SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Broadcom (BRCM) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Keith A Walker who wrote (4135)8/14/2000 9:00:03 AM
From: jackmore  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6531
 
Broadcom to Acquire NewPort Communications, Targeting the Highest Growth Segments of the Optical Communications Market

Acquisition Adds OC-48 and OC-192 SONET Transceivers, Framers, Serial 10 Gbps Ethernet and the World’s Highest Speed SerDes Technology for the Optical Communications Market

IRVINE, Calif. – August 14, 2000 – Broadcom Corporation (Nasdaq: BRCM), the leading provider of integrated circuits enabling high speed broadband communications, today announced that it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire NewPort Communications, Inc., a privately held company based in Irvine, California. NewPort Communications develops high-performance optical communications chips, which enable the rapid build out and bandwidth expansion of the fiber-optic infrastructure necessary to support the explosive growth of the Internet.

The acquisition is a key step in advancing Broadcom’s strategic initiative to provide end-to-end IC solutions that increase the performance, intelligence and cost-effectiveness of broadband communication networks worldwide. This merger will provide Broadcom with the broadest offering of CMOS optical communications technologies for the next generation of Synchronous Optical Network/Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SONET/SDH) and 10-Gigabit Ethernet networks. Specifically, Broadcom will be able to offer optical communications OEMs and laser module suppliers with a broad portfolio of optical and Wide Area Network (WAN) infrastructure products, including transceivers, framers, communications processors and high-speed serial interface devices.

NewPort Communications has achieved design wins and strategic relationships with a number of the top-tier optical infrastructure suppliers. Cisco, Lucent, and Sumitomo are strategic investors in NewPort Communcations and are presently among its largest customers. Other top-tier customers include Alcatel, Ciena, and JDS Uniphase.

NewPort has achieved major industry milestones by introducing the world’s first single-chip 2.5 Gigabit-per-second (Gbps) OC-48 transceiver in July 1999 and the world’s first 10 Gbps CMOS OC-192 transceiver solution in May 2000. These devices offer substantially higher levels of integration and lower power than competitive Gallium Arsenide, Bipolar or Silicon Germanium solutions. The unique implementation of these ultra-high speed transceivers in standard CMOS process results in the lowest power and cost-per-port, thereby enabling higher port density systems, such as Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM), and integration of the transceiver into the laser module, as well as higher levels of silicon integration of the transceiver with large ASICs, such as framers, intelligent routers, and packet processors.

NewPort’s highly integrated and low power system-on-a-chip solutions are ideal for high port count communications systems, such as DWDM transport equipment. NewPort’s products allow the economic scaling of the future DWDM equipment by reducing the power consumption and footprint required for each port, resulting in an increase in port density.

Broadcom announced the world’s first single-chip 10-Gigabit Ethernet Coarse Wavelength Division Multiplexing (CWDM) CMOS transceiver in May 2000, and is currently developing Serializer/Deserializer (SERDES) technology to speed up the backplanes of next-generation Local Area Network (LAN) and WAN systems. The addition of NewPort’s products complements Broadcom’s product portfolio and enables Broadcom to offer complete end-to-end solutions for both the LAN and the WAN.

The explosive growth in Internet traffic demands a 10X increase in network bandwidth every two years. As a result, the trunk capacities of Internet backbone equipment will increase from two channels of OC-48 (2.5Gbps) today to more than 80 channels of OC-192 (10Gbps) in 2003. In metropolitan networks, the trend is strongly toward 10-Gigabit Ethernet. According to the Dell’Oro Group, 10-Gigabit Ethernet remains at the forefront of integration between the LAN, Metropolitan Area Network (MAN) and WAN. The NewPort acquisition further reinforces Broadcom’s capability to capitalize upon the upcoming convergence of the LAN and WAN infrastructure, and the accelerated port shipment growth associated with it. The Gartner Group forecasts the total available market for WAN optical networking chips to grow to over $1.3 billion in 2001.

"Today’s announcement reinforces Broadcom’s strategic initiative to provide end-to-end solutions across the LAN and WAN," said Dr. Henry T. Nicholas III, President and CEO of Broadcom. "The acquisition of NewPort Communications and its SONET/SDH expertise is not only synergistic with our 10-Gigabit Ethernet technology but is also complementary to the communications processor technology that we are acquiring through our merger with Silicon Spice Inc., announced on August 7. Together these acquisitions will provide Broadcom with a powerful platform to address the rapidly growing wide area networking marketplace."

"The combined capabilities and resources of NewPort and Broadcom will bring the most complete system solutions to the optical communications marketplace," said Dr. Armond Hairapetian, President and CEO of NewPort Communications. "Broadcom’s market presence and proven ability to deliver innovative, cost-effective silicon solutions and NewPort’s complementary intellectual property and talented engineering pool together promise to speed up the timetable for delivering complete solutions for MAN and WAN networks."

In connection with the acquisition, Broadcom will issue in aggregate about 5.5 million shares of its Class A Common Stock in exchange for all outstanding shares of NewPort’s Preferred and Common Stock and upon exercise of outstanding employee stock options, warrants and other rights of NewPort. The merger transaction is expected to close within 60 days and will be accounted for under the purchase method of accounting. The boards of directors of both companies have approved the merger, which awaits approval by NewPort’s shareholders and the satisfaction of regulatory requirements and other customary closing conditions. Broadcom expects to record a one-time write-off for purchased in-process research and development expenses related to the acquisition in its third fiscal quarter (ending September 30).

About NewPort Communications

NewPort Communications, Inc., founded by Dr. Armond Hairapetian and Lorenzo Longo in 1996, supplies mixed-signal integrated circuits for the high-speed communications market. The Company’s business objective is to develop highly integrated single-chip solutions that enable economic scaling of the existing bandwidth capacity of today’s fiber-based networks. For more information, visit www.newportcom.com.

See BRCM website press release.



To: Keith A Walker who wrote (4135)8/15/2000 12:11:50 AM
From: Raymond Duray  Respond to of 6531
 
EETimes/Loring Wirbel on NewPort Acquisition

eetimes.com

Broadcom makes NewPort its latest acquisition
By Loring Wirbel
EE Times
(08/14/00, 5:40 p.m. EST)

IRVINE, Calif. — Continuing its string of high-profile acquisitions, Broadcom Corp. announced Monday (Aug. 14) the acquisition of NewPort Communications Inc., which is using CMOS process concepts to develop 2.5- and 10-Gbit/second transceivers for Sonet and Gigabit Ethernet.

NewPort was founded by several executives formerly with Rockwell Semiconductor, the predecessor of Conexant Systems Inc. (Newport Beach, Calif.), underscoring Broadcom and Conexant's race to purchase communication IC companies, often at premium prices.

Broadcom will offer 5.5 million shares of stock for NewPort, worth some $1.2 billion based on Broadcom's Friday (Aug. 11) closing price. NewPort has 75 employees located across the street from Broadcom headquarters in Irvine, Calif., in the same building that was the original Broadcom headquarters. The offer comes a week after Broadcom's $1.2 billion acquisition of Silicon Spice and its reconfigurable processor; and only two weeks after Broadcom's $535 million offer to acquire Altima Communications Inc. (San Jose, Calif.), a specialist in 10/100-Mbit/second switching and media-access solutions aimed at enterprise applications. The Silicon Spice and Altima deals followed Broadcom's acquisition of at least five other small semiconductor manufacturers in the last six months.

"Some of this is based on using the cash on hand for strategic acquisitions," said one investment banker who asked not to be cited by name. "But a lot of this is turning into some kind of game of chicken between Broadcom and Conexant. They're trying to create Southern California fiefdoms in high-speed networking, and there seems to be an element of personal one-upsmanship between Nick [Henry 'Nick' Nicholas, chief executive of Broadcom] and Dwight [Decker, chief executive officer of Conexant]."

Nicholas said in a morning conference call that he'd been maintaining some level of friendly discussion with NewPort for three years, and had even offered the founders some advice on developing OC-192 products, though no initial investment had been made at that time. During the past two years, Broadcom and NewPort had done some limited mixed-signal joint designs for OC-48 (2.5-Gbit/s) and OC-192 (10-Gbit/s) designs. The acquisition will accelerate design work on OC-768 (40-Gbit/s) networks, as well.

NewPort was launched by Armond Hairapetian and Lorenzo Longo, both formerly of Rockwell Semiconductor, who left Rockwell before its conversion to Conexant. The two engineers had developed new concepts for front-end Sonet functions involving a new design concept NewPort calls Current-Controlled MOS, or C3MOS. The process requires no special mask steps beyond a standard CMOS process, but allows the integration of analog functions for OC-48 Sonet in a process no more difficult than standard CMOS. At the May NetWorld+Interop show, NewPort debuted its first engineering samples of 10-Gbit transceivers implemented in 0.18-micron CMOS.

"It cannot be stressed enough that C3MOS is a design methodology, requiring no special steppings or process steps whatsoever," said Yossi Cohen, director of marketing in Broadcom's networking business unit. "In fact, we see very little work in bringing the two companies together. We use libraries for Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. processes, we use the same fabs, the same test equipment, it will be a very smooth integration."

Nicholas said that both the NewPort and Silicon Spice acquisitions will meld well with Broadcom's own Fusion processor core for simple very-high-speed interconnect, including a serial single-channel version of 10-Gbit Ethernet. Hairapetian, chief executive of NewPort, stressed that NewPort has an equal number of engineers involved in mixed-signal transceiver designs and in digital framer and mux/demux processor design. This will allow NewPort to aid Broadcom in development of Packet Over Sonet, 10-Gbit MAC, and other chips for broadband digital functions.

While a turn to OC-768 likely will require some front-end functions that are not implemented in CMOS, Cohen predicted that the Broadcom and NewPort teams will be able to implement many 40-Gbit functions in CMOS. In the meantime, Cohen said that NewPort has a significant lead in low-power CMOS implementations of transceiver functions at both 2.5- and 10-Gbit/s speeds. In the 10 Gigabit Ethernet market, he said, NewPort's focus on serial implementations represents a perfect complement to Broadcom's own work on four-channel coarse wave division multiplexed transceivers.

"Whatever physical-layer choices the IEEE working group comes up with, we will be able to support them all," Cohen said.