Vitesse Semiconductor

Last updated
Vitesse Semiconductor
Company type Subsidiary of Microsemi
Formerly Nasdaq:  VTSS
IndustryCommunication Equipment
Founded1984 (1984)
Headquarters Camarillo, California
Key people
Chris Gardner (CEO)
Website www.vitesse.com

Vitesse Semiconductor was a fabless American semiconductor company based in Camarillo, California, which developed high-performance Ethernet integrated circuits solutions for Carrier, Enterprise networks. On March 18, 2015, Microsemi Corporation and Vitesse Semiconductor Corporation jointly announced that Microsemi would acquire Vitesse. The acquisition closed on April 28, 2015. [1]

Contents

Corporate history

Vitesse was founded by Alfred S. Joseph PhD in 1984 as Vitesse Electronics Corporation. Its founders came out of Rockwell International and were funded with $30 Million from the Norton corporation. It later raised venture capital from Sequoia Capital and New Enterprise Associates. It changed its name to Vitesse Semiconductor in 1987. It became a public company in 1991. In 1999, it acquired XaQti [2] and in 2000, acquired Sitera [3] and Orologic. [4]

Products

VSC7420XJQ-01 - 10-Port Layer-2 Gigabit Ethernet Switch Lancom GS-1108 - Vitesse VSC7420XJQ-01-4059.jpg
VSC7420XJQ-01 - 10-Port Layer-2 Gigabit Ethernet Switch

Vitesse was one of the early developers of gallium arsenide (GaAs) based integrated circuits. It now offers a line of Ethernet switching products consisting of Carrier Ethernet switch engines for customer-premises equipment, access network equipment, wireless base stations, mobile access equipment, fiber and microwave wireless backhaul equipment, and metro networking equipment; and Ethernet switches that enable desktop, workgroup, and LAN infrastructure. The company also provides Ethernet media access controllers that offer addressing and channel control mechanisms and are used in enterprise class modular Ethernet switch platforms, as well as in Ethernet-over-SONET/SDH and Ethernet-over-OTN systems used in access, metro, and long-haul carrier networking systems; Ethernet transceivers, including single, quad, and octal devices that allow the transmission of 10/100/1000 BASE-T data over category 5 copper cable and fiber optic cabling for use in personal computers, home electronics, and LAN applications; and Ethernet transceivers with packet timing and synchronization capabilities. In addition, it provides a line of connectivity products, which comprise mixed-signal physical media devices, physical layer devices, crosspoint switches, and signal integrity devices that are used for the connection of systems via optical fiber, copper cable, or backplanes. Further, Vitesse offers a range of transport processing products, such as framers, mappers, and switches, which support data rates up to 10  Gbit/s for SONET/SDH, EoS, and OTN applications. It markets and sells its products directly to OEMs and original design manufacturers, as well as through third-party electronic component distributors and manufacturing service providers. [5]

Minisupercomputer

Vitesse developed a minisupercomputer intended for the scientific market and employing the company's GaAs chips. The company closed that division in 1987 with the first model as demonstration version. Reportedly management was unable to raise sufficient funds and thought bringing the product to market would take too long. [6] [7]

Securities fraud

In 2007 the company paid US$10.2 million to settle a class action lawsuit alleging securities fraud though options backdating, saying that the company failed to disclose and misrepresented some adverse facts. [8] Subsequently, in 2010, two of its former executives, Lou Tomasetta and the former executive vice president Eugene Hovanec were charged with securities fraud related to the backdating. [9] In December 2010, Vitesse finalized a settlement with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), over the SEC's investigations into the firm's historical stock options practices and accounting. Vitesse agreed to pay $3.0M to the SEC, which concluded the SEC's investigation of Vitesse. [10]

Turnaround

In June 2014, the Camarillo-based chip company announced a $23.2M stock offering, a planned sale of 7.5 million shares at $3.35 each, to be used for working capital and general corporate purposes. [11]

In June 2013, Vitesse closed a $18.7M offering at a price of $2.15 and gross proceeds of $40.2M. [12] The company previously netted $17.1M from an offering in December 2012. [13]

In the June 2014 offering, Vitesse's largest shareholder, Raging Capital Management LLC, purchased an additional 1.6 million shares. This raised Raging Capital's total position to 14.3 million shares, or approximately 25% of Vitesse's outstanding shares. [14]

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References

  1. "Microsemi Successfully Completes Acquisition of Vitesse" (Press release). 2015-04-28. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  2. "Vitesse acquires Xaqti for $65 million". edn.com.
  3. EE Times article 4/20/2000
  4. Szweda, R. (2000). Gallium Arsenide, Electronics Materials and Devices. A Strategic Study of Markets, Technologies and Companies Worldwide 1999-2004. Elsevier. p. 326. ISBN   9780080532288.
  5. "VTSS Profile | Vitesse Semiconductor Corporati Stock - Yahoo! Finance". finance.yahoo.com. Archived from the original on 2011-12-24.
  6. Getting up to Speed. 2004. doi:10.17226/11148. ISBN   978-0-309-09502-0.
  7. Eugene N. Miya. "[l/m xx/xx/xx] Dead Comp. Arch. Society" (TXT).
  8. "Vitesse Semiconductor Corporation". April 2006. Retrieved Jul 28, 2013.
  9. Vitesse founder reportedly charged with fraud
  10. "Vitesse Finalizes Settlement With SEC".
  11. "Vitesse plans $23.2M stock offering | Pacific Coast Business Times". 12 June 2014.
  12. "2781919 - Profile | Reuters". Reuters .
  13. "Vitesse Offering 10 Million Shares | San Fernando Valley Business Journal". 7 December 2012.
  14. "Top Vitesse Shareholder Buys 1.6 Million Shares | San Fernando Valley Business Journal". 17 June 2014.