<span style='color:red'>IDT</span> stockholders approve merger
  Integrated Device Technology, Inc. (IDT?) (NASDAQ: IDTI), a supplier of high-performance system-level analog/mixed-signal semiconductors, today announced that, at the Company’s special meeting of stockholders held on January 15, 2019, IDT stockholders voted to adopt the Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated September 10, 2018, by and between IDT and Renesas Electronics Corporation (“Renesas”, TSE: 6723), a premier global supplier of advanced semiconductor solutions.  Approximately 99% of all votes cast voted in favor of the adoption of the merger agreement, representing approximately 82% of all outstanding shares as of November 23, 2018, the record date for the special meeting. The final voting results for each of the proposals voted on at the special meeting of stockholders will be reported on a Current Report on Form 8-K, in accordance with the rules of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.  Closing of the transaction remains subject to customary closing conditions and remaining regulatory approvals.  On December 21, 2018, IDT reported that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States(CFIUS) review regarding national security concerns relating to the Merger was underway and the initial 45-day review period would conclude by January 2, 2019. Due to the U.S. government shutdown that commenced in December 2018, this review period has been tolled pursuant to section 1709 of the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act of 2018, and will resume following the resumption of operations by the relevant U.S. government agencies.  As previously announced, the two companies have already received regulatory antitrust approval for the proposed transaction from China, Germany, Hungary, and Korea. In addition, the waiting period under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976, as amended, in connection with the proposed acquisition expired at 11:59 p.m., Eastern time, on October 22, 2018.
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Release time:2019-01-21 00:00 reading:1095 Continue reading>>
<span style='color:red'>IDT</span> Deal Fuels Renesas Growth Ambitions
Renesas Electronics’ plan to acquire Integrated Device Technology (IDT) signals the Japanese giant’s appetite to expand well beyond the automotive sector and delve into data centers and communications. By leveraging IDT’s strengths in RF, power, sensors and real-time interconnect, Renesas will be poised to build a synergistic product/technology portfolio across its existing markets in automotive, industrial and the Internet of Things (IoT).The M&A frenzy among semiconductor companies has tapered down in the past two years. The biggest acquisition agreement in 2018 was Microchip buying Microsemi at $8.35 billion. Renesas snagging IDT at $6.7 billion is the year’s runner-up, observed Rob Lineback, senior market research analyst at IC Insights.Industry observers generally welcomed the announcement. IC Insights’ Lineback called the deal “a pretty good fit” for Renesas “with very little overlap, including the Intersil business,” which Renesas acquired a year ago. IDT likes to refer to itself “as an analog mixed-signal systems IC supplier versus an IoT or embedded solutions provider,” observed Lineback. “Renesas should benefit from IDT’s focus in sensors, signal conditioning, and actuator/motor control ICs that can fit well into its large microcontroller and automotive presence.”Renesas will pay $49 a share in cash for IDT, about a 16% premium to the U.S. company’s Monday close and 29% higher than the share price when talks were first disclosed. The total sticker price on the deal is about $6.7 billion. In a one-on-one phone interview with CEOs at Renesas and IDT, EE Times asked about some specific plans Renesas may have for IDT’s current business.Where’s the synergy in data centers?One of the new market segments IDT brings to Renesas is data centers. During the interview, Bunsei Kure, the chief executive of Renesas, acknowledged that the Japanese chip vendor, over the last few years, has been missing out on a red-hot data center market. “We should have been there,” Kure said. Although Renesas has some power management ICs (from Intersil) in data centers, the Japanese company doesn’t necessarily see a move into data centers as a key to “synergy” either on the product or technology levels. Renesas doesn’t plan to seek to enter the market of the powerful processors necessary for data centers, either. Instead, Kure said, “We will offer our support to IDT’s data center business by providing more resources.”Lineback noted that IDT's presence in data center and high computing ranges has been fueled by its DDR3 and DDR4 memory interfaces, PCI Express and other I/O solutions, and timing products.IDT in automotive, industrial and IoTIn contrast, Kure sees plenty of synergetic opportunities in automotive, industry and IoT.For example, Renesas-designed R-Car starter kits — designed to support ADAS software development — already contain two timing chips from IDT, Kure noted. “It’s a perfect match to demonstrate our direct synergy,” he said. Further, Renesas’ interest in IDT includes IDT’s expertise in RF, optical devices for 4G and 5G communication. “5G is very interesting as a standalone market,” said Kure. “But it also becomes critical for ADAS and self-driving cars.” This is because one of 5G’s anticipated applications is connected cars, especially in no-latency V2X communications.Strategic Rational behind Renesas' acquisition of IDT: Renesas plans to execute consistent acquisition strategy to strengthen its analog mixed-signal capability. (Source: Renesas)More specifically, IDT has a portfolio of millimeter wave beamformer products for 5G next-generation communications systems, thus accelerating IDT’s growth in the RF market. It also strengthens its position as a supplier of RF and millimeter wave products for wireless infrastructure. Greg Waters, president and chief executive at IDT, boasted, “5G scheduled for unveiling at Tokyo Olympics in 2020 will be driven by IDT’s RF chips.”IDT’s leading position in the global wireless power business is also well established. Acquisition by Renesas should lift IDT’s wireless charging solutions to broad adoption among car OEMs in “all types of cars in two years,” Waters predicted.Kure added that both 5G and wireless charging technologies fit well with Renesas’ IoT portfolio. Communication and wireless charging chips will become a crucial feature “in wearable, medical and monitoring devices,” he explained.Notably, IDT has been on a growth path through key acquisitions. Last year, IDT acquired optical interconnect IC vendor GigaPeak Inc., a leader in optical, RF and video transport technology.Late in 2015, IDT bought Dresden-based privately-held ZDMI. This provided IDT a foothold in the automotive sensor market, according Waters.Highlighting ZDMI’s fame in the auto and industrial segments, Lineback previously told us the ZDMI deal immediately boosted IDT's appeal. ZDMI’s high-power programmable power devices complement IDT's existing low- and medium-power devices, “creating a new industry franchise for high-performance, scalable power management solutions ideal for everything from solid state drives to data centers and 4G/5G base stations,” IDT said at the time of the announcement.China factorBoth Renesas' and IDT's CEOs don’t appear concerned about potential rejection by M&A regulators either in China or the United States.IDT today generates 36% of its revenue in China (including Hong Kong). Twenty percent of Renesas’ revenue comes from China.Kure said, “Look, our products don’t overlap.” But of course, that didn’t exactly stop China’s M&A watchdog, Mofcom, from delaying the approval process when Qualcomm tried to buy NXP Semiconductors.Asked about lessons learned from the Qualcomm-NXP debacle, IDT’s Waters said, “Each acquisition comes with a unique set of requirements.” He insisted that the Renesas-IDT situation is much different from Qualcomm-NXP. He added, “Of course, governments have the right to apply their set of requirements.”However, Waters added, both IDT and Renesas retained “very expensive legal counsels,” who have instilled them with confidence that they can close this deal.Compelling financial benefits: Renesas describes the deal as immediately and highly accretive to non-GAAP gross margin and non-GAAP EPS by approximately 1.6% points and 18% respectively (Source: Renesas)Can Renesas/IDT match TI?Waters painted a picture of the combined Renesas/IDT claiming a unique space within a global semiconductor business in which sales are expected to exceed $460 billion in 2018. “We are neither in a big microprocessor business like Intel is, nor in a memory business like Samsung is today,” said Waters. “We are in the embedded microcontroller business with mixed signal chips — in which we will become a new global champion.”Asked if Texas Instruments is already the leader in the particular segment he referred to, Waters acknowledged, “OK. You’re right, this isn’t exactly a new category of the semiconductor industry, and we are much smaller than TI.”Waters explained that the IDT’s robust success in growth margin and growth rate — both well above the semiconductor industry average — lends momentum to Renesas/IDT team. “We have a chance to lead this segment," he said. Renesas goes into Lidar business?While not central to the Renesas-IDT deal, IDT’s on-going partnership with LeddarTech to develop the lidar company’s new LeddarCore IC for mass-market solid-state lidars affords Renesas/IDT a good chance in the solid-state lidar market. With IDT’s optical technology, Renesas’ microcontroller expertise, IDT’s experience in designing custom circuits for LeddarTech, “We will have all the elements necessary” to go after and design solid-state lidars, explained Waters.
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Release time:2018-09-13 00:00 reading:2187 Continue reading>>
Renesas said to be looking at <span style='color:red'>IDT</span> acqusition
<span style='color:red'>IDT</span> Teams with Startup on Radar Imaging Chips
Integrated Device Technology (IDT) has announced a strategic partnership with Bangalore, India-based startup Steradian Semiconductor to deliver its first ultra-high-resolution 4D mmWave imaging radar chip for industrial, security, medical, and autonomous vehicle markets.The chip is developed by a team of ex-Qualcomm and Texas Instruments alumni based in India who have over 50 patents between them ranging from GPS to LTE-Advanced.The five of them co-founded fabless semiconductor company Steradian Semiconductor two years ago and have just received $1 million in funding from Indian early-stage venture capital firm Endiya Partners, a VC firm that has backed a number of other emerging Indian tech companies, including one developing an AI processor co-founded by Vinod Dham and another using AI and CMOS image sensors for intelligent medical screening.Through the partnership, IDT will offer the SenseVerse SVR4410 IC, a multi-channel high-resolution MIMO radar device that operates in the 76- to 81-GHz frequency band offering what the company says is superior interference performance and the highest number of channels per device in the industry (however, there is no data sheet on the website at the time of this writing to substantiate numbers). With integrated beamforming and support for multi-device aggregation, the SVR4410 provides best-in-class angular resolution, range, and power consumption in a very small form factor. The two companies are collaborating on a series of roadmap ICs with increasing levels of integration and enabling customers’ adoption by means of providing radar modules with integrated antennas, transceiver ICs, radar processing ICs, and DSP algorithms.EE Times spoke to two of the co-founders of Steradian Semi, CEO Gireesh Rajendran and CTO Ashish Lachhwani, who explained how they came to the startup. Rajendran said, “We saw a lot of activity in lidar, but with our experience in sensors and the growth in interest we observed in autonomous vehicles, we decided to focus on the radar. Production is already well-established, but we felt that it lagged on the performance side.” He added, “High-resolution radar imaging is already established in satellite imaging, so we wanted to develop it at a cost and form factor that enabled real-time high-resolution imaging in automotive environments.”Lachhwani continued, “Radar has been in use in automotive applications for some time but mostly as a warning system as opposed to detecting objects. At 80 GHz, the aperture needs to be very wide to get the resolution to be able to, say, distinguish two human beings standing next to each other or to differentiate between stationary and moving objects. We are aiming to achieve one-degree resolution as opposed to other systems today, which only achieve 8- to 10-degree resolution.”We asked how the solution differs to those of, say, TI and Arbe Robotics. Without being specific, Lachhwani said that some of the others are addressing near-field communication applications in the 3- to 10-GHz band. “We demonstrated a 24-GHz imaging radar prototype last year to prove the algorithms. In this, we could clearly see a point cloud and were able to figure out an object’s width and height. We’ve now taped out an RF IC for 79 GHz.”This is the IC that will be offered by IDT, which offers one-degree resolution and a reach of 300 m. Steradian says that the IC, to be produced on a 28-nm TSMC process, integrates synthesizers and transceivers; the processing is currently on an Arm-based FPGA, but its roadmap will eventually put this in a DSP.Sailesh Chittipeddi, IDT’s executive vice president of global operations and chief technology officer, said IDT’s SenseVerse radar family "will add new dimension to sensing and vision, causing a disruptive change in Industry 4.0 and similar end markets needing high-resolution solutions."Chittipeddi said IDT's imaging radar architecture based on mmWave technology "will be key to reliable and autonomous operation in various climatic conditions and continues IDT’s tradition of delivering high-value-added solutions for its customers.”Rajendran added, “IDT’s SenseVerse radar family offers all-weather high-resolution sensing and will enhance and complement human and computer vision. IDT’s SVR4410 and roadmap ICs, together with Steradian’s RF expertise, will offer exceptional value to a wide variety of application spaces.”IDT says that its SenseVerse radar products are currently sampling at selected customers.
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Release time:2018-08-29 00:00 reading:1117 Continue reading>>
A battered Trump may escalate the US-China trade war ahead of midterms
President Donald Trump speaks to reporters upon his departure from the White House in Washington, August 17, 2018. Besieged by increasing legal concerns, U.S. President Donald Trump is thought to be looking to shore up his political position ahead of the midterm elections in November.One way to do so could be to distract voters from the problems at home by shifting the focus to the ongoing trade war with China, analysts said. In other words, the U.S. may be on the verge of escalating the conflict between the world's two largest economies.Last Tuesday, Trump was hit by two legal bombshells simultaneously: One involved his former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, who was found guilty of eight felonies, and the other his former lawyer Michael Cohen, who pleaded guilty to eight felony counts involving various fraud.Potentially the most damaging piece of news for Trump was Cohen implicating the president in an illegal scheme to silence two women from making public their claims of having sex with him.The two cases have fueled talk — even from the president himself — about impeachment."The point is that with the political pressures at home, Trump needs to up his political capital (buffer)," said Vishnu Varathan, Mizuho Bank's head of economics and strategy.The White House could drum up support by focusing attentions on a "common enemy," but that could anger businesses suffering from tariffs, Varathan said."On China, he will be caught between using 'distract and consolidate' by turning up trade pressures, and not squandering his political capital given that businesses are not in favour of an intensifying trade dispute. It is a tough call and may include incremental shifts either way," he told CNBC in an email.Nick Marro, an analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit, echoed those sentiments, explaining that Trump has demonstrated a pattern of turning to geopolitics as a domestic ploy."There is a chance that the president could use the trade war as a diversion: We've seen him do it before with international affairs," Marro said.But that's a "big risk" if there's any chance that the dispute could be deescalated, he told CNBC."The greatest value from the talks (recently) was that both sides returned to the negotiating table, perhaps creating a path forward for more substantive discussions. But that small momentum would be eliminated if Trump uses the trade war as a political diversion."Shane Oliver, AMP Capital's head of investment strategy, said the U.S. legal developments so far aren't severe enough to lead to Trump being removed from office, but it runs the risk of the president "doing even less considered things" to shore up his base. For markets, that could mean more volatility that could intensify in the months ahead, according to Oliver.There wasn't consensus, however, that Trump's domestic headaches would have any impact on where the U.S.-China trade war is heading.For one, Milken Institute Asia Fellow Curis Chin said the trade tensions are set to worsen regardless of what's troubling Trump. Instead, the president is simply keeping to his initial campaign promise: "fair trade" through "a tougher stance on the trade relationship with China," said Chin, who was formerly U.S. ambassador to the Asian Development Bank."Trump has tapped into an ongoing unease in the United States, and indeed across Asia, about Chinese trade practices. The violation of intellectual property rights, and unfair or unequal treatment of foreign companies in favor of domestic players in China is a challenge faced by American and non-American companies alike," he said.Despite that, a NBC News/Marist poll released last week found that Trump's tariff policy has failed to catch on in three states critical to the midterm elections — Pennsylvania, Texas and Illinois.Many voters in those states said that the duties will raise the cost of consumer goods and hurt the U.S. economy.U.S. midterm elections will be held on Nov. 6 this year.
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Release time:2018-08-27 00:00 reading:772 Continue reading>>

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