Spansion

Spansion Inc. was an American-based company that designed, developed, and manufactured flash memory, microcontrollers, mixed-signal and analog products, and system-on-chip (SoC) solutions.[1][2] The company had more than 3,700 employees in 2014 and is headquartered in Sunnyvale, California. Spansion was a joint-venture between AMD and Fujitsu.[3]

Spansion Inc.
IndustrySemiconductors
Founded2003
DefunctMarch 12, 2015 (2015-03-12)
FatePurchased by Cypress Semiconductor
SuccessorCypress Semiconductor, later acquired by Infineon
HeadquartersSunnyvale, California,
United States
Key people
John Kispert
(CEO and Member of Spansion's Board of Directors)
ProductsFlash memory-based embedded systems
Revenue~$1.3 billion USD (Annual 2013)
Number of employees
~3,700 (2014)
Websitewww.spansion.com

In August 2013, Spansion closed the acquisition of the Microcontroller and Analog Business of Fujitsu Semiconductor Limited.[4]

Spansion had more than 10,000 customers worldwide. Its products were used in the following markets: automotive electronics, home appliance, peripheral computing equipment, consumer equipment, industrial, and networking.[1]

History

Spansion was founded in 1993 as a joint venture between AMD and Japan's Fujitsu Ltd. Spansion was formerly known as FASL LLC.[5] Once AMD took control of the company in 2003, it was renamed Spansion LLC in June 2004[5] and officially spun off as an independent maker of flash memory chips in December 2005.[6][7]

After joining the company in 2009, CEO, John Kispert, brought Spansion out of bankruptcy with over $1 billion in sales and 10,000 customers worldwide. In 2013, Spansion purchased Fujitsu's microcontroller and analog business for $175 million, expanding Spansion's work force by more than 1,000 worldwide.

Mergers and acquisitions

In October 2007, Spansion announced that it was acquiring Israel-based Saifun Semiconductors Ltd., non-volatile memory provider. The companies signed an agreement that consolidated all MirrorBit and NROM IP, design and manufacturing expertise within Spansion. As a result, Spansion expanded IP portfolio and enabled its immediate entry into the technology licensing business.[8][9] The acquisition closed on March 18, 2008.[8][9]

In April 2013, Spansion announced that it would acquire the Microcontroller and Analog Business of Fujitsu Semiconductor for approximately $110 million and approximately $65 million for inventory.[10] Spansion closed the acquisition deal in August 2013.

In December 2014, Cypress Semiconductor merged with Spansion in an all-stock deal worth $1.59 billion. Shareholders of each side will own about 50 percent of the new company, which will keep the name of Cypress Semiconductor Corp. The companies valued the deal at $4 billion. They expected it to close in the first half of 2015 and to cut annual costs by $135 million within three years. Cypress President and CEO TJ Rodgers was the CEO of the combined company, which was expected to have $2 billion in annual revenue. Spansion Chairman Ray Bingham was the non-executive chairman.

Products

A Spansion 128 Megabit Flash Memory with 110 nm MirrorBit Process Technology
Spansion Traveo ARM-.Evaluation-Board

Spansion's product portfolio offers NOR densities ranging from four-megabit to eight-gigabits, NAND densities ranging from one-gigabit to eight-gigabits and an array of interfaces and features.[1] It has developed two flash memory technologies, single-bit-per-cell floating gate technology and one-, two- or more-bit-per-cell MirrorBit technology, with MirrorBit products based on two-bits per cell and allow offering a range of product configurations.[1] The Company's products based on NOR flash memory architecture are designed for code storage and execution, and utilize either traditional floating gate technology or its MirrorBit technology.[1]

Spansion's NOR and NAND offering is targeted at embedded applications such as automotive, industrial and telecommunications.[11]

Spansion concentrates on the embedded electronics market. Its Floating Gate and MirrorBit technology is used to make networking and telecommunications equipment, consumer electronics, gaming equipment, TV set-top control boxes, automotive equipment and personal computer peripherals.[12]

The company's NOR products offer designers the option to choose from 5V, 3V and 1.8V products that range from 1Mb to 2Gb.NAND products offer 3V and 1.8V products that range from 1Gb to 8 Gb.

Spansion's standard parallel NOR flash includes Spansion's MirrorBit NOR GL, AL AS, CD-CL, F, JL, PL, NS/VS/XS and WS families of flash memory. The products operate anywhere at 1.8 to 5.0 volts (Vcc), feature a random read speed of 90-100 nanoseconds (ns) access and offer a page read speed of 25 ns via an 8-word page buffer.[13]

Spansion's serial peripheral interface (SPI) devices read information serially, or one bit at a time, requiring fewer connections and pins, allowing for lower costs and simplified board layouts.[14] Serial flash memory is used in applications such as high-end printers, FPGAs, networking equipment and set-top boxes.[15]

The Spansion SPI FL family of serial flash memory: Densities for the SPI flash memory devices range from 4 Mb to 1 Gb with uniform 4KB uniform 64KB and uniform 256KB (128Mb – 1Gb FL-S) sectors and 4 Mb with parameter sectors.[16]

Spansion developed the HyperFlash NOR memory devices, based on the HyperBus interface. The family features read throughput of up to 333 megabytes per second—more than five times faster than ordinary Quad SPI flash currently available with one-third the number of pins of parallel NOR flash. Spansion HyperFlash memory devices provide a migration path—from single Quad SPI to Dual Quad SPI to HyperFlash Memory—allowing system applications to be scaled to different levels of flash performance when paired with compatible controllers, giving OEMs the ability to offer different product models with a single design.[17]

In August 2011, Spansion announced that it had created the first single-die, 4-gigabit NOR product implemented at the 65-nm node.

In 2013 Spansion acquired the Fujitsu microcontroller and analog business, including 8- 16- and 32-bit microcontroller families.

Spansion's FM MCU microcontroller family, which is based on the ARM Cortex-M4, M3, M0+ CPUs comes in packages from 32 to 216 pins, with flash memory densities between 56KB and 2MB. The Spansion Traveo microcontrollers are based on the ARM Cortex-R5 core and the first series in the Traveo family, MB9D560, operate at 200 MHz.[18]

Spansion also acquired power management ICs aimed at energy harvesting and LED lighting.[19] The Buck PMIC for solar and vibrations energy harvesting MB39C811regulates output voltage with the quiescent current of 1.5µA. The Boost PMIC for solar and thermal energy harvesting MB39C831. Spansion's Easy DesignSim is a comprehensive online design support tool for LED Driver Circuit designers.

Manufacturing

Spansion had its headquarters in Sunnyvale, California. The company's main wafer fabrication facility, known as Fab 25, was in Austin, Texas.[20] The company also operated a final-manufacturing facility, in Bangkok, Thailand. In Penang, Malaysia, the company had a design center to focus on providing design, layout, CAD and verification services and to support to cross-site design centers.

Financial

At the end of Q2 2014, Spansion reported results for its second fiscal quarter; the company reported both GAAP and non-GAAP results due to the impact of fresh start accounting. On a U.S. GAAP basis, Spansion reported net sales of $314.7 million, a 61.3% year-over-year increase. On a non‑GAAP basis, gross margin was 33.2%, operating income was $22.1 million and net income was $15.6 million.[21]

Emergence from Chapter 11

After filing a motion with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware,[22] in April 2010, Spansion won court approval of its plan to exit bankruptcy and was allowed to reorganize the company.[23]

On May 10, 2010, Spansion emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Its old common stock was previously deemed to be impaired and then cancelled; the company issued new shares to those to whom it owed money.[24] The company began trading on the New York Stock Exchange on June 22, 2010 under the ticker symbol "CODE."[25]

Executive pay controversy

John Kispert was named CEO in February 2009, a month before the company's Chapter 11 filing.[7] It was understood that Kispert walked into a "no-win situation," according to the local media.[7]

With the company in turmoil and needing to reduce expenses,[7] Spansion laid off 3,000 employees without severance pay on February 23, 2009. Kispert was given a compensation package that could pay a $1.7 million bonus if he successfully found a buyer for the company or liquidated the company within six months.[26] Kispert never saw this bonus since he opted to file bankruptcy[7] in March 2009.[27] Managers received an 11% increase in pay, negating the effect of an earlier 10% salary cut.[28] The company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on March 1, 2009, amid growing anger of former employees.[29][30]

In 2010, a settlement was reached on behalf of former employees of Spansion Inc. whose employment was terminated on or around February 23, 2009.[31] Kispert also instituted a policy of offering any new jobs first to the employees who were fired in 2009.[7]

References

  1. Reuters. "Spansion Inc.." July 26, 2010.
  2. By Mark LaPedus, EE Times. "Spansion ships “green memory line”." April 20, 2009.
  3. Spencer Chin, EE Times. "Spansion IPO Filings Signals Spinoff from AMD Archived 2020-07-23 at the Wayback Machine." April 13, 2005.
  4. "Business".
  5. Bloomberg BusinessWeek. "Spansion Inc-Class A." July 6, 2010.
  6. Michael Feldman, HPCwire. "Spansion Brings NOR Flash to HPC Archived 2009-04-24 at the Wayback Machine." April 20, 2009.
  7. Chris O'Brien, San Jose Mercury News. "The Death and Rebirth of Spansion." July 10, 2010.
  8. Design & Reuse. "Spansion Inc. Closes Acquisition of Saifun Semiconductors." On March 18, 2008.
  9. EETimes (10 Oct 2007), "Long-time partners Spansion, Saifun sign merger", EMedia Asia, archived from the original on 2007-10-12, retrieved 2010-05-26
  10. "Spansion to Acquire Microcontroller and Analog Business from Fujitsu". Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  11. EETimes, "Spansion to offer NAND in deal with Hynix." April 2, 2012, http://www.eetimes.com/document.asp?doc_id=1261470
  12. By Kirk Ladenfdorf, American-Statesman. "Spansion to exit bankruptcy after more than a year." April 19, 2010.
  13. By Staff, EE Times. "." November 29, 2009.
  14. By Mark LaPedus, EE Times. "Spansion rolls SPI flash line." May 21, 2009
  15. Huliq.com. "Spansion Launches 128Mb MirrorBit SPI Flash Memory." April 10, 2007
  16. SPansion MirrorBit SPI FL. Accessed July 13, 2010.
  17. "Spansion MediaRoom - Site Password".
  18. "Spansion Expands Traveo™ Automotive Microcontroller Product Family with New CAN FD Interface Offerings - MarketWatch". www.marketwatch.com. Archived from the original on 2014-07-05.
  19. "Spansion goes battery-less with tiny 'Internet of things' chips". 5 June 2014.
  20. Dylan McGrath, EE Times. "Spansion plans to emerge from bankruptcy in Q1." December 31, 2009.
  21. https://finance.yahoo.com/news/lo-inc-reports-second-quarter-200400943.html
  22. Spansion claims progress in emergence from Chapter 11, EETimes, April 4, 2010
  23. By Steven Church, Bloomberg BusinessWeek. "Spansion Wins Court Approval to Reorganize, Exit Bankruptcy." April 17, 2010.
  24. Dan Nystedt, IDG/NetworkWorld. "Spansion Emerges from Bankruptcy Leaner Archived 2010-05-12 at the Wayback Machine." May 10, 2010.
  25. Staff, Yahoo! News. "Spansion to list on New York Stock Exchange." June 22, 2010.
  26. Spansion restores executives to full pay, Austin American-Statesman, February 24, 2009
  27. Steve Johnson, San Jose Mercury News. "Spansion Files for Bankruptcy." March 1, 2009.
  28. Laid-off Spansion employees outraged over execs' pay increases, San Jose Mercury News, February 26, 2009
  29. "Spansion Chapter 11 Voluntary Petition" (PDF). PacerMonitor. Retrieved 16 May 2016.
  30. Anger grows as Spansion files for bankruptcy, EE Times, March 1, 2009
  31. By Lawyers and Settlements."Settlement Proposed in Spansion WARN Act Class Action"
  • Spansion Official Website
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