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American semiconductor company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marvell Technology, Inc. is an American company, headquartered in Santa Clara, California, which develops and produces semiconductors and related technology. Founded in 1995, the company had more than 6,500 employees as of 2024, with over 10,000 patents worldwide, and an annual revenue of $5.5 billion for fiscal 2024.[1][2]
Company type | Public |
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| |
ISIN | US5738741041 |
Industry | Semiconductors |
Founded | 1995 |
Founders |
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Headquarters | Santa Clara, California, U.S. |
Key people | |
Products | |
Revenue | US$5.508 billion (2024) |
US$−568 million (2024) | |
US$−933 million (2024) | |
Total assets | US$21.23 billion (2024) |
Total equity | US$14.83 billion (2024) |
Number of employees | 6,577 (2024) |
Subsidiaries | |
Website | marvell.com |
Footnotes / references Financials as of February 3, 2024[update].[1] |
Marvell was founded in 1995 by Dr. Sehat Sutardja, his wife Weili Dai, and his brother Pantas Sutardja.[3][2] They worked on designing a CMOS-based read channel for disk drives as their first product. Seagate Technology became their first customer.[3] The initial public offering on June 27, 2000 (near the end of the dot-com bubble) raised $90 million.[4]
In April 2016, CEO Sehat Sutardja and President Weili Dai were ousted from their posts after activist investor Starboard Value fund took a roughly 7 percent stake in the company.[5]
In July 2016, Marvell appointed Matt Murphy as its new president and CEO.[6]
On July 6, 2018, Marvell completed its acquisition of Cavium, Inc. On the same day, it announced the appointment of Syed Ali (co-founder of Cavium, Inc., and previously the company's president and CEO), Brad Buss (director of Cavium, Inc.) and Edward Frank (director of Cavium, Inc.) to the Marvell Board of Directors.[7]
In September 2019, Marvell completed the acquisition of Aquantia.
In April 2021, Marvell completed the acquisition of Inphi Corporation. As part of the acquisition, Marvell reorganized so that the combined company is domiciled in Wilmington, Delaware.[8]
In September 2023, Marvell Technologies acquired an expansion deal in Pune, India.[9]
Through the years, Marvell acquired smaller companies to enter new markets.
Date | Acquired company | Expertise | Cost |
---|---|---|---|
October 2000 | Galileo Technology | Ethernet switches, system controllers | $2700M in stock[10] |
June 2002 | SysKonnect | PC networking[11] | |
February 2003 | Radlan | Embedded networking software | $49.7M[12] |
August 2005 | Hard disk controller division of Qlogic | Hard disk & tape drive controllers | $180M in cash + $45M in stock[13] |
December 2005 | SOC division of UTStarcom | Wireless communications (3G) | $24M in cash[14] |
February 2006 | Printer ASIC business of Avago | Printer ASICs | $240M in cash[15][16] |
July 2006 | XScale product line from Intel | Communications processors and SOCs | $600M in cash[17] |
January 2008 | PicoMobile Networks | Communication software for IWLAN and IMS[18] | |
August 2010 | Diseño de Sistemas en Silicio S.A. ("DS2") | Spanish company, PLC communication ICs[19] | |
January 2012 | Xelerated | Network Processors[20][21] | |
July 6, 2018 | Cavium | ARM Processors | $6B in cash & stock[22] |
May 2019 | Avera Semi | ASICs | $650 million in cash[23] |
September 2019 | Aquantia Corporation | ASICs Multi-Gig Ethernet | $450 million in cash |
April 2021 | Inphi Corporation | Mixed-signal integrated circuit | $8.2 billion[8] |
October 2021 | Innovium | Data center network switches | $1.1 billion[24] |
Marvell OCTEON and ARMADA DPUs which integrate a CPU, network interfaces and programmable data acceleration engines on a specialized electronic circuit.[25]
Marvell also offered Customer Specific Standard Product (CSSP), where customer accelerators and interfaces could be integrated directly into Marvell's Octeon processors. Following Marvell's 2019 acquisition of Avera Semiconductor (formerly the custom ASIC division of GlobalFoundries and prior to that of IBM), Marvell offers custom ASIC tailored to clients' specific design goals.[23][26] And it provides services for ASICs development to the Aerospace and Defense industries through its independent subsidiary Marvell Government Solutions (MGS).[27] In a joint venture with TSMC, Marvell introduced a 3nm product.[28]
On November 12, 2019, Marvell announced that their ThunderX2 SoCs have been deployed on Microsoft Azure.[29] On March 2, 2020, Marvell announced OCTEON Fusion and OCTEON TX2 5G infrastructure processors, as well as deals to provide processors for 5G Infrastructure for Huawei, Nokia, Ericsson, ZTE, and Samsung.[30] On March 16, 2020, Marvell announced ThunderX3 and their plan for ThunderX4 in 2022.[31] On August 28, 2020, Marvell announced plan to refocus their ThunderX Server Teams to their Custom Silicon Business.[32]
Marvell's security-related products include their LiquidSecurity HSM Adapters and NITROX Cryptographic Offload Engines.[33]
Marvell's networking products include their FastLinQ Ethernet network adapters and controllers, Ethernet Switch chips for both Enterprises (Prestera) & Datacenters (Teralynx), Ethernet PHYs and Automotive Ethernet.[34][35][36][37][38]
Marvell's products include SSD Controllers, HDD Controllers, HDD Preamplifiers, Storage Accelerators, and QLogic Fibre Channel Adapters and Controllers.[39][40][41][42] On May 27, 2021, Marvell announced its first NVM Express SSD controllers to support PCI Express 5.0.[43]
Marvell supplied the Wi-Fi chip for the original (first-generation) Apple iPhone.[44] Marvell Mobile Hotspot (MMH) is an in-car Wi-Fi connectivity. The 2010 Audi A8 was the first automobile in the market to feature a factory-installed MMH.[45]
Google's Chromecast products are powered by Marvell SoCs. Namely the Marvell ARMADA 1500 Mini SoC (88DE3005) for the Chromecast 1st gen and Marvell ARMADA 1500 Mini Plus SoC (88DE3006) for the Chromecast 2nd gen & Chromecast audio.[46]
Synaptics acquired Marvell Multimedia Solutions on 2017-06-12.[47] ARMADA 1500 SoC's are now produced under different names.[48]
In 2006, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) started an inquiry into the company's stock option grant practices.[49] An investigation determined "grant dates were chosen with the benefit of hindsight" to make the options more valuable.[50] The press estimated that the founders and other executives had made $760 million in gains from the options, which were awarded by the founding couple, Sehat Sutardja and Weili Dai.[51] The SEC asked to interview the company's general counsel Matthew Gloss, but Marvell claimed attorney–client privilege.[52] Gloss was fired just before the investigation results were announced in May 2007.[53] Abraham David Sofaer was hired to investigate the investigation after Gloss alleged it was not independent. In announcing the results of its own inquiry, the SEC did not give Marvell the credit granted to other companies in the options scandal for cooperating with the SEC's investigation or for cleaning up.[54] At the time of the announcement, the co-acting regional director of the SEC's San Francisco office stated, among other things, that the SEC did not believe that the lack of cooperation and remediation shown by Marvell merited much credit in terms of being lenient with Marvell.[54] In announcing its results, the SEC found that Gloss was not a participant in Dai and Sutardja's backdating scheme.[54] Marvell restated its financial results, and stated that Dai will no longer be executive vice president, chief operating officer, and director but continue with the company in a non-management position.[55] The company agreed to pay a $10 million fine in 2008, but did not fire Dai nor replace Sutardja as chairman as stated by the investigating committee.[50][54]
In December 2012, a Pittsburgh jury ruled that Marvell had infringed two patents (co-inventors Alek Kavčić and Jose Moura) by incorporating hard disk technology developed and owned by Carnegie Mellon University without a license.[56] The technology, relating to improving hard disk data read accuracy at high speeds, was reported to have been used in 2.3 billion chips sold by Marvell between 2003 and 2012.[57] The jury awarded damages of $1.17 billion, the third largest ever in a patent case at the time.[58] The jury also found that the breach had been "willful", giving the judge discretion to award up to three times the original damage amount.[57] In December 2012, the company lost its mistrial bid in this dispute.[59] Post-trial hearings were scheduled for May 2013 and Marvell reported to be considering an appeal in the interim.[56] In August, US District Judge Nora Barry Fischer upheld the award.[60] On February 17, 2016, Marvell agreed to a settlement in which Marvell will pay Carnegie Mellon University $750,000,000.[61]
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