we recognize all revenue and costs for those installations. Bookings in the quarter were $14 million, respectable yet shy of our expectations, as we did not win a specific opportunity for a rather large store order that we had in our forecasts.
Although we do not believe that this European contract has been awarded yet, the customer informed us they have elected to negotiate final terms with one of our competitors at a price that is far below what we think is reasonable and sustainable for this business. We’re never happy about losing a major piece of business, but we believe very strongly in the value and superiority of our products.
And although, we’ve successfully prevailed over most of these attempts by our competitors to buy the business, we are determined not to let short-term pricing tactics alter our long-term business judgment. We firmly believe that our products and solutions will prove to be worth the value and that customers will for the most part, recognize the superior capability that we deliver.
And will be willing to pay us more for that advantage that we bring. As a result of not winning these contracts, we now forecast that our Life Sciences business will be closer to $70 million for the fiscal year compared to our prior estimates of $80 million.
We do have some significant contract opportunities in the pipeline that may close in the next quarter or two, but the timing of those orders will not allow us to recognize revenue in time to hit the $80 million goal. Although we are always aggressive in going up to new business, we do not think that driving to $80 million this year at any cost is worth a long-term damage that could be caused by short-term actions.
That said, we remained confident in our direction, our investments, our product development roadmap and the ability for us to grow Life Sciences to $220 million we’ve targeted for our fiscal 2017. Revenue for the quarter came in at $18 million, which is up 38% from the March quarter one year ago, up 5% from Q1 and consistent with our forecast.
Gross margin was 31% modestly higher than Q1, but was about as expected with the conclusion of the large UK project and unfortunately brought down by some charges to [indiscernible] that resulted from the discontinuation of some low volume products and from FX headwinds. These one-timers represented about 500 basis points of margin reduction for bliss in the quarter, so operationally at least, we believe we had an improvement.
We forecast June quarter revenue to be approximately flat with a gross margin improvement of approximately 500 basis points. I’d now like to take a moment to describe our most exciting bliss announcement to-date.
I remind you that the reason we entered the Life Sciences space was to be able to address the automation need for Ultra-Cold sample management systems, for bio samples and cell therapy application. And earlier this week, we announced the launch of our new bio-store cryo system, which is an automated minus 150 degrees temperature storage system that’s targeted at biological sample storage customers, who have thousands or tens of thousands but not millions of samples to store.
But we need to ensure that the samples can be maintained at temperatures below minus 135 degrees. And we’ll be safe from the mishaps that too often occur with manually loaded storage systems.
We’re launching a family of three products designed specifically to serve this market, which is in desperate need of automation. The first product is an automated storage system that we co-developed with Chart Biomedical a division of Chart Industries, the leader in manual liquid nitrogen cold storage systems.
We’ve developed a system that is safer for samples, safer for operators, and more dependable from the standpoint of accuracy and selection and storage. In terms of commercial rollout, our current plans are to deliver 10 of the bio store cryo systems to customers beginning in July this year.
These early adopters are each signing up to provide data, critical feedback, product enhancement suggestions and in some cases published accounts of scientific studies that result from their use of these new products. These early adopters are leaders from well-known institutions and we will inform you of as many as we are able once we have secured consent from these institutions.
Needless to say we’re very excited about our first products designed to serve this segment. Additionally, we’re launching a transport device called the Cryopod for the secured transport of samples at minus 150 degrees.
Working in collaboration with BioCision, a California based Biotech Company, in which we have an equity investment, we’ve developed a sample carrier that allows secured transport of biological samples at minus 150 degrees. The Cryopod is equipped with temperature tracking and logging, alarm and alert mechanisms and sample data tracking.
For those of you who are familiar with semiconductor manufacturing, the analogous concept is that of the semiconductor [indiscernible] , which allows wafer transport between process steps in a pristine, controlled environment. Similarly, the Cryopod enables transport of samples between steps while they remain at temperatures below the glass transition temperature, which is critical to biological sample integrity and will improve yield and sale efficacy .
We believe that these elements of automation that take human variability out of sample handling portends great promise for the improvement of research and cell therapy treatments. Finally, we are also introducing automated bench top liquid nitrogen charging station, and it is a walk away instrument that allows safe and efficient refilling of the liquid nitrogen charged cryopod, so then in a matter of minutes a cryopod will be ready to accept samples and can maintain temperature for more than four hours.
Prior to a system like the cryopod charging station operators were in protective safety gear which spend hours filling primitive uninstrumented transportation devices. This appliance changes all of that and has the potential to dramatically improve the efficiency and safety of sample handling and retrieval.
This family of products, which is designed to improve the work flow of our biosample handling and processing is truly an innovative breakthrough that we believe will change process flows that have been in place for more than 50 years. We’re unveiling these products next week in Phoenix, Arizona at the annual meeting of the International Society of Biological and Environmental Repositories often referred to as ISBER.
This is the ideal showcase for all part of the Life Sciences community and we expect a very positive response. We believe the long-term market opportunity for this product family is in excess of $300 million per year.
Following our early adaptor valuation period we plan to begin to recognize revenue for these products beginning in our December quarter. In terms of our overall business, after many quarters of strong and aggressive investment in OpEx which includes R&D for new products and cost reduction initiatives, we began to scale back with a more streamlined OpEx structure.
For few years, we had to spend to get out in front of needs of our Tier 1 OEMs, additionally, we’ve been investing heavily in new products for our Life Sciences business. With a launch last year of the twin bank platform and the completion of our first three products in the minus 150 space, we’re confident that we can continue to grow all of our businesses, but with a lower level of R&D spend.
Still we consider even a $50 million run rate for R&D to be significant. It’s also adequate for us to be able to sustain our current offerings and to be able to deliver next-generation innovative products for new and existing markets.
In terms of our outlook, we’re positive about the outlook for June, as we forecast strength in the June quarter, driven by added foundry capacity of the 16-nanometer node and the increased need for automated hook cleaners and radical stockers. We are confident that the cost reduction steps we’ve taken in Life Sciences and the profitability potential of our backlog will allow us to once again raise the gross margin in this business toward the promise that we were delivering only a couple of quarters ago.
And we are bullish about the opportunity that exists in the management of samples at ultracold cryogenic temperatures and we are keen to place our newest systems and the key customers for validation during the remainder of 2015. The actions and our continued management of the business allow us to forecast a meaningful increase in profitability, and we hope to continue the trend of growth and increased earnings on the roadmap that we’ve described for you.
That concludes my prepared remarks, and I’ll now turn the call back over to Lindon.
Lindon Robertson
Thank you, Steve. Please refer now to the PowerPoint slides available on the Brooks’ website under our Investor Relations tab.
I will draw your attention to slide three, a consolidated view of our operation performance to start the remarks. Top line revenue increased 14% sequentially to $139 million, driven by higher revenue in our Brooks’ Product Solutions and Life Sciences businesses.
Gross margins remain at 34% on a non-GAAP basis, revenue growth was the primary driver of the improved EPS performance in the quarter. However, we also had help from both of our recent acquisitions FluidX and Contamination Control Solutions, which were each accretive on a GAAP and non-GAAP basis in the quarter.
We’ll cover more on each of our business units in the subsequent charts. Let’s now look at the segment revenue briefly outlined on page four.
Brooks Product Solutions grew 19% sequentially, as we saw growth in each area of automation, Contamination Control Solutions and cryogenic vacuum products. Life Sciences revenue grew 5% sequentially, with most of this from the organic base of consumables and services, while FluidX expanded about $200,000 to $3.8 million of revenue in the quarter.
Our Global Services business, BGS sequential decline is primarily currency driven. Currency impact of Brooks overall is minimized due to a majority of our BPS contracts being written in U.S.
dollars out of the U.S. However, we do feel some impact in the Life Sciences business and in particular in our Global Services business, where most contracts are written in the local currency of the – where the fabs are located.
Let’s go deeper into the segment starting with page five. Product Solutions business saw continued growth.
Gross margins increased to a 100 basis points from the prior quarter and on higher volumes. As previously mentioned, growth in the quarter was driven by sales and automation, Contamination Control Solutions and the cryogenic product set.
As Steve explained, we have seen continued healthy growth in the frontend manufacturing customers, as well as the anticipated rebound in the backend manufacturing. Also notable is our CCS business, which turned in $9 million of revenue.
At the gross margin line, the CCS business was just 28% this quarter, reflecting a lower mix and some early qualification tool cost for a new customer. However, this business drove an FX benefit as do most of our contracts in U.S., obviously as we do most of our contracts in U.S.
dollars out of our German-based business. In total CCS was accretive to net income on both the GAAP and non-GAAP basis.
We continue to be very pleased with this business, which we acquired exactly one year ago today. Turning to page six.
Our Global Services revenue declined 2% from the prior quarter driven by foreign exchange translation. Gross margins were 32% on weaker mix of repair services, which carried higher materials cost.
Turning to page seven. Life Sciences revenue grew 5% from the prior period.
The primary driver of expansion was in the base consumables and services revenue. The FluidX business provided $3.8 million in revenue, an increase of 4% compared to the first quarter.
It was also accretive on a GAAP and non-GAAP basis in the quarter, as I mentioned. Adjusted gross margins remain low.
As I described last quarter, we were facing unusual premium labor and freight cost on our large projects, which we anticipate would continue to depress margins some in the second quarter. We did see modest improvement in the systems margins, but we reserved approximately 600,000 of inventory, much of which was related to product lines we will discontinue in the consolidation of our site operations.
We expect further improvement in gross margins in the third quarter as the primary project driving the cost overruns behind us and the restructuring actions we’ll just begin to take effect. As Steve highlighted, we did book $14 million of new business in Life Sciences.
The total backlog is now $47 million, while the 12-month backlog is it at $35 million. On slide eight, you can see the dynamics driving earnings per share results this quarter.
The numbers reflect approximately 35% of gross margin drop through on the incremental revenue. This is typically higher, but it was mitigated this quarter with Life Sciences inventory reserves and lower Global Services margins.
Special charges this quarter are for restructuring, as we continue on our path to reduce redundancies on workforce and facilities. Other income which is a benefit of $1.3 million includes the net gains from foreign exchange, as I mentioned in the CCS business earlier.
Our tax line returned to a more normal dynamic this quarter, driving an expense instead of credit. The effect to GAAP tax rate in the quarter was approximately 36%.
As a reminder, we have a nominal amount of cash taxes paid due to the use of deferred tax assets. Let’s turn to slide nine to see the cash performance.
Operating cash flow for the second quarter of fiscal 2015 is $2 million, which was adversely affected by the increased shipments at quarter-end, leaving accounts receivables higher on the books. We use $7 million for dividend payments in the quarter, and provided our second tranche of $2.5 million in funding to BioCision an exchange for convertible notes.
At the end of the quarter, our balance sheet shows a balance of cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities of $207 million. The balance sheet remained quite strong.
Slide 10 displays our balance sheet summary. As referenced, working capital increased on the back of accounts receivables.
Inventory was reduced an additional $4 million and reflects further progress in our execution model. The strength of the balance sheet provides significant flexibility to pursue strategic investments still in the future.
Now turning to slide 11, we provide our guidance estimates for the third fiscal quarter of 2015. Revenue was expected to be in the range of $136 million to $142 million and our non-GAAP earnings per share is expected to be in the range of $0.08 to $0.12 per share.
That completes our prepared remarks. I’ll now turn the call back over to Grant to take questions from the telephone lines.
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And the first question comes from the line of Edwin Mok with Needham.
Please proceed with your question.
Edwin Mok
Great. Thanks for taking my question.
And congrats for good quarter and good guidance. So first question, I just want to focus on the [indiscernible] front-end semi cap business and your commentary around that.
We’ve heard some of your customer and peers within the sector talk about that market and I think in general it was – the commentary was I guess on average is how flattish sequentially going through the coming quarter, but you seems more confident or more bullish on that and you mentioned strength in the foundry area. Can you give us some color on that?
Is that the market that you believe is helping you to drive growth in the June quarter, or is that some of the share gain that you have mentioned in that area that is driving growth?
Steve Schwartz
Hi, Patrick – or Edwin, sorry. I think, we guide basically flat for the quarter.
We see strength in all of the segments. We see continued strength in the back-end and in the front-end and in the front end in particular, we do have a pretty strong position in that batch.
And in addition to the growth in this segment and others have reported already in addition to growth in the segment, we also have been gaining some share because of legacy platforms that we mentioned. So unusually without a market growth per say there are still market opportunities for growth for us because of the segments that we’re in.
And the other thing we see is a good pretty strong ramp coming now in the tooth cleaners. So, it’s most of the segments in the business continued to be relatively strong, but overall guidance for us is approximately flat.
But we do see good strength in all the segment where we participate.
Edwin Mok
I see. Okay.
So that’s helpful actually. Just talk about film cleaner or the CCS business, you mentioned that historically you have seen that more come from logic customer base, about to see adoption or interest from memory customer.
Is that something that could potentially a driver this year or is just something that we should expect to see some level of same expansion as those customers thought they got by [indiscernible] if you can give us a idea of the timeframe, you think that could potentially happen?
Steve Schwartz
So Edwin, we’re starting to get some increased activity for the logic and foundry. So, we feel the order starting to come there.
From a memory standpoint, they have been satisfied historically with manual tooth clears and with some products that don’t possess all the capabilities that come with our high-end product and we see that some of the applications they’re beginning to run into maybe some technical limitations. So, we’re pursuing those pretty hard, but the fact that we’re getting evaluations around the memory space give us some indication that perhaps the specification they’re changing.
Edwin Mok
Okay. Great.
That’s helpful. On the Life Science area, you talk about one of the contract, the pricing was little aggressive on the competitor side.
I’m just curious do you think that that could be a pricing risk in a new marketplace where you guys surf because as you guys offer these products competitors try to come in with a low price. And then, even with the $70 million that suggest shipment has to ramp-up in the back half of the year.
But your booking – your book-to-bill was pretty lower this quarter. So are you expecting to just shift from your backlog?
Lindon Robertson
Yes. And, yes, few questions there.
One, we’ve had pricing pressure all the time. I think because we’ve been winning pretty high percentage of the large stores, it’s probably not an unexpected reaction that somebody would who really had to have the business would do something that’s below where we go.
So it’s we’ve been winning in the face of price pressure all along because we think the products are better. We still think the products are better, and although anything can happen.
We stand-by our products and the value that we bring. So we’ll see how it plays out.
So we’re not panicked about it, but we don’t like to lose good opportunity like that. We’ll continue to put our – put good products out here at a good price, we think it’s going to be a good business.
Yeah, we booked $14 million, we had revenue of $18 million. That’s a little bit backward, we’re in a little bit of backlog, but we still have considerable backlog and the ability to continue to make the back half of the year?
Edwin Mok
Okay. One last and I’ll go away.
In terms of gross margin I think that you mentioned FX was a contributing factor for weak gross margin in the service business. To the extent that, obviously, we’re not printing currency here, but assuming that your thaw doesn’t change or the FX rate doesn’t change.
Is this the new level of margins that we should think about for the service business?
Lindon Robertson
Not entirely because as I mentioned there was some mix involved as well. So, we would expect this to come back.
Edwin, I’ve also said before that once I get about 35%, it’s in the past, it was stretching what we thought economics and services business could support the high-end of mix. So, I think, I would expect somewhere between 33%, 36% in that range of course to move back and forth.
Edwin Mok
Great. That’s all I have.
I’ll let the guys ask. Thank you.
Lindon Robertson
Thanks, Edwin
Operator
And the next question comes from the line of Ben Rose with Battle Road. Please proceed with your question.
Ben Rose
Good afternoon, Steve, and good afternoon, Lindon. Prior to the announcement this week of AMAT and Tokyo Electronic Calling Officer merger, there was a concern that some companies that had done business with both separately might be consolidated as a result of the merger.
Steve, could you talk about your perspective on the merger longer going through and what it might mean for the industry and for Brooks in particular?
Steve Schwartz
Yeah. Sure, Ben.
And we’re going to wait and see how that shapes out as well. But even for the time the deal was announced obviously we work really hard for both of those customers.
And actually the behaviors that they had toward us and the things that we did for them during the last 18 months were unrelated to any deal. We aggressively went after the technical things that we have to do to win business.
So, we made progress with both companies and we’re really proud of that. So, we increased the strength of our position with both of them.
In terms of what happens now from the fallout standpoint it’s really not clear to us because once we – once we’re going to platform, we hope that we hang onto it. And so we’ve been aggressive.
We’ve build the business with both of them and we continue to do the same kinds of things. And frankly, we’re not giving any indications about, what the implications might have been once the two companies came together.
I think they were very good and very careful about that. So we didn’t have any advance indication of what changes might have been coming.
Ben Rose
Okay, great. And it sounds like some of the challenges with regard to the UK Biocentre implementation are now behind the company, are you pretty confident in that installation serving as a reference site for Brooks?
Steve Schwartz
We are – so we think challenges – we have challenges on the cost standpoint, but the products are great. I actually was there at the opening ceremony last week with dignitaries and a hundred potential customers.
And they showcased it, they featured Brooks. They were really gracious and they made sure that we were front and center and present and I think it’s – I think they’re also very proud of the job that we’ve done so those are great tools and great installations they’ll be a tremendous reference site and I’ve been witnessed to it already on the 21st last week.
Ben Rose
Okay, great. Thanks very much and congratulations on the quarter.
Steve Schwartz
Thank you.
Lindon Robertson
Thank you, Ben.
Operator
And the next question comes from the line of Patrick Ho with Stifel Nicolaus. Please proceed with your question.
Patrick Ho
Thank you very much. Steve, maybe first off as a follow-up to the Contamination Control business.
Some of the activity that you’re starting to see on the memory side of things given some of the industry transition we’re both seeing in DRAM and in NAND flash, is there a bias to one segment of the memory that you’re seeing this increased activity?
Steve Schwartz
Patrick, actually to be frankly, we can’t distinguish. We know the customers, but certainly, its NAND related, but that’s about all we know right now.
Patrick Ho
Okay. Fair enough.
Going to the Life Science side for a second, with these new products coming out, the Small Sample Storage System that you talked about for some time are obviously excluding the restructuring and the efforts you’re doing to streamline the operations in that business. How do you see that aspect playing in terms of margins because typically new products have a learning curve ramp – the arc – they tend to be lower margins initially, how do you balance, I guess some of the gains that you’re trying to make on the operations front with new products that are coming out?
Steve Schwartz
That’s a good question. We think we’re – we’ve done a lot to work, we think we’re in a position where – we understand the cost is extremely well, we think from a pricing standpoint, they had yet to be determined, because again, we’re rolling the products out right now, but early indications lead us to believe that it will be least consistent with the business we’ve laid out for Life Sciences in general.
And then as we continue to add features and capability, we think we’ll be able to push margins even higher, but we’re confident about the early enthusiasm for the product and we’ll absolutely be clear with everybody, how those products are rolling-out, but we think it’s going to be pretty consistent with the objectives we put out in the 40%,45% range and obviously, we hope to do better as we have more learning with these products.
Patrick Ho
Great. And final question for me on your FluidX business, that’s it appears to be tracking better than expectations over the last few quarters since you acquired it.
I know, as part of the – rationale behind the deal was to leverage your sales force and your team to – I guess why broadly more distribute their products. Is that part of the reason why it’s been tracking better than expected or it has I guess basically the core team that you acquired, has it just done better than you anticipate to this point?
Steve Schwartz
Yeah. We – Patrick, one of things we knew was that if we could put more touch points out, more sales resources out that they had a better chance.
We had a very strong European model that we started to employ now in North America. I think the benefit of – so, it’s more attention, more sales capabilities happen to drive the top-line there.
The things that we’ll see as a result of combining the FluidX offering with our cold stores, is coming. So, we have some indications that we will likely be able to win some more business, as a result of having FluidX in part of our portfolio.
The early returns that you’re seeing if you will are as they’re all result of building out more North American capability for example.
Patrick Ho
Great, thank you very much.
Steve Schwartz
Thanks, Patrick.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] And the next question comes from the line of Atif Malik with Citi. Please proceed with your question.
Amanda Scarnati
Hi, thanks for taking the question, as this is Amanda Scarnati for Atif. Just a question on the semiconductor side, are you seeing any indirect impact or any direct impact from the equipment reuse rate going up at TSMC and Intel?
Steve Schwartz
If we see this indirect, Amanda, and we wouldn’t necessarily know. So, from a reuse standpoint, we ship our automation products and cryogenic products mostly for new tools.
And so, it would be tough for us to know from a reuse standpoint on the lower-end of the scale, on the 200-millimeter business, if they ever acquire 200 millimeter product that was not – that did not have a standard mechanical interface, the smith interface and they bought load ports for example from us, those would be tools that we reuse from 200 millimeter that we might automate. But it would be tough for us to tell on current 300 millimeter products what the impact would be from a reuse standpoint.
Amanda Scarnati
Okay, thanks. And then, the second question on the Life Sciences business.
It’s a backlog at about $47 million. How should we think about revenue linearity to get the $700 million estimated for 2015 or $70 million I’m sorry?
Lindon Robertson
I’m glad you corrected that $70 million. So, the backlog is built up around systems and services and a little bit in the consumables instruments.
And so, we have really good headlights into systems revenue through the backlog. Services, we sell a lot as we move along and some of that is in general service and repair, but also some of it is in upgrades that our team does.
And so, that doesn’t all come out of backlog through the next couple of quarters. And then the consumables and instruments are similar.
We sell a lot on in the quarter orders week-to-week from customers. But it’s tends to be a steadier stream.
So, it’s not – it doesn’t pretend as much on backlog to keep a study. We have seen variations I’d say a $1 million or more in a quarter up and down, but in general, it’s a reliable – a more reliable study stream.
So, in total, we are realigning on the backlog much for the balance of the year and systems and then we see a fairly normal rate of backlog and dependency on sales in the other elements of the business.
Amanda Scarnati
Great. Thank you.
Operator
And the next question comes from the line of Farhan Ahmad with Credit Suisse. Please proceed with your question.
Farhan Ahmad
Thanks for taking my question. My first question is regarding the gross margins.
If I look at your annual revenues for the March quarter, they were up a good 11%. Area gross margins are down 200 bps.
I just wanted to ask you like what is the reason that the gross margins are down on a year-on-year basis and how should we think about gross margin progressing from here?
Lindon Robertson
Yeah. It’s a very fair question.
One, just reflecting on the trends as we’ve seen, we’ve been running fair amount lower in the Life Sciences business and that has been weighing on us this past two quarters. We have also in this particular quarter – you’ve seen us running lower on the global services.
So, the combination of those two by themselves are pretty difficult to offset. And then, when you look at the product solutions business, it’s not quite as weak.
If you went back, we’re about a point – within a point of where we were running in the first half of last year. And at that level, what you’re seeing is a little bit of mix and when the business picks up with higher volume, where that volume comes from our largest customers with best pricing equations for them.
So, this is a little bit of customer mix, but then we also – as we mentioned, we’ve just a little headwind in the CCS business as it picked up this quarter, loss of periods, some early qualification tools. So in total look I’m not – you can add up a lot of different reasons we look at this and we say we’ve got a healthy business in the BPS business and we see that the CCS business is I am looking forward now.
CCS business is going to continue to help us expand, because we fully expect this as a lift to our margins at the gross margin level. We also see a clear path of improvement in life sciences.
As Steve alluded to we have about 5 points of gross margin opportunity ahead of us this year in that business and our strategic I shouldn’t say strategic our tactical objective here is to get it to 40%, 45% level. We saw this next quarter think about 5 points improvement.
And we’ll get a little lift back in the BGS space we expect, so we really expect margins improve, but I also have to make to that when the business is at the highest point we do see a lot of it coming from our largest customers that do have a fairly demanding pricing equation.
Farhan Ahmad
Got it. And then, Steve I wanted to probe you a little bit on the life sciences business you mentioned that on one of the products that you were expecting to win a order and you lost it to a competitor this quarter, because of very low pricing from the competitor and I just wanted to understand could this be a problem going forward and just that the competition increases, so much that going forward pricing could deteriorate in the market?
Steve Schwartz
Yeah, Farhan it could happen, we’ve seen lower pricing before, but I think they’re generally a rational company. So it’s a little bit surprise to us without this when we’re going to win.
So we’re not anticipating that this would be the norm because it’s pretty destructive behavior, but you just never know. So we don’t think so.
We pay close attention to it, we still win most of the businesses are now one out of the four stores, this year we didn’t win. So it’s not good.
It’s a big order and I don’t know what – what the motivations were for this time that changed the behavior to be even that more aggressive and actually the customer decision I think is – of course we don’t think it’s the right customer decision, but I can’t comment yet.
Farhan Ahmad
Got it. That’s all I have, thank you.
Steve Schwartz
Okay. Thanks, Farhan.
Lindon Robertson
Thanks, Farhan.
Operator
And there are no further questions at this time. I’ll now turn the presentation back to the main speaker.
Steve Schwartz
Thank you, everyone. We appreciate your interest in Brooks and we do look forward to a chance to speak with you next quarter when we report Q3.
Thank you.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude the conference call. We thank you for your participation and ask that you please disconnect your lines.