INTEVAC INC - Quarter Report: 2007 March (Form 10-Q)
Table of Contents
    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
    COMMISSION
Washington, DC 20549
Washington, DC 20549
    Form 10-Q
| (Mark One) | ||
| 
 
    þ
 
 | 
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 | |
| For the quarterly period ended March 31, 2007 | ||
| 
 
    OR
 
 | 
||
| 
 
    o
 
 | 
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 | |
| For the transition period from to | ||
    Commission file number 0-26946
    INTEVAC, INC.
    (Exact name of registrant as
    specified in its charter)
| California | 94-3125814 | |
| (State or other jurisdiction of | (IRS Employer | |
| incorporation or organization) | Identification No.) | 
    3560 Bassett Street
Santa Clara, California 95054
(Address of principal executive office, including Zip Code)
Santa Clara, California 95054
(Address of principal executive office, including Zip Code)
    Registrants telephone number, including area code:
    (408) 986-9888
    Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed
    all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of
    the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding
    12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant
    was required to file such reports), and (2) has been
    subject to such filing requirements for the past
    90 days.  þ Yes     o No
    Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large
    accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, or a non-accelerated
    filer. See definition of accelerated filer and large
    accelerated filer in
    Rule 12b-2
    of the Exchange Act. (Check one):
    Large accelerated
    filer o  Accelerated
    filer þ     Non-accelerated
    filer o
    
    Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company
    (as defined in
    Rule 12b-2
    of the
    Act).  o Yes     þ No
    APPLICABLE ONLY TO CORPORATE ISSUERS:
    On May 7, 2007, 21,394,023 shares of the
    Registrants Common Stock, no par value, were outstanding.
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
    INDEX
    
    1
Table of Contents
    PART I.
    FINANCIAL INFORMATION
| Item 1. | Financial Statements | 
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
| 
    March 31, | 
    December 31, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| 
    (Unaudited) | 
||||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||
| 
 
    ASSETS
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Current assets:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Cash and cash equivalents
    
 
 | 
$ | 30,796 | $ | 39,440 | ||||
| 
 
    Short-term investments
    
 
 | 
71,700 | 55,595 | ||||||
| 
 
    Trade and other accounts
    receivable, net of allowances of $149 and $143 at March 31,
    2007 and December 31, 2006
    
 
 | 
33,298 | 39,927 | ||||||
| 
 
    Inventories
    
 
 | 
33,926 | 37,942 | ||||||
| 
 
    Prepaid expenses and other current
    assets
    
 
 | 
2,134 | 2,506 | ||||||
| 
 
    Deferred tax assets
    
 
 | 
4,100 | 3,269 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total current assets
    
 
 | 
175,954 | 178,679 | ||||||
| 
 
    Property, plant and equipment, net
    
 
 | 
14,511 | 13,546 | ||||||
| 
 
    Long-term investments
    
 
 | 
12,000 | 8,000 | ||||||
| 
 
    Investment in 601 California
    Avenue LLC
    
 
 | 
2,431 | 2,431 | ||||||
| 
 
    Goodwill
    
 
 | 
5,434 |  | ||||||
| 
 
    Other intangible assets, net
    
 
 | 
299 |  | ||||||
| 
 
    Deferred income taxes and other
    long term assets
    
 
 | 
3,666 | 3,347 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total assets
    
 
 | 
$ | 214,295 | $ | 206,003 | ||||
| 
 
    LIABILITIES AND
    SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Current liabilities:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Notes payable
    
 
 | 
$ | 1,921 | $ |  | ||||
| 
 
    Accounts payable
    
 
 | 
16,287 | 15,994 | ||||||
| 
 
    Accrued payroll and related
    liabilities
    
 
 | 
5,189 | 11,769 | ||||||
| 
 
    Other accrued liabilities
    
 
 | 
9,796 | 6,612 | ||||||
| 
 
    Customer advances
    
 
 | 
20,404 | 26,243 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total current liabilities
    
 
 | 
53,597 | 60,618 | ||||||
| 
 
    Other long-term liabilities
    
 
 | 
1,062 | 1,075 | ||||||
| 
 
    Long-term notes payable
    
 
 | 
1,830 |  | ||||||
| 
 
    Shareholders equity:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Common stock, no par value
    
 
 | 
101,096 | 99,468 | ||||||
| 
 
    Additional paid-in capital
    
 
 | 
9,321 | 7,319 | ||||||
| 
 
    Accumulated other comprehensive
    income
    
 
 | 
375 | 354 | ||||||
| 
 
    Retained earnings
    
 
 | 
47,014 | 37,169 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total shareholders equity
    
 
 | 
157,806 | 144,310 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total liabilities and
    shareholders equity
    
 
 | 
$ | 214,295 | $ | 206,003 | ||||
    Note: Amounts as of December 31, 2006 are derived from the
    December 31, 2006 audited consolidated financial statements.
    See accompanying notes.
    
    2
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
| Three Months Ended | ||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| 
    (Unaudited) | 
||||||||
| (In thousands, except per share amounts) | ||||||||
| 
 
    Net revenues:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Systems and components
    
 
 | 
$ | 73,593 | $ | 48,074 | ||||
| 
 
    Technology development
    
 
 | 
2,781 | 1,546 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total net revenues
    
 
 | 
76,374 | 49,620 | ||||||
| 
 
    Cost of net revenues:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Systems and components
    
 
 | 
42,129 | 31,340 | ||||||
| 
 
    Technology development
    
 
 | 
1,507 | 952 | ||||||
| 
 
    Inventory provisions (reversal of
    reserve)
    
 
 | 
(44 | ) | 22 | |||||
| 
 
    Total cost of net revenues
    
 
 | 
43,592 | 32,314 | ||||||
| 
 
    Gross profit
    
 
 | 
32,782 | 17,306 | ||||||
| 
 
    Operating expenses:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Research and development
    
 
 | 
12,192 | 5,561 | ||||||
| 
 
    Selling, general and administrative
    
 
 | 
7,513 | 5,114 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total operating expenses
    
 
 | 
19,705 | 10,675 | ||||||
| 
 
    Operating income
    
 
 | 
13,077 | 6,631 | ||||||
| 
 
    Interest expense
    
 
 | 
(46 | ) | (4 | ) | ||||
| 
 
    Interest income and other, net
    
 
 | 
1,366 | 602 | ||||||
| 
 
    Income before income taxes
    
 
 | 
14,397 | 7,229 | ||||||
| 
 
    Provision for income taxes
    
 
 | 
4,552 | 218 | ||||||
| 
 
    Net income
    
 
 | 
$ | 9,845 | $ | 7,011 | ||||
| 
 
    Other comprehensive income:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Foreign currency translation
    adjustments
    
 
 | 
21 | 29 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total comprehensive income
    
 
 | 
$ | 9,866 | $ | 7,040 | ||||
| 
 
    Basic income per share:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Net income
    
 
 | 
$ | 0.46 | $ | 0.34 | ||||
| 
 
    Shares used in per share amounts
    
 
 | 
21,293 | 20,832 | ||||||
| 
 
    Diluted income per share:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Net income
    
 
 | 
$ | 0.44 | $ | 0.32 | ||||
| 
 
    Shares used in per share amounts
    
 
 | 
22,188 | 21,920 | ||||||
    See accompanying notes.
    
    3
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
| Three Months Ended | ||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| 
    (Unaudited) | 
||||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||
| 
 
    Operating activities
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Net income
    
 
 | 
$ | 9,845 | $ | 7,011 | ||||
| 
 
    Adjustments to reconcile net
    income to net cash and cash equivalents provided by (used in)
    operating activities:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Depreciation and amortization
    
 
 | 
1,163 | 601 | ||||||
| 
 
    Inventory provisions (reversal of
    reserve)
    
 
 | 
(44 | ) | 22 | |||||
| 
 
    Equity-based compensation
    
 
 | 
1,357 | 460 | ||||||
| 
 
    Loss on disposal of equipment
    
 
 | 
 | 1 | ||||||
| 
 
    Changes in operating assets and
    liabilities
    
 
 | 
5,258 | (12,863 | ) | |||||
| 
 
    Total adjustments
    
 
 | 
3,351 | (11,779 | ) | |||||
| 
 
    Net cash and cash equivalents
    provided by (used in) operating activities
    
 
 | 
13,196 | (4,768 | ) | |||||
| 
 
    Investing activities
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Purchases of investments
    
 
 | 
(43,700 | ) | (33,631 | ) | ||||
| 
 
    Proceeds from sales and maturities
    of investments
    
 
 | 
23,500 | 38,500 | ||||||
| 
 
    Acquisition of DeltaNu LLC, net of
    cash acquired
    
 
 | 
(5,803 | ) |  | |||||
| 
 
    Purchases of leasehold
    improvements and equipment
    
 
 | 
(1,856 | ) | (1,152 | ) | ||||
| 
 
    Net cash and cash equivalents
    provided by (used in) investing activities
    
 
 | 
(27,859 | ) | 3,717 | |||||
| 
 
    Financing activities
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Net proceeds from issuance of
    common stock
    
 
 | 
1,645 | 1,708 | ||||||
| 
 
    Issuance of notes payable
    
 
 | 
3,738 |  | ||||||
| 
 
    Tax benefit from equity-based
    compensation
    
 
 | 
645 |  | ||||||
| 
 
    Net cash and cash equivalents
    provided by financing activities
    
 
 | 
6,028 | 1,708 | ||||||
| 
 
    Effect of exchange rate changes on
    cash
    
 
 | 
(9 | ) | 19 | |||||
| 
 
    Net increase (decrease) in cash
    and cash equivalents
    
 
 | 
(8,644 | ) | 676 | |||||
| 
 
    Cash and cash equivalents at
    beginning of period
    
 
 | 
39,440 | 15,255 | ||||||
| 
 
    Cash and cash equivalents at end
    of period
    
 
 | 
$ | 30,796 | $ | 15,931 | ||||
| 
 
    Supplemental Schedule of Cash
    Flow Information
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Cash paid for:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Income taxes
    
 
 | 
$ | 1,500 | $ |  | ||||
    See accompanying notes.
    
    4
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
    
| 1. | Business Activities and Basis of Presentation | 
    We are the worlds leading provider of disk sputtering
    equipment to manufacturers of magnetic media used in hard disk
    drives and a developer and provider of leading technology for
    extreme low light imaging sensors, cameras and systems. We
    operate two businesses: Equipment and Imaging.
    Our Equipment business designs, manufactures, markets and
    services complex capital equipment used in the sputtering, or
    deposition, of highly engineered thin-films of material onto
    magnetic disks which are used in hard disk drives. Hard disk
    drives are the primary storage medium for digital data and
    function by storing data on magnetic disks. These disks are
    created in a sophisticated manufacturing process involving a
    variety of many steps, including plating, annealing, polishing,
    texturing, sputtering and lubrication. We are also utilizing our
    expertise in complex manufacturing equipment to develop new
    manufacturing products that address the semiconductor market.
    Our Imaging business develops and manufactures electro-optical
    sensors, cameras, and systems that permit highly sensitive
    detection of photons in the visible and near infrared portions
    of the spectrum, allowing vision in extreme low light situations.
    The vast majority of our revenue is currently derived from our
    Equipment business and we expect that the majority of our
    revenues for at least the next several years will continue to be
    derived from our Equipment business.
    The financial information at March 31, 2007 and for the
    three-month periods ended March 31, 2007 and April 1,
    2006 is unaudited, but includes all adjustments (consisting only
    of normal recurring accruals) that we consider necessary for a
    fair presentation of the financial information set forth herein,
    in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in
    the United States of America (U.S. GAAP) for
    interim financial information, the instructions to
    Form 10-Q
    and Article 10 of
    Regulation S-X.
    Accordingly, it does not include all of the information and
    footnotes required by U.S. GAAP for annual financial
    statements. For further information, refer to the Consolidated
    Financial Statements and footnotes thereto included in our
    Annual Report on
    Form 10-K
    for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2006.
    The preparation of financial statements in conformity with
    U.S. GAAP requires management to make estimates and
    assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and
    liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities
    at the date of the financial statements and reported amounts of
    revenue and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results
    inevitably will differ from those estimates, and such
    differences may be material to the financial statements.
    The results for the three-month period ended March 31, 2007
    are not considered indicative of the results to be expected for
    any future period or for the entire year.
    Intevac®,
    LIVAR®,
    and 200
    Lean®
    are trademarks of Intevac, Inc.
| 2. | Concentrations | 
    Historically, a significant portion of our revenues in any
    particular period has been attributable to sales to a limited
    number of customers. Our largest customers tend to change from
    period to period.
    We evaluate the collectibility of trade receivables on an
    ongoing basis and provide reserves against potential losses when
    appropriate.
| 3. | New Accounting Pronouncements | 
    In February 2007, the FASB issued Statement of Financial
    Accounting Standards No. 159, The Fair Value Option
    for Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities 
    Including an amendment of FASB Statement No. 115
    (SFAS 159). SFAS 159 permits entities to
    choose to measure many financial instruments and certain other
    items at fair value. The fair value option established by
    SFAS 159 permits all entities to choose to measure eligible
    items at fair value at specified election dates and report
    unrealized gains and losses on items for which the fair value
    option
    
    5
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
    
    NOTES TO
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
    STATEMENTS  (Continued)
    has been elected in earnings at each subsequent reporting date.
    SFAS 159 is effective for fiscal years beginning after
    November 15, 2007. We are currently evaluating the impact
    of adopting this standard.
    In September 2006, the FASB issued SFAS No. 157,
    Fair Value Measurements. SFAS 157 defines fair
    value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value, and
    expands disclosures about fair value measurements. The statement
    is effective for financial statements issued for fiscal years
    beginning after November 15, 2007, and interim periods
    within that fiscal year. We are currently evaluating the impact
    of adopting SFAS 157.
    In May 2005, the FASB issued SFAS No. 154,
    Accounting Changes and Error Corrections  a
    Replacement of APB Opinion No. 20 and FASB Statement
    No. 3 (SFAS 154), which requires retrospective
    application to prior periods financial statements of
    voluntary changes in accounting principle unless it is
    impracticable to do so. SFAS 154 is effective for
    accounting changes and corrections of errors beginning in fiscal
    2007. The implementation of this standard did not have a
    material effect on our financial position or results of
    operations.
| 4. | Inventories | 
    Inventories are priced using average actual costs, which
    approximate cost under the
    first-in,
    first-out method, and are stated at the lower of cost or market.
    Inventories consist of the following:
| 
    March 31, | 
    December 31, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||
| 
 
    Raw materials
    
 
 | 
$ | 20,501 | $ | 19,906 | ||||
| 
 
    Work-in-progress
    
 
 | 
13,054 | 12,271 | ||||||
| 
 
    Finished goods
    
 
 | 
371 | 5,765 | ||||||
| $ | 33,926 | $ | 37,942 | |||||
    Finished goods inventory consists primarily of completed systems
    at customer sites that are undergoing installation and
    acceptance testing.
    Inventory reserves included in the above numbers were
    $8.5 million and $9.1 million at March 31, 2007
    and December 31, 2006, respectively. Each quarter, we
    analyze our inventory (raw materials, WIP and finished goods)
    against the forecast demand for the next 12 months. Raw
    materials with no forecast requirements in that period are
    considered excess and inventory provisions are established to
    write those items down to zero net book value.
    Work-in-progress
    and finished goods inventories with no forecast requirements in
    that period are typically written down to the lower of cost or
    market. During this process, some inventory is identified as
    having no future use or value to us and is disposed of against
    the reserves.
    The following table displays the activity in the inventory
    reserve account for the three-month periods ending
    March 31, 2007 and April 1, 2006:
| Three Months Ended | ||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||
| 
 
    Beginning balance
    
 
 | 
$ | 9,128 | $ | 10,988 | ||||
| 
 
    New provisions (reversal of
    reserve) in cost of sales
    
 
 | 
(44 | ) | 22 | |||||
| 
 
    New provisions for refurbishment
    of consigned products
    
 
 | 
6 | 5 | ||||||
| 
 
    Disposals of inventory
    
 
 | 
(547 | ) | (70 | ) | ||||
| 
 
    Ending balance
    
 
 | 
$ | 8,543 | $ | 10,945 | ||||
    
    6
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
    
    NOTES TO
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
    STATEMENTS  (Continued)
| 5. | Stock-Based Compensation | 
    At March 31, 2007, we had stock-based awards outstanding
    under the 2004 Equity Incentive Plan (the 2004 Plan)
    and the 2003 Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the
    ESPP). Our shareholders approved both of these plans.
    The 2004 Plan permits the grant of incentive or non-statutory
    stock options, restricted stock, stock appreciation rights,
    performance units and performance shares. During the three
    months ended March 31, 2007, we granted 73,500 stock
    options with an estimated total grant-date fair value of
    $1.2 million. Of this amount, we estimated that the
    stock-based compensation for the awards not expected to vest was
    $374,000.
    The ESPP provides that eligible employees may purchase our
    common stock through payroll deductions at a price equal to 85%
    of the lower of the fair market value at the beginning of the
    applicable offering period or at the end of each applicable
    purchase period. Offering periods are generally two years in
    length, and consist of a series of six-month purchase intervals.
    Eligible employees may join the ESPP at the beginning of any
    six-month purchase interval. During the three months ended
    March 31, 2007, we granted purchase rights with an
    estimated total grant-date value of $158,000.
    Compensation
    Expense
    The effect of recording stock-based compensation for the
    three-month periods ended March 31, 2007 and April 1,
    2006 was as follows:
| 
    Three Months | 
    Three Months | 
|||||||
| 
    Ended | 
    Ended | 
|||||||
| March 31, 2007 | April 1, 2006 | |||||||
| 
 
    Stock-based compensation by type
    of award:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Stock options
    
 
 | 
$ | 1,145 | $ | 344 | ||||
| 
 
    Employee stock purchase plan
    
 
 | 
213 | 116 | ||||||
| 
 
    Amounts capitalized as inventory
    
 
 | 
(4 | ) | (32 | ) | ||||
| 
 
    Total stock-based compensation
    
 
 | 
1,354 | 428 | ||||||
| 
 
    Tax effect on stock-based
    compensation
    
 
 | 
(428 | ) | (13 | ) | ||||
| 
 
    Net effect on net income
    
 
 | 
$ | 926 | $ | 415 | ||||
| 
 
    Effect on earnings per share:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Basic
    
 
 | 
$ | 0.04 | $ | 0.02 | ||||
| 
 
    Diluted
    
 
 | 
$ | 0.04 | $ | 0.02 | ||||
    Approximately $73,000 and $32,000 of stock-based compensation
    was capitalized as inventory at March 31, 2007 and
    April 1, 2006, respectively.
    Valuation
    Assumptions
    The fair value of share-based payment awards is estimated at the
    grant date using the Black-Scholes option valuation model. The
    determination of fair value of share-based payment awards on the
    date of grant using an option-pricing model is affected by our
    stock price as well as assumptions regarding a number of highly
    complex and subjective variables. These variables include, but
    are not limited to, our expected stock price volatility over the
    term of the awards, and actual employee stock option exercise
    behavior.
    The weighted-average estimated value of employee stock options
    granted during the three months ended March 31, 2007 and
    April 1, 2006 was $15.91 per share and $11.89 per
    share, respectively. The weighted-average estimated fair value
    of employee stock purchase rights granted pursuant to the ESPP
    during the three months ended March 31, 2007 and
    April 1, 2006 was $10.54 and $5.16 per share,
    respectively. The fair value of each option and
    
    7
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
    
    NOTES TO
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
    STATEMENTS  (Continued)
    employee stock purchase right grant is estimated on the date of
    grant using the Black-Scholes option valuation model with the
    following weighted-average assumptions:
| Three Months Ended | ||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| 
 
    Stock Options:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Expected volatility
    
 
 | 
67.42 | % | 77.04 | % | ||||
| 
 
    Risk free interest rate
    
 
 | 
4.49 | % | 4.83 | % | ||||
| 
 
    Expected term of options (in years)
    
 
 | 
4.5 | 4.8 | ||||||
| 
 
    Dividend yield
    
 
 | 
None | None | ||||||
| 
 
    Stock Purchase Rights:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Expected volatility
    
 
 | 
63.48 | % | 61.47 | % | ||||
| 
 
    Risk free interest rate
    
 
 | 
4.84 | % | 4.64 | % | ||||
| 
 
    Expected term of purchase rights
    (in years)
    
 
 | 
1.5 | 0.5 | ||||||
| 
 
    Dividend yield
    
 
 | 
None | None | ||||||
    The computation of the expected volatility assumptions used in
    the Black-Scholes calculations for new grants and purchase
    rights is based on the historical volatility of our stock price,
    measured over a period equal to the expected term of the grant
    or purchase right. The risk-free interest rate is based on the
    yield available on U.S. Treasury Strips with an equivalent
    remaining term. The expected life of employee stock options
    represents the weighted-average period that the stock options
    are expected to remain outstanding and was determined based on
    historical experience of similar awards, giving consideration to
    the contractual terms of the stock-based awards and vesting
    schedules. The expected life of purchase is the period of time
    remaining in the current offering period. The dividend yield
    assumption is based on our history of not paying dividends and
    the assumption of not paying dividends in the future.
    As the stock-based compensation expense recognized in the
    Condensed Consolidated Statement of Operations is based on
    awards ultimately expected to vest, such amount has been reduced
    for estimated forfeitures. Statement of Financial Accounting
    Standards No. 123(R) requires forfeitures to be estimated
    at the time of grant and revised, if necessary, in subsequent
    periods if actual forfeitures differ from those estimates.
    Forfeitures were estimated based on our historical experience.
    
    8
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
    
    NOTES TO
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
    STATEMENTS  (Continued)
    Stock
    Plan Activity
    2004
    Equity Incentive Plan
    A summary of activity under the above captioned plan is as
    follows:
| 
    Weighted | 
||||||||||||||||
| 
    Average | 
||||||||||||||||
| 
    Weighted | 
    Remaining | 
|||||||||||||||
| 
    Average | 
    Contractual | 
    Aggregate | 
||||||||||||||
| 
    Exercise | 
    Term | 
    Intrinsic | 
||||||||||||||
| Shares | Price | (Years) | Value | |||||||||||||
| 
 
    Options outstanding at
    December 31, 2006
    
 
 | 
2,354,215 | $ | 11.47 | 7.93 | $ | 34,107,462 | ||||||||||
| 
 
    Options granted
    
 
 | 
73,500 | $ | 28.14 | |||||||||||||
| 
 
    Options forfeited
    
 
 | 
(9,016 | ) | $ | 11.72 | ||||||||||||
| 
 
    Options exercised
    
 
 | 
(158,517 | ) | $ | 6.14 | ||||||||||||
| 
 
    Options outstanding at
    March 31, 2007
    
 
 | 
2,260,182 | $ | 12.39 | 7.90 | $ | 31,776,661 | ||||||||||
| 
 
    Vested and expected to vest at
    March 31, 2007
    
 
 | 
1,931,137 | $ | 11.87 | 7.42 | $ | 28,120,443 | ||||||||||
| 
 
    Options exercisable at
    March 31, 2007
    
 
 | 
844,310 | $ | 8.47 | 6.48 | $ | 15,113,902 | ||||||||||
| 
 
    Available to grant at
    March 31, 2007
    
 
 | 
221,886 | |||||||||||||||
    The aggregate intrinsic value in the table above represents the
    total pretax intrinsic value, based on our closing stock price
    of $26.37 as of March 30, 2007, which would have been
    received by the option holders had all options holders exercised
    their options as of that date.
    As of March 31, 2007, the unrecorded deferred stock-based
    compensation balance related to stock options was
    $9.0 million and will be recognized over an estimated
    weighted average recognition period of 1.8 years. The
    recognition period is based on the expected term of the option,
    which is defined as the period from grant date to exercise date.
    2003
    Employee Stock Purchase Plan
    During the three months ended March 31, 2007,
    39,069 shares were purchased at an average per share price
    of $17.17. At March 31, 2007, there were
    348,868 shares available to be issued under the ESPP.
    As of March 31, 2007, the unrecorded deferred stock-based
    compensation balance related to purchase rights was
    $1.1 million and will be recognized over an estimated
    weighted average recognition period of 1.3 years. The
    recognition period is based on the expected term of the option,
    which is defined as the period from grant date to expiration of
    the offering period.
| 6. | Business Combinations | 
    On January 31, 2007, we completed the acquisition of the
    assets and certain liabilities of DeltaNu, LLC
    (DeltaNu) for a total purchase price of
    $6 million. The purchase price was comprised of
    $2 million cash due at the close of the acquisition and
    $2 million due on each of January 31, 2008 and
    January 31, 2009, which is in the form of a note. DeltaNu
    is a Laramie, Wyoming company specializing in small footprint
    and handheld Raman spectrometry instruments. We believe that the
    combination of DeltaNus miniature Raman spectrometer
    designs with our capabilities in near-infrared sensors will
    enable a new class of portable instruments with greatly enhanced
    chemical detection capabilities.
    We accounted for the acquisition as a taxable purchase
    transaction and, accordingly, the purchase price has been
    allocated to tangible assets, liabilities assumed, and
    identifiable intangible assets acquired based on their estimated
    fair values on the acquisition date. The excess of the purchase
    price over the aggregate fair values was
    
    9
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
    
    NOTES TO
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
    STATEMENTS  (Continued)
    recorded as goodwill. The fair value assigned to identifiable
    intangible assets acquired is determined using the income
    approach, which discounts expected future cash flows to present
    value using estimates and assumptions determined by management.
    Purchased intangible assets are amortized on a straight-line
    basis over the respective useful lives. Our allocation of the
    purchase price is summarized below (in thousands):
| 
 
    Net liabilities assumed, net of
    cash of $4
    
 
 | 
$ | (31 | ) | |
| 
 
    Goodwill
    
 
 | 
5,434 | |||
| 
 
    Backlog
    
 
 | 
120 | |||
| 
 
    Trademarks/names
    
 
 | 
120 | |||
| 
 
    Customer relationships
    
 
 | 
60 | |||
| 
 
    Non-compete agreements
    
 
 | 
100 | |||
| 
 
    Total
    
 
 | 
$ | 5,803 | ||
    The $5.8 million allocated purchase price consists of
    $2.0 million paid in cash, $3.7 million in notes
    payable (present value at January 31, 2007) and
    $87,000 in acquisition-related expenses. The estimated useful
    economic lives of the identified intangible assets acquired are
    two years for the customer relationships and non-compete
    agreements and approximately four months for the backlog. The
    trademark/names asset has an indefinite life. Future
    amortization of the identified intangible assets will be
    $193,000 in 2007, $80,000 in 2008 and $7,000 in 2009.
    The results of operations for the acquired business have been
    included in our condensed consolidated statements of operations
    for the period subsequent to our acquisition of DeltaNu.
    DeltaNus results of operations for periods prior to this
    acquisition were not material to our condensed consolidated
    statement of operations and, accordingly, pro forma financial
    information has not been presented.
| 7. | Warranty | 
    We provide for the estimated cost of warranty when revenue is
    recognized. Our warranty is per contract terms and for our
    systems the warranty typically ranges between 12 and
    24 months from customer acceptance. During this warranty
    period any defective non-consumable parts are replaced and
    installed at no charge to the customer. The warranty period on
    consumable parts is limited to their reasonable usable life. We
    use estimated repair or replacement costs along with our actual
    warranty experience to determine our warranty obligation. We
    exercise judgment in determining the underlying estimates.
    On the condensed consolidated balance sheet, the short-term
    portion of the warranty is included in other accrued
    liabilities, while the long-term portion is included in other
    long-term liabilities.
    The following table displays the activity in the warranty
    provision account for the three-month periods ending
    March 31, 2007 and April 1, 2006:
| Three Months Ended | ||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||
| 
 
    Beginning balance
    
 
 | 
$ | 5,283 | $ | 3,399 | ||||
| 
 
    Expenditures incurred under
    warranties
    
 
 | 
(1,235 | ) | (1,123 | ) | ||||
| 
 
    Accruals for product warranties
    issued during the reporting period
    
 
 | 
1,074 | 965 | ||||||
| 
 
    Adjustments to previously existing
    warranty accruals
    
 
 | 
107 | 332 | ||||||
| 
 
    Ending balance
    
 
 | 
$ | 5,229 | $ | 3,573 | ||||
    
    10
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
    
    NOTES TO
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
    STATEMENTS  (Continued)
    The following table displays the balance sheet classification of
    the warranty provision account at March 31, 2007 and at
    December 31, 2006:
| 
    March 31, | 
    December 31, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||
| 
 
    Other accrued liabilities
    
 
 | 
$ | 4,167 | $ | 4,208 | ||||
| 
 
    Other long-term liabilities
    
 
 | 
1,062 | 1,075 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total warranty provision
    
 
 | 
$ | 5,229 | $ | 5,283 | ||||
| 8. | Guarantees | 
    We have entered into agreements with customers and suppliers
    that include limited intellectual property indemnification
    obligations that are customary in the industry. These guarantees
    generally require us to compensate the other party for certain
    damages and costs incurred as a result of third party
    intellectual property claims arising from these transactions.
    The nature of the intellectual property indemnification
    obligations prevents us from making a reasonable estimate of the
    maximum potential amount we could be required to pay our
    customers and suppliers. Historically, we have not made any
    significant indemnification payments under such agreements, and
    no amount has been accrued in the accompanying consolidated
    financial statements with respect to these indemnification
    obligations.
| 9. | Cash, Cash Equivalents and Investments in Debt Securities | 
    Our investment portfolio consists of cash, cash equivalents and
    investments in debt securities and municipal bonds. We consider
    all highly liquid investments with a maturity of three months or
    less when purchased to be cash equivalents. Investments in debt
    securities and municipal bonds consist principally of highly
    rated debt instruments with maturities generally between one and
    25 months.
    We account for our investments in debt securities and auction
    rate securities in accordance with Statement of Accounting
    Standards No. 115 Accounting for Certain Investments
    in Debt and Equity Securities, which requires certain
    securities to be categorized as either trading,
    available-for-sale
    or
    held-to-maturity.
    Available-for-sale
    securities, consisting solely of Auction Rate Securities, are
    carried at fair value, with unrealized gains and losses recorded
    within other comprehensive income (loss) as a separate component
    of shareholders equity. Auction Rate Securities have
    long-term underlying maturities (ranging from 20 to
    40 years), however the market is highly liquid and the
    interest rates reset every 7 or 28 days. Our intent is not
    to hold these securities to maturity, but rather to use the
    interest rate reset feature to sell securities to provide
    liquidity as needed. Our practice is to invest in these
    securities for higher yields compared to cash equivalents.
    Held-to-maturity
    securities are carried at amortized cost. We have no trading
    securities. The cost of investment securities sold is determined
    by the specific identification method. Interest income is
    recorded using an effective interest rate, with the associated
    premium or discount amortized to interest income. Realized gains
    and losses and declines in value judged to be other than
    temporary, if any, on
    available-for-sale
    securities are included in earnings. The table below presents
    the amortized principal amount, major security type and
    maturities for our investments in debt securities and auction
    rate securities.
    
    11
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
    
    NOTES TO
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
    STATEMENTS  (Continued)
| 
    March 31, | 
    December 31, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||
| 
 
    Amortized Principal Amount:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Debt securities issued by the US
    government and its agencies
    
 
 | 
$ | 12,000 | $ | 8,000 | ||||
| 
 
    Auction rate securities
    
 
 | 
71,700 | 53,595 | ||||||
| 
 
    Corporate debt securities
    
 
 | 
 | 2,000 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total investments in debt
    securities
    
 
 | 
$ | 83,700 | $ | 63,595 | ||||
| 
 
    Short-term investments
    
 
 | 
$ | 71,700 | $ | 55,595 | ||||
| 
 
    Long-term investments
    
 
 | 
12,000 | 8,000 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total investments in debt
    securities
    
 
 | 
$ | 83,700 | $ | 63,595 | ||||
| 
 
    Approximate fair value of
    investments in debt securities
    
 
 | 
$ | 83,699 | $ | 63,585 | ||||
    The decline in the fair value of our investments from the
    principal amount is attributable to changes in interest rates
    and not credit quality. In accordance with EITF
    03-01, we
    have the ability and intent to hold these investments until fair
    value recovers, which may be maturity, and we do not consider
    these investments to be
    other-than-temporarily
    impaired at March 31, 2007.
    Cash and cash equivalents represent cash accounts and money
    market funds. Cash balances held in foreign bank accounts
    totaled $2.0 million and $1.6 million at
    March 31, 2007 and December 31, 2006, respectively.
    Included in accounts payable is $5.2 million and
    $2.4 million of book overdraft at March 31, 2007 and
    December 31, 2006, respectively.
| 10. | Net Income Per Share | 
    The following table sets forth the computation of basic and
    diluted earnings per share:
| Three Months Ended | ||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||
| 
 
    Numerator:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Numerator for diluted earnings per
    share  income available to common stockholders
    
 
 | 
$ | 9,845 | $ | 7,011 | ||||
| 
 
    Denominator:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Denominator for basic earnings per
    share  weighted-average shares
    
 
 | 
21,293 | 20,832 | ||||||
| 
 
    Effect of dilutive securities:
    
 
 | 
||||||||
| 
 
    Employee stock options(1)
    
 
 | 
895 | 1,088 | ||||||
| 
 
    Dilutive potential common shares
    
 
 | 
895 | 1,088 | ||||||
| 
 
    Denominator for diluted earnings
    per share  adjusted weighted-average shares and
    assumed conversions
    
 
 | 
22,188 | 21,920 | ||||||
| (1) | Potentially dilutive securities, consisting of shares issuable upon exercise of employee stock options, are excluded from the calculation of diluted EPS when their effect would be anti-dilutive. The weighted average number of employee stock options excluded for the three-month periods ended March 31, 2007 and April 1, 2006 was 249,850 and 65,753 respectively. | 
12
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
    
    NOTES TO
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
    STATEMENTS  (Continued)
| 11. | Segment Reporting | 
    Segment
    Description
    We have two reportable operating segments: Equipment and
    Imaging. Our Equipment business designs, manufactures, markets
    and services complex capital equipment used in the sputtering,
    or deposition, of highly engineered thin-films of material onto
    magnetic disks which are used in hard disk drives and is
    developing a system for the semiconductor manufacturing market.
    Our Imaging business develops and manufactures electro-optical
    sensors, cameras and systems that permit highly sensitive
    detection of photons in the visible and near infrared portions
    of the spectrum, allowing vision in extreme low light situations.
    Included in corporate activities are general corporate expenses,
    less an allocation of corporate expenses to operating units
    equal to 3% of net revenues. Assets of corporate activities
    include unallocated cash and investments, deferred tax assets
    and other assets.
    Segment
    Profit or Loss and Segment Assets
    We evaluate performance and allocate resources based on a number
    of factors, including profit or loss from operations and future
    revenue potential. The accounting policies of the reportable
    segments are the same as those described in the summary of
    significant accounting policies.
    Business
    Segment Net Revenues
| Three Months Ended | ||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||
| 
 
    Equipment
    
 
 | 
$ | 72,446 | $ | 47,573 | ||||
| 
 
    Imaging
    
 
 | 
3,928 | 2,047 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total
    
 
 | 
$ | 76,374 | $ | 49,620 | ||||
    Business
    Segment Profit & Loss
| Three Months Ended | ||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||
| 
 
    Equipment
    
 
 | 
$ | 14,989 | $ | 8,480 | ||||
| 
 
    Imaging
    
 
 | 
(1,600 | ) | (1,869 | ) | ||||
| 
 
    Corporate activities
    
 
 | 
(312 | ) | 20 | |||||
| 
 
    Operating income
    
 
 | 
13,077 | 6,631 | ||||||
| 
 
    Interest expense
    
 
 | 
(46 | ) | (4 | ) | ||||
| 
 
    Interest income
    
 
 | 
1,238 | 492 | ||||||
| 
 
    Other income and expense, net
    
 
 | 
128 | 110 | ||||||
| 
 
    Income before income taxes
    
 
 | 
$ | 14,397 | $ | 7,229 | ||||
    
    13
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
    
    NOTES TO
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
    STATEMENTS  (Continued)
    Business
    Segment Net Assets
| 
    March 31, | 
    December 31, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||
| 
 
    Equipment
    
 
 | 
$ | 72,071 | $ | 84,366 | ||||
| 
 
    Imaging
    
 
 | 
15,657 | 7,379 | ||||||
| 
 
    Corporate activities
    
 
 | 
126,567 | 114,258 | ||||||
| 
 
    Total
    
 
 | 
$ | 214,295 | $ | 206,003 | ||||
    Geographic
    Area Net Trade Revenues
| Three Months Ended | ||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
|||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | |||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||
| 
 
    United States
    
 
 | 
$ | 7,000 | $ | 8,556 | ||||
| 
 
    Asia
    
 
 | 
69,004 | 41,064 | ||||||
| 
 
    Europe
    
 
 | 
370 |  | ||||||
| 
 
    Total
    
 
 | 
$ | 76,374 | $ | 49,620 | ||||
| 12. | Income Taxes | 
    For the three months ended March 31, 2007, we accrued
    income tax using an effective tax rate of 31.6% of pretax
    income. This rate is based on an estimate of our annual tax rate
    calculated in accordance with Statement of Financial Accounting
    Standards No. 109, Accounting for Income Taxes.
    Our effective tax rate is highly dependent on the availability
    of tax credits and the geographic composition of our worldwide
    earnings. Our deferred tax asset is partially offset by a
    valuation allowance, resulting in a net deferred tax asset of
    $5.4 million at March 31, 2007.
    For the three months ended April 1, 2006, we accrued income
    tax using an effective tax rate of 3.0% of pretax income. Our
    tax rate differs from the applicable statutory rates due to the
    utilization of net operating loss carry-forwards and deferred
    credits.
    We adopted the provisions of Financial Accounting Standards
    Board (FASB) Interpretation Number 48,
    Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes,
    (FIN 48) on January 1, 2007. As required
    by FIN 48, which clarifies SFAS No. 109,
    Accounting for Income Taxes, we recognize the
    financial statement benefit of a tax position only after
    determining that the relevant tax authority would more likely
    than not sustain the position following an audit. For tax
    positions meeting the more-likely-than-not threshold, the amount
    recognized in the financial statements is the largest benefit
    that has a greater than 50 percent likelihood of being
    realized upon ultimate settlement with the relevant tax
    authority. At January 1, 2007, we applied FIN 48 to
    all tax positions for which the statute of limitations remained
    open and determined there are no material unrecognized tax
    benefits as of that date. In addition, there have been no
    material changes in unrecognized benefits since January 1,
    2007. As a result, the adoption of FIN 48 did not have an
    effect on our financial condition, or results of operation.
    We are subject to income taxes in the U.S. federal
    jurisdiction, and various states and foreign jurisdictions. Tax
    regulations within each jurisdiction are subject to the
    interpretation of the related tax laws and regulations and
    require significant judgment to apply. With few exceptions, we
    are no longer subject to U.S. federal, state and local, or
    non-U.S. income
    tax examinations by tax authorities for the years before 2000.
    The Company recognizes interest and penalties accrued related to
    unrecognized tax benefits in the provision for income taxes for
    all periods presented, which were not significant.
    
    14
Table of Contents
    INTEVAC,
    INC.
    
    NOTES TO
    CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
    STATEMENTS  (Continued)
| 13. | Contingencies | 
    From time to time, we may have certain contingent liabilities
    that arise in the ordinary course of our business activities. We
    account for contingent liabilities when it is probably that
    future expenditures will be made and such expenditures can be
    reasonably estimated.
    On July 7, 2006, we filed a patent infringement lawsuit
    against Unaxis USA, Inc. and its affiliates, Unaxis Balzers AG
    and Unaxis Balzers, Ltd., in the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California. Our lawsuit against
    Unaxis asserts infringement by Unaxis of United States Patent
    6,919,001, which relates to our 200 Lean system. Our complaint
    seeks monetary damages and an injunction that bars Unaxis from
    making, using, offering to sell or selling in the United States,
    or importing into the United States, Unaxis allegedly
    infringing product. In the suit, we seek damages and a permanent
    injunction for infringement of the same patent. We believe we
    have meritorious claims, and we intend to pursue them vigorously.
    On September 12, 2006, Unaxis filed a response to our
    lawsuit in which it asserted non-infringement, invalidity of our
    patent, inequitable conduct by Intevac, patent misuse by
    Intevac, and lack of jurisdiction by the court as defenses.
    Additionally, Unaxis requested a declaratory judgment of patent
    non-infringement, invalidity and unenforceability; asserted our
    violation of the California Business and Professional Code;
    requested that we be enjoined from engaging in any unfair
    competition; and requested that we be required to pay
    Unaxis attorney fees. We believe such claims lack merit,
    and we intend to defend ourselves vigorously.
    We replied to Unaxis response on October 3, 2006,
    denying the assertions of non-infringement, invalidity and
    unenforceability of the Intevac patent, and denying any unfair
    competition. With the approval of the Court, we amended our
    complaint on February 6, 2007 to assert an additional
    ground for our infringement claim and to add a request for a
    declaratory judgment of infringement. Unaxis filed a response on
    February 21, 2007, in which it repeated the assertions of
    its September 12, 2006 response.
    On March 29, 2007, the court denied a motion filed by
    Unaxis requesting a stay of the litigation pending action by the
    U.S. Patent Office on their February 27, 2007 request
    for a reexamination of United States Patent 6,919,001. Unaxis
    renewed the stay motion on May 1, 2007 after the
    U.S. Patent Office granted the reexamination request and
    issued an initial office action rejecting the claims of the
    001 patent. Intevac had no input to the initial
    determination by the U.S. Patent Office, but will now
    participate in the reexamination.
| 14. | Capital Transactions | 
    During the three-month period ending March 31, 2007, we
    sold stock to our employees under Intevacs Stock Option
    and Employee Stock Purchase Plans. A total of
    197,000 shares were issued under these plans, for which
    Intevac received $1.6 million.
| 15. | Financial Presentation | 
    Certain prior year amounts in the Condensed Consolidated
    Financial Statements have been reclassified to conform to 2007
    presentation. The reclassifications had no material effect on
    total assets, liabilities, equity, revenue, net income (loss) or
    comprehensive income (loss) previously reported.
    
    15
Table of Contents
| Item 2. | Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations | 
    This Quarterly Report on
    Form 10-Q
    contains forward-looking statements, which involve risks and
    uncertainties. Words such as believes,
    expects, anticipates and the like
    indicate forward-looking statements. These forward looking
    statements include comments related to our shipments, projected
    revenue recognition, product costs, gross margin, operating
    expenses, interest income, cash balances and financial results
    in 2007; our projected customer requirements for new capacity
    and for technology upgrades for their installed base of our
    thin-film disk sputtering equipment, and when, and if, our
    customers will place orders for these products; Imagings
    ability to proliferate its technology into major military
    weapons programs and to develop and introduce commercial imaging
    products; and the timing of delivery
    and/or
    acceptance of the systems and products that comprise our backlog
    for revenue. Our actual results may differ materially from the
    results discussed in the forward-looking statements for a
    variety of reasons, including those set forth under Risk
    Factors and in other documents we file from time to time
    with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including
    Intevacs Annual Report on
    Form 10-K
    filed in March 2007,
    Form 10-Qs
    and
    Form 8-Ks.
    Critical
    Accounting Policies and Estimates
    The preparation of financial statements and related disclosures
    in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in
    the United States of America (US GAAP) requires
    management to make judgments, assumptions and estimates that
    affect the amounts reported. Our significant accounting policies
    are described in Note 2 to the consolidated financial
    statements included in Item 8 of our Annual Report on
    Form 10-K.
    Certain of these significant accounting policies are considered
    to be critical accounting policies, as defined below.
    A critical accounting policy is defined as one that is both
    material to the presentation of our financial statements and
    requires management to make difficult, subjective or complex
    judgments that could have a material effect on our financial
    conditions and results of operations. Specifically, critical
    accounting estimates have the following attributes: 1) We
    are required to make assumptions about matters that are highly
    uncertain at the time of the estimate; and 2) different
    estimates we could reasonably have used, or changes in the
    estimate that are reasonably likely to occur, would have a
    material effect on our financial condition or results of
    operations.
    Estimates and assumptions about future events and their effects
    cannot be determined with certainty. We base our estimates on
    historical experience and on various other assumptions believed
    to be applicable and reasonable under the circumstances. These
    estimates may change as new events occur, as additional
    information is obtained and as our operating environment
    changes. These changes have historically been minor and have
    been included in the consolidated financial statements as soon
    as they become known. In addition, management is periodically
    faced with uncertainties, the outcomes of which are not within
    its control and will not be known for prolonged periods of time.
    Many of these uncertainties are discussed in the section below
    entitled Risk Factors. Based on a critical
    assessment of our accounting policies and the underlying
    judgments and uncertainties affecting the application of those
    policies, management believes that our consolidated financial
    statements are fairly stated in accordance with US GAAP, and
    provide a meaningful presentation of our financial condition and
    results of operation.
    We believe the following critical accounting policies affect the
    more significant judgments and estimates we make in preparing
    our consolidated financial statements. We also have other key
    accounting policies and accounting estimates related to the
    collectibility of trade receivables, valuation of deferred tax
    assets and prototype product costs. We believe that these other
    accounting policies and other accounting estimates either do not
    generally require us to make estimates and judgments that are as
    difficult or subjective, or are less likely to have a material
    impact on our reported results of operation for a given period.
    Revenue
    Recognition
    Certain of our system sales with customer acceptance provisions
    are accounted for as multiple-element arrangements. If we have
    previously met defined customer acceptance levels with the
    specific type of system, then we recognize revenue for the fair
    market value of the system upon shipment and transfer of title,
    and recognize revenue for the fair market value of installation
    and acceptance services when those services are completed. We
    estimate the fair market value of the installation and
    acceptance services based on our actual historical experience.
    For systems that have generally not been demonstrated to meet a
    particular customers product specifications prior
    
    16
Table of Contents
    to shipment, revenue recognition is typically deferred until
    customer acceptance. For example, while initial shipments of our
    200 Lean system were recognized for revenue upon customer
    acceptance during 2004, revenue was recognized upon shipment for
    the majority of 200 Leans shipped in 2005, 2006 and 2007 to
    date. Most of the systems in backlog at March 31, 2007 are
    for customers where we have met defined customer acceptance
    levels, and we expect to recognize revenue upon shipment for
    those systems.
    In some instances, hardware that is not essential to the
    functioning of the system may be delivered after acceptance of
    the system. In these cases, we estimate the fair market value of
    the non-essential hardware as if it had been sold on a
    stand-alone basis, and defer recognizing revenue on that value
    until the hardware is delivered.
    In certain cases, we sell limited rights to our intellectual
    property. Revenue from the sale of any intellectual property
    license is generally recognized at the inception of the license
    term.
    We perform best efforts research and development work under
    various government-sponsored research contracts. These contracts
    are a mixture of cost-plus-fixed-fee (CPFF) and firm
    fixed-price (FFP). Revenue on CPFF contracts is
    recognized in accordance with contract terms, typically as costs
    are incurred. Revenue on FFP contracts is generally recognized
    on the
    percentage-of-completion
    method based on costs incurred in relation to total estimated
    costs. Provisions for estimated losses on government-sponsored
    research contracts are recorded in the period in which such
    losses are determined.
    Inventories
    Inventories are priced using average actual costs, which
    approximate
    first-in,
    first-out, and are stated at the lower of cost or market. The
    carrying value of inventory is reduced for estimated excess and
    obsolescence by the difference between its cost and the
    estimated market value based on assumptions about future demand.
    We evaluate the inventory carrying value for potential excess
    and obsolete inventory exposures by analyzing historical and
    anticipated demand. In addition, inventories are evaluated for
    potential obsolescence due to the effect of known and
    anticipated engineering change orders and new products. If
    actual demand were to be substantially lower than estimated,
    additional inventory adjustments would be required, which could
    have a material adverse effect on our business, financial
    condition and results of operation. A
    cost-to-market
    reserve is established for
    work-in-progress
    and finished goods inventories when the value of the inventory
    plus the estimated cost to complete exceeds the net realizable
    value of the inventory.
    Warranty
    We provide for the estimated cost of warranty when revenue is
    recognized. Our warranty is per contract terms, and for our
    systems, the warranty typically ranges between 12 and
    24 months from customer acceptance. We use estimated repair
    or replacement costs along with our actual warranty experience
    to determine our warranty obligation. We exercise judgment in
    determining the underlying estimates. Should actual warranty
    costs differ substantially from our estimates, revisions to the
    estimated warranty liability would be required, which could have
    a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition
    and results of operations.
    Income
    Taxes
    We account for income taxes in accordance with Statement of
    Financial Accounting Standard No. 109, Accounting for
    Income Taxes, (SFAS 109), which requires
    that deferred tax assets and liabilities be recognized using
    enacted tax rates for the effect of temporary differences
    between book and tax bases of recorded assets and liabilities.
    SFAS 109 also requires that deferred tax assets be reduced
    by a valuation allowance if it is more likely than not that a
    portion of the deferred tax asset will not be realized. Based on
    our history of losses through 2004, our deferred tax asset was
    fully offset by a valuation allowance as of December 31,
    2005. During 2006, the deferred tax asset and the related
    valuation allowance were both reduced due to the usage of our
    remaining NOL and credit carry-forwards. As of December 31,
    2006, $4.6 million of the deferred tax asset was valued on
    the balance sheet, net of a valuation allowance of
    $2.8 million. This represents the amount of the deferred
    tax asset from which we expect to realize a benefit. We cannot
    predict with certainty when, or if, we will realize the benefit
    of the portion of the deferred tax asset currently offset with a
    valuation allowance.
    
    17
Table of Contents
    On a quarterly basis, we provide for income taxes based upon an
    annual effective income tax rate. The effective tax rate is
    highly dependent upon the level of our projected earnings, the
    geographic composition of worldwide earnings, tax regulations
    governing each region, net operating loss carry-forwards,
    availability of tax credits and the effectiveness of our tax
    planning strategies. We carefully monitor the changes in many
    factors and adjust our effective income tax rate on a timely
    basis. If actual results differ from the estimates, this could
    have a material effect on our business, financial condition and
    results of operations. For example, as our projected level of
    earnings increased throughout 2006, we increased the annual
    effective tax rate from 3.0% at the end of the first quarter, to
    8.8% at the end of the second quarter, to 10.0% at the end of
    the third quarter and to 12% at the end of the fourth quarter.
    The current estimate of the annual effective income tax rate for
    2007 is 31.6%.
    The calculation of tax liabilities involves significant judgment
    in estimating the impact of uncertainties in the application of
    complex tax laws. Resolution of these uncertainties in a manner
    inconsistent with our expectations could have a material effect
    on our business, financial condition and results of operations.
    Results
    of Operations
    Three
    Months Ended March 31, 2007 and April 1,
    2006.
    Net
    revenues
| Three Months Ended | 
    Change Over | 
|||||||||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
Prior Period | ||||||||||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | Amount | % | |||||||||||||
| (In thousands, except percentages) | ||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Equipment net revenues
    
 
 | 
$ | 72,446 | $ | 47,573 | $ | 24,873 | 52 | % | ||||||||
| 
 
    Imaging net revenues
    
 
 | 
3,928 | 2,047 | 1,881 | 92 | % | |||||||||||
| 
 
    Total net revenues
    
 
 | 
$ | 76,374 | $ | 49,620 | $ | 26,754 | 54 | % | ||||||||
    Net revenues consist primarily of sales of equipment used to
    manufacture thin-film disks, and, to a lesser extent, related
    equipment and system components, flat panel equipment technology
    license fees, contract research and development related to the
    development of electro-optical sensors, cameras and systems and
    low light imaging products.
    Equipment revenue for the three months ending March 31,
    2007 included revenue recognition for thirteen 200 Lean systems,
    and a significant quarter over quarter increase in revenue from
    disk equipment technology upgrades and spare parts. We also sold
    a
    D-Star®
    flat panel technology license for $1.3 million. Revenue for
    the three months ended April 1, 2006 included revenue
    recognition of nine 200 Lean systems. We expect Equipment
    revenues in the first half of 2007 will be higher than in the
    first half of 2006, but revenues in the second half of 2007 will
    be lower than the comparable period of 2006.
    Imaging revenue for the three months ending March 31, 2007
    consisted of $2.8 million of research and development
    contract revenue and $1.1 million of product sales. Revenue
    for the three months ended April 1, 2006 consisted of
    $1.5 million of contract research and development revenue
    and $501,000 of product sales. The increase in contract research
    and development revenue was the result of a better mix of fully
    funded vs. partially funded programs. Product revenue included
    contributions from our new DeltaNu subsidiary, which was
    acquired on January 31, 2007. Substantial growth in future
    Imaging revenues is dependent on proliferation of our technology
    into major military weapons programs, the ability to obtain
    export licenses for foreign customers, obtaining production
    subcontracts for these programs, and development and sale of
    commercial products.
    Our backlog of orders at March 31, 2007 was
    $92.8 million, as compared to $125.0 million at
    December 31, 2006 and $124.8 million at April 1,
    2006. The decrease in backlog was primarily the result of the
    recognition for revenue of thirteen disk sputtering systems in
    the quarter. We include in backlog the value of purchase orders
    for our products that have scheduled delivery dates. We do not
    recognize revenue on this backlog until we have met the criteria
    contained in our revenue recognition policy, including customer
    acceptance of newly developed systems.
    International sales increased by 69% to $69.4 million for
    the three months ended March 31, 2007 from
    $41.1 million for the three months ended April 1,
    2006. International revenues include products shipped to
    overseas
    
    18
Table of Contents
    operations of U.S. companies. The increase in international
    sales was primarily due to an increase in net revenues from disk
    sputtering systems and disk equipment technology upgrades and
    spare parts. Substantially all of our international sales are to
    customers in Asia. International sales constituted 91% of net
    revenues for the three months ended March 31, 2007 and 83%
    of net revenues for the three months ended April 1, 2006.
    Our mix of domestic versus international sales will change from
    period to period depending on the location of our largest
    customer in each period.
    Gross
    margin
| Three Months Ended | ||||||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
|||||||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | % Change | ||||||||||
| (In thousands, except percentages) | ||||||||||||
| 
 
    Equipment gross profit
    
 
 | 
$ | 31,345 | $ | 16,769 | 87 | % | ||||||
| 
 
    % of Equipment net revenues
    
 
 | 
43.3 | % | 35.2 | % | ||||||||
| 
 
    Imaging gross profit
    
 
 | 
$ | 1,437 | $ | 537 | 168 | % | ||||||
| 
 
    % of Imaging net revenues
    
 
 | 
36.6 | % | 26.2 | % | ||||||||
| 
 
    Total gross profit
    
 
 | 
$ | 32,782 | $ | 17,306 | 89 | % | ||||||
| 
 
    % of net revenues
    
 
 | 
42.9 | % | 34.9 | % | ||||||||
    Cost of net revenues consists primarily of purchased materials
    and costs attributable to contract research and development, and
    also includes fabrication, assembly, test and installation labor
    and overhead, customer-specific engineering costs, warranty
    costs, royalties, provisions for inventory reserves and scrap.
    Cost of net revenues for the three months ended March 31,
    2007 and April 1, 2006 included $173,000 and $46,000,
    respectively, of equity-based compensation expense.
    Equipment gross margin improved to 43.3% in the three months
    ended March 31, 2007 from 35.3% in the three months ended
    April 1, 2006. The increase in gross margin was due to the
    flat panel license fee, cost reduction programs, increased
    volume and product mix. We expect the gross margin for the
    Equipment business in 2007 to be better than 2006, primarily as
    a result of continued cost reduction efforts undertaken on the
    200 Lean system. Gross margins in the Equipment business will
    vary depending on a number of factors, including product mix,
    product cost, system configuration and pricing, factory
    utilization, and provisions for excess and obsolete inventory.
    Imaging gross margin improved to 36.6% in the three months ended
    March 31, 2007 from 26.2% in the three months ended
    April 1, 2006. The increase in gross margin resulted
    primarily from higher margins on development contracts and
    favorable adjustments related to contract closeouts. We expect
    Imaging gross margin in 2007 to be improved over 2006, due
    primarily to an increase in both product revenue and revenue
    from fully funded research and development contracts.
    Research
    and development
| Three Months Ended | 
    Change Over | 
|||||||||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
Prior Period | ||||||||||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | Amount | % | |||||||||||||
| (In thousands, except percentages) | ||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Research and development expense
    
 
 | 
$ | 12,192 | $ | 5,561 | $ | 6,631 | 119 | % | ||||||||
| 
 
    % of net revenues
    
 
 | 
16.0 | % | 11.2 | % | ||||||||||||
    Research and development expense consists primarily of prototype
    materials, salaries and related costs of employees engaged in
    ongoing research, design and development activities for disk
    sputtering equipment, semiconductor equipment and Imaging
    products. Research and development expense for the three months
    ended March 31, 2007 and April 1, 2006 included
    $502,000 and $204,000, respectively, of equity-based
    compensation expense.
    Research and development spending increased in both Equipment
    and in Imaging during the three months ended March 31, 2007
    as compared to the three months ended April 1, 2006. The
    increase in Equipment was due primarily to spending on the
    development of a new product line to serve the semiconductor
    market and, to a lesser
    
    19
Table of Contents
    extent, spending for continuing development of our disk
    sputtering products. The increase in Imaging was due primarily
    to increased spending on the development of our commercial
    Imaging products. Engineering headcount increased from 94 at
    April 1, 2006 to 137 at March 31, 2007. We expect that
    research and development spending will increase in 2007 due
    primarily to expenditures related to our new semiconductor
    equipment product line and the addition of key engineering
    personnel.
    Research and development expenses do not include costs of
    $1,439,000 and $952,000 for the three-month periods ended
    March 31, 2007 and April 1, 2006, respectively, which
    are related to contract research and development and included in
    cost of net revenues.
    Selling,
    general and administrative
| Three Months Ended | 
    Change Over | 
|||||||||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
Prior Period | ||||||||||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | Amount | % | |||||||||||||
| (In thousands, except percentages) | ||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Selling, general and
    administrative expense
    
 
 | 
$ | 7,513 | $ | 5,114 | $ | 2,399 | 47 | % | ||||||||
| 
 
    % of net revenues
    
 
 | 
9.8 | % | 10.3 | % | ||||||||||||
    Selling, general and administrative expense consists primarily
    of selling, marketing, customer support, financial and
    management costs and also includes production of customer
    samples, travel, liability insurance, legal and professional
    services and bad debt expense. All domestic sales and
    international sales of disk sputtering products in Asia, with
    the exception of Japan, are typically made by Intevacs
    direct sales force, whereas sales in Japan of disk sputtering
    products and other products are typically made by our Japanese
    distributor, Matsubo, who provides services such as sales,
    installation, warranty and customer support. We also have
    subsidiaries in Singapore and in Hong Kong, along with field
    offices in Japan, Malaysia, Korea and Shenzhen, China to support
    our equipment customers in Asia. Selling, general and
    administrative expense for the three months ended March 31,
    2007 and April 1, 2006 included $679,000 and $178,000,
    respectively, of equity-based compensation expense.
    The increase in selling, general and administrative spending in
    the three months ended March 31, 2007 as compared to the
    three months ended April 1, 2006 was primarily the result
    of increases in costs related to business development, customer
    service and support in the Equipment business and legal expenses
    associated with the Unaxis litigation. Our selling, general and
    administrative headcount increased from 66 at April 1, 2006
    to 87 at March 31, 2007. We expect that selling, general
    and administrative expenses will increase in 2007 over the
    amount spent in 2006 due primarily to a projected increase in
    costs related to customer service and support for the Equipment
    business, the addition of key business development and
    administrative personnel and increasing legal expenses.
    Interest
    income and other, net
| Three Months Ended | 
    Change Over | 
|||||||||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
Prior Period | ||||||||||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | Amount | % | |||||||||||||
| (In thousands, except percentages) | ||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Interest income and other, net
    
 
 | 
$ | 1,320 | $ | 598 | $ | 722 | 121 | % | ||||||||
    Interest income and other, net consists primarily of interest
    and dividend income on investments and foreign currency gains
    and losses. The increase in the three months ended
    March 31, 2007 was driven by higher interest rates on our
    investments and a higher average invested balance. We expect
    interest income and other, net to increase in 2007 due to a
    higher average level of investments.
    Provision
    for income taxes
| Three Months Ended | 
    Change Over | 
|||||||||||||||
| 
    March 31, | 
    April 1, | 
Prior Period | ||||||||||||||
| 2007 | 2006 | Amount | % | |||||||||||||
| (In thousands, except percentages) | ||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Provision for income taxes
    
 
 | 
$ | 4,552 | $ | 218 | $ | 4,334 | 1988 | % | ||||||||
    
    20
Table of Contents
    For the three months ended March 31, 2007, we accrued
    income tax using an effective tax rate of 31.6% of pretax
    income. This rate is based on an estimate of our annual tax rate
    calculated in accordance with Statement of Financial Accounting
    Standards No. 109, Accounting for Income Taxes.
    Our effective tax rate is highly dependent on the availability
    of tax credits and the geographic composition of our worldwide
    earnings. Our deferred tax asset is partially offset by a
    valuation allowance, resulting in a net deferred tax asset of
    $5.4 million at March 31, 2007.
    For the three months ended April 1, 2006, we accrued income
    tax using an effective tax rate of 3.0% of pretax income. Our
    tax rate differs from the applicable statutory rates due to the
    utilization of net operating loss carry-forwards and deferred
    credits.
    Stock-Based
    Compensation
    During the three months ended March 31, 2007 and
    April 1, 2006, we recorded stock-based compensation expense
    related to stock options of $1.1 million and $344,000,
    respectively. As of March 31, 2007, the unrecorded deferred
    stock-based compensation balance related to stock options was
    $9.0 million and will be recognized over an estimated
    weighted average amortization period of 1.8 years.
    The compensation cost associated with the employee stock
    purchase plan for the three months ended March 31, 2007 and
    April 1, 2006 was $213,000 and $116,000, respectively.
    There were 39,069 shares purchased under the employee stock
    purchase plan during the three months ended March 31, 2007.
    Approximately $73,000 and $69,000 of stock-based compensation
    was capitalized as inventory at March 31, 2007 and
    December 31, 2006, respectively.
    Liquidity
    and Capital Resources
    During the first fiscal quarter of 2007, cash, cash equivalents
    and short-term investments decreased by $8.6 million, from
    $39.4 million as of December 31, 2006 to
    $30.8 million as of March 31, 2007.
    Operating activities provided cash of $13.2 million in the
    first quarter of 2007. The cash provided from operating
    activities was due primarily to net income, adjusted to exclude
    the effect of non-cash charges including depreciation and
    equity-based compensation, and to decreases in accounts
    receivable and inventories. This was partially offset by
    decreases in customer advances and accrued payroll. Accounts
    receivable totaled $33.3 million at March 31, 2007,
    compared to $39.9 million at December 31, 2006. The
    decrease of $6.6 million in the receivable balance was due
    primarily to collections related to the record revenue generated
    in the fourth quarter of 2006. Net inventories decreased by
    $4.0 million during the first quarter of 2007 due to a
    decrease in finished goods inventory. Accounts payable increased
    $293,000 to $16.3 million at March 31, 2007. Accrued
    payroll and related liabilities decreased by $6.6 million
    during the three months ended March 31, 2007 due primarily
    to bonuses and profit sharing payments. Other accrued
    liabilities totaled $9.8 million at March 31, 2007
    compared to $6.6 million at December 31, 2006. The
    increase of $3.2 million is due primarily to income tax
    accruals. Customer advances decreased by $5.8 million
    during the first quarter of 2007, due to both the number of
    systems shipped in the first quarter and to the systems accepted
    during the quarter.
    Investing activities in the first three months of 2007 used cash
    of $27.9 million. Purchases of investments, net of proceeds
    from sales and maturities, totaled $20.2 million and our
    acquisition of DeltaNu, LLC used cash of $5.8 million
    during the first quarter of 2007. Capital expenditures for the
    three months ended March 31, 2007 were $1.9 million.
    Financing activities provided cash of $6.0 million during
    the three months ended March 31, 2007 due primarily to the
    issuance of $3.7 million in notes payable related to the
    acquisition of DeltaNu, LLC. We also sold $1.6 million of
    Intevac common stock to our employees through our employee
    benefit plans and recognized $645,000 in tax benefits from
    equity-based compensation.
    We have generated operating income for the last two years, after
    incurring annual operating losses from 1998 through 2004. We
    expect our Equipment business to be profitable again in 2007. We
    also expect to continue to invest in Imaging during 2007, but
    with lower losses than in 2006.
    
    21
Table of Contents
    We believe that our existing cash, cash equivalents and
    short-term investments, combined with the cash we anticipate
    generating from operating activities will be sufficient to meet
    our cash requirements for the foreseeable future. We intend to
    undertake approximately $14 million in capital expenditures
    during the remainder of 2007.
    Contractual
    Obligations
    In the normal course of business, we enter into various
    contractual obligations that will be settled in cash. These
    obligations consist primarily of operating lease and purchase
    obligations. The expected future cash flows required to meet
    these obligations as of March 31, 2007 are shown in the
    table below.
| Payments Due by Period | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Total | < 1 Year | 1-3 Years | 3-5 Years | > 5 Years | ||||||||||||||||
| (In thousands) | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Operating lease obligations
    
 
 | 
$ | 11,672 | $ | 2,228 | $ | 4,632 | $ | 4,617 | $ | 195 | ||||||||||
| 
 
    Purchase obligations
    
 
 | 
22,333 | 22,333 |  |  |  | |||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Total
    
 
 | 
$ | 34,005 | $ | 24,561 | $ | 4,632 | $ | 4,617 | $ | 195 | ||||||||||
| Item 3. | Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk | 
    Interest rate risk.  Our exposure to market
    risk for changes in interest rates relates primarily to our
    investment portfolio. We do not use derivative financial
    instruments in our investment portfolio. We place our
    investments with high quality credit issuers and, by policy,
    limit the amount of credit exposure to any one issuer.
    Short-term investments typically consist of investments in
    commercial paper, auction rate securities and debt instruments
    issued by the US government and its agencies.
    The table below presents principal amounts and related
    weighted-average interest rates by year of maturity for our
    investment portfolio at March 31, 2007.
| 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | Beyond | Total | Fair Value | |||||||||||||||||||
| (In thousands, except percentages) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Cash equivalents
    
 
 | 
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Fixed rate amounts
    
 
 | 
$ | 5,176 |  |  |  | $ | 5,176 | $ | 5,176 | |||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Weighted-average rate
    
 
 | 
5.26 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Variable rate amounts
    
 
 | 
$ | 10,961 |  |  |  | $ | 10,961 | $ | 10,961 | |||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Weighted-average rate
    
 
 | 
5.24 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Short-term investments
    
 
 | 
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Fixed rate amounts
    
 
 | 
$ | 71,700 |  |  |  | $ | 71,700 | $ | 71,700 | |||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Weighted-average rate
    
 
 | 
5.24 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Long-term investments
    
 
 | 
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Fixed rate amounts
    
 
 | 
 | $ | 8,000 | $ | 4,000 |  | $ | 12,000 | $ | 11,999 | ||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Weighted-average rate
    
 
 | 
5.28 | % | 5.48 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 
 
    Total investment portfolio
    
 
 | 
$ | 87,837 | $ | 8,000 | $ | 4,000 |  | $ | 99,837 | $ | 99,836 | |||||||||||||
    Due to the short-term nature of our investments, we believe that
    we do not have any material exposure to changes in the fair
    value of our investment portfolio as a result of changes in
    interest rates.
    Foreign exchange risk.  From time to time, we
    enter into foreign currency forward exchange contracts to
    economically hedge certain of our anticipated foreign currency
    transaction, translation and re-measurement exposures. The
    objective of these contracts is to minimize the impact of
    foreign currency exchange rate movements on our operating
    results. At March 31, 2007, we had no foreign currency
    forward exchange contracts.
    
    22
Table of Contents
| Item 4. | Controls and Procedures | 
    Evaluation
    of disclosure controls and procedures.
    We maintain a set of disclosure controls and procedures that are
    designed to ensure that information relating to Intevac, Inc.
    required to be disclosed in periodic filings under Securities
    Exchange Act of 1934, or Exchange Act, is recorded, processed,
    summarized and reported in a timely manner under the Exchange
    Act. In connection with the filing of this
    Form 10-Q
    for the quarter ended March 31, 2007, as required under
    Rule 13a-15(b)
    of the Exchange Act, an evaluation was carried out under the
    supervision and with the participation of management, including
    the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, of the
    effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures as of
    the end of the period covered by this quarterly report. Based on
    this evaluation, our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial
    Officer concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures
    were effective as of March 31, 2007.
    Attached as exhibits to this Quarterly Report are certifications
    of the CEO and the CFO, which are required in accordance with
    Rule 13a-14
    of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (Exchange
    Act). This Controls and Procedures section includes the
    information concerning the controls evaluation referred to in
    the certifications, and it should be read in conjunction with
    the certifications for a more complete understanding of the
    topics presented.
    Definition
    of Disclosure Controls
    Disclosure Controls are controls and procedures designed to
    ensure that information required to be disclosed in our reports
    filed under the Exchange Act, such as this Quarterly Report, is
    recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time
    periods specified in the Securities and Exchange
    Commissions rules and forms. Disclosure Controls are also
    designed to ensure that such information is accumulated and
    communicated to our management, including the CEO and CFO, as
    appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required
    disclosure. Our Disclosure Controls include components of our
    internal control over financial reporting, which consists of
    control processes designed to provide reasonable assurance
    regarding the reliability of our financial reporting and the
    preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally
    accepted accounting principles in the U.S. To the extent
    that components of our internal control over financial reporting
    are included within our Disclosure Controls, they are included
    in the scope of our quarterly controls evaluation.
    Limitations
    on the Effectiveness of Controls
    Our management, including the CEO and CFO, does not expect that
    our Disclosure Controls or our internal control over financial
    reporting will prevent all error and all fraud. A control
    system, no matter how well designed and operated, can provide
    only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the control
    systems objectives will be met. Further, the design of a
    control system must reflect the fact that there are resource
    constraints, and the benefits of controls must be considered
    relative to their costs. Because of the inherent limitations in
    all control systems, no evaluation of controls can provide
    absolute assurance that all control issues and instances of
    fraud, if any, within the Company have been detected. These
    inherent limitations include the realities that judgments in
    decision-making can be faulty and that breakdowns can occur
    because of simple error or mistake. Controls can also be
    circumvented by the individual acts of some persons, by
    collusion of two or more people, or by management override of
    the controls. The design of any system of controls is based in
    part on certain assumptions about the likelihood of future
    events, and there can be no assurance that any design will
    succeed in achieving its stated goals under all potential future
    conditions. Over time, controls may become inadequate because of
    changes in conditions or deterioration in the degree of
    compliance with policies or procedures. Because of the inherent
    limitations in a cost-effective control system, misstatements
    due to error or fraud may occur and not be detected.
    Changes
    in internal controls over financial reporting
    There were no changes in our internal controls over financial
    reporting that occurred during the period covered by this
    Quarterly Report on
    Form 10-Q
    that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to
    materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.
    
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    PART II.
    OTHER INFORMATION
| Item 1. | Legal Proceedings | 
    Patent
    Infringement Complaint against Unaxis
    On July 7, 2006, we filed a patent infringement lawsuit
    against Unaxis USA, Inc. and its affiliates, Unaxis Balzers AG
    and Unaxis Balzers, Ltd., in the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California. Our lawsuit against
    Unaxis asserts infringement by Unaxis of United States Patent
    6,919,001, which relates to our 200 Lean system. Our complaint
    seeks monetary damages and an injunction that bars Unaxis from
    making, using, offering to sell or selling in the United States,
    or importing into the United States, Unaxis allegedly
    infringing product. In the suit, we seek damages and a permanent
    injunction for infringement of the same patent. We believe we
    have meritorious claims, and we intend to pursue them vigorously.
    On September 12, 2006, Unaxis filed a response to our
    lawsuit in which it asserted non-infringement, invalidity of our
    patent, inequitable conduct by Intevac, patent misuse by
    Intevac, and lack of jurisdiction by the court as defenses.
    Additionally, Unaxis requested a declaratory judgment of patent
    non-infringement, invalidity and unenforceability; asserted our
    violation of the California Business and Professional Code;
    requested that we be enjoined from engaging in any unfair
    competition; and requested that we be required to pay
    Unaxis attorney fees. We believe such claims lack merit,
    and we intend to defend ourselves vigorously.
    We replied to Unaxis response on October 3, 2006,
    denying the assertions of non-infringement, invalidity and
    unenforceability of the Intevac patent, and denying any unfair
    competition. With the approval of the Court, we amended our
    complaint on February 6, 2007 to assert an additional
    ground for our infringement claim and to add a request for a
    declaratory judgment of infringement. Unaxis filed a response on
    February 21, 2007, in which it repeated the assertions of
    its September 12, 2006 response.
    On March 29, 2007, the court denied a motion filed by
    Unaxis requesting a stay of the litigation pending action by the
    U.S. Patent Office on their February 27, 2007 request
    for a reexamination of United States Patent 6,919,001. Unaxis
    renewed the stay motion on May 1, 2007 after the
    U.S. Patent Office granted the reexamination request and
    issued an initial office action rejecting the claims of the
    001 patent. Intevac had no input to the initial
    determination by the U.S. Patent Office, but will now
    participate in the reexamination.
    Other
    Legal Matters
    From time to time, we are involved in claims and legal
    proceedings that arise in the ordinary course of business. We
    expect that the number and significance of these matters will
    increase as our business expands. Any claims or proceedings
    against us, whether meritorious or not, could be time consuming,
    result in costly litigation, require significant amounts of
    management time, result in the diversion of significant
    operational resources, or require us to enter into royalty or
    licensing agreements which, if required, may not be available on
    terms favorable to us or at all. We are not presently party to
    any lawsuit or proceeding that, in our opinion, is likely to
    seriously harm our business.
| Item 1A. | Risk Factors | 
    Demand
    for capital equipment is cyclical, which subjects our business
    to long periods of depressed revenues interspersed with periods
    of unusually high revenues.
    Our Equipment business sells equipment to capital-intensive
    industries, which sell commodity products such as disk drives.
    When demand for these commodity products exceeds capacity,
    demand for new capital equipment such as ours tends to be
    amplified. Conversely, when supply of these commodity products
    exceeds demand, the demand for new capital equipment such as
    ours tends to be depressed. The hard disk drive industry has
    historically been subject to multi-year cycles because of the
    long lead times and high costs involved in adding capacity, and
    to seasonal cycles driven by consumer purchasing patterns, which
    tend to be heaviest in the third and fourth quarters of each
    year.
    The cyclical nature of the capital equipment industry means that
    in some years we will have unusually high sales of new systems,
    and that in other years our sales of new systems will be
    severely depressed. The timing, length
    
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    and volatility of these cycles are difficult to predict. These
    cycles have affected the timing and amounts of our
    customers capital equipment purchases and investments in
    new technology. For example, sales of systems for magnetic disk
    production were severely depressed from mid-1998 until mid-2003
    and grew rapidly from 2004 through 2006. We cannot predict with
    any certainty when these cycles will begin and end.
    If the
    projected growth in demand for hard disk drives does not
    materialize and our customers do not replace or upgrade their
    installed base of disk sputtering systems, then future sales of
    our disk sputtering systems will suffer.
    From mid-1998 until mid-2003, there was very little demand for
    new disk sputtering systems, as magnetic disk manufacturers were
    burdened with over-capacity and were not investing in new disk
    sputtering equipment. By 2003, however, over-capacity had
    diminished, and orders for our 200 Lean began to increase.
    Sales of our equipment for capacity expansions are dependent on
    the capacity expansion plans of our customers and upon whether
    our customers select our equipment for their capacity
    expansions. We have no control over our customers
    expansion plans, and we cannot assure you that they will select
    our equipment if they do expand their capacity. Our customers
    may not implement capacity expansion plans, or we may fail to
    win orders for equipment for those capacity expansions, which
    could have a material adverse effect on our business and our
    operating results. In addition, some manufacturers may choose to
    purchase used systems from other manufacturers or customers
    rather than purchasing new systems from us.
    Sales of our 200 Lean disk sputtering systems are also dependent
    on obsolescence and replacement of the installed base of disk
    sputtering equipment. If technological advancements are
    developed that extend the useful life of the installed base of
    systems, then sales of our 200 Lean will be limited to the
    capacity expansion needs of our customers, which would
    significantly decrease our revenue.
    Our customers have experienced competition from other companies
    that produce alternative storage technologies like flash memory,
    where increased capacity, improving cost, lower power
    consumption and performance ruggedness have resulted in
    competition with lower capacity, smaller form factor disk drives
    in handheld applications. While this competition has
    traditionally been in the markets for handheld consumer
    electronics applications like personal media players, these
    competitors have recently announced products for notebook and
    enterprise compute applications. If alternative technologies,
    such as flash memory, replace hard disk drives as a primary
    method of digital storage, demand for our products would
    decrease.
    Our
    operating results fluctuate significantly from quarter to
    quarter, which may cause the price of our stock to
    decline.
    Over the last 9 quarters, our revenues per quarter have
    fluctuated between $10.6 million and $95.9 million.
    Over the same period our operating income (loss) as a percentage
    of revenues has fluctuated between approximately 23% and (41%)
    of revenues. We anticipate that our revenues and operating
    margins will continue to fluctuate. We expect this fluctuation
    to continue for a variety of reasons, including:
|  | changes in the demand, due to seasonality, cyclicality and other factors, for computer systems, storage subsystems and consumer electronics containing disks our customers produce with our systems; and | |
|  | delays or problems in the introduction and acceptance of our new products, or delivery of existing products; | |
|  | our business is inherently subject to fluctuations in revenue from quarter to quarter due to factors such as timing of orders, acceptance of new systems by our customers or cancellation of those orders; | |
|  | new products, services or technological innovations by our competitors or us. | 
    Additionally, because our systems are priced in the millions of
    dollars and we sell a relatively small number of systems, we
    believe that
    quarter-to-quarter
    comparisons of our revenues and operating results may not be an
    accurate indicator of our future performance. Our operating
    results in one or more future quarters may fail to meet the
    expectations of investment research analysts or investors, which
    could cause an immediate and significant decline in the trading
    price of our common shares.
    
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    We are
    exposed to risks associated with a highly concentrated customer
    base.
    Historically, a significant portion of our revenue in any
    particular period has been attributable to sales of our disk
    sputtering systems to a limited number of customers. In 2006,
    one of our customers accounted for 52% of our revenues, and
    three customers in the aggregate accounted for 93% of our
    revenues. The same three customers, in the aggregate, accounted
    for 86% of our net accounts receivable at December 31,
    2006. During 2006, Seagate acquired Maxtor, which further
    consolidated our customer base. Orders from a relatively limited
    number of magnetic disk manufacturers have accounted for, and
    likely will continue to account for, a substantial portion of
    our revenues. The loss of, or delays in purchasing by, any one
    of our large customers would significantly reduce potential
    future revenues. The concentration of our customer base may
    enable customers to demand pricing and other terms unfavorable
    to us. Furthermore, the concentration of customers can lead to
    extreme variability in revenue and financial results from period
    to period. For example, during 2006 revenues ranged between
    $49.6 million in the first quarter and $95.9 million
    in the fourth quarter. These factors could have a material
    adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results
    of operations.
    Our
    long-term revenue growth is dependent on new products. If these
    new products are not successful, then our results of operations
    will be adversely affected.
    We have invested heavily, and continue to invest, in the
    development of new products. Our success in developing and
    selling new products depends upon a variety of factors,
    including our ability to predict future customer requirements
    accurately, technological advances, total cost of ownership of
    our systems, our introduction of new products on schedule, our
    ability to manufacture our products cost-effectively and the
    performance of our products in the field. Our new product
    decisions and development commitments must anticipate
    continuously evolving industry requirements significantly in
    advance of sales.
    The majority of our revenues in both fiscal 2006 and fiscal 2005
    were from sales of our 200 Lean disk sputtering system, which
    was first delivered in December 2003. When first introduced,
    advanced vacuum manufacturing equipment, such as the 200 Lean,
    is subject to extensive customer acceptance tests after
    installation at the customers factory. These acceptance
    tests are designed to validate reliable operation to
    specifications in areas such as throughput, vacuum level,
    robotics, process performance and software features and
    functionality. These tests are generally more comprehensive for
    new systems than for mature systems, and are designed to
    highlight problems encountered with early versions of the
    equipment. For example, initial builds of the 200 Lean
    experienced high production and warranty costs in comparison to
    our more established product lines. Failure to promptly address
    any of the problems uncovered in these tests could have adverse
    effects on our business, including rescheduling of backlog,
    failure to achieve customer acceptance and therefore revenue
    recognition as anticipated, unanticipated product rework and
    warranty costs, penalties for non-performance, cancellation of
    orders, or return of products for credit.
    We are making a substantial investment to develop a new
    manufacturing system for semiconductor manufacturing. We spent a
    substantial portion of our research and development costs on
    this new product in 2006 and expect to increase our level of
    spending on this project in 2007. Intevac has not developed or
    sold products for this market previously. Failure to correctly
    assess the size of the market, to successfully develop a cost
    effective product to address the market, or to establish
    effective sales and support of the new product would have a
    material adverse effect on our future revenues and profits,
    including loss of the Companys entire investment in the
    project.
    We are jointly developing a next generation head mounted
    night-vision system with another defense contractor. This system
    is planned for sale to the U.S. military and will compete
    with head-mounted systems developed by our competitors. The US
    military does not intend to initiate production of this system
    until 2010. We plan to make a significant investment in this
    product and cannot be assured when, or if, we will be awarded
    any production contracts for these night vision systems.
    We have developed a night-vision sensor and camera module for
    use in a NATO customers digital head-mounted and
    rifle-sight system. In 2006, we entered into a purchasing
    agreement with our customer to deliver 32,000 camera modules
    over seven years. We cannot guarantee that we will achieve the
    yield improvements and cost reductions necessary for this
    program to be successful. Shipments under this program are
    subject to export approval from the U.S. government.
    
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    Our LIVAR target identification and low light level camera
    technologies are designed to offer significantly improved
    capability to military customers. We are also developing
    commercial products in our Imaging business. None of our Imaging
    products are currently being manufactured in high volume, and we
    may encounter unforeseen difficulties when we commence volume
    production of these products. Our Imaging business will require
    substantial further investment in sales and marketing, in
    product development and in additional production facilities in
    order to expand our operations. We may not succeed in these
    activities or generate significant sales of these new products.
    In 2006, sales of our Imaging products totaled $1.7 million.
    Failure of any of these new products to perform as intended, to
    penetrate their markets and develop into profitable product
    lines or to achieve their production cost objectives would have
    a material adverse effect on our business.
    We may
    not be successful in maintaining and obtaining the necessary
    export licenses to conduct operations abroad, and the United
    States government may prevent proposed sales to foreign
    customers.
    Many of our Imaging products require export licenses from United
    States Government agencies under the Export Administration Act,
    the Trading with the Enemy Act of 1917, the Arms Export Act of
    1976 and the International Traffic in Arms Regulations. This
    limits the potential market for our products. We can give no
    assurance that we will be successful in obtaining all the
    licenses necessary to export our products. Recently, heightened
    government scrutiny of export licenses for products in our
    market has resulted in lengthened review periods for our license
    applications. Export to countries, which are not considered by
    the United States Government to be allies, is likely to be
    prohibited, and even sales to U.S. allies may be limited.
    Failure to obtain, delays in obtaining, or revocation of
    previously issued licenses would prevent us from selling our
    products outside the United States, may subject us to fines
    or other penalties, and would have a material adverse effect on
    our business, financial condition and results of operations.
    Our
    products are complex, constantly evolving and often must be
    customized to individual customer requirements.
    The systems we manufacture and sell in our Equipment business
    have a large number of components and are complex, which require
    us to make substantial investments in research and development.
    If we were to fail to develop, manufacture and market new
    systems or to enhance existing systems, that failure would have
    an adverse effect on our business. We may experience delays and
    technical and manufacturing difficulties in future introduction,
    volume production and acceptance of new systems or enhancements.
    In addition, some of the systems that we manufacture must be
    customized to meet individual customer site or operating
    requirements. In some cases, we market and commit to deliver new
    systems, modules and components with advanced features and
    capabilities that we are still in the process of designing. We
    have limited manufacturing capacity and engineering resources
    and may be unable to complete the development, manufacture and
    shipment of these products, or to meet the required technical
    specifications for these products, in a timely manner. Failure
    to deliver these products on time, or failure to deliver
    products that perform to all contractually committed
    specifications, could have adverse effects on our business,
    including rescheduling of backlog, failure to achieve customer
    acceptance and therefore revenue recognition as anticipated,
    unanticipated rework and warranty costs, penalties for
    non-performance, cancellation of orders, or return of products
    for credit. In addition, we may incur substantial unanticipated
    costs early in a products life cycle, such as increased
    engineering, manufacturing, installation and support costs, that
    we may be unable to pass on to the customer and that may affect
    our gross margins. Sometimes we work closely with our customers
    to develop new features and products. In connection with these
    transactions, we sometimes offer a period of exclusivity to
    these customers.
    Our
    sales cycle is long and unpredictable, which requires us to
    incur high sales and marketing expenses with no assurance that a
    sale will result.
    The sales cycle for our equipment systems can be a year or
    longer, involving individuals from many different areas of our
    company and numerous product presentations and demonstrations
    for our prospective customers. Our sales process for these
    systems also includes the production of samples and
    customization of products for our
    
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    prospective customers. We do not enter into long-term contracts
    with our customers and therefore until an order is actually
    submitted by a customer there is no binding commitment to
    purchase our systems.
    Our Imaging business is also subject to long sales cycles
    because many of our products, such as our LIVAR system, often
    must be designed into our customers products, which are
    often complex
    state-of-the-art
    products. These development cycles are often multi-year, and our
    sales are contingent on our customers successfully integrating
    our product into their product, completing development of their
    product and then obtaining production orders for their product
    from the U.S. government or its allies.
    As a result, we may not recognize revenue from our products for
    extended periods of time after we have completed development,
    and made initial shipments of our products, during which time we
    may expend substantial funds and management time and effort with
    no assurance that a sale will result.
    We
    operate in an intensely competitive marketplace, and our
    competitors have greater resources than we do.
    In the market for our disk sputtering systems, we have
    experienced competition from competitors such as Anelva
    Corporation, which is a subsidiary of Canon, and Oerlikon, each
    of which has sold substantial numbers of systems worldwide. In
    the market for semiconductor equipment, we expect to experience
    competition from competitors such as Applied Materials, LAM
    Research and Tokyo Electron, Ltd. In the market for our military
    Imaging products, we experience competition from companies such
    as ITT Industries, Inc. and Northrop Grumman Corporation, the
    primary U.S. manufacturers of Generation-III night vision
    devices and their derivative products. In the markets for our
    commercial Imaging products, we compete with companies such as
    Andor, E2V, Hamamatsu, Texas Instruments and Roper Scientific
    for sensor and camera products, and with companies such as
    Ahura, B&W Tek, Horiba  Jobin Yvon, InPhotonics,
    Ocean Optics, and Smiths Detection for portable Raman
    spectrometer products. Our competitors have substantially
    greater financial, technical, marketing, manufacturing and other
    resources than we do. We cannot assure you that our competitors
    will not develop enhancements to, or future generations of,
    competitive products that offer superior price or performance
    features. Likewise, we cannot assure you that new competitors
    will not enter our markets and develop such enhanced products.
    Moreover, competition for our customers is intense, and our
    competitors have historically offered substantial pricing
    concessions and incentives to attract our customers or retain
    their existing customers.
    We
    experienced significant growth in our business and operations
    and if we do not appropriately manage this growth and any future
    growth, our operating results will be negatively
    affected.
    Our business has grown significantly in recent years in both
    operations and headcount, and continued growth may cause a
    significant strain on our infrastructure, internal systems and
    managerial resources. To manage our growth effectively, we must
    continue to improve and expand our infrastructure, including
    information technology and financial operating and
    administrative systems and controls, and continue managing
    headcount, capital and processes in an efficient manner. Our
    productivity and the quality of our products may be adversely
    affected if we do not integrate and train our new employees
    quickly and effectively and coordinate among our executive,
    engineering, finance, marketing, sales, operations and customer
    support organizations, all of which add to the complexity of our
    organization and increase our operating expenses. We also may be
    less able to predict and effectively control our operating
    expenses due to the growth and increasing complexity of our
    business. In addition, our information technology systems may
    not grow at a sufficient rate to keep up with the processing and
    information demands placed on them by a much larger company. The
    efforts to continue to expand our information technology systems
    or our inability to do so could harm our business. Further,
    revenues may not grow at a sufficient rate to absorb the costs
    associated with a larger overall headcount.
    Our future growth may require significant additional resources,
    given that, as we increase our business operations in complexity
    and scale, we may have insufficient management capabilities and
    internal bandwidth to manage our growth and business
    effectively. We cannot assure you that resources will be
    available when we need them or that we will have sufficient
    capital to fund these potential resource needs. Also, growth in
    the number of orders received in our Equipment business may
    require additional physical space and headcount, and our ability
    to fulfill such orders may be constrained if we are unable to
    effectively grow our business. If we are unable to manage our
    growth effectively or if we experience a shortfall in resources,
    our results of operations will be harmed.
    
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    Our
    Imaging business depends heavily on government contracts, which
    are subject to immediate termination and are funded in
    increments. The termination of or failure to fund one or more of
    these contracts could have a negative impact on our
    operations.
    We sell many of our Imaging products and services directly to
    the U.S. government, as well as to prime contractors for
    various U.S. government programs. Our revenues from
    government contracts totaled $10.2 million,
    $6.9 million, and $8.2 million in 2006, 2005, and
    2004, respectively. Generally, government contracts are subject
    to oversight audits by government representatives and contain
    provisions permitting termination, in whole or in part, without
    prior notice at the governments convenience upon the
    payment of compensation only for work done and commitments made
    at the time of termination. We cannot assure you that one or
    more of the government contracts under which our customers or we
    operate will not be terminated under these circumstances. Also,
    we cannot assure you that we or our customers would be able to
    procure new government contracts to offset the revenues lost as
    a result of any termination of existing contracts, nor can we
    assure you that we or our customers will continue to remain in
    good standing as federal contractors.
    Furthermore, the funding of multi-year government programs is
    subject to congressional appropriations, and there is no
    guarantee that the U.S. government will make further
    appropriations. The loss of funding for a government program
    would result in a loss of anticipated future revenues
    attributable to that program. That could increase our overall
    costs of doing business.
    In addition, sales to the U.S. government and its prime
    contractors may be affected by changes in procurement policies,
    budget considerations and political developments in the United
    States or abroad. The influence of any of these factors, which
    are beyond our control, could also negatively impact our
    financial condition. We also may experience problems associated
    with advanced designs required by the government, which may
    result in unforeseen technological difficulties and cost
    overruns. Failure to overcome these technological difficulties
    or occurrence of cost overruns would have a material adverse
    effect on our business.
    Unexpected
    increases in the cost to develop or manufacture our products
    under fixed-price contracts may cause us to experience
    un-reimbursed cost overruns.
    A portion of our revenue is derived from fixed-price development
    and production contracts. Under fixed-price contracts,
    unexpected increases in the cost to develop or manufacture a
    product, whether due to inaccurate estimates in the bidding
    process, unanticipated increases in material costs,
    inefficiencies or other factors, are borne by us. We have
    experienced cost overruns in the past that have resulted in
    losses on certain contracts, and may experience additional cost
    overruns in the future. We are required to recognize the total
    estimated impact of cost overruns in the period in which they
    are first identified. Such cost overruns could have a material
    adverse effect on our results of operation and financial
    condition.
    Our
    sales of disk sputtering systems are dependent on substantial
    capital investment by our customers, far in excess of the cost
    of our products.
    Our customers must make extremely large capital expenditures in
    order to purchase our systems and other related equipment and
    facilities. These costs are far in excess of the cost of our
    systems alone. The magnitude of such capital expenditures
    requires that our customers have access to large amounts of
    capital and that they be willing to invest that capital over
    long periods of time to be able to purchase our equipment. The
    magnetic disk manufacturing industry has made significant
    additions to its production capacity in the last few years. Our
    customers may not be willing or able to continue this level of
    capital investment, especially during a downturn in either the
    overall economy or the hard disk drive industry.
    Our
    stock price is volatile.
    The market price and trading volume of our common stock has been
    subject to significant volatility, and this trend may continue.
    Over the last 12 months, the closing price of our common
    stock, as traded on The Nasdaq
    
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    National Market, fluctuated from a low of $14.81 per share
    to a high of $30.60 per share. The value of our common
    stock may decline regardless of our operating performance or
    prospects. Factors affecting our market price include:
|  | our perceived prospects; | |
|  | hard disk drive market expectations; | |
|  | variations in our operating results and whether we achieve our key business targets; | |
|  | sales or purchases of large blocks of our stock; | |
|  | changes in, or our failure to meet, our revenue and earnings estimates; | |
|  | changes in securities analysts buy or sell recommendations; | |
|  | differences between our reported results and those expected by investors and securities analysts; | |
|  | announcements of new contracts, products or technological innovations by us or our competitors; | |
|  | market reaction to any acquisitions, joint ventures or strategic investments announced by us or our competitors; | |
|  | our high fixed operating expenses, including research and development expenses; | |
|  | developments in the financial markets; and | |
|  | general economic, political or stock market conditions in the United States and other major regions in which we do business. | 
    In addition, the general economic, political, stock market and
    hard drive industry conditions that may affect the market price
    of our common stock are beyond our control. The market price of
    our common stock at any particular time may not remain the
    market price in the future. In the past, securities class action
    litigation has been instituted against companies following
    periods of volatility in the market price of their securities.
    Any such litigation, if instituted against us, could result in
    substantial costs and a diversion of managements attention
    and resources.
    Changes
    in tax rates or tax liabilities could affect future
    results.
    As a global company, we are subject to taxation in the United
    States and various other countries. Significant judgment is
    required to determine and estimate worldwide tax liabilities.
    Our future tax rates could be affected by changes in the
    applicable tax laws, composition of earnings in countries with
    differing tax rates, changes in the valuation of our deferred
    tax assets and liabilities, or changes in the tax laws. Although
    we believe our tax estimates are reasonable, there can be no
    assurance that any final determination will not be materially
    different from the treatment reflected in our historical income
    tax provisions and accruals, which could materially and
    adversely affect our results of operations.
    Our effective tax rate in both 2006 and 2005 was well below the
    applicable statutory rates due primarily to the utilization of
    net operating loss carry-forwards and deferred credits. We are
    currently projecting an effective tax rate of 31.6% for 2007.
    Our
    future success depends on international sales and the management
    of global operations
    In 2006, approximately 90% of our revenues came from regions
    outside the United States. We currently have international
    customer support offices in Singapore, China, Malaysia, Korea
    and Japan. We expect that international sales will continue to
    account for a significant portion of our total revenue in future
    years. Certain manufacturing facilities and suppliers are also
    located outside the United States. Managing our global
    operations presents challenges including, but not limited to,
    those arising from:
|  | varying regional and geopolitical business conditions and demands; | |
|  | global trade issues; | |
|  | variations in protection of intellectual property and other legal rights in different countries; | 
    
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|  | rising raw material and energy costs; | |
|  | variations in the ability to develop relationships with suppliers and other local businesses; | |
|  | changes in laws and regulations of the United States (including export restrictions) and other countries, as well as their interpretation and application; | |
|  | fluctuations in interest rates and currency exchange rates; | |
|  | the need to provide sufficient levels of technical support in different locations; | |
|  | political instability, natural disasters (such as earthquakes, hurricanes or floods), pandemics, terrorism or acts of war where we have operations, suppliers or sales; | |
|  | cultural differences; and | |
|  | shipping delays. | 
    Changes
    in existing financial accounting standards or practices or
    taxation rules or practices may adversely affect our results of
    operations.
    Changes in existing accounting or taxation rules or practices,
    new accounting pronouncements or taxation rules, or varying
    interpretations of current accounting pronouncements or taxation
    practice could have a significant adverse effect on our results
    of operations or the manner in which we conduct our business.
    Further, such changes could potentially affect our reporting of
    transactions completed before such changes are effective. In
    December 2004, the Financial Accounting Standards Board
    (FASB) enacted Statement of Financial Accounting
    Standards 123 (Revised 2004) (SFAS 123R),
    Share-Based Payment, which replaces
    SFAS No. 123 (SFAS 123),
    Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation.
    SFAS 123R requires the measurement of all share-based
    payments to employees, including grants of employee stock
    options, using a fair-value-based method and the recording of
    such compensation expense in our statements of income. We
    adopted SFAS 123R in the first quarter of fiscal year 2006.
    In June 2006, the FASB issued Interpretation No. 48,
    Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes
    (FIN 48). FIN 48, which was effective
    January 1, 2007, clarifies the accounting for uncertainty
    in income taxes recognized in an enterprises financial
    statements in accordance with FASB Statement No. 109,
    Accounting for Income Taxes. We adopted FIN 48
    in the first quarter of fiscal year 2007.
    We are
    required to evaluate our internal control over financial
    reporting under Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
    2002, and any adverse results from such evaluation could result
    in a loss of investor confidence in our financial reports and
    have an adverse effect on our stock price.
    Pursuant to Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002,
    our management must perform evaluations of our internal control
    over financial reporting. Beginning in 2004, our
    Form 10-K
    has included a report by management of their assessment of the
    adequacy of such internal control. Additionally, our independent
    registered public accounting firm must publicly attest to the
    adequacy of managements assessment and the effectiveness
    of our internal control.
    We have completed the evaluation of our internal controls over
    financial reporting as required by Section 404 of the
    Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. Although our assessment, testing,
    and evaluation resulted in our conclusion that as of
    December 31, 2006, our internal controls over financial
    reporting were effective, we cannot predict the outcome of our
    testing in future periods. If our internal controls are
    ineffective in future periods, our financial results or the
    market price of our shares could be adversely affected. We will
    incur additional expenses and commitment of managements
    time in connection with further evaluations.
    Our
    dependence on suppliers for certain parts, some of them
    sole-sourced, makes us vulnerable to manufacturing interruptions
    and delays, which could affect our ability to meet customer
    demand.
    We are a manufacturing business. Purchased parts constitute the
    largest component of our product cost. Our ability to
    manufacture depends on the timely delivery of parts, components
    and subassemblies from suppliers. We obtain some of the key
    components and
    sub-assemblies
    used in our products from a single supplier or a limited
    
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    group of suppliers. If any of our suppliers fail to deliver
    quality parts on a timely basis, we may experience delays in
    manufacturing, which could result in delayed product deliveries
    or increased costs to expedite deliveries or develop alternative
    suppliers. Development of alternative suppliers could require
    redesign of our products.
    Our
    business depends on the integrity of our intellectual property
    rights and failure to protect our intellectual property rights
    adequately could have a material adverse effect on our
    business.
    The success of our business depends upon integrity of our
    intellectual property rights, and we cannot assure you that:
|  | any of our pending or future patent applications will be allowed or that any of the allowed applications will be issued as patents or will issue with claims of the scope we sought; | |
|  | any of our patents will not be invalidated, deemed unenforceable, circumvented or challenged; | |
|  | the rights granted under our patents will provide competitive advantages to us; | |
|  | other parties will not develop similar products, duplicate our products or design around our patents; or | |
|  | our patent rights, intellectual property laws or our agreements will adequately protect our intellectual property or competitive position. | 
    We may
    be subject to claims of intellectual property
    infringement.
    From time to time, we have received claims that we are
    infringing third parties intellectual property rights. We
    cannot assure you that third parties will not in the future
    claim that we have infringed current or future patents,
    trademarks or other proprietary rights relating to our products.
    Any claims, with or without merit, could be time-consuming,
    result in costly litigation, cause product shipment delays or
    require us to enter into royalty or licensing agreements. Such
    royalty or licensing agreements, if required, may not be
    available on terms acceptable to us.
    Our
    success is dependent on recruiting and retaining a highly
    talented work force.
    Our employees are vital to our success, and our key management,
    engineering and other employees are difficult to replace. We
    generally do not have employment contracts with our key
    employees. Further, we do not maintain key person life insurance
    on any of our employees. The expansion of high technology
    companies worldwide has increased demand and competition for
    qualified personnel, and has made companies increasingly
    protective of prior employees. It may be difficult for us to
    locate employees who are not subject to non-competition and
    other restrictions.
    Our U.S. operations are located in Santa Clara,
    California and Fremont, California, where the cost of living and
    recruiting employees is high. Additionally, our operating
    results depend, in large part, upon our ability to retain and
    attract qualified management, engineering, marketing,
    manufacturing, customer support, sales and administrative
    personnel. Furthermore, we compete with similar industries, such
    as the semiconductor industry, for the same pool of skilled
    employees. If we are unable to retain key personnel, or if we
    are not able to attract, assimilate or retain additional highly
    qualified employees to meet our needs in the future, our
    business and operations could be harmed.
    Changes
    in demand caused by fluctuations in interest and currency
    exchange rates may reduce our international sales.
    Sales and operating activities outside of the United States are
    subject to inherent risks, including fluctuations in the value
    of the U.S. dollar relative to foreign currencies, tariffs,
    quotas, taxes and other market barriers, political and economic
    instability, restrictions on the export or import of technology,
    potentially limited intellectual property protection,
    difficulties in staffing and managing international operations
    and potentially adverse tax consequences. We earn a significant
    portion of our revenue from international sales, and there can
    be no assurance that any of these factors will not have an
    adverse effect on our ability to sell our products or operate
    outside the United States.
    We currently quote and sell the majority of our products in
    U.S. dollars. From time to time, we may enter into foreign
    currency contracts in an effort to reduce the overall risk of
    currency fluctuations to our business. However,
    
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    there can be no assurance that the offer and sale of products
    denominated in foreign currencies, and the related foreign
    currency hedging activities, will not adversely affect our
    business.
    Our principal competitor for disk sputtering equipment is based
    in Japan and has a cost structure based on the Japanese yen.
    Accordingly, currency fluctuations could cause the price of our
    products to be more or less competitive than our principal
    competitors products. Currency fluctuations will decrease
    or increase our cost structure relative to those of our
    competitors, which could lessen the demand for our products and
    affect our competitive position.
    Difficulties
    in integrating past or future acquisitions could adversely
    affect our business.
    We have completed a number of acquisitions during our operating
    history and we recently announced the acquisition of certain
    assets of DeltaNu, LLC. We have spent and will continue to spend
    significant resources identifying and acquiring businesses. The
    efficient and effective integration of our acquired businesses
    into our organization is critical to our growth. Any future
    acquisitions involve numerous risks including difficulties in
    integrating the operations, technologies and products of the
    acquired companies, the diversion of our managements
    attention from other business concerns and the potential loss of
    key employees of the acquired companies. Failure to achieve the
    anticipated benefits of these and any future acquisitions or to
    successfully integrate the operations of the companies we
    acquire could also harm our business, results of operations and
    cash flows. Any future acquisitions may also result in
    potentially dilutive issuance of equity securities, acquisition-
    or divestiture-related write-offs or the assumption of debt and
    contingent liabilities.
    We use
    hazardous materials and are subject to risks of non-compliance
    with environmental and safety regulations.
    We are subject to a variety of governmental regulations relating
    to the use, storage, discharge, handling, emission, generation,
    manufacture, treatment and disposal of toxic or otherwise
    hazardous substances, chemicals, materials or waste. If we fail
    to comply with current or future regulations, such failure could
    result in suspension of our operations, alteration of our
    manufacturing process, or substantial civil penalties or
    criminal fines against us or our officers, directors or
    employees. Additionally, these regulations could require us to
    acquire expensive remediation or abatement equipment or to incur
    substantial expenses to comply with them. Failure to properly
    manage the use, disposal or storage of, or adequately restrict
    the release of, hazardous or toxic substances could subject us
    to significant liabilities.
    Future
    sales of shares of our common stock by our officers, directors
    and affiliates could cause our stock price to
    decline.
    Substantially all of our common stock may be sold without
    restriction in the public markets, although shares held by our
    directors, executive officers and affiliates may be subject to
    volume and manner of sale restrictions. Sales of a substantial
    number of shares of common stock in the public market by our
    officers, directors or affiliates or the perception that these
    sales could occur could materially and adversely affect our
    stock price and make it more difficult for us to sell equity
    securities in the future at a time and price we deem appropriate.
    Anti-takeover
    provisions in our charter documents and under California law
    could prevent or delay a change in control, which could
    negatively impact the value of our common stock by discouraging
    a favorable merger or acquisition of us.
    Our articles of incorporation authorize our board of directors
    to issue up to 10,000,000 shares of preferred stock and to
    determine the powers, preferences, privileges, rights, including
    voting rights, qualifications, limitations and restrictions of
    those shares, without any further vote or action by the
    shareholders. The rights of the holders of our common stock will
    be subject to, and may be adversely affected by, the rights of
    the holders of any preferred stock that we may issue in the
    future. The issuance of preferred stock could have the effect of
    delaying, deterring or preventing a change in control and could
    adversely affect the voting power of your shares. In addition,
    provisions of California law and our bylaws could make it more
    difficult for a third party to acquire a majority of our
    outstanding voting stock by discouraging a hostile bid, or
    delaying or deterring a merger, acquisition or tender offer in
    which our
    
    33
Table of Contents
    shareholders could receive a premium for their shares or a proxy
    contest for control of our company or other changes in our
    management.
    We
    could be involved in litigation
    From time to time we may be involved in litigation of various
    types, including litigation alleging infringement of
    intellectual property rights and other claims. For example, in
    July 2006, we filed a patent infringement lawsuit against Unaxis
    USA, Inc. and its affiliates Unaxis Balzers AG and Unaxis
    Balzers, Ltd. alleging infringement by Unaxis of a patent
    relating to our 200 Lean system. Litigation tends to be
    expensive and requires significant management time and attention
    and could have a negative effect on our results of operations or
    business if we lose or have to settle a case on significantly
    adverse terms.
    Business
    interruptions could adversely affect our
    operations.
    Our operations are vulnerable to interruption by fire,
    earthquake or other natural disaster, quarantines or other
    disruptions associated with infectious diseases, national
    catastrophe, terrorist activities, war, disruptions in our
    computing and communications infrastructure due to power loss,
    telecommunications failure, human error, physical or electronic
    security breaches and computer viruses, and other events beyond
    our control. We do not have a fully implemented detailed
    disaster recovery plan. Despite our implementation of network
    security measures, our tools and servers are vulnerable to
    computer viruses, break-ins and similar disruptions from
    unauthorized tampering with our computer systems and tools
    located at customer sites. Political instability could cause us
    to incur increased costs in transportation, make such
    transportation unreliable, increase our insurance costs and
    cause international currency markets to fluctuate. This same
    instability could have the same effects on our suppliers and
    their ability to timely deliver their products. In addition, we
    do not carry sufficient business interruption insurance to
    compensate us for all losses that may occur, and any losses or
    damages incurred by us could have a material adverse effect on
    our business and results of operations. For example, we
    self-insure earthquake risks, because we believe this is the
    prudent financial decision based on the high cost of the limited
    coverage available in the earthquake insurance market. An
    earthquake could significantly disrupt our operations, most of
    which are conducted in California. It could also significantly
    delay our research and engineering effort on new products, most
    of which is also conducted in California. We take steps to
    minimize the damage that would be caused by an earthquake, but
    there is no certainty that our efforts will prove successful in
    the event of an earthquake.
| Item 2. | Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds | 
    None.
| Item 3. | Defaults upon Senior Securities | 
    None.
| Item 4. | Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security-Holders | 
    None.
| Item 5. | Other Information | 
    None.
    
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Table of Contents
| Item 6. | Exhibits | 
    The following exhibits are filed herewith:
| 
    Exhibit | 
||||
| 
 
    Number
 
 | 
 
    Description
 
 | 
|||
| 31 | .1 | Certification of President and Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. | ||
| 31 | .2 | Certification of Vice President, Finance and Administration, Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer and Secretary Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. | ||
| 32 | .1 | Certification Pursuant to U.S.C. 1350 adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes- Oxley Act of 2002. | ||
    
    35
Table of Contents
    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.
    INTEVAC, INC.
| By: | 
     /s/  KEVIN
    FAIRBAIRN 
 | 
    Kevin Fairbairn
    President, Chief Executive Officer and Director
    (Principal Executive Officer)
    Date: May 10, 2007
| By: | 
     /s/  CHARLES
    B. EDDY III 
 | 
    Charles B. Eddy III
    Vice President, Finance and Administration,
    Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer and Secretary
(Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)
(Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)
    Date: May 10, 2007
    
    36
Table of Contents
    Exhibit Index
| 
    Exhibit | 
||||
| 
 
    Number
 
 | 
 
    Description
 
 | 
|||
| 31 | .1 | Certification of President and Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. | ||
| 31 | .2 | Certification of Vice President, Finance and Administration, Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer and Secretary Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. | ||
| 32 | .1 | Certification Pursuant to U.S.C. 1350 adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes- Oxley Act of 2002. | ||
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