Simulated chip giant makes a move! Texas Instruments plans to acquire Silicon Labs for $7.5 billion to strengthen its presence in the industrial and IoT markets

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Texas Instruments announces agreement to acquire American chip company Silicon Labs for approximately $7.5 billion in cash. This is the largest acquisition deal by the analog chip giant since 2011, aimed at strengthening its deep presence in traditional markets such as home appliances, industrial, power supplies, and medical devices, and expanding its business footprint in wireless connectivity chips.

According to a joint statement from both parties, Silicon Labs’ shareholders will receive $231 in cash per share. The transaction is expected to be completed in the first half of 2027, pending approval from Silicon Labs’ shareholders. Following the announcement, Silicon Labs’ stock price surged 49% during trading to $203.66; Texas Instruments’ stock fell 1.4%.

Texas Instruments plans to finance this acquisition through its existing cash reserves and new debt financing. According to reports, the company expects to achieve approximately $450 million in annual cost synergies within three years after the deal closes by integrating manufacturing and operational systems.

Under the terms of the announced agreement, the parties have set unequal termination fees: if Silicon Labs voluntarily terminates the deal, it must pay Texas Instruments a breakup fee of $259 million; conversely, if the deal fails due to reasons attributable to Texas Instruments, it must pay Silicon Labs $499 million.

Focusing on Core Business and Betting on Industrial Recovery

This acquisition further clarifies Texas Instruments’ long-term strategy to concentrate its resources on core business areas. As the world’s largest manufacturer of analog chips, Texas Instruments focuses on producing fundamental chips that convert physical signals from the real world (such as sound, temperature, pressure) into electronic signals. These chips are widely used in automobiles, industrial equipment, and various electronic products. The company’s strong sales forecast released last week also confirms that demand from industrial and automotive sectors is recovering.

Silicon Labs’ chip business mainly serves connectivity markets such as smart home devices, industrial automation, battery energy storage systems, and commercial lighting. After selling some assets, including automotive chips, to Skyworks Solutions for $2.75 billion in 2021, the company’s focus has shifted to chips for smart home, smart meters, and industrial IoT connected devices.

Texas Instruments has a broad and diverse customer base, including industry leaders such as Apple, SpaceX, and Ford. Unlike peers like NVIDIA and AMD, which focus on cutting-edge AI and computing chips, Texas Instruments’ core strength lies in providing essential foundational semiconductor components for smartphones, automobiles, medical devices, and other everyday applications.

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