Bangkok Post

Qualcomm pays $1.4bn for chip start-up Nuvia

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Qualcomm Inc said on Wednesday that it would acquire Nuvia Inc, a chip start-up founded by Apple Inc veterans, for $1.4 billion, with planned to put the firm’s technology into its smartphone, laptop and automotive processors.

The deal marks a big push by Qualcomm to re-establish a leading position in chip performanc­e after several years of high-profile patent licensing litigation with rival Apple and regulatory authoritie­s.

It also comes amid a change in the helm with Qualcomm announcing this month that Cristiano Amon, its current president and head of its silicon division, would replace outgoing CEO Steven Mollenkopf, effective June 30.

Founded by three of Apple’s former top semiconduc­tor executives in charge of iPhone chips, Nuvia has been working on a custom CPU core design that it had said would be used in server chips.

Qualcomm, however, plans a broad use of Nuvia’s processors, saying they would power flagship smartphone­s, next-generation laptops, infotainme­nt systems and driver-assistance systems among other applicatio­ns.

While laptop makers have traditiona­lly turned to Intel Corp for processors, Qualcomm has been supplying PC chips for several years to firms such as Samsung Electronic­s

Co Ltd and Microsoft Corp.

“It’s exciting to see Nuvia join the Qualcomm team,” Panos Panay, Microsoft’s chief product officer, said in a statement. “Moving forward, we have an incredible opportunit­y to empower our customers across the Windows ecosystem.”

The deal is also significan­t because it could help lessen Qualcomm’s reliance on Arm Ltd, which is being purchased by Qualcomm rival Nvidia Corp for $40 billion.

Most of Qualcomm’s current chips use computing cores licensed directly from Arm, while Nuvia’s cores use Arm’s underlying architectu­re but are custom designs.

For Qualcomm, using more custom core designs — a move that Apple has also made — could lower some licensing costs to Arm in the short term and make it easier to move to a rival architectu­re in the longer term.

While Qualcomm and Apple have resolved disputes over Qualcomm’s patent royalties, Nuvia and Apple have been at loggerhead­s.

In 2019, Apple sued Nuvia’s chief executive Gerard Williams III, alleging him of recruiting Apple employees to Nuvia while he was still employed at Apple.

Apple did not sue Nuvia itself, nor did it allege any intellectu­al property theft, and no trial date has been set.

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