SAN FRANCISCO, July 10 (Reuters) - Altera, a maker of
programmable chips spun out of Intel ( INTC ), is growing
roughly 20% a year and more than doubling operating income as it
prepares for an eventual public listing, Chief Executive Raghib
Hussain told Reuters in an interview.
Altera became fully independent last September after Intel ( INTC )
agreed to sell a 51% stake to Silver Lake for $4.46 billion in a
transaction valuing Altera at $8.75 billion. Intel ( INTC ) retains a 49%
stake.
Hussain, a former Marvell Technology executive who took the
top job when Intel ( INTC ) spun out Altera, said the company grew more
than 20% last year and expects mid-20% growth again this year,
though as a private company it does not disclose specific
figures.
"I believe in an engineer-to-engineer type of a discussion,"
Hussain said. "We have brought engineering very close to the
customers, so that actually already is showing up in our
customer engagement."
Intel ( INTC ) had reported Altera revenue of $1.5 billion in 2024,
which was down sharply from $2.9 billion in 2023. Altera's
revenue decline happened partly because buyers shifted their
attention toward buying GPU chips for AI in 2023 and partly due
to losing market share to its largest competitor, AMD-owned
Xilinx.
Hussain is positioning Altera for growth from artificial
intelligence and robotics, using the "field programmable gate
array" chips it makes, which are known as FPGAs in the industry,
for connectivity, data pre-processing and sensor fusion
alongside GPUs.
"If GPU is the brain, the FPGAs are the nervous system,"
Hussain said, projecting FPGA content of $100 to several hundred
dollars per robot could create a market worth "100 billion to
several hundred billion dollars" over a decade.
On execution, Hussain said the company produced working
prototypes of six new chips last year and has cut down its
dependence on transition service agreements from Intel ( INTC ) from 125
agreements to 15.
He said Altera is the only programmable chip supplier in full
production with a new type of memory called DDR5 for use in mid-
to high-programmable chips and that Altera built a memory
stockpile that is insulating it from current shortages.
Altera manufactures its chips with both Intel Foundry and
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co and is developing products
on TSMC's 2-nanometer and 3-nanometer technologies, Hussain
said.