Type | Public |
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| |
Industry | Semiconductors |
Founded | 1983, public since 1989 |
Headquarters | Hillsboro, Oregon, U.S.45°31′38″N 122°55′36″W / 45.527216°N 122.926626°WCoordinates: 45°31′38″N 122°55′36″W / 45.527216°N 122.926626°W |
Key people | Jim Anderson, CEO |
Products | FPGAs, CPLDs |
Revenue | ![]() |
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Number of employees | 747 (2019, full-time)[1] |
Website | latticesemi |
Lattice Semiconductor Corporation is an American semiconductor company specializing in the design and manufacturing of low power, field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs).[2] Headquartered in the Silicon Forest area of Hillsboro, Oregon,[3] the company also has operations in Shanghai,[4] Manila,[5] and Singapore.[6] Lattice Semiconductor has more than 700 employees and an annual revenue of more than $400 million as of 2019.[1] Founded in 1983, the company went public in 1989 and is traded on the NASDAQ stock exchange under the symbol LSCC.
Lattice was founded on April 3, 1983, by C. Norman Winningstad, Rahul Sud, and Ray Capece,[7] with investment from Winningstad, Harry Merlo, Tom Moyer, and John Piacentini.[7] Lattice was incorporated in Oregon in 1983 and reincorporated in Delaware in 1985. Co-founder Sud left as president in December 1986, and Winningstad left in 1991 as chairman of the board.[7] Early struggles led to chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization in July 1987.[7] The company emerged from bankruptcy after 62 days and moved from its headquarters in an unincorporated area near Beaverton to a smaller building in Hillsboro, Oregon.[8] Over the next year, the company shrank from 140 to 64 employees but posted record revenues.[9]
Cyrus Tsui became the company's chief executive officer in 1988.[10] On November 9, 1989, Lattice became a publicly traded company when its shares were listed on the NASDAQ after in initial public offering.[11] The initial share price was $6, and raised almost $14 million for the company.[11] In July 1990, a second stock offering of nearly 1.5 million new shares raised $22.6 million at $16.25 per share.[12]
In 1995, the company attempted to assert trademark rights in the term Silicon Forest beyond the use of its trademark for the use in semiconductor devices.[13] They had registered the mark in 1985, but later conceded they could not prevent the usage of the term as a noun.[13] Forbes ranked the company as their 162nd best small company in the United States in 1996,[14] and Lattice began to double the size of its Hillsboro headquarters.[10]
In 2000, annual revenues topped $560 million with profits of $160 million.[15] Its stock price reached an all-time high of $41.34, adjusted for splits.[15] For the next five years, however, the company recorded no annual profit.
Lattice purchased Agere Corporation's FPGA division in 2002.[16] In 2004, the company settled charges with the United States government that it had illegally exported certain technologies to China, paying a fine of $560,000.[17] In 2005, Tsui was replaced as CEO by Steve Skaggs[16] and the company laid off employees for the first time.[16] In fiscal year 2006, Lattice posted a profit of $3.1 million on revenues of $245.5 million, the first annual profit since 2000.[18]
In June 2008, Bruno Guilmart was named as chief executive officer of the company, replacing Steve Skaggs.[19] For fiscal year 2008, Lattice had a loss of $32 million on annual revenues of $222.3 million.[20] In 2009, the company began moving all of its warehouse operations for parts from Oregon to Singapore.[21] Through July 2009, the company had lost money for ten straight quarters,[22] and had its first profitable quarter in three years during the fourth quarter of 2009.[23] Bruno Guilmart left the company in August 2010, and Darin Billerbeck, former Zilog CEO, who had just sold Zilog in the previous year, was named the new CEO in October of that year, starting in November.[24] The company reported 2011 revenue of $318 million.[25] Lattice started a stock buy-back program in 2010 that continued into 2012 that would total about $35 million if fully implemented.[26]
In 2011, the company was ranked third among the world's makers of field programmable gate array (FPGA) devices[27] and second for CPLDs & SPLDs.[28] On December 9, 2011, Lattice announced it was acquiring SiliconBlue for $63.2 million in cash.[29][30][31] Lattice announced in July 2012 a foundry agreement with United Microelectronics Corporation.[32] Lattice returned to profitability in 2013 with a profit of $22.3 million on $332.5 million in revenues.[33] The company acquired Silicon Image Inc. for $606 million in March 2015[34] and moved company headquarters to Downtown Portland.[35]
In April 2016, Tsinghua Holdings said in a U.S. filing that it accumulated a roughly 6 percent stake in Lattice Semiconductor through share purchased on the open market.[36] In November, 2016, Canyon Bridge Capital Partners announced a definitive agreement to acquire all of Lattice's shares.[37] The purchase of Lattice by Canyon Bridge was in September 2017 blocked by US President Donald Trump based on the recommendation of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States on national security grounds under the Exon–Florio Amendment.[38][39][40][41] The company re-located its headquarters back to its Hillsboro campus in 2019.[42]
Activist investor Lion Point Capital purchased a six percent stake in Lattice in February 2018.[43] The next month the company filled three new seats on its board with independent directors supported by Lion Point.[44] That same year, Lattice replaced several members of its leadership team, including bringing in a new president and CEO, Jim Anderson, who previously worked at Advanced Micro Devices.[45] Under the new leadership, Lattice shifted the company's focus entirely to low-power field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs).[46] Lattice acquired computer vision software company Mirametrix in November 2021.[47][48]
See also: iCE (FPGA), LatticeMico8, LatticeMico32, and GAL22V10 |
Lattice primarily focuses on small, efficient low-power field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs).[49][46] It also sells programmable mixed-signal and interconnect products, related software and intellectual property (IP),[50] for applications from edge computing[51] to cloud computing.[52] Lattice's main products are the ECP and Certus-NX series of general purpose FPGAs,[53] CrossLink FPGAs for video bridging and processing,[54] iCE FPGAs for low-power applications,[55] and MachXO FPGAs for control and security.[56][57] Products are used in a variety of end uses, such as flat-panel televisions and laptops.[19]
Lattice's software offerings include design tools Diamond,[58] Radiant,[59] and Propel.[60] It also provides solution stacks, including mVision, designed for machine vision in power-constrained designs;[61] sensAI, designed to integrate machine learning into internet of things applications;[62] Automate, designed to facilitate industrial applications like robotics and real-time networking in settings like automated factories and warehouses;[63] and Sentry, for security.[64]
The company is headquartered in Hillsboro, Oregon, in the high-tech area known as the Silicon Forest.[3] The company employs more than 700 people worldwide as of 2019[update].[1] Jim Anderson is Lattice's chief executive officer and president.[65][66] Its chief competitors are Xilinx, Altera and Microsemi (previously Actel.)[67]