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Texas Instruments to buy chip designer Silicon Laboratories in $7.5 billion deal

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
Signage at the Texas Instruments (TI) semiconductor wafer plant in Sherman, Texas, US, on Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025. Texas Instruments Inc. plans to spend more than $60 billion on semiconductor plants in the US, as the Trump administration urges investments and threatens to upend the sector with tariffs. Photographer: Desiree Rios/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Signage at the Texas Instruments (TI) semiconductor wafer plant in Sherman, Texas, US, on Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025.
Desiree Rios | Bloomberg | Getty Images


Texas Instruments on Wednesday agreed to buy Silicon Laboratories ⁠in a deal valuing the chip designer at $7.5 billion, to expand its footprint in wireless connectivity chips used for industrial and ‍consumer applications.

For Texas Instruments, ‍whose core strength ‍lies in analog chips that manage signals and power in electronic equipment, the acquisition marks its biggest since the $6.5 billion deal for National Semiconductor ‌in ‌2011.

Unlike AI chip firms Nvidia and AMD, Texas Instruments focuses on foundational chips used in everyday devices such as smartphones, cars and medical devices, giving it a large client base that includes Apple, SpaceX ⁠and Ford Motor.

Texas Instruments will acquire Silicon Labs for $231 per share, implying a premium of about 69% to the stock’s last unaffected closing price on Tuesday, when the deal talks were first reported. Silicon shares jumped 51% in premarket trading, while Texas was down 3.5%.

Silicon had sold some automotive chip assets and other lines of business to Skyworks Solutions for $2.75 billion in 2021.

The divestment was aimed at sharpening its focus on chips for connected devices, such as smart home and power meter products, as well as connected industrial equipment, which collect data ‍to improve efficiency.

Under the terms of the latest agreement, Silicon ‌would pay a $259 million termination fee if ⁠it walks away from the deal, while Texas would pay $499 million if it abandoned the transaction.

Goldman Sachs is serving ‍as an exclusive financial advisor to Texas Instruments on the deal, which is expected to close in the first half of 2027.

Texas Instruments is planning to finance the acquisition through cash on hand and debt. The deal is expected to generate about $450 ⁠million in annual manufacturing and ‌operational savings within three years of the deal close.

 
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