UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM
(Mark One)
| ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 |
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED
or
| TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 |
For the transition period from to
Commission File Number:
QUICKLOGIC CORPORATION
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
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(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization) |
| (I.R.S. Employer Identification Number) |
(Address of principal executive offices, including zip code)
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(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of Each Class | Trading Symbol | Name of Exchange on which Registered |
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Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes ☐
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Exchange Act. Yes ☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§ 232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files).
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company or an emerging growth company. See definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer”, “smaller reporting company” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
Large accelerated filer | ☐ |
| Accelerated filer | ☐ | |
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| Emerging growth company | |
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and attestation to its management’s assessment of the effectiveness of its internal control over financial reporting under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting firm that prepared or issued its audit report.
If securities are registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act, indicate by check mark whether the financial statements of the registrant included in the filing reflect the correction of an error to previously issued financial statements.
Indicate by check mark whether any of those error corrections are restatements that required a recovery analysis of incentive-based compensation received by any of the registrant’s executive officers during the relevant recovery period pursuant to §240.10D-1(b).
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act)
Yes
The aggregate market value of voting stock held by non-affiliates of the registrant as of June 30, 2024, the registrant’s most recently completed second fiscal quarter, was $
As of March 21, 2025, the registrant had
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
Item 1 of Part 1 of this Form 10-K, Item 5 of Part II of this Form 10-K and Items 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14 of Part III of this Form 10-K incorporate information by reference from the Proxy Statement to be filed subsequently for the registrant’s Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Proxy Statement”). Except with respect to the information specifically incorporated by reference in this Form 10-K, the Proxy Statement is not deemed to be filed as part hereof.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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ITEM 1. | Business | 6 |
ITEM 1A. |
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ITEM 1B. |
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ITEM 1C. | Cybersecurity | 23 |
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ITEM 4. |
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ITEM 5. |
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ITEM 6. |
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ITEM 7. |
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations |
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ITEM 7A. |
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ITEM 8. |
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ITEM 9. |
Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure |
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ITEM 9A. |
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ITEM 9B. |
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ITEM 9C. | Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdictions that Prevent Inspections | 66 |
ITEM 10. |
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ITEM 11. |
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ITEM 12. |
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters |
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ITEM 13. |
Certain Relationships, Related Transactions, and Director Independence |
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ITEM 14. |
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ITEM 15. |
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ITEM 16. | Form 10-K Summary | 70 |
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FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENT AND RISK FACTOR SUMMARY
Forward-Looking Statements
This Annual Report on Form 10-K, including the information contained in "Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations", as well as information contained in “Risk Factors” in Item 1A and elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 regarding our business, financial condition, results of operations, and prospectus. We intend that these forward-looking statements be subject to the safe harbors created by those provisions. Forward-looking statements are generally written in the future tense and/or are preceded by words such as “will,” “may,” “should,” “forecast,” “could,” “expect,” “suggest,” “believe,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan,” "future," "potential," "target," "seek," "continue," "if," or other similar words.
The forward-looking statements contained in this Annual Report involve a number of risks and uncertainties, many of which are outside of our control. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from projected results include, but are not limited to, risks associated with (i) the conversion of our design opportunities into revenue; (ii) the commercial and technical success of our new products and our successful introduction of products and solutions incorporating emerging technologies or standards; (iii) our dependence on our relationships with third parties to manufacture our products and solutions; (iv) our dependence upon single suppliers to fabricate and assemble our products; (v) the liquidity required to support our future operating and capital requirements; (vi) our ability to accurately estimate quarterly revenue; (vii) our expectations about market and product trends; (viii) our future plans for partnerships and collaborations; (ix) our dependence upon a few customers for a significant portion of our total revenue; (x) our ability to forecast demand for our products; (xi) our dependence on our international business operations; (xii) our ability to attract and retain key personnel; (xiii) our ability to remain competitive in our industry; (xiv) our ability to protect our intellectual property rights; (xv) our ability to prevent cyberattacks and protect our data; (xvi) pandemics, epidemics, or other widespread public health problems, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, which could impact the global economy, and (xvii) global hostilities, including the invasion of Ukraine by Russia and resulting regional instability, and the continued hostilities and armed conflict in the Middle East, which could adversely impact the global supply chain, disrupt our operations, or negatively impact the demand for our products in our primary end markets. Although we believe that the assumptions underlying the forward-looking statements contained in this Annual Report are reasonable, any of the assumptions could be inaccurate, and therefore, there can be no assurance that such statements will be accurate. The risks, uncertainties, and assumptions referred to above that could cause our results to differ materially from the results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, those discussed under the heading “Risk Factors” in Part I, Item 1A hereto and the risks, uncertainties, and assumptions discussed from time to time in our other public filings and public announcements. All forward-looking statements included in this document are based on information available to us as of the date hereof. In light of the significant uncertainties inherent in the forward-looking statements included herein, the inclusion of such information should not be regarded as a representation by us or any other person that the results or conditions described in such statements, or our objectives and plans will be achieved. Furthermore, past performance in operations and share price is not necessarily indicative of future performance. We disclaim any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.
As used herein, "QuickLogic," the "Company," "we," "our," and similar terms include QuickLogic Corporation and its subsidiaries, unless the context indicates otherwise.
Risk Factor Summary
Some of the factors that could materially and adversely affect our business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows, but are not limited to, the following:
Risks Related to Our Business
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We have incurred losses in the past years. We may not be able to generate sufficient revenue or raise additional financing to fund future losses, and we may not be able to sustain sufficient liquidity, and as a result, our financial condition and operating results could be materially and adversely affected. |
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Our future operating results are likely to fluctuate and therefore, may fail to meet expectations, which could materially adversely affect our business, results of operations, and financial condition. |
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Our margins vary. |
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Cyberattacks, like our January 2023 cybersecurity incident that was previously disclosed, can lead to disruption of business, reduced revenue, increased costs, liability claims, or harm to our reputation or competitive position. |
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We may be unable to adequately protect our intellectual property rights and may face significant expenses as a result of future litigation. |
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We may be unable to successfully grow our business if we fail to compete effectively with others to attract and retain our executive officers, and other key management or technical personnel. |
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There may be some effects of system outages or data security breaches, which could adversely affect our operations, financial results, or reputation. |
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Our company’s global operations are subject to risks and uncertainties. |
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We may not be able to achieve the anticipated synergies and benefits from business acquisitions. |
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Litigation could adversely impact our consolidated financial position. |
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If a financial institution holding our funds fails, we may not be able to pay our operational expenses or make other payments, which could adversely impact our liquidity and financial performance. Deterioration of financial markets may result in our inability to borrow on favorable terms, which could adversely impact our ability to pursue our growth and other strategic initiatives. |
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Our business is subject to political, economic, and health risks, natural disasters, and other catastrophic events, which could have a material adverse effect on our business operations. |
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Our insurance may not adequately cover certain risks and, as a result, our financial condition and results may be adversely affected. |
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Pandemics or other widespread public health problems could adversely affect our business, results of operations, and financial condition in a material way. |
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Changes to existing accounting pronouncements or taxation rules or practices may cause adverse income fluctuations or affect our reported financial results or how we conduct our business. |
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We may have increased difficulty attracting and retaining qualified, outside board members. |
Risks Related to Our Common Stock
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We may be unable to accurately estimate quarterly revenue, which could adversely affect the trading price of our stock. |
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If we do not maintain compliance with the listing requirements of the Nasdaq Capital Market, our common stock could be delisted, which could, among other things, reduce the price of our common stock and the levels of liquidity available to our stockholders. |
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The market price of our common stock may fluctuate significantly and could lead to securities litigation. |
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Our certificate of incorporation, our bylaws, and Delaware law contain provisions that could discourage a takeover that is beneficial to stockholders. |
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If, in the future, we conclude our internal control over financial reporting is not effective, investors could lose confidence in the reliability of our financial statements, which could result in a decrease in the value of our common stock. |
Risks Related to Our Industry and Global and Economic Conditions
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The semiconductor industry is highly competitive, and has experienced significant consolidation, and if we are unable to compete effectively or identify attractive opportunities for consolidation, it could materially adversely affect our business and results of operations. |
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The semiconductor business is subject to downward price pressure. |
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Both we and our customers are subject to laws, regulations, and similar requirements, changes to which may adversely affect our business, results of operations, and financial condition. |
Risks Related to Our Products
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If we fail to successfully develop, introduce, and sell new products and other new solutions or if our design opportunities do not generate the revenue we expect, we may be unable to compete effectively in the future and our future gross margins and operating results will be lower. |
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If a market for our new products does not develop, or if our products do not meet customer needs, the loss of or reduction in orders could adversely affect our revenue and harm our business's financial condition, operating results and cash flows. |
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If our AI products are not low touch, the cost of addressing the fragmented AI market will be high, which will delay market penetration, result in reduced revenues, or require increased expenses, any of which could adversely affect our revenue and harm our business financial condition, operating results, and cash flows. |
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Our products are subject to a lengthy sales cycle and our customers may cancel or change their product plans after we have expended substantial time and resources on the design of their products. |
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If we fail to adequately forecast demand for our products, we may incur product shortages or excess product inventories. |
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Our business could be adversely affected by undetected errors or defects in our products. |
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We will be unable to compete effectively if we fail to anticipate product opportunities based upon emerging technologies and standards or fail to develop products and solutions that incorporate these technologies and standards in a timely manner. |
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Rising concern of potential export restrictions could materially and adversely affect our business and results of operations. |
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Our business could suffer as a result of tariffs and trade sanctions or similar actions. |
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Exchange rate fluctuations could adversely affect our company’s results of operations and financial condition. |
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We have implemented import and export control procedures to comply with United States regulations, but we are still exposed to potential risks from import and export activity. |
Risks Related to Our Customers and Partners
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We currently depend on a limited number of significant customers, for a significant portion of our revenue, and the loss of, or reduction in orders from, such significant customers could adversely affect our revenue and harm our business financial condition, operating results, and cash flows. |
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Our revenue from U.S. Government contracts depends on the continued availability of funding from the U.S. Government, and, accordingly, we have the risk that funding for our existing contracts may be canceled or diverted to other uses or delayed or that funding for new programs will not be available. |
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We depend upon partnering with other companies to offer voice, motion, and other solutions into our platform. |
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We depend on our relationships with third parties to manufacture our new hardware products. |
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We depend upon third parties for silicon IP, RTL, design, physical design, verification and assembly of our silicon platforms and any failure to meet our requirements in a timely fashion may adversely affect our time to market and revenue. |
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We depend upon partnering with other companies to develop IP, reference platforms, algorithms, and system software. |
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We depend upon third parties to fabricate, assemble, test, and program our products, and to provide logistics services. Any problems with these third parties could adversely affect our business, results of operations, and financial condition. |
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We entered into informal partnerships with certain third parties for the development of solutions. Our business could be adversely affected if such informal partnerships fail to grow as we expected. |
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Our solutions face competition from suppliers of ASSPs, integrated application processors, low-power FPGAs, low-power MCUs, ASICs, and eFPGA IP. |
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We may engage in manufacturing, distribution, or technology agreements that involve numerous risks, including the use of cash, erosion of margins due to royalty obligations or revenue sharing, and diversion of resources. |
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We have entered and will continue to enter into strategic licensing and collaborative partnerships and relationships with third parties. The anticipated benefits of these partnerships and relationships may never materialize and these partnerships and relationships may instead disrupt our business and harm our financial condition. |
General
QuickLogic Corporation was founded in 1988 and reincorporated in Delaware in 1999. We provide innovative, programmable silicon and software platforms to enable our customers to develop custom hardware products in a fast time-to-market and cost-effective way. Specifically, we are a fabless semiconductor company with a variety of products: embedded FPGA ("eFPGA") intellectual property ("IP"), low power, multi-core semiconductor system-on-chips ("SoCs"), discrete FPGAs, and AI software. Our customers can use our eFPGA IP for hardware acceleration and pre-processing in their Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) products, our SoCs to run our customers' software and build their hardware around, and our discrete FPGAs to implement their custom functionality. The Analytics Toolkit from SensiML Corporation ("SensiML"), our wholly-owned subsidiary, provides an end-to-end Artificial Intelligence / Machine Learning solution with accurate sensor algorithms using AI technology. The full range of products, software tools, and eFPGA IP enables the practical and efficient field programmability for our customers across Aerospace and Defense, Consumer/Industrial IoT, and Consumer Electronics markets.
Our new products include the following: eFPGA IP Licensing business, associated professional services, consisting of development and integration of eFPGA technology into custom semiconductor solutions, and our silicon products consisting of EOS™, QuickAI™, ArcticLink® III, PolarPro®3, PolarPro II, PolarPro, and Eclipse II products. In addition to delivering our own semiconductor solutions, our new products category includes our AI/ML Software Platform from our wholly-owned subsidiary company, SensiML, which includes Software as a Service (SaaS) subscriptions for development, per unit license fees when deployed in production, and proof-of-concept services, all of which are also included in the new products revenue category. Our mature products include primarily FPGA families named PASIC®3 and QuickRAM®, as well as programming hardware and design software.
For our IP and silicon platforms, we collaborate with multiple partners on co-marketing and/or co-selling initiatives. These partners could have primary business lines in semiconductor IP, Design Services, semiconductor foundry, semiconductor assembly and test, and others.
For our AI/ML Software, SensiML collaborates with several microcontroller and sensor manufacturers to integrate the microcontroller and/or sensor manufacturers’ development kits with SensiML’s Analytics Toolkit in order to showcase combined solutions for AI/ML applications. Currently, these collaborations include On Semiconductor Corp., Microchip Technology Inc., Silicon Laboratories, Inc., Arduino, NXP Semiconductors N.V., Raspberry Pi, and Nordic Semiconductor.
Our eFPGA IP is currently developed on 12nm, 16nm, 22nm, 28nm, 40nm, 65nm, 90nm, 130nm, and 250nm process nodes with a roadmap to more advanced, sub-10nm nodes. The licensable IP is generated by our automated compiler tool called Australis™, which enables our engineers to create an eFPGA IP for our licensees that they can then integrate into their SoC without significant involvement by QuickLogic. We believe this flow enables a scalable development and support model for QuickLogic. For our eFPGA strategy, we typically work with semiconductor manufacturing partners prior to this IP being licensed to a SoC company.
We have changed our manufacturing strategies to reduce the cost of our silicon solution platforms to enable their use in a range of unique products ranging from low to high volume. Our EOS S3, EOS S3AI, QuickAI and ArcticLink III silicon platforms combine mixed signal physical functions and hard-wired logic alongside our field programmable logic. Our EOS S3, EOS S3AI, and ArcticLink III solution platforms are manufactured on process nodes where we can benefit from smaller die sizes and lower power consumption. We typically implement sophisticated logic blocks and mixed signal functions in hard-wired logic because it is very cost-effective and energy efficient. We use small form factor packages, which are less expensive to manufacture and include smaller pin counts. Reduced pin counts result in lower costs for our customers' printed circuit board space and routing. Furthermore, our SRAM reprogrammable silicon platforms can be programmed in-system by our customers, and therefore, we do not incur programming costs, lowering the overall cost of ownership to our customers. We expect to continue to invest in silicon solution platforms and manufacturing technologies that make us competitive for the variety of markets and applications that programmable logic serves.
In order to grow our revenue from its current level, we depend upon increased revenue from our new products, including existing new product platforms and platforms currently in development. We expect our business growth to be driven mainly by eFPGA IP and our silicon solutions. Therefore, our revenue growth needs to be strong enough to enable us to sustain profitability while we continue to invest in the development, sale, and marketing of our new solution platforms, IP, and software.
Available Information
Our corporate headquarters are located at 2220 Lundy Avenue, San Jose, California 95131. We can be reached at (408) 990-4000, and our website address is www.quicklogic.com. The information on our website is not incorporated herein by reference and is not a part of this Form 10-K. Our common stock trades on the Nasdaq Capital Market under the symbol “QUIK.” Our annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K, and amendments to such reports are available, free of charge, on our website home page as soon as reasonably practicable after we electronically file such materials with, or furnish them to, the Securities and Exchange Commission, or the SEC. Copies of the materials filed by the Company with the SEC are also available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. A copy of our Code of Conduct and Ethics is posted on our website at https://ir.quicklogic.com/governance-docs. Any changes to or waiver from this Code of Conduct and Ethics will be posted to this page on our website.
Fiscal Year
Our fiscal year ends on the Sunday closest to December 31. References to Fiscal Years 2024, 2023, and 2022 refer to the Fiscal Years ended December 29, 2024, December 31, 2023, and January 1, 2023, respectively.
Industry Background
Historically, system processing capability was built using a homogenous architecture, meaning one that consisted of the use of only one type of technology. This could be one or more instances of a single processor type, or only programmable logic. More recently, there is a general trend in the semiconductor market that enhanced processing capability can come from the adoption of more heterogeneous architectures. Examples of this trend are the inclusion of one or more general purpose processor cores (e.g., Arm or RISC-V) in conjunction with programmable logic. This type of architecture enables the end user to partition their application workloads across the heterogeneous cores so that the most appropriate core is used for a given workload, often concurrently. Generally, this is viewed as the most optimal way to design systems that need to optimize for performance or battery life. The heterogeneity can be implemented as multiple discrete devices on a Printed Circuit Board (PCB), multiple IP cores in a monolithic device, or as multiple devices (e.g., chiplets) integrated into an advanced package.
An important underlying trend for the Aerospace and Defense, and Industrial markets is that there is a need for a high degree of fragmentation of system functionality. This drives a need for a time and cost-efficient product development flow while maintaining the ability to extend the life cycle of a given design through design changes and uniquely optimize designs for new workloads and/or algorithms that need to be deployed (e.g., deploying more advanced AI algorithms in the future). Development time and non-recurring engineering ("NRE") costs tend to be more of the focus for hardware products in these markets rather than the bill of materials cost.
We believe these industry trends are shifting the demand among different classes of core silicon. The following are the four main classes of non-memory core silicon:
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Microcontrollers ("MCUs") are typically small, low-power hardware products on a single integrated circuit that contain a processor core, memory, and a number of peripherals. They are designed to be programmed with software for embedded applications; |
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• | Application Specific Standard Products ("ASSPs") other than processors, are fixed-function hardware products designed to address a relatively narrow set of applications. These hardware products typically integrate a number of common peripherals or functions, and the functionality of these hardware products is fixed prior to wafer fabrication; |
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• | Programmable Logic Devices ("PLDs") are general-purpose hardware products, which can be used by a variety of electronic systems manufacturers and are customized after purchase for a specific application. FPGAs are a subset of PLDs and are typically used to implement complex system functions; and |
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• | Application Specific Integrated Circuits ("ASICs") are custom hardware products designed and fabricated to meet the needs of one specific application for one end-customer. Structured ASICs, a sub-category of ASICs, provide a limited amount of custom content to broaden the applicability of a device for additional applications. |
ASSPs are offered broadly to the market, making it challenging for a system designer to create differentiated products from these hardware products alone. In many situations, the available ASSPs may not directly implement the desired function and the system designer is required to use a combination of ASSPs to achieve the desired result at the expense of increased cost, product size, and power consumption. As standards evolve or new standards are developed, ASSPs may not be available to implement desired functions.
System designers can customize their products using programmable logic, ASICs, or MCUs. The competitive dynamic between these classes of core silicon is well understood. High development risks, development costs, and opportunity costs are incurred when using ASICs to produce custom hardware products with either very low unit production cost or unique functionality that is only achievable with a customer ASIC solution. Suppliers of programmable logic hardware products, which have lower development and market risks and development costs relative to ASICs, have aggressively reduced the unit cost of their products over time, making programmable logic hardware products the solution of choice for custom products unless the volume is very high or the functionality and/or operating environment is unique. These cost reduction efforts have significantly increased the volume required to justify the total cost of an ASIC.
Field Programmable Gate Array ("FPGA") technology has been used historically by system companies and OEMs to develop and deploy customer-specific functionality with fast time-to-market and low development costs. End market use includes Aerospace and Defense, Industrial, Computing, Communications, IoT, and Consumer. According to a recent research report published by Markets and Markets, the FPGA market was valued at $12.1 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $25.8 billion by 2029, growing at a CAGR of 16.4% during the forecast period from 2024 to 2029. Additionally, according to SNS Insider, the military and aerospace segment is expected to grow at the fastest CAGR, fueled by the adoption of embedded FPGAs. High-density FPGAs provide advanced levels of integration, reliability, and low-leakage power consumption required for high-performance aviation and defense applications. The emergence of embedded field programmable gate array IP technology ("eFPGA IP") has particularly favored the aerospace and defense industry by offering even better integration, reliability, and low power options over the use of traditional discrete FPGAs.
The Aerospace and Defense and Industrial markets are well served by existing core silicon or custom ASIC development. Although much of these markets' uses are generally not as price, power, and size sensitive, there are use cases for reducing size, weight, and power. When there is a strong need for a custom solution to address specific functionality or operating environment (e.g., high radiation, extended temperature ranges, etc.), designers often turn to discrete FPGAs, or in some cases when standard FPGAs do not exist, an ASIC. QuickLogic FPGAs have a loyal following in certain segments of these markets, particularly when instant-on, energy efficiency, high reliability, or intellectual property security is important.
Since 2022, QuickLogic has also entered into multiple, large eFPGA-related contracts with customers in the Aerospace and Defense market and expects to continue to do so in the future. Historically, the Defense market has followed QuickLogic’s mature products revenue trend, but recent advancements in QuickLogic’s Australis IP generator tool, the recent Strategic Radiation Hardened FPGA contract for the U.S. Department of Defense, participation in the DARPA Toolbox, and other eFPGA-related contracts with the Defense Industrial Base have enabled renewed interest from customers in this area. Consequently, QuickLogic expects these trends to be a primary growth driver.
Markets and Product Technology
We market our programmable logic (FPGAs and eFPGA IP) solutions primarily to Defense Industrial Base contractors, U.S. Government entities, System OEMs, and fabless semiconductor companies. These customers may value one or more of our product categories. A solution can be based on our programmable technology, which enables customized designs, low power, flexibility, rapid time-to-market, longer time-in-market, and lower total cost of ownership. We are capable of providing complete solutions because of our investment in developing the low power IP and software required to implement specific functions. In some cases, we develop the IPs and either software or firmware ourselves and, in other cases, we utilize third parties to develop the mixed signal physical layers, logic, and/or software.
By using our silicon platforms, our IPs, our software, and our in-depth architecture knowledge, we can deliver energy efficient custom solutions that blend the benefits of traditional ASSPs with the flexibility, product proliferation, differentiation, and low total cost of ownership advantages of programmable logic.
Our product technology consists of five major elements:
1. Programmable Logic Technology
Our programmable logic enables our customers to customize their hardware platforms. We have two distinct types of programmable logic – Reprogrammable and One-Time Programmable ("OTP"). Within our Reprogrammable logic architecture, we can utilize standard foundry processes (e.g., CMOS-logic process with foundry-provided SRAM memory elements) or more unique processes (e.g., foundry-provided CMOS logic processes and third-party-provided memory elements (e.g., MRAM)). We can choose the appropriate process technology based on our customers’ requirements. Our SRAM-reprogrammable logic is the basis of our eFPGA IP License initiative and is the logic used in our EOS S3, EOS S3 LV, and EOS S3AI products. An example of the unique process combination is when we use foundry-provided CMOS with MRAM in the Strategic Radiation Hardened FPGA program for which we are the prime contractor.
The second type of programmable logic is our ViaLink® OTP technology. ViaLink is our proprietary and patented technology and possesses the characteristics of non-volatility and instant-on, very low standby power, low dynamic power, and small form factor.
2. Semiconductor Intellectual Property
We develop semiconductor intellectual property (IP) cores for licensing to our customers or for use within our own devices. Licensable eFPGA IP based on our Field Programmable Gate Array technology is called “embedded FPGA IP”. The eFPGA IP is generated by our automated IP compiler tool called Australis™, which enables our engineers to create an eFPGA IP for our licensees that they can then integrate into their SoC without significant involvement by us. We believe this flow enables a scalable development and support model for our company. Additionally, we may develop and provide other IP blocks that our customers can use in conjunction with our eFPGA IP, such as signal processing / digital filter functions, hardware acceleration, processor offloading, and various bus interface functions.
3. FPGA User Tools
We develop, maintain and support software tools that our customers use to program their designs into our FPGA, eFPGA IP, and SoC products. By design, all programmable logic technology is unconfigured in its default state after manufacturing. Designers using programmable logic must configure the state of the programmable logic to match their requirements; this is accomplished by a suite of tools commonly referred to as FPGA User Tools. There are two such categories of FPGA User Tools – proprietary and open-source. Historically, FPGA/eFPGA vendors have provided only proprietary versions of these tools to their customers. For our Mature products, we continue to support a 100% proprietary FPGA User Tool. For our new products and eFPGA IP, we support a 100% open-source version, as well as a hybrid FPGA User Tool called Aurora that combines open-source and proprietary technology, including logic synthesis via Synopsys's Synplify® product.
4. Silicon Platforms
We have two types of silicon platforms, discrete FPGAs and SoCs that embed FPGA technology. We have a variety of discrete FPGAs – historically based on our ViaLink technology and more recently based on our Reprogrammable technology (either SRAM- or MRAM-based configuration). We also have multiple silicon platforms that fall under the SoC category - ArcticLink, EOS S3, EOS S3 LV, and EOS S3AI. Our SoC platforms combine mixed signal physical functions, hard-wired logic, and programmable logic on one device. Adding hard-wired IP enables us to deliver more logic at lower cost and lower power, while the programmable logic allows us to provide solutions that can be rapidly customized to differentiate products, add features, and reduce system development costs. This combination of mixed signal, hard-wired logic, and programmable logic enables us to deliver low cost, small form factor solutions that can be customized for a particular customer or market requirements while lowering the total cost of ownership.
5. Artificial Intelligence / Machine Learning (AI/ML) Software
Through our wholly-owned subsidiary company, SensiML, we develop and optimize an end-to-end software suite that provides developers with a practical means for developing IoT sensor algorithms using AI. Each component of the software suite handles specific steps to progress from initial raw sensor data collection using prototype hardware to optimized firmware code generation, validation and testing, and post-ship algorithm updates and continuous learning enhancements. SensiML Data Studio (formerly the Data Capture Lab) is a full-featured client tool that enables rapid, efficient, and collaborative multi-user data collection, cleansing, labeling, and metadata annotation of custom application datasets. SensiML Analytics Studio is a cloud service component that uses labeled datasets to deliver device-optimized firmware for a chosen endpoint product. SensiML Test App is used to quickly and efficiently validate final device firmware and test for the proper behavior, accuracy, and performance of the algorithm empirically on actual endpoint hardware. Lastly, the SensiML Application Programmer’s Interface ("API") is a simplified interface to extend the SensiML algorithms and manage advanced features like edge model tuning and continuous learning updates to the cloud.
Marketing, Sales and Customers
We monetize our technology through hardware product sales and eFPGA IP licenses, with any necessary corresponding work delivered via professional engineering services, SensiML Analytics Toolkit subscriptions, and per unit royalties. We specialize in enabling field programmability of our customers' systems - ether via our discrete Field Programmable Gate Array devices or our eFPGA IP. For our customers, we enable hardware programmability cost-effectively and at low power.
Our embedded FPGA technology gives ASIC and SoC developers the benefit of flexibility to make post-manufacturing design changes at very fast time-to- and time-in-market, while keeping power consumption low. Our multi-core sensor processing products such as ArcticLink 3 S1, ArcticLink 3 S2, EOS 3, EOS S3 LV, and EOS S3AI provide an extremely power-efficient approach for real-time multi-modal (vision, motion, voice, location, biometric, and environmental) sensor processing independently of the cloud. Our SensiML Analytics Toolkit is cutting-edge software that enables ultra-low power IoT endpoints that implement AI to transform raw sensor data into meaningful insight at the device itself. The Toolkit also provides an end-to-end development platform spanning data collection, labeling, algorithm and firmware auto generation, and testing.
We recognize that our markets require a range of solutions, and we intend to work with market-leading companies to combine silicon solution platforms, packaging technology, FPGA User Tools, sensor software algorithms, software drivers, and firmware, to meet the product proliferation, high bandwidth, time-to-market, time-in-market, and form factor requirements of our customers. We intend to continue to define and implement compelling solutions for our target customers and partners.
We believe our solutions are resonating with our target customers who value lower power consumption, platform design flexibility, rapid time-to-market, longer time-in-market, and low total cost of ownership available through the use of our solutions.
We sell our products through a network of sales channel partners and direct sales executives in North America, Europe, and Asia. In addition to our corporate headquarters in San Jose, California, we have international sales operations in Japan and the United Kingdom. Our sales personnel and independent sales representatives are responsible for sales and application support for a given region, focusing on major strategic accounts, and managing our channel sales partners, such as distributors.
Customers typically order our FPGA products through our distributors. Currently, we have fourteen active distributors in North America and a network of nineteen active distributors and sales representatives throughout Europe and Asia to support our international business. eFPGA IP customers and SensiML SaaS subscribers typically enter into licensing agreements directly with QuickLogic and SensiML, respectively.
We also have an Aerospace and Defense, Industrial, and IoT product customer base that purchases our mature silicon products. We expect to continue to offer silicon hardware products to these customers, as well as new eFPGA IP for when these customers choose to implement their own silicon platform solution.
One customer represented approximately 54% of our total revenue for the year ended December 29, 2024. One customer represented 70% of our total revenue for the year ended December 31, 2023. In addition, a noteworthy portion of our revenue comes from sales to customers located outside of the United States. See Note 14 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information.
Backlog
We do not believe that backlog as of any particular date is indicative of future results. The majority of our quarterly silicon shipments are typically booked during the quarter. Our silicon sales are made primarily pursuant to standard purchase orders issued by OEM customers and distributors. Our eFPGA IP and design service contracts are typically made pursuant to license agreements and development contracts. Development contracts can span several months to several quarters in duration.
Competition
A number of companies offer products that compete with one or more of our semiconductor products and solutions. Competitors of our eFPGA semiconductor IP include small, venture-backed startup companies. In 2024, Analog Devices acquired the assets and technology of our most noteworthy eFPGA competitor, FlexLogix. Competitors of our low power discrete FPGA devices include suppliers of low-density FPGAs such as Lattice Semiconductor Corp. and Microsemi Corp. (a subsidiary of Microchip Technology Inc.). Competitors for our Aerospace and Defense discrete FPGAs include conventional FPGAs suppliers such as Xilinx Inc. (a subsidiary of Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.), Altera (a recent spin-off of Intel Corp.), and Microsemi Corp. Competitors of our SensiML AI/ML Software business include several small, venture-backed startup companies.
Research and Development
We are focused on developing our core programmable logic technology and software tools. Our products combine our silicon platforms with our eFPGA IP, FPGA User Tools, software drivers, and other system software, and may include SensiML software for AI applications.
Our future success will depend largely on our ability to rapidly develop, enhance, and port to new foundry and process technology our eFPGA IP solutions, as well as continue to enhance and support our FPGA User Tools to meet emerging industry standards and satisfy changing customer requirements. Further, our future success will depend on our ability to execute on current, large eFPGA IP and discrete FPGA development contracts, as well as win new ones. We have made and expect to continue to make substantial investments in R&D. Our R&D expenses were $6.5 million, or 33% of revenue, $6.4 million, or 30% of revenue, and $5.0 million, or 31% of revenue for the years ended December 29, 2024, December 31, 2023, and January 1, 2023, respectively. Research and development expenses for the year ended December 29, 2024 reflect increases in employee salaries, depreciation, and financing arrangement expenses.
Manufacturing
We have close relationships with third-party manufacturers for our customer commercial products for wafer fabrication, package assembly, and testing requirements to help us ensure stability in the supply of our products and to allow us to focus our internal efforts on product and solution design and sales.
In connection with commercial customers, we outsource commercial products wafer manufacturing, primarily to GlobalFoundries and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited ("TSMC"). We outsource our commercial product packaging primarily to Amkor Technology, Inc. Integra Specialty Products, JCET Group Co. Ltd., and Golden Altos Corp. GlobalFoundries manufactures our EOS S3, EOS S3 LV, and EOS S3AI Sensor Platform in a 40 nm complementary metal oxide semiconductor ("CMOS") process, and PolarPro 3E, ArcticLink III VX and BX, and ArcticLink 3 S2 Sensor Hub, in a 65 nm CMOS process. TSMC manufactures our PASIC 3, QuickRAM and certain QuickPCI products, using a 0.35 nm CMOS process. TSMC also manufactures our Eclipse products on 0.25 micron CMOS process, and other products using a 65nm CMOS process on twelve-inch wafers. We purchase products from GlobalFoundries and TSMC on a purchase order basis.
Outsourcing of commercial wafer manufacturing enables us to take advantage of the high-volume economies of scale offered by these suppliers. We may establish additional commercial foundry relationships as such arrangements become economically useful or technically necessary.
In connection with U.S. Government end-user customers, we are required to procure wafer fabrication, package assembly, and testing from sources that maintain Defense Microelectronics Activity accreditation from the U.S. Department of Defense and maintain certain intellectual property security standards. We outsource wafer manufacturing, packaging, and testing services to certified U.S.-owned and continental U.S.-based suppliers.
Employees and Human Capital
As of December 29, 2024, we had fifty-nine employees worldwide, of which fifty-one employees were located in the United States. We believe our future success depends in part on our continued ability to attract, hire, and retain qualified personnel. None of our employees are represented by a labor union and we believe our employee relations are favorable. We recognize that in order to drive innovation and operational excellence, we must attract, develop, motivate, and retain highly qualified talent. The well-being of employees is a key priority and includes a dynamic and welcoming workplace that promotes inclusive diversity, fosters collaboration, encourages employees to bring their best ideas to work every day, and promotes work-life balance. The principal purposes of our equity and cash incentive plans are to attract, retain, and reward personnel through the granting of stock-based and cash-based compensation awards, in order to increase shareholder value and the success of our company by motivating such individuals to perform to the best of their abilities and achieve our objectives.
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Our silicon engineering group develops our eFPGA IP and FPGA products. |
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• | Our electronic design and automation software group collaborates with the open-source software community to ensure the design libraries, interface routines, and place and route software that allow our customers to take their own designs and target them to programmable hardware products are optimized. Our system software group creates the drivers and other system code required to connect our silicon hardware products to Application Processors, drivers, and microcode to support our sensor hubs. |
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• | Our hardware group develops and verifies IP Blocks that can be programmed into our programmable logic and develops primarily open-source hardware reference designs to showcase and verify our solutions. |
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• | Our product engineering group oversees product manufacturing and process development with our third-party foundries and is involved in ongoing process improvements to increase yields and optimize device characteristics. |
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• | The office of the CTO investigates future trends and requirements in order to define the next generation of solutions and platforms. |
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• | Our SensiML group develops and maintains all software with respect to the SensiML Analytics Software Suite. |
We monitor employee turnover rates by region and globally. Approximately 26% of our employees have been employed by us for more than 10 years and approximately 20% have been employed by us for more than 20 years. The average tenure is 8.40 years. Our turnover rate was 6% for the fiscal year ended December 29, 2024. We believe our compensation philosophy, along with the career growth and development opportunities promotes longer employee tenure and reduces voluntary turnover.
Intellectual Property
We believe that it is important to maintain a large patent portfolio to protect our innovations. We currently hold twenty-one active U.S. patents and have four pending applications for additional U.S. patents. Our patents contain claims covering various aspects of programmable integrated circuits, programmable interconnect structures, and programmable metal hardware products. In Europe and Asia, we hold five patents and have zero pending applications. Our issued patents expire between 2026-2042.
In most cases, revenue will decline from a decrease in demand for our mature products long before the expiration of pending or issued patents relating to the underlying technology in such products. The decision to cease maintaining a patent is made based on the importance of the patent in our current or future product offerings.
We have five registered trademarks with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
With regard to certain patents, the U.S. Government has an irrevocable, non-exclusive, royalty-free license, pursuant to which the U.S. Government may use or authorize others to use the inventions covered by such patents.
Information About Our Executive Officers and Directors
Our executive officers are appointed by, and serve at the discretion of, our Board of Directors. There are no family relationships among our directors and officers.
The following table sets forth certain information concerning our current executive officers and directors as of March 25, 2025:
Name |
|
Age |
|
|
Position |
|
Brian C. Faith |
|
|
50 |
|
|
President and Chief Executive Officer; Director |
Elias Nader |
|
|
60 |
|
Chief Financial Officer and Senior Vice President (SVP) of Finance |
|
Rajiv Jain |
|
|
64 |
|
|
Vice President, Worldwide Operations |
Timothy Saxe |
|
|
69 |
|
|
Senior Vice President Engineering and Chief Technology Officer |
Owen Bateman | 58 | Vice President, Worldwide Sales | ||||
Andrew Jaros | 61 | Vice President, Intellectual Property Sales | ||||
Michael R. Farese |
|
|
78 |
|
|
Chairman of the Board |
Joyce Kim | 54 | Director | ||||
Andrew J. Pease |
|
|
74 |
|
|
Director |
Christine Russell |
|
|
75 |
|
|
Director |
Gary H. Tauss |
|
|
70 |
|
|
Director |
Brian C. Faith joined QuickLogic in June 1996. Mr. Faith has served as our President and Chief Executive Officer since June 2016 after having served as Vice President of Worldwide Marketing and Vice President of Worldwide Sales & Marketing between 2008 and 2016. Mr. Faith during the last 26 years has held a variety of managerial and executive leadership positions in engineering, product line management, marketing, and sales. Mr. Faith has also served as the board member of the Global Semiconductor Alliance (GSA), the Chairman of the Marketing Committee for the CE-ATA Organization. He holds a B.S. degree in Computer Engineering from Santa Clara University and was an Adjunct Lecturer at Santa Clara University for Programmable Logic courses.
Elias Nader joined QuickLogic in February 2022. Mr. Nader brings more than 30 years of experience in semiconductors and related industries, including 21 years in senior leadership positions. Prior to joining QuickLogic, Mr. Nader most recently served as Senior Vice President and Chief Financial officer at Pixelworks, Inc., where he was directly responsible for all of General and Administrative worldwide and worked directly with the Board of Directors to provide strategic and operational direction to the company. Prior to that, Mr. Nader worked at Sigma Designs, Inc. as the Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Corporate Secretary. Mr. Nader has also served in executive capacities at Imperial Jet and Dionex Corp. Mr. Nader holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Accounting and Bachelor of Arts Degree in Economics and an MBA in International Business from San Jose State University.
Rajiv Jain joined QuickLogic in August 1992. Mr. Jain has served as our Vice President of Worldwide Operations since April 2014. Prior to this role, Mr. Jain served as QuickLogic’s Senior Director of Operations and Development Engineering from 2011 to 2014, Senior Director of System Solutions and Process Technology from 2009 to 2011, Director of Process Technology from 1997 to 2009, and Senior Process Technologist from 1992 to 1997. Prior to joining QuickLogic, Mr. Jain was a Senior Yield Engineer at National Semiconductor from 1991 to 1992, where he focused on BiCMOS product yield improvements, and at Monolithic Memories from 1985 to 1988, where he focused on BiPolar product yield and engineering wafer sort improvements. Mr. Jain holds a Master’s degree in Chemical Engineering from the University of California, Berkeley and a B.S. degree in Chemical Engineering from the University of Illinois, Champaign/Urbana.
Timothy Saxe (Ph.D.) joined QuickLogic in May 2001. Dr. Saxe has served as our Senior Vice President of Engineering and Chief Technology Officer since August 2016 and Senior Vice President and Chief Technology Officer since November 2008. Previously, Dr. Saxe has held a variety of executive leadership positions in QuickLogic including Vice President of Engineering and Vice President of Software Engineering. Dr. Saxe was Vice President of FLASH Engineering at Actel Corp. a semiconductor manufacturing company, from November 2000 to February 2001. Dr. Saxe joined GateField Corp., a design verification tools and services company formerly known as Zycad, in June 1983 and was a founder of their semiconductor manufacturing division in 1993. Dr. Saxe became GateField’s Chief Executive Officer in February 1999 and served in that capacity until Actel Corp. acquired GateField in November 2000. Dr. Saxe holds a B.S.E.E. degree from North Carolina State University, and an M.S.E.E. degree and a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University.
Owen Bateman joined QuickLogic in February 1997. Mr. Bateman has served as our Vice President of Worldwide Sales since April 2022. Prior to this role, Mr. Bateman served as QuickLogic’s Senior Director of Sales EMEA and USA from 2013 to 2022, and Strategic Accounts, Direct Sales and Channel Sales from 1997 to 2013. Prior to joining QuickLogic, Mr. Bateman held sales and field application engineering positions at Intel and Abacus Polar. Mr. Bateman has designed FPGAs and completed several successful FPGAs and custom ASIC designs. Mr. Bateman holds a Higher National Certificate in Electronic and Microelectronic Engineering from Brooklands College, England.
Andrew Jaros joined QuickLogic in December 2024 as Vice President of IP Sales, bringing over 20 years of leadership experience in semiconductor IP, embedded systems, and business development. Prior to joining QuickLogic, Mr. Jaros most recently served as FlexLogix's World-Wide Vice President of Sales, Marketing, and Solutions Architecture. Prior to joining FlexLogix, Mr. Jaros served eleven years in various management and leadership roles licensing ARC processor IP at Synopsys, Virage Logic, and ARC International. Prior to that, Mr. Jaros managed a sales team covering North America strategic accounts for ARM. Mr. Jaros started his career as a territory manager for Motorola Semiconductor and holds a B.S. degree in Chemical Engineering from Arizona State University.
Information regarding the backgrounds of our directors is hereby incorporated by reference from our definitive Proxy Statement relating to the 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, which Proxy Statement is anticipated to be filed within 120 days after the end of the Fiscal Year covered by this Annual Report.
In addition to other information in this Annual Report on Form 10-K and in other filings we make with the SEC, the following risk factors should be carefully considered in evaluating our business as they may have a significant impact on our business, operating results and financial condition. If any of the following risks actually occurs, our business, financial condition, results of operations, and future prospects could be materially and adversely affected. Because of the following factors, as well as other variables affecting our operating results, past financial performance should not be considered as a reliable indicator of future performance and investors should not use historical trends to anticipate results or trends in future periods.
Risks Related to Our Business
We have incurred losses in the past years. We may not be able to generate sufficient revenue or raise additional financing to fund future losses, and we may not be able to sustain sufficient liquidity, and as a result, our financial condition and operating results could be materially and adversely affected.
We have experienced net losses in the past years as we continue to develop new products, applications, and technologies. Most of our new products and products currently under development are generating stable gross margins as a percentage of revenue year over year. Our mature products also generate stable gross margins due to the markets that they serve. Whether we can achieve cash flow levels sufficient to support our operations cannot be accurately predicted, and our investment portfolio is subject to a degree of interest rate and liquidity risk. Unless such cash flow levels are achieved, in addition to the proceeds that we received during Fiscal 2024 from the sale of our equity securities, and the credit line we may be able to draw down from Heritage Bank of Commerce, we may need to obtain additional funds through strategic divestiture, or sell debt or equity securities, or some combination thereof, to provide funding for our operations. Such additional funding may not be available on commercially reasonable terms, or at all.
If we are unable to generate sufficient sales from our new products or adequate funds are not available when needed, our liquidity, financial condition, and operating results would be materially and adversely affected, and we may not be able to operate our business without significant changes in our operations, or at all.
Our future operating results are likely to fluctuate and therefore, may fail to meet expectations, which could materially adversely affect our business, results of operations, and financial condition.
Our operating results have varied widely in the past and are likely to do so in the future. In addition, our past operating results may not be an indicator of future operating results.
Factors that could cause our operating results to fluctuate include, without limitation: (i) successful development and market acceptance of our products and solutions; (ii) our ability to accurately forecast product volumes and mix, and to respond to rapid changes in customer demand; (iii) changes in sales volume or expected sales volume, product mix, average selling prices, or production variances that affect gross profit; (iv) the effect of end-of-life programs; (v) a significant change in sales to, or the collectability of accounts receivable from, our largest customers; (vi) our ability to adjust our product features, manufacturing capacity and costs in response to economic and competitive pressures; (vii) our reliance on subcontract manufacturers for product capacity, yield and quality; (viii) our competitors’ product portfolio and product pricing policies; (ix) timely implementation of efficient manufacturing technologies; (x) errors in applying or changes in accounting and corporate governance rules; (xi) the issuance of equity compensation awards or changes in the terms of our stock plan or employee stock purchase plan; (xii) mergers or acquisitions; (xiii) the impact of import and export laws and regulations; (xiv) the cyclical nature of the semiconductor industry and general economic, market, political, and social conditions in the countries where we sell our products and the related effect on our customers, distributors, and suppliers; and (xv) our ability to obtain capital, debt financing, and insurance on commercially reasonable terms, and (xvi) allocations between our operating expenses and cost of sales. Although certain of these factors are out of our immediate control, unless we can anticipate and be prepared with contingency plans that respond to these factors, our business, results of operations, and financial condition could be materially adversely affected, which could cause our stock price to significantly fluctuate or decline.
We may also encounter periods of industry-wide semiconductor oversupply, resulting in pricing pressure, as well as undersupply, resulting in a risk that we could be unable to fulfill our customers' requirements. The semiconductor industry has historically been characterized by wide fluctuations in the demand for, and supply of, its products. These fluctuations have resulted in circumstances when supply of and demand for semiconductors has been widely out of balance. An industry-wide semiconductor oversupply could result in severe downward pricing pressure from customers. In a market with an undersupply of manufacturing capacity, we would have to compete with larger foundry and assembly customers for limited manufacturing resources. In such an environment, we may be unable to have our products manufactured in a timely manner, at a cost that generates adequate gross profit or in sufficient quantities. Since we outsource all of our manufacturing and generally have a single source of wafer supply, test, assembly, and programming for our products, we are particularly vulnerable to such supply shortages and capacity limitations. As a result, we may be unable to fulfill orders and may lose customers. Any future industry-wide oversupply or undersupply of semiconductors could therefore, have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition.
Our margins vary.
Our profit margins vary due to a number of factors, which may include customer demand and shipment volume; capital expenditures and resulting depreciation; our manufacturing processes; product mix; inventory levels; tariffs; freight costs; and new accounting pronouncements or changes in existing accounting practices or standards. In addition, we operate in a highly competitive market environment that might adversely affect pricing for our products.
Cyberattacks, like our January 2023 cybersecurity incident that was previously disclosed, can lead to disruption of business, reduced revenue, increased costs, liability claims, or harm to our reputation or competitive position.
As demonstrated by our January 2023 cybersecurity incident that was previously disclosed, security vulnerabilities may arise from our hardware, software, employees, contractors, or policies we have deployed, and which may result in external parties gaining access to our networks, data centers, cloud data centers, corporate computers, manufacturing systems, and/or access to accounts we have at our suppliers, vendors, and customers. Due to the actions of outside parties, employee error, malfeasance, or otherwise, an unauthorized party may gain access to our data or our users’ or customers’ data, attack the networks causing denial of service, or attempt to hold our data or systems in ransom. The vulnerability could be caused by inadequate account security practices such as failure to timely remove employee access when terminated. To mitigate these security issues, we have implemented measures throughout our organization, including firewalls, backups, encryption, employee information technology policies, and user account policies. However, there can be no assurance these measures will be sufficient to avoid cyberattacks. If any of these types of security breaches were to occur and we were unable to protect sensitive data, our relationships with our business partners and customers could be materially damaged, our reputation could be materially harmed, and we could be exposed to a risk of litigation and possible significant liability.
As previously disclosed, we detected a ransomware infection on January 20, 2023 affecting a limited number of IT systems, including systems that contained personal information of our employees. While we took steps to resolve this issue and believe the incident has not had nor will have a material impact on our business, operations, ability to serve our customers, or financial results, similar cybersecurity incidents could occur in the future.
Further, if we fail to adequately maintain our infrastructure, we may have outages and data loss. Excessive outages may affect our ability to timely and efficiently deliver products to customers or develop new products and solutions. Such disruptions and data loss may adversely impact our ability to fulfill orders, patent our intellectual property or protect our source code, and interrupt other processes. Delayed sales or lost customers resulting from these disruptions could adversely affect our financial results, stock price, and reputation.
Effective May 25, 2018, the European Union ("EU") implemented the General Data Protection Regulation (“GDPR”) a broad data protection framework that expands the scope of current EU data protection law to non-European Union entities that process, or control the processing of, the personal information of EU subjects. The State of California enacted the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 (“CCPA”) effective on January 1, 2020, which contains requirements similar to GDPR for the handling of personal information of California residents, commencing on January 1, 2020. Further, the California Privacy Rights Act (“CPRA”), which was voted into law by California residents in 2020, became enforceable on July 1, 2023 and amends the CCPA, imposes additional data protection obligations on covered companies doing business in California and creates a new California data protection agency specifically tasked to enforce the law, which will likely result in increased regulatory scrutiny of California businesses in the areas of data protection and security. Privacy and security laws, self-regulatory schemes, regulations, standards, and other obligations are constantly evolving, and may conflict with each other, and any such laws, schemes, regulations and standards may have an adverse impact on our business if we are not able to comply or if compliance requires time and resources for implementation.
Our company's, collaborators’, and contractors’ failure to fully comply with GDPR, CCPA and other laws could lead to significant fines and require onerous corrective action. In addition, data security breaches experienced by us or our collaborators or contractors could result in the loss of trade secrets or other intellectual property, public disclosure of sensitive commercial data, and the exposure of personally identifiable information (including sensitive personal information) of our employees, customers, collaborators, and others.
Unauthorized use or disclosure of, or access to, any personal information maintained by us or on our behalf, whether through breach of our systems, breach of the systems of our suppliers or vendors by an unauthorized party, or through employee or contractor error, theft or misuse, or otherwise, could harm our business. If any such unauthorized use or disclosure of, or access to, such personal information was to occur, our operations could be seriously disrupted, and we could be subject to demands, claims, and litigation by private parties, and investigations, related actions, and penalties by regulatory authorities. In addition, we could incur significant costs in notifying affected persons and entities and otherwise complying with the multitude of foreign, federal, state, and local laws and regulations relating to the unauthorized access to, or use or disclosure of, personal information. Finally, any perceived or actual unauthorized access to, or use or disclosure of, such information could harm our reputation, substantially impair our ability to attract and retain customers, and have an adverse impact on our business, financial condition, and results of operations.
We may be unable to adequately protect our intellectual property rights and may face significant expenses as a result of future litigation.
Protection of intellectual property rights is crucial to our business, since that is how we keep others from copying our innovations and those of third parties that are central to our existing and future products. From time to time, we receive letters alleging patent infringement or inviting us to license other parties’ patents. We evaluate these requests on a case-by-case basis. These situations may lead to litigation if we reject the offer to obtain the license.
In the past, we have been involved in litigation relating to our alleged infringement of third-party patents or other intellectual property rights. This type of litigation is expensive and consumes large amounts of management time and attention.
Because it is critical to our success that we continue to prevent competitors from copying our innovations, we intend to continue to seek patent and trade secret protection for our products. The process of seeking patent protection can be long and expensive, and we cannot be certain that any currently pending or future applications will actually result in issued patents or that, even if patents are issued, they will be of sufficient scope or strength to provide meaningful protection or any commercial advantage to us. Furthermore, others may develop technologies that are similar or superior to our technology or design around the patents we own. We also rely on trade secret protection for our technology, in part through confidentiality agreements with our employees, consultants, and other third parties. However, these parties may breach these agreements and we may not have adequate remedies for any breach. In any case, others may come to know about or determine our trade secrets through a variety of methods. In addition, the laws of certain territories in which we develop, manufacture, or sell our products may not protect our intellectual property rights to the same extent as the laws of the United States.
We may be unable to successfully grow our business if we fail to compete effectively with others to attract and retain our executive officers, and other key management or technical personnel.
We believe our future success depends upon our ability to attract and retain highly competent personnel. Our employees are at-will and not subject to employment contracts. We could potentially lose the services of any of our senior management personnel at any time due to a variety of factors that could include, without limitation, death, incapacity, military service, personal issues, retirement, resignation, or competing employers. Our ability to execute current plans could be adversely affected by such a loss. We may fail to attract and retain qualified technical, sales, marketing, and managerial personnel required to continue to operate our business successfully. Personnel with the expertise necessary for our business are scarce and competition for personnel with proper skills is intense.
In addition, new hires frequently require extensive training before they achieve desired levels of productivity. Additionally, attrition in personnel can result from, among other things, changes related to acquisitions, retirement, and disability. We may not be able to retain existing key technical, sales, marketing, and managerial employees or be successful in attracting, developing, or retaining other highly qualified technical, sales, marketing, and managerial personnel, particularly at such times in the future as we may need to fill a key position. If we are unable to continue to develop and retain existing executive officers or other key employees or are unsuccessful in attracting new highly qualified employees, our financial condition, cash flows, and results of operations could be materially and adversely affected.
There may be some effects of system outages or data security breaches, which could adversely affect our operations, financial results, or reputation.
We face risks from electrical or telecommunications outages, computer hacking, or other general system failures. We rely heavily on our internal information and communications systems and on systems or support services from third parties to manage our operations efficiently and effectively. Any of these are subject to failure. System-wide or local failures that affect our information processing could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations, and cash flows. Further, insurance coverage does not generally protect from normal wear and tear, which can affect system performance. Any applicable insurance coverage for an occurrence could prove to be inadequate. Coverage may be or become unavailable or inapplicable to any risks then prevalent.
Our company’s global operations are subject to risks and uncertainties.
Many of our products are manufactured outside of the United States at manufacturing facilities operated by our suppliers in Asia and South Asia. In addition, most of our domestic customers sell their products outside of North America, thereby indirectly exposing us to risks associated with foreign commerce and economic instability. We continue to maintain overseas sales offices.
International operations are subject to certain risks inherent in conducting business outside the U.S., such as changes in currency exchange rates, tax laws, price and currency exchange controls, export and import restrictions, environmental regulations, protection of intellectual property rights, nationalization, expropriation, and other governmental action. Accordingly, our operations and revenue are subject to a number of risks associated with foreign commerce, including the following: (i) staffing and managing foreign offices; (ii) managing foreign distributors; (iii) collecting amounts due; (iv) political and economic instability; (v) foreign currency exchange fluctuations; (vi) changes in tax laws, import and export regulations, tariffs and freight rates; (vii) timing and availability of export licenses; (viii) supplying products that meet local environmental regulations; and (ix) inadequate protection of intellectual property rights. In addition, we incur costs in foreign countries that may be difficult to reduce quickly because of employee-related laws and practices in those foreign countries. Our global operations also may be adversely affected by political events and domestic or international terrorist events and hostilities. Current events, including the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, the Russia-Ukraine military conflict, rising tensions with Taiwan, potential disruption caused by pandemics, and potential changes in tariffs, trade restrictions, immigration policies, and tax reform proposals, create a level of uncertainty for multi-national companies. As U.S. companies continue to expand globally, increased complexity exists due to the possibility of renegotiated trade deals, revised international tax law treaties, and changes to the U.S. corporate tax code. These uncertainties could have a material adverse effect on our business and our results of operations and financial condition. As we continue to expand our business globally, our success will depend, in part, on our ability to anticipate and effectively manage these and other risks.
We may not be able to achieve the anticipated synergies and benefits from business acquisitions.
We continue to seek acquisitions of businesses that we believe can complement our current business activities, both financially and strategically. Acquisitions, involve many complexities, including, but not limited to, risks associated with the acquired business’ past activities, difficulties in integrating personnel and human resource programs, integrating technology systems and other infrastructures under our control, unanticipated expenses and liabilities, and the impact on our internal controls and compliance with the regulatory requirements under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. There is no guarantee that our acquisitions will increase the profitability and cash flow of the Company, and our efforts could cause unforeseen complexities and additional cash outflows, including financial losses. As a result, the realization of anticipated synergies or benefits from acquisitions may be delayed or substantially reduced.
Litigation could adversely impact our consolidated financial position.
We have been and may be in the future involved in various litigation matters arising in the ordinary course of business, including, but not limited to, litigation relating to employment matters, commercial transactions, intellectual property matters, contracts, environmental matters, and matters related to compliance with governmental regulations. Litigation is inherently uncertain and unpredictable. The potential risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, such factors as the costs and expenses of litigation and the time and attention required of management to attend to litigation. An unfavorable resolution of any particular legal claim or proceeding, and/or the costs and expenses incurred in connection with a legal claim or proceeding, could have a material and adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition.
If a financial institution holding our funds fails, we may not be able to pay our operational expenses or make other payments, which could adversely impact our liquidity and financial performance. Deterioration of financial markets may result in our inability to borrow on favorable terms, which could adversely impact our ability to pursue our growth and other strategic initiatives.
Actual events involving limited liquidity, defaults, non-performance, or other adverse developments that affect financial institutions or other companies in the financial services industry or the financial services industry generally, or concerns or rumors about any events of these kinds, have in the past (such as with the March 2023 failures of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank, and Silvergate Capital Corp.) and may in the future lead to market-wide liquidity problems. We regularly maintain cash balances at financial institutions in amounts exceeding the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insurance limit. If a financial institution in which we hold such funds fails, or is subject to significant adverse conditions in the financial or credit markets, we could lose all or a portion of our uninsured funds, or be subject to a delay in accessing all or a portion of our funds. If we are unable to access all or a significant portion of our funds for any extended period of time, we may not be able to pay our operational expenses or make other payments, including to our vendors and employees, and we may be subject to other operational challenges, any of which could adversely impact our liquidity and financial performance. If any parties with whom we conduct business are unable to access funds, such parties’ ability to pay their obligations to us or to enter into new commercial arrangements requiring additional payments to us could be adversely affected.
In addition, investor concerns regarding the U.S. or international financial systems could result in less favorable commercial financing terms, including higher interest rates or costs and tighter financial and operating covenants, or systemic limitations on access to credit and liquidity sources, thereby, making it more difficult for us to acquire financing on acceptable terms or at all. Any material declines in available funding or our ability to access our cash, cash equivalents, and liquidity resources could adversely impact our ability to meet our operating expenses, financial and contractual obligations, or result in breaches of our contractual obligations or result in violations of federal or state wage and hour laws. Any of these impacts could have material adverse impacts on our operations and liquidity.
Our business is subject to political, economic, and health risks, natural disasters, and other catastrophic events, which could have a material adverse effect on our business operations.
Our operations and the operations of our suppliers are vulnerable to interruption by fire, earthquake, power loss, flood, terrorist acts, and other catastrophic events beyond our control. In particular, our headquarters are located near earthquake fault lines in the San Francisco Bay Area. In addition, we rely on certain suppliers to manufacture our products and would not be able to qualify an alternate supplier of our products for several quarters. Our suppliers often hold significant quantities of our inventories, which, in the event of a disaster, could be destroyed. If there is an earthquake or other catastrophic event near our headquarters, our customers’ facilities, our distributors' facilities, or our suppliers’ facilities, our business could be seriously harmed.
In addition, any catastrophic event, the failure of our computer systems or networks, including due to computer viruses, security breaches, war, or acts of terrorism, could significantly disrupt our operations. Specifically, any prolonged health threat globally could adversely affect the economies and financial markets of many countries, resulting in an economic downturn that could impact our operating results. The occurrence of any of these events could also affect our customers, distributors, and suppliers and produce similar disruptive effects upon their business, which would likely impact our sales and cause a decline in our revenue.
We do not maintain sufficient business interruption and other insurance policies to compensate us for all losses that may occur. Any losses or damages incurred by us as a result of a catastrophic event or any other significant uninsured loss could have a material adverse effect on our business.
Our insurance may not adequately cover certain risks and, as a result, our financial condition and results may be adversely affected.
We carry insurance customary for companies in our industry, including, but not limited to, liability, property, and casualty; workers' compensation; cyber liability; and business interruption insurance. We also insure our employees for basic medical expenses. In addition, we have insurance contracts that provide director and officer liability coverage for our directors and officers. Other than the specific areas mentioned above, we are self-insured with respect to most other risks and exposures, and the insurance we carry in many cases is subject to a significant policy deductible or other limitation before coverage applies. Based on management's assessment and judgment, we have determined that it is more cost effective to self-insure against certain risks than to incur the insurance premium costs. The risks and exposures for which we self-insure include, but are not limited to, certain natural disasters, certain product defects, certain matters for which we indemnify third parties, political risk, certain theft, patent infringement, and employment practice matters. Should there be a catastrophic loss due to an uninsured event (such as an earthquake) or a loss due to adverse occurrences in any area in which we are self-insured, our financial condition or operating results could be adversely affected.
Pandemics or other widespread public health problems could adversely affect our business, results of operations, and financial condition in a material way.
Pandemics, epidemics, or other widespread public health problems, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, could negatively impact our business. Outbreaks have, and could again, result in significant government measures to control the spread of disease, including, among others, restrictions on travel, manufacturing, and the movement of employees. If, for example, pandemics were to occur in ways that significantly disrupt the manufacture, shipment, and purchasing of our products or the products of our customers, this may materially negatively impact our operating results and our overall business. Disruptions to manufacturing and shipping could also constrain our supplies, leading to operational delays, disruptions, and inflationary pressures.
The ultimate impact of a pandemic and its potential effects on our business depends on many factors that are not within our control. This could lead to further disruptions or restrictions on our ability to source, manufacture, or distribute our products, including temporary disruptions to the facilities of our contract manufacturers in China, Taiwan, the Philippines, and Singapore, or the facilities of our suppliers and their contract manufacturers globally. Additionally, multiple countries have imposed and may further impose restrictions on business operations and movement of people and products to limit the spread of a pandemic. Delays in production or delivery of components or raw materials that are part of our global supply chain due to restrictions imposed to limit the spread of a pandemic could delay or inhibit our ability to obtain the supply of components and finished goods. If the impact of a pandemic becomes more severe in the locations where we, our customers, or suppliers conduct business, or we experience more pronounced disruptions in our operations, we may experience constrained supply or curtailed demand that may materially adversely impact our business, cash flows, and results of operations.
Changes to existing accounting pronouncements or taxation rules or practices may cause adverse income fluctuations or affect our reported financial results or how we conduct our business.
Generally accepted accounting principles in the United States (“GAAP”) are promulgated by and are subject to the interpretation of the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) and the SEC. New accounting pronouncements or taxation rules and varying interpretations of accounting pronouncements or taxation practices have occurred and may occur in the future. Any future changes in accounting pronouncements or taxation rules or practices may have a significant effect on how we report our results and may even affect our reporting of transactions completed before the change is effective. In addition, a review of existing or prior accounting practices may result in a change in previously reported amounts. This change to existing rules, future changes, if any, or the questioning of current practices may adversely affect our reported financial results, our ability to remain listed on the Nasdaq Capital Market, or the way we conduct our business and subject us to regulatory inquiries or litigation.
We may have increased difficulty attracting and retaining qualified, outside board members.
The directors and management of publicly traded corporations are increasingly concerned with the extent of their personal exposure to lawsuits and shareholder claims, as well as governmental and creditor claims that may be made against them in connection with their positions with publicly held companies. Outside directors are becoming increasingly concerned with the availability of directors’ and officers’ liability insurance to pay on a timely basis the costs incurred in defending shareholder claims. Directors’ and officers’ liability insurance is expensive and difficult to obtain. The SEC and the Nasdaq Capital Market have also imposed higher independence standards and certain special requirements on directors of public companies. Accordingly, it may become increasingly difficult to attract and retain qualified outside directors to serve on our board of directors.
Risks Related to Our Common Stock
We may be unable to accurately estimate quarterly revenue, which could adversely affect the trading price of our stock.
Due to our relatively long product delivery cycle and the inability of our customers in the rapidly evolving end markets to confirm product requirements on a timely basis, we may have low visibility to product demand or estimated revenue in any given quarter. If our customers cannot provide us with accurate delivery lead times, we may not be able to deliver products to our customers in a timely fashion. Furthermore, our ability to respond to increased demand is limited to inventories on hand or on order, the capacity available at our contract manufacturers, and our capacity to program products to customer specifications. If we fail to accurately estimate customer demand, or if our available capacity is less than needed to meet customer demand, we may not be able to accurately estimate our quarterly revenue, which may have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition, and our stock price could materially fluctuate as a result.
If we do not maintain compliance with the listing requirements of the Nasdaq Capital Market, our common stock could be delisted, which could, among other things, reduce the price of our common stock and the levels of liquidity available to our stockholders.
Our common stock is listed on the Nasdaq Capital Market (“Nasdaq”). In order to maintain that listing, we must satisfy minimum financial and other continued listing requirements and standards, including those regarding director independence and independent committee requirements, minimum stockholders' equity, minimum share price, and certain corporate governance requirements.
There can be no assurances that we will be able to maintain compliance with the applicable listing standards of Nasdaq. In the event that our common stock is delisted from Nasdaq and is not eligible for quotation on another market or exchange, trading of our common stock could be conducted in the over-the-counter market or on an electronic bulletin board established for unlisted securities, such as the Pink Sheets or the OTC Markets. In such event, it could become more difficult to dispose of, or obtain accurate price quotations for, our common stock, and there would likely also be a reduction in our coverage by securities analysts and the news media, which could cause the price of our common stock to decline further. Also, it may be difficult for us to raise additional capital if we are not listed on a major exchange.
The market price of our common stock may fluctuate significantly and could lead to securities litigation.
Stock prices for many companies in the technology and emerging growth sectors have experienced wide fluctuations that have often been unrelated to the operating performance of such companies. In the past, securities class action litigation has often been brought against companies following periods of volatility in the market price of their securities. In the future, we may be the subject of similar litigation. Securities litigation could result in substantial costs and divert management’s attention.
Our certificate of incorporation, our bylaws, and Delaware law contain provisions that could discourage a takeover that is beneficial to stockholders.
Provisions of our certificate of incorporation, our bylaws, and Delaware law could have the effect of discouraging takeover attempts that certain stockholders might deem to be in their interest. These anti-takeover provisions may make us a less attractive target for a takeover bid or merger, potentially depriving shareholders of an opportunity to sell their shares of common stock at a premium over prevailing market prices as a result of a takeover bid or merger.
If, in the future, we conclude our internal control over financial reporting is not effective, investors could lose confidence in the reliability of our financial statements, which could result in a decrease in the value of our common stock.
As directed by Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, the SEC adopted rules requiring public companies to include a report of management on the companies’ internal control over financial reporting in their annual reports on Form 10-K, including an assessment by management of the effectiveness of the filing company’s internal control over financial reporting. In addition, the independent registered public accounting firm auditing a public company’s financial statements must attest to the effectiveness of the company’s internal control over financial reporting. There is a risk that in the future, we may identify internal control deficiencies that suggest that our controls are no longer effective. This could result in an adverse reaction in the financial markets due to a loss of confidence in the reliability of our financial statements, which could cause the market price of our common stock to decline and make it more difficult for us to finance our operations.
Risks Related to Our Industry and Global and Economic Conditions
The semiconductor industry is highly competitive, and has experienced significant consolidation, and if we are unable to compete effectively or identify attractive opportunities for consolidation, it could materially adversely affect our business and results of operations.
Our ability to compete successfully in the highly competitive semiconductor industry depends on elements both within and outside of our control. We face significant competition within each of our product lines from major global semiconductor companies, as well as smaller companies focused on specific market niches. In addition, companies not currently in direct competition with us may introduce competing products in the future.
If we are unable to compete effectively, our competitive position could be weakened relative to our peers, which would have a material adverse effect on our business and results of operations. Our future success depends on many factors, including the development of new technologies and effective commercialization and customer acceptance of our products and our ability to increase our position in our current markets, expand into adjacent and new markets, and optimize operational performance. Products or technologies developed by competitors may render our products or technologies obsolete or noncompetitive. We also may be unable to market and sell our products if they are not competitive on the basis of price, quality, technical performance, features, system compatibility, customized design, innovation, availability, delivery timing, and reliability. If we fail to compete effectively on developing strategic relationships with customers and customer sales and technical support, our sales and revenue may be materially adversely affected.
The semiconductor industry has experienced, and may continue to experience, significant consolidation among companies and vertical integration among customers. Larger competitors resulting from consolidations may have certain advantages over us, and we may be at a competitive disadvantage if we fail to identify attractive opportunities to acquire companies to expand our business. Consolidation among competitors and integration among customers could erode our market share, impair our capacity to compete, and require us to restructure operations, any of which could have a material adverse effect on our business.
In addition, some of our competitors may receive governmental subsidies or other incentives that give them a competitive advantage over us. For example, the U.S. and the European Union have enacted legislation to provide funding and incentives for semiconductor research, development, and manufacturing in their respective regions. If we are unable to access such funding or incentives, or if our competitors receive more funding or incentives than we do, we may be at a disadvantage in developing and producing new or improved products or technologies, which could adversely affect our market share, revenue, and profitability.
The semiconductor business is subject to downward price pressure.
Historically, the market for our products has been characterized by declining selling prices. With the recent supply chain shortages and materials price increases, we anticipate that our average selling prices will fluctuate in future periods, although the timing and amount of these fluctuations cannot be predicted with any certainty. The pricing pressure in the semiconductor industry in past years has been due to a large number of factors, many of which were not easily foreseeable, such as industry-wide excess manufacturing capacity, weak economic growth, and at times, the slowdown in capital spending. Similar to past years, recent unfavorable economic conditions have resulted in a tightening of the credit markets. If signs of improvement in the global economy do not progress as expected and global economic conditions worsen, we may experience a decline in our average selling prices. In addition, our competitors have in the past, and may again in the future, lower prices in order to increase their market share. Despite the recent industry-wide price increases being implemented, prices may reduce in the future as the supply chain becomes more normalized again. In that event, downward price pressure in the industry may harm our competitive position and materially and adversely affect our financial condition, cash flows, and results of operations.
Global supply chain constraints have not had a material impact on our business. While we have experienced some volatilities with input material costs and supplier costs in accordance with domestic and global economic conditions, none of these have had a material impact to our business during our Fiscal 2024 year. We do not expect material increases in costs over the next twelve months. However, we expect to be subject to continued, broader-based inflationary, labor, and supplier cost increases in alignment with domestic and global economic conditions. We expect any increases in costs to be dilutive to our gross profit and we may be limited in our ability to offset any increased costs with price increases to customers. This may have a negative impact on our results from operations and cash flows.
Both we and our customers are subject to laws, regulations, and similar requirements, changes to which may adversely affect our business, results of operations, and financial condition.
Both we and our customers are subject to laws, regulations, and similar requirements that affect our business, results of operations, and financial condition, including, but not limited to, the areas of commerce, import and export control, financial disclosures, intellectual property, income and other taxes, anti-trust, anti-corruption, labor, environmental, health, and safety. Our compliance in these areas may be costly, especially in areas where there are inconsistencies between the various jurisdictions in which we operate. While we have implemented policies and procedures to comply with laws and regulations, there can be no assurance that our employees, contractors, suppliers, or agents will not violate such laws and regulations or our policies. Any such violation or alleged violation could materially and adversely affect our business, financial condition, cash flows, and results of operations. Any changes or potential changes to laws, regulations, or similar requirements, or our ability to respond to these changes, may significantly increase our costs to maintain compliance or result in our decision to limit our business, products, or jurisdictions in which we operate, any of which could materially and adversely affect our results of operations and financial condition. Federal and state regulatory agencies, including the United States Federal Communications Commission and the various state public utility commissions and public service commissions, regulate most of our domestic telecommunications customers. Similar government oversight also exists in the international market. While we may not be directly affected by this legislation, such regulation of our customers may negatively impact our business. For instance, the sale of our products may be affected by the imposition upon certain of our customers of common carrier tariffs and the taxation of telecommunications services. These regulations are continuously reviewed and changed by the various governmental agencies. Changes in current or future laws or regulations, in the United States or elsewhere, could materially and adversely affect our results of operations and financial condition.
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act includes provisions regarding certain minerals and metals, known as conflict minerals, mined from the Democratic Republic of Congo and adjoining countries. These provisions require companies to undertake due diligence procedures and report on the use of conflict minerals in their products, including products manufactured by third parties. Compliance with these provisions has caused and will continue to cause us to incur costs to determine whether our supply chain is conflict-free, and we may face difficulties if our suppliers are unwilling or unable to verify the source of their materials. Our ability to source these minerals and metals may also be adversely impacted. In addition, our customers may require that we provide them with a certification and our inability to do so may disqualify us as a supplier.
Risks Related to Our Products
If we fail to successfully develop, introduce, and sell new products and other new solutions or if our design opportunities do not generate the revenue we expect, we may be unable to compete effectively in the future and our future gross margins and operating results will be lower.
The market for differentiated IP and semiconductor products is highly competitive and dynamic. To compete successfully, we must obtain access to advanced fabrication capacity and dedicate significant resources to specify, design, develop, manufacture, and sell new or enhanced solutions that provide increasingly higher levels of performance, low power consumption, new features meeting current and emerging industry standards, reliability, and/or cost savings to our customers. Our revenue is subject to fluctuation in a short period of time and our ability to grow our business depends on accelerating our design win activity. We often make significant investments in eFPGA IP development, software and silicon platform development, selling, and marketing, long before we generate revenue, if any, from our efforts. Some of the markets we are targeting typically have higher volumes and greater price pressure than our traditional business. In addition, we quote opportunities in anticipation of future cost reductions and may aggressively price products to gain market share. In order to react quickly to opportunities or to obtain favorable wafer prices, we make significant investments in and commitments to purchase inventories and capital equipment before we have firm commitments from customers.
We expect our business growth to be driven by new products, which currently include our eFPGA IP licenses and professional services, EOS™, QuickAI™, SensiML Analytics Toolkit, ArcticLink® III, PolarPro®3, PolarPro II, PolarPro, and Eclipse II products. The new product revenues growth of our new products needs to be strong enough to achieve profitability. The gross margin associated with our eFPGA IP is generally higher than the gross margin of our devices. Within our device revenue, gross margins of mature products, as well as new products sold to Aerospace and Defense customers, are generally higher than when selling the same products to higher volume IoT and/or Consumer customers. While we expect revenue and gross profit growth from new products will offset the expected decline in revenue and gross profit from our mature products, there is no assurance whether or when this will occur. In order to increase our revenue from its current level, we depend upon increased revenue from our existing new products, especially solutions based on our eFPGA IP, EOS S3, ArcticLink and PolarPro solution platforms, and the development of additional new products and solutions.
If (i) we are unable to design, produce, and sell new products and other products and solutions that meet design specifications, address customer requirements, and generate sufficient revenue and gross profit; (ii) market demand for our new products and other products fails to materialize; (iii) we are unable to obtain adequate fabrication capacity on a timely basis; (iv) we are unable to develop new silicon platforms or solutions in a timely manner; or (v) our customers do not successfully introduce products incorporating our hardware products, or choose a competing offering, our revenue and gross margin of the new products will be materially harmed, which could have an overall adverse and potentially disproportionate effect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition.
If a market for our new products does not develop, or if our products do not meet customer needs, the loss of or reduction in orders could adversely affect our revenue and harm our business's financial condition, operating results and cash flows.
We have history and experience in developing, selling, and supporting FPGA products and incorporating FPGA IP developed by us into our platform solutions. The eFPGA market is a developing market with unknown requirements and demand. Our current FPGA architectures and their performance may not be a good fit for the eFPGA Market. eFPGA IP is designed for specific foundry/process node combinations, and the ones we have chosen to target may be different from what our customers require. The software developed by us for eFPGA may be delayed or may not meet the needs of the eFPGA Market. The support required by a customer to incorporate the eFPGA may be much higher than expected which may delay new engagements or lead to higher costs. The incorporated eFPGA IP may have an unexpected result in the customer’s chip leading to compensation demands. The expected NRE and royalty rates we expect to charge for the eFPGA may not be competitive, which may have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition.
If our AI products are not low touch, the cost of addressing the fragmented AI market will be high, which will delay market penetration, result in reduced revenues, or require increased expenses, any of which could adversely affect our revenue and harm our business financial condition, operating results, and cash flows.
The end-point AI market consists of many different use cases, with each individual use case having a modest volume even though the aggregate volume is large. This is quite different from the IoT consumer market, which consists of a few large customers and use cases. In order to scale in the fragmented AI end-point market, our products will have to be extremely low touch so that the cost of support is low and scalable across many customers. The current EOS S3AI solution and SensiML solutions may not be sufficiently low touch to address this market in a cost-effective manner, or in the volume required. Higher than expected costs, or lower than expected volume may have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition.
Our products are subject to a lengthy sales cycle and our customers may cancel or change their product plans after we have expended substantial time and resources on the design of their products.
Our customers often evaluate our products for six months or more before designing them into their systems, and they may not commence volume shipments for up to an additional six to twelve months, if at all. During this lengthy sales cycle, our potential customers may cancel or change their product plans. Customers may also discontinue products incorporating our hardware products at any time or they may choose to replace our products with lower-cost semiconductors. In addition, we are working with leading customers in our target markets to define our future products. If customers cancel, reduce, or delay product orders from us, or choose not to release products that incorporate our hardware products after we have spent substantial time and resources developing products or assisting customers with their product design, our revenue levels may be less than anticipated and our business, results of operations, and financial condition may be materially adversely affected.
If we fail to adequately forecast demand for our products, we may incur product shortages or excess product inventories.
Our agreements with certain suppliers require us to provide forecasts of our anticipated manufacturing orders and place binding manufacturing commitments in advance of receiving purchase orders from our customers. We are limited in our ability to increase or decrease our forecasts under such agreements. Other manufacturers supply us with products on a purchase order basis. The allocation of capacity is determined solely by our suppliers, over which we have no direct control. Additionally, we may place orders with our suppliers in advance of customer orders to allow us to quickly respond to changing customer demand or to obtain favorable product costs. Furthermore, we provide our suppliers with equipment that is used to program our products to customer specifications. The programming equipment is manufactured to our specifications and has significant order lead times. These factors may result in product shortages or excess product inventories. Obtaining additional supply in the face of product, programming equipment, or capacity shortages may be costly, or not possible, especially in the short-term since most of our products and programming equipment are supplied by a single supplier. If we fail to adequately forecast demand for our products, our business, the relationship with our customers, and our results of operations and financial condition could be materially adversely affected.
Our business could be adversely affected by undetected errors or defects in our products.
Difficulties encountered during the complex semiconductor manufacturing process can render a substantial percentage of semiconductor hardware products nonfunctional. New manufacturing techniques or fluctuations in the manufacturing process may change the performance, distribution, and yield of our products. We have, in the past, experienced manufacturing runs that have contained substantially reduced or no functioning hardware products, or that generated hardware products with below-normal performance characteristics. Our reliance on third-party suppliers may extend the period of time required to analyze and correct these problems. Once corrected, our customers may be required to redesign or re-qualify their products. As a result, we may incur substantially higher manufacturing costs, shortages of inventories, or reduced customer demand.
Yield fluctuations frequently occur in connection with the manufacture of newly introduced products, with changes in product architecture, and with manufacturing at new facilities, on new fabrication processes, or in conjunction with new back-end manufacturing processes. Newly introduced solutions and products are often more complex and more difficult to produce, increasing the risk of manufacturing-related defects. New manufacturing facilities or processes are often more complex and take a period of time to achieve the expected quality levels and manufacturing efficiencies. While we test our products, including our software development tools, they may still contain errors or defects that are found after we have commenced commercial production. Undetected errors or defects may also result from new manufacturing processes or when new intellectual property is incorporated into our products. If our products or software development tools contain undetected or unresolved defects, we may lose market share, experience delays in or loss of market acceptance, reserve or scrap inventories, or be required to issue a product recall. In addition, we would be at risk of product liability litigation if defects in our products were discovered. Although we attempt to limit our liability to end users through disclaimers of special, consequential, and indirect damages and similar provisions, we cannot provide assurance that such limitations of liability will be legally enforceable.
We will be unable to compete effectively if we fail to anticipate product opportunities based upon emerging technologies and standards or fail to develop products and solutions that incorporate these technologies and standards in a timely manner.
We spend significant resources designing and developing silicon solution platforms, IP, and software and reference designs and adopting emerging technologies. We intend to develop additional products and solutions and to adopt new technologies in the future. If system manufacturers adopt alternative standards or technologies, if an industry standard or emerging technology that we have targeted fails to achieve broad market acceptance, if customers choose low-power offerings from our competitors, or if we are unable to bring the technologies or solutions to market in a timely and cost-effective manner, we may be unable to generate significant revenue from our research and development efforts. As a result, our business, results of operations, and financial condition could be materially adversely affected and we may be required to write off related inventories and long-lived assets.
Rising concern of potential export restrictions could materially and adversely affect our business and results of operations.
If U.S. export controls expand to place new restrictions on the exportation of our products or a subset of our products, such controls could have a material adverse effect on our operating results. Moreover, concerns that U.S. companies may not be reliable suppliers may, in the future, cause some of our customers to replace our products in favor of products from other suppliers.
Further, changes in United States trade policy could trigger retaliatory actions by affected countries, which could impose restrictions on our ability to do business in or with affected countries or prohibit, reduce, or discourage purchases of our products by foreign customers, leading to increased costs of products that contain our components, increased costs of manufacturing our products, and higher prices of our products in foreign markets. Changes in, and responses to, United States trade policy could reduce the competitiveness of our products and cause our sales and revenues to drop, which could materially and adversely impact our business and results of operations.
Our business could suffer as a result of tariffs and trade sanctions or similar actions.
The imposition by the United States of tariffs, sanctions or other restrictions on goods exported from the United States or imported into the United States or countermeasures imposed in response to such government actions could adversely affect our operations or our ability to sell our products globally, which could adversely affect our operating results and financial condition. Beginning in 2018, the U.S. government imposed significant additional tariffs on many items imported from China, which have since been raised to between 7.5% and 100% on certain products. China responded by imposing significant tariffs on many items imported from the United States. Recently, U.S. government leaders have increased their frequency of discussion of the imposition of stronger tariffs, sanctions, and other restrictions on goods exported from the United States or imported into the United States, and non-U.S. government leaders have increased their discussion of countermeasures. For example, in February 2025, the United States imposed an additional 10% tariff on imports of Chinese-origin goods and steel and aluminum imports. China announced plans to impose retaliatory tariffs on certain U.S.-origin goods and implemented new trade controls restricting the export of tungsten, tellurium, bismuth, molybdenum, and indium. As the February 2025, U.S. executive order contains provisions allowing for further increases in the scope and amount of tariffs in the event of retaliatory countermeasures, and the future of existing tariffs, and the possibility for new tariffs, remains very uncertain. Such escalations in these trade measures may directly impair our business by increasing trade-related costs or disrupting established supply chains and may indirectly impair our business by causing a negative effect on global economic conditions and financial markets. The ultimate impact of these trade measures is uncertain and may be affected by various factors, including whether and when such trade measures are implemented, the timing when such measures may become effective, and the amount, scope, or nature of such trade measures.
Additional changes or threatened changes in U.S. trade measures have affected and may continue to affect trade involving additional countries as well, including Mexico, Canada, Colombia, Taiwan, the United Kingdom, and the member countries of the European Union. Each of these measures or threatened measures may instigate reciprocal countermeasures by affected countries, potentially accelerating further increases in trade measures. If the President were to impose significant new tariffs against the European Union, Taiwan, or any other country or countries, the macroeconomic effect of any such tariffs could be significant. The tariff threatened against Taiwan may specifically target imports of semiconductor products, which, if imposed, could seriously and negatively affect our business and the U.S. economy overall. The materials subject to these tariffs may impact the cost or availability of raw materials used by our suppliers or in our customers’ products. The imposition of further tariffs by the United States on a broader range of imports, or further retaliatory trade measures taken in response to additional tariffs, could increase costs in our supply chain or reduce demand of our customers’ products, either of which could adversely affect our results of operations. Any increase in trade-related costs associated with such measures may impair the profitability of such international production, may strain our suppliers’ ability to reliably provide inputs necessary to produce these items, and may otherwise affect our partners’ abilities to provide our products at previously contracted prices. Our business and financial results could be negatively affected as a result.
Exchange rate fluctuations could adversely affect our company’s results of operations and financial condition.
We denominate sales of our products to foreign countries exclusively in U.S. dollars. As a result, any increase in the value of the U.S. dollar relative to the local currency of a foreign country will increase the price of our products in that country so that our products become relatively more expensive to customers in their local currency, which may cause sales of our products in that foreign country to decline. If the local currency of a foreign country in which we conduct business strengthens against the U.S. dollar, our payroll and other local expenses will be higher, and since sales are transacted in U.S. dollars, would not be offset by any increase in revenue. To the extent any such risks materialize, our business, results of operations, and financial condition could be materially adversely affected.
We have implemented import and export control procedures to comply with United States regulations, but we are still exposed to potential risks from import and export activity.
Our products, solutions, technology, and software are subject to import and export control laws and regulations which, in some instances, may impose restrictions on business activities, or otherwise require licenses or other authorizations from agencies such as the U.S. Department of State, U.S. Department of Commerce, and U.S. Department of the Treasury. These restrictions may impact deliveries to customers or limit development and manufacturing alternatives. We have import and export licensing and compliance procedures in place for purposes of conducting our business consistent with U.S. and applicable international laws and regulations, and we periodically review these procedures to maintain compliance with the requirements relating to import and export regulations. If we are not able to remain in compliance with import and export regulations, we might be subject to investigation, sanctions, or penalties by regulatory authorities. Such penalties can include civil, criminal, or administrative remedies such as loss of export privileges. We cannot be certain as to the outcome of an evaluation, investigation, inquiry, or other action or the impact of these items on our operations. Any such action could adversely affect our financial results and the market price of our common stock.
Risks Related to Our Customers and Partners
We currently depend on a limited number of significant customers, for a significant portion of our revenue, and the loss of, or reduction in orders from, such significant customers could adversely affect our revenue and harm our business financial condition, operating results, and cash flows.
A small number of end-customers represented a significant portion of our total revenue in our Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024. During our Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024, one customer accounted for 54% of our total revenue. We expect this high level of customer concentration to decrease as we continue to market our solutions to additional Aerospace and Defense, Industrial, Computing, and Communications customers. As in the past, future demand from this customer may fluctuate significantly from quarter to quarter. Customers typically order products with short, requested delivery lead times, and do not provide a commitment to purchase products past the period covered by purchase orders, which may be rescheduled or canceled. In addition, our manufacturing lead times are longer than the delivery lead times requested by these customers, and we make significant purchases of inventory and capital expenditures in anticipation of future demand. If revenue from any significant customer were to decline substantially, we may be unable to offset this decline with increased revenue and gross margin from other customers and we may purchase excess inventories. These factors could have a material adverse impact on our business, results of operations, and financial condition.
We may make a significant investment in long-lived assets for the production of our products based upon historical and expected demand. If demand for our products or gross margin generated from our products does not meet our expectations or if we are unable to collect amounts due from significant customers, we may be required to write off inventories, provide for uncollectible accounts receivable, or incur charges against long-lived assets, which may have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition.
Our revenue from U.S. Government contracts depends on the continued availability of funding from the U.S. Government, and, accordingly, we have the risk that funding for our existing contracts may be canceled or diverted to other uses or delayed or that funding for new programs will not be available.
We perform work on a number of contracts with the U.S. Department of Defense and other agencies and departments of the U.S. Government including subcontracts with government prime contractors. Sales under contracts with the U.S. Government, including sales under contracts with the U.S. Department of Defense, as prime contractor or subcontractor, represented 54% of our total net sales in 2024. Performance under government contracts has inherent risks that could have a material effect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition.
Government contracts are conditioned upon the continuing availability of Congressional appropriations, and the failure of Congress to appropriate funds for programs in which we participate could negatively affect our results of operations. U.S. Government operation under a continuing resolution could impact the business by preventing new programs from starting as planned and by limiting funding on existing programs. U.S. Government shutdowns have may result in delays in anticipated contract awards and delayed payments of invoices and any new shutdown or increase in shutdowns could have similar or worse effects. Any renewed emphasis on Federal deficit and debt reduction could lead to a further decrease in overall defense spending. Budgetary concerns could result in future contracts being awarded more on price than on other competitive factors, and smaller defense budgets could result in government in-sourcing of programs and more intense competition on programs that are not in-sourced, which could result in lower revenues and profits.
The new Presidential administration has announced plans to significantly cut federal spending and the size of the federal government and has taken steps to reduce and reorganize the federal workforce at many agencies. It is unclear how such cuts, if implemented, could impact our current and future business with the U.S. government. If cuts to government personnel lead to staff shortages or disorganization at certain federal agencies, we may experience delays in obtaining contract awards or payments, the loss of current or future contracts, or delays in obtaining necessary permits, licenses or registrations.
Rising inflation and other factors also may result in a shift in U.S. defense spending between various programs based on priorities, which may result in a reduction or loss of expected revenues on programs in which we participate.
Changes in policy and budget priorities by the U.S. Presidential Administration could impact our business. It is also not uncommon for the U.S. Department of Defense to delay the timing of awards or change orders for major programs for six to twelve months. These delays by the U.S. Government could impact our revenues. Uncertainty over budgets or priorities with the U.S. Presidential Administration could result in further delays in funding and the timing of awards, and changes in funded programs that could have a material impact on our revenues.
We depend upon partnering with other companies to offer voice, motion, and other solutions into our platform.
In addition to working directly with our customers, we partner with other companies that are experts in certain technologies to create more complete solutions. The depth of these relationships varies depending on the partner and the dynamics of the end market being targeted, but these relationships are typically a co-marketing relationship that includes joint account calls, promotional activities, and/or engineering collaboration and developments. The propriety code provided by these partners may be an integral part of the solutions that we offer our customers. If we are unable to obtain competitive pricing (NRE, royalty) and prompt quality support from our partner, our solution may not be competitive. In addition, if the quality of our partner’s solution does not meet our customer’s requirements, it may delay or prevent the incorporation of our product by the customer. There may also be delays and additional expenses to improve or update the partner’s solution to meet current market needs. If we are unable to maintain a close working relationship with our partners, it would hinder our ability to continue to develop and introduce leading solutions effectively in the future, which may have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition.
We depend on our relationships with third parties to manufacture our new hardware products.
We depend upon GlobalFoundries, TSMC, SkyWater Technologies, Honeywell Aerospace, Amkor Technology, Inc., Integra Specialty Products, JCET Group Co. Ltd., and Golden Altos Corp. to manufacture our new hardware products. The inability of any one of these companies to continue manufacture of our new hardware products for any reason would require us to identify and qualify a new foundry to manufacture our new hardware products. This would be time-consuming, difficult, and result in unforeseen operational problems. Alternate foundries might not be available to fabricate our new hardware products, or if available, might be unwilling or unable to offer services on acceptable terms and our ability to operate our business or deliver our products to our customers could be severely impaired.
We depend upon third parties for silicon IP, RTL, design, physical design, verification and assembly of our silicon platforms and any failure to meet our requirements in a timely fashion may adversely affect our time to market and revenue.
Our move to a variable cost or outsourced engineering development model allows us access to the best design resources for developing new silicon platforms. This includes access to leading edge silicon IP, as well as RTL design and physical design expertise. However, outsourcing the design of a complex silicon platform typically involves multiple companies in multiple locations, which may increase the risk of costly design errors. Any delays or errors in the design of our new silicon platforms could significantly increase the cost of development, as well as adversely affect our time to market, which may have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition.
We depend upon partnering with other companies to develop IP, reference platforms, algorithms, and system software.
In addition to working directly with our customers, we partner with other companies that are experts in certain technologies to develop additional intellectual property, reference platforms, algorithms, and system software to provide application solutions. We also work with IoT processor manufacturers and companies that supply sensor, storage, networking or graphics components for embedded systems. The depth of these relationships varies depending on the partner and the dynamics of the end market being targeted but is typically a co-marketing relationship that includes joint account calls, promotional activities, and/or engineering collaboration and developments, such as reference designs. If we are unable to license new technologies or maintain a close working relationship with our partners, fail to continue to develop and introduce leading technologies, or if these technologies fail to generate the revenue we expect, we may not be able to compete effectively in the future, which may have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition.
We depend upon third parties to fabricate, assemble, test, and program our products, and to provide logistics services. Any problems with these third parties could adversely affect our business, results of operations, and financial condition.
We contract with third parties to fabricate, assemble, test, and program our hardware products, and vendors for logistics. In general, each of our hardware products is fabricated, assembled, and programmed by a single supplier, and the loss of a supplier, transfer of manufacturing to a new location, expiration of a supply agreement, or the inability of our suppliers to manufacture our products to meet volume, performance, quality, and cost targets could have a material adverse effect on our business. Our relationship with our suppliers could change as a result of a merger or acquisition. If for any reason these suppliers or any other vendor becomes unable or unwilling to continue to provide services of acceptable quality, at acceptable costs, and in a timely manner, our ability to operate our business or deliver our products to our customers could be severely impaired. We would have to identify and qualify substitute suppliers, which could be time-consuming, difficult, and result in unforeseen operational problems, or we could announce an end-of-life program for these products. Alternate suppliers might not be available to fabricate, assemble, test, and program our hardware products or, if available, might be unwilling or unable to offer services on acceptable terms. In addition, if competition for wafer manufacturing capacity increases, if we need to migrate to more advanced wafer manufacturing technology, or if competition for assembly services increases, we may be required to pay or invest significant amounts to secure access to this capacity. The number of companies that provide these services is limited and some of them have limited operating histories and financial resources. In the event our current suppliers refuse or are unable to continue to provide these services to us, or if we are unable to secure sufficient capacity from our current suppliers on commercially reasonable terms, we may be unable to procure services from alternate suppliers in a timely manner, if at all. Moreover, our reliance on a limited number of suppliers subjects us to reduced control over delivery schedules, quality assurance, and costs. This lack of control may cause unforeseen product shortages or may increase our costs to manufacture and test our products.
We utilize third-party logistics services, including transportation, warehouse, and shipping services. These service providers are subject to interruptions that affect their ability to service us, including the availability of transportation services, disruptions related to work stoppages, volatility in fuel prices, and security incidents or natural events at manufacturing, shipping, or receiving points, or along transportation routes.
In the event any of our third-party suppliers or vendors were to experience financial, operational, production, or quality assurance difficulties resulting in a reduction or interruption in supply or providing services to us, our business, results of operations, and financial condition may be materially adversely affected.
We entered into informal partnerships with certain third parties for the development of solutions. Our business could be adversely affected if such informal partnerships fail to grow as we expected.
Our approach to developing solutions for potential customers involves developing solutions for and aligning our roadmap with application processor, sensor, and flash memory vendors. We have entered into informal partnerships with other parties that involve the development of solutions that interface with their hardware products or standards. These informal partnerships also may involve joint marketing campaigns and sales calls. If the informal partnerships do not grow as expected or if they are significantly reduced or terminated by acquisition or other means, our business, results of operations, and financial condition could be materially adversely affected, and we may be required to write off related inventories and long-lived assets.
Our solutions face competition from suppliers of ASSPs, integrated application processors, low-power FPGAs, low-power MCUs, ASICs, and eFPGA IP.
We face competition from companies that offer ASSPs. While it is difficult to provide a unique solution through the use of ASSPs, ASSPs generally are cost-effective standard products with short lead times. In certain design opportunities, ASSPs can be combined to achieve system design objectives. Manufacturers of integrated application processors often integrate new features when they introduce new products. A system designer could elect the use of an integrated processor that includes the features offered in our solutions and/or a widely accepted feature of our solutions could be integrated into a competitor’s ASSP. Some vendors offer low-power FPGAs that can be adopted by an IoT device for hardware differentiation that is similar in functionality, physical size, power consumption, and price to what we offer with our programmable logic-based solutions. We also face competition from low-power MCU companies. While MCUs cannot be customized at the hardware level for product differentiation, they do have the ability to run custom software algorithms written in standard C code, which may yield similar functionality to what we can provide with our products. Companies that supply ASICs, which may be purchased for a lower price at higher volumes, may have greater logic capacity, additional features, and higher performance than our products. In addition, we face competition from companies that provide sensor algorithm software, which may be licensed directly by an OEM, or licensed for use through an MCU company. If we are unable to successfully compete with companies that supply ASSPs, lower power FPGAs, MCUs, ASICs, eFPGA IP, or sensor algorithm software in any of the following areas, our business, results of operations, and financial condition will be materially adversely affected: (i) the development of new products, solutions, and advanced manufacturing technologies; (ii) the quality, power characteristics, performance characteristics, price, and availability of hardware products, programming hardware, and software development tools; (iii) the ability to engage with companies that provide synergistic products and services, including algorithms that may be preloaded into our device at configuration; (iv) the incorporation of industry standards in our products and solutions; (v) the diversity of product offerings available to customers; and (vi) the quality and cost-effectiveness of design, development, manufacturing and marketing efforts.
We may engage in manufacturing, distribution, or technology agreements that involve numerous risks, including the use of cash, erosion of margins due to royalty obligations or revenue sharing, and diversion of resources.
We have entered into and, in the future, intend to enter into agreements that involve numerous risks, including the use of significant amounts of our cash; royalty obligations or revenue sharing; diversion of resources from other development projects or market opportunities; our ability to collect amounts due under these contracts; and market acceptance of related products and solutions. If we fail to recover the cost of these or other assets from the cash flow generated by the related products, our assets will become impaired, and our results of operations and financial condition could be materially adversely affected.
We have entered and will continue to enter into strategic licensing and collaborative partnerships and relationships with third parties. The anticipated benefits of these partnerships and relationships may never materialize and these partnerships and relationships may instead disrupt our business and harm our financial condition.
We have entered into strategic licensing and collaborative partnerships and relationships with third parties and will continue to enter into such partnerships and relationships with the goal of acquiring or gaining access to new and innovative semiconductor products and technologies, as well as other technologies which can be used to add to the differentiation of our emerging products, on a timely basis. Negotiating and performing under these arrangements involves significant time and expense, and we cannot provide assurance that the anticipated benefits of these arrangements will ever materialize or that the products or technologies involved will ever be commercialized or that, as a result, we will not have written down a portion or all of our investment. The arrangements with some third parties contain conditions and contingencies (such as a condition to raise a certain amount of capital), and we cannot provide assurance that we will meet all the conditions under these arrangements. We may end up owing various obligations and commitments to third parties related to these arrangements. Such arrangements can magnify several risks for us, including loss of control over the development and development timeline of products being developed with third parties. Accordingly, we face increased risk that development activities may result in products that are not commercially successful or that are not available in a timely fashion. In addition, any third-party with whom we enter into a development, product collaboration, or technology licensing arrangement may fail to commit sufficient resources to the project, change its policies or priorities, and abandon or fail to perform its obligations related to the collaboration. The failure to timely develop commercially successful products through our development projects or strategic investment activities as a result of any of these and other challenges could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, and financial condition. Other challenges and risks presented by use of strategic partnerships include the acquisition of a partner with which we have a strategic relationship by an unaffiliated third-party that either delays or jeopardizes the original intent of the partnering relationship or investment.
ITEM 1B. UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS
Not applicable.
In July 2023, the SEC adopted a new rule, Cybersecurity Risk Management, Strategy, Governance, and Incident Disclosure, which requires registrants to disclose material cybersecurity incidents they experience and to disclose on an annual basis material information regarding their cybersecurity risk management, strategy, and governance. For registrants, the final rules were effective September 5, 2023, with the new disclosures required beginning in annual reports for fiscal years ending on or after December 15, 2023. With respect to compliance with the incident disclosure requirements, all registrants other than smaller reporting companies must begin complying on December 18, 2023, with smaller reporting companies being given an additional 180 days, or June 15, 2024. The Company adopted these new cybersecurity disclosure requirements in the prior fiscal year, as detailed below.
Cybersecurity Risk Management and Strategy
As one of the critical elements of the Company’s overall ERM approach, the Company’s cybersecurity risk management program includes the following key components:
• | Risk assessments designed to help identify cybersecurity risks to our critical systems, information, services, and our broader enterprise IT environment. | |
• | The IT team including its executive leadership is in charge of managing (i) our cybersecurity risk assessment processes, (ii) our security controls, and (iii) our response to security incidents. | |
• | The Company deploys technical safeguards that are designed to protect the Company’s information systems from cybersecurity threats, including firewalls, intrusion prevention and detection systems, anti-malware functionality, and access controls, which are evaluated and improved through vulnerability assessments and cybersecurity threat intelligence. | |
• | The Company has in place an incident response and recovery plan that addresses the Company’s response to a cybersecurity incident. | |
• | The Company maintains a comprehensive, risk-based approach to identifying and overseeing cybersecurity risks presented by external resources accessing the Company’s systems, as well as the systems of parties that could adversely impact our business in the event of a cybersecurity incident affecting those third-party systems. | |
• | The Company provides regular, mandatory training for personnel regarding cybersecurity threats as a means to equip the Company’s personnel with effective tools to address cybersecurity threats, and to communicate the Company’s evolving information security policies, standards, processes, and practices. |
The Company engages in the periodic assessment and testing of the Company’s policies, standards, processes and practices that are designed to address cybersecurity threats and incidents. These efforts include a wide range of activities, including audits, assessments, EDR tools, and PEN test exercises that focus on evaluating the effectiveness of our cybersecurity measures and planning. The Company regularly engages
parties to perform assessments on our cybersecurity measures, including audits and independent reviews of our information security control environment and operating effectiveness. The results of such assessments, audits and reviews are reported to the executive management team and the Board, and the Company adjusts its cybersecurity policies, standards, processes and practices as necessary based on the information provided by these assessments, audits, and reviews.
Governance
Our principal administrative, sales, marketing, research and development, and final testing facility is located in a building of approximately 24,164 square feet of premises located at 2220 Lundy Avenue, San Jose, California, which is under lease until June 14, 2027. Our subsidiary, SensiML Corp., occupies a 925 square feet facility space in Beaverton, Oregon, which is under lease until March 31, 2025. We lease flexible workspace on a monthly basis for sales offices in Shanghai, China; London, England; and Taipei, Taiwan. We also lease sales office space in the Seoul Capital Area, South Korea on a short-term basis. We believe that our existing facilities are adequate for our current needs.
From time to time, we are involved in legal actions arising in the ordinary course of business, including but not limited to intellectual property infringement and collection matters. Absolute assurance cannot be given that third-party assertions will be resolved without costly litigation in a manner that is not adverse to our financial position, results of operations, or cash flows or without requiring royalty or other payments in the future, which may adversely impact gross profit. We are not currently a party to any material pending legal proceedings.
ITEM 4. MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES
Not applicable.
ITEM 5. MARKET FOR THE REGISTRANT’S COMMON EQUITY, RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS AND ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES
Common Stock Information
Our common stock is currently traded on the Nasdaq Capital Market under the symbol QUIK.
The closing price of our common stock on the Nasdaq was [$ 5.62] per share on March 21, 2025. As of March 21, 2025, there were [15,799,036] shares of common stock outstanding that were held of record by [75] stockholders. The actual number of stockholders is greater than this number of holders of record since this number does not include stockholders whose shares are held in trust by other entities.
Dividend Policy
We have never declared or paid any dividends on our capital stock. We currently expect to retain future earnings, if any, for use in the operation and expansion of our business and do not anticipate paying any cash dividends in the foreseeable future.
Equity Compensation Plan Information
The information required by this item regarding equity compensation plans is set forth under the caption "Equity Compensation Plan Summary" in our Proxy Statement which information is incorporated by reference herein.
Stock Performance Graph
The following graph compares the cumulative total return to stockholders of our common stock from December 29, 2019 to December 29, 2024 to the cumulative total return over such period of (i) the S&P 500 Index and (ii) the S&P Semiconductors Index. The graph assumes that $100 was invested on December 29, 2019 in QuickLogic’s common stock and in each of the other two indices and the reinvestment of all dividends, if any, through December 29, 2024.
The information contained in the Performance Graph shall not be deemed to be “soliciting material” or to be “filed” with the SEC, nor shall such information be incorporated by reference into any future filing under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, except to the extent that QuickLogic specifically incorporates it by reference into any such filing. The graph is presented in accordance with SEC requirements. Stockholders are cautioned against drawing any conclusions from the data contained therein, as past results are not necessarily indicative of future performance.
12/29/2019 |
1/3/2021 |
1/2/2022 |
1/1/2023 |
12/31/2023 |
12/29/2024 |
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QuickLogic Corporation |
100.00 | 82.75 | 111.57 | 112.23 | 302.62 | 215.28 | ||||||||||||||||||
S&P 500 |
100.00 | 118.40 | 152.39 | 124.79 | 157.59 | 197.02 | ||||||||||||||||||
S&P Semiconductors |
100.00 | 143.73 | 214.66 | 134.55 | 283.10 | 525.75 |
The stock price performance included in this graph is not necessarily indicative of future stock price performance.
ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
The following discussion of our financial condition and results of operations should be read in conjunction with the financial statements and related notes included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. This discussion may contain forward-looking statements based upon current expectations that involve risks and uncertainties including those discussed under Part I, Item 1A, “Risk Factors.” These risks and uncertainties may cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed in the forward-looking statements.
Overview
QuickLogic Corporation was founded in 1988 and reincorporated in Delaware in 1999. We provide innovative, programmable silicon and software platforms to enable our customers to develop custom hardware products in a fast time-to-market and cost-effective way. Specifically, we are a fabless semiconductor company with a variety of products: embedded FPGA ("eFPGA") intellectual property ("IP"), low power, multi-core semiconductor system-on-chips ("SoCs"), discrete FPGAs, and AI software. Our customers can use our eFPGA IP for hardware acceleration and pre-processing in their Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) products, our SoCs to run our customers' software and build their hardware around, and our discrete FPGAs to implement their custom functionality. The Analytics Toolkit from SensiML Corporation ("SensiML"), our wholly-owned subsidiary, provides an end-to-end Artificial Intelligence / Machine Learning solution with accurate sensor algorithms using AI technology. The full range of products, software tools, and eFPGA IP enables the practical and efficient field programmability for our customers across Aerospace, and Defense, Consumer/Industrial IoT, and Consumer Electronics markets.
Our new products include the following: eFPGA IP Licensing business, associated professional services, consisting of development and integration of eFPGA technology into custom semiconductor solutions, and our silicon products consisting of EOS™, QuickAI™, ArcticLink® III, PolarPro®3, PolarPro II, PolarPro, and Eclipse II products. In addition to delivering our own semiconductor solutions, our new products category includes our AI/ML Software Platform from our wholly-owned subsidiary company, SensiML, which includes Software as a Service (SaaS) subscriptions for development, per unit license fees when deployed in production, and proof-of-concept services, all of which are also included in the new products revenue category. Our mature products include primarily FPGA families named PASIC®3 and QuickRAM®, as well as programming hardware and design software.
For our IP and silicon platforms, we collaborate with multiple partners on co-marketing and/or co-selling initiatives. These partners could have primary business lines in semiconductor IP, Design Services, semiconductor foundry, semiconductor assembly and test, and others. For our AI/ML Software, SensiML collaborates with several microcontroller and sensor manufacturers to integrate the microcontroller and/or sensor manufacturers’ development kits with SensiML’s Analytics Toolkit in order to showcase combined solutions for AI/ML applications. Currently, these collaborations include On Semiconductor Corp., Microchip Technology Inc., Silicon Laboratories, Inc., Arduino, NXP Semiconductors N.V., Raspberry Pi, and Nordic Semiconductor.
Our eFPGA IP is currently developed on 12nm, 16nm, 22nm, 28nm, 40nm, 65nm, 90nm, 130nm, and 250nm process nodes with a roadmap to more advanced, sub 10nm nodes. The licensable IP is generated by our automated compiler tool called Australis™, which enables our engineers to create an eFPGA IP for our licensees that they can then integrate into their SoC without significant involvement by QuickLogic. We believe this flow enables a scalable development and support model for QuickLogic. For our eFPGA strategy, we typically work with semiconductor manufacturing partners prior to this IP being licensed to a SoC company.
We have changed our manufacturing strategies to reduce the cost of our silicon solution platforms to enable their use in a range of unique products ranging from low to high volume. Our EOS S3, EOS S3AI, QuickAI and ArcticLink III silicon platforms combine mixed signal physical functions and hard-wired logic alongside our field programmable logic. Our EOS S3, EOS S3AI, and ArcticLink III solution platforms are manufactured on process nodes where we can benefit from smaller die sizes and lower power consumption. We typically implement sophisticated logic blocks and mixed signal functions in hard-wired logic because it is very cost-effective and energy efficient. We use small form factor packages, which are less expensive to manufacture and include smaller pin counts. Reduced pin counts result in lower costs for our customers' printed circuit board space and routing. Furthermore, our SRAM reprogrammable silicon platforms can be programmed in-system by our customers, and therefore, we do not incur programming costs, lowering the overall cost of ownership to our customers. We expect to continue to invest in silicon solution platforms and manufacturing technologies that make us competitive for the variety of markets and applications that programmable logic serves.
In order to grow our revenue from its current level, we depend upon increased revenue from our new products, including existing new product platforms and platforms currently in development. We expect our business growth to be driven mainly by eFPGA IP and our silicon solutions. Therefore, our revenue growth needs to be strong enough to enable us to sustain profitability while we continue to invest in the development, sale, and marketing of our new solution platforms, IP, and software.
We market our programmable logic (FPGAs and eFPGA IP) solutions primarily to Defense Industrial Base contractors, U.S. Government entities, System OEMs, and fabless semiconductor companies. These customers may value one or more of our product categories. A solution can be based on our programmable technology, which enables customized designs, low power, flexibility, rapid time-to-market, longer time-in-market, and lower total cost of ownership. We are capable of providing complete solutions because of our investment in developing the low power IP and software required to implement specific functions, along with sensor software algorithms optimized for our architecture. In some cases, we develop the IPs and either software or firmware ourselves and, in other cases, we utilize third parties to develop the mixed signal physical layers, logic, and/or software.
We market our SoC and SensiML solutions to OEMs and ODMs offering differentiated Consumer/IoT products, to processor vendors wishing to expand their served available market, and to sensor manufacturers and sensor processing software companies wishing to expand their ecosystems. Our target markets for our SoC and SensiML products include Consumer/Industrial IoT and Consumer Electronics.
By using our silicon platforms, our IPs, our software, and our in-depth architecture knowledge, we can deliver energy efficient custom solutions that blend the benefits of traditional ASSPs with the flexibility, product proliferation, differentiation, and low total cost of ownership advantages of programmable logic.
We monetize our technology through hardware product sales and eFPGA IP licenses, with any necessary corresponding work delivered via professional engineering services, SensiML Analytics Toolkit subscriptions, and per unit royalties. We specialize in enhancing the user experience in leading edge IoT hardware products. For our customers, we enable hardware and sensor algorithmic differentiation quickly, cost-effectively, and at low power. For our partners, we expand their reach into new segments and new use cases, thereby expanding the served available market for their existing hardware products.
Our embedded FPGA technology gives ASIC and SoC developers the benefit of flexibility to make post-manufacturing design changes at very fast time-to- and time-in-market, while keeping power consumption low. Our multi-core sensor processing products such as ArcticLink 3 S1, ArcticLink 3 S2, EOS 3, EOS S3 LV, and EOS S3AI provide an extremely power-efficient approach for real-time multi-modal (vision, motion, voice, location, biometric, and environmental) sensor processing independently of the cloud. Our SensiML Analytics Toolkit is cutting-edge software that enables ultra-low power IoT endpoints that implement AI to transform raw sensor data into meaningful insight at the device itself. The toolkit also provides an end-to-end development platform spanning data collection, labeling, algorithm and firmware auto generation, and testing.
We recognize that our markets require a range of solutions, and we intend to work with market-leading companies to combine silicon solution platforms, packaging technology, FPGA User Tools, sensor software algorithms, software drivers and firmware, to meet the product proliferation, high bandwidth, time-to-market, time-in-market, and form factor requirements of our customers. We intend to continue to define and implement compelling solutions for our target customers and partners.
We believe our solutions are resonating with our target customers who value lower power consumption, platform design flexibility, rapid time-to-market, longer time-in-market, and low total cost of ownership available through the use of our solutions.
We sell our products through a network of sales managers in North America, Europe, and Asia. In addition to our corporate headquarters in San Jose, California, we have international sales operations in Japan and the United Kingdom. Our sales personnel and independent sales representatives are responsible for sales and application support for a given region, focusing on major strategic accounts, and managing our channel sales partners such as distributors.
Customers typically order our products through our distributors. Currently, we have fourteen active distributors in North America and a network of nineteen active distributors and sales representatives throughout Europe and Asia to support our international business. eFPGA IP customers and SensiML SaaS subscribers typically enter into licensing agreements directly with QuickLogic and SensiML, respectively.
We also have an Aerospace and Defense, industrial, and IoT product customer base that purchases our mature silicon products. We expect to continue to offer silicon hardware products to these customers, as well as new eFPGA IP for when these customers choose to implement their own silicon platform solution.
New products revenue for the Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024 was $16.1 million, a decrease of $2.1 million as compared to the Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023. Of the $16.1 million in new products revenue, approximately $13.1 million was generated from eFPGA IP revenue, primarily eFPGA-related professional engineering services, as compared to approximately $16.8 million in the Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023. Mature products revenue for the Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024 was $4.0 million, an increase of $1.0 million compared to the Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023. We shipped new products into multiple end market segments including Aerospace and Defense, Industrial, IoT, Consumer, and SaaS revenue from the new Artificial Intelligence ("AI") market beginning in the Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024. We reported a net loss of $3.8 million for the Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024 compared to a net loss of $0.3 million in the Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023.
We have experienced net losses in the past years and expect to experience losses in at least some of the fiscal quarters during 2025 as we continue to develop new products, applications, and technologies. Our new hardware products and hardware products currently under development are generating stable gross margins year over year and higher margins than our mature products due to the markets that we have targeted, and the larger order quantities associated with these new products. New eFPGA products have been generating higher gross margins as a percentage of revenue. Whether we can achieve cash flow levels sufficient to support our operations cannot be accurately predicted, and our investment portfolio is subject to a degree of interest rate and liquidity risk. Unless such cash flow levels are achieved, in addition to the $3.2 million, $3.5 million, and $2.3 million in net proceeds that we received in December 2024, March 2024, and March 2023, respectively, from the sale of our equity securities, and the revolving line of credit we may be able to draw down from Heritage Bank of Commerce, we may need to obtain additional funds through strategic divestiture, or sell debt or equity securities, or some combination thereof, to provide funding for our operations. Such additional funding may not be available on commercially reasonable terms, or at all.
Impact of Supply Chain Disruptions on Business
We continue to experience increased product and logistics costs and impacts from the worldwide semiconductor supply shortage. The semiconductor supply shortage is due, in part, to increased demand across multiple industries resulting in a slowdown in production schedules. The semiconductor supply shortage is also impacting our supply chain and our ability to meet demand for some of our customers.
Our Employees and Customers
QuickLogic nurtures a culture of teams of employees operating in a committed, execution-oriented, and globally collaborative environment. Our close-knit, family-oriented team welcomes and encourages all perspectives and ideas to improve and innovate in our space, providing exciting career opportunities for the future of technology. Collaboration is deeply ingrained in how we work with each other and our customers. We offer competitive compensation and benefits. Many of our personnel work from home except a few personnel required for minimum operations. We embrace remote work and enable our employees to do their best work from anywhere in the United States, allowing them to balance their work obligations with their personal lives. We are committed to our customers to provide the support they need to continue providing vital services and tools.
Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates
The methods, estimates, and judgments we use in applying our most critical accounting policies have a significant impact on the results we report in our consolidated financial statements. The SEC has defined critical accounting policies as those that are most important to the portrayal of our financial condition and results of operations and require us to make our most difficult and subjective judgments, often as a result of the need to make estimates of matters that are inherently uncertain.
Although these estimates are based on our knowledge of current events and actions we may undertake in the future, actual results may ultimately materially differ from these estimates and assumptions. Areas where we use subjective judgment include, but are not limited to, revenue recognition, inventory valuation, including the identification of excess quantities, market value, and obsolescence, and valuation of goodwill and long-lived and intangible assets. We believe that we apply judgments and estimates in a consistent manner and that such consistent application results in consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes that fairly represent all periods presented. However, any factual errors or errors in these judgments and estimates may have a material impact on our financial statements.
Revenue Recognition
We recognize revenue in accordance with Accounting Standards Codification ("ASC") Topic 606 and related Accounting Standards Updates ("ASUs").
We earn revenue from principal activities by (i) delivering standard hardware products, (2) delivering and providing eFPGA IP products and professional services, (iii) and providing software as a service to customers, as well as (iv) other miscellaneous revenue.
In accordance with ASC 606, we apply a five-step model for recognizing revenue:
1. | Identification of the contract, or contracts, with a customer, |
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2. | Identification of the performance obligations in the contract, |
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3. | Determination of the transaction price. We estimate the transaction price based on the amount expected to be received for transferring the performance obligations in the contract, which may include both fixed consideration and variable consideration. Our contracts with customers containing variable consideration are generally sales-based royalties, which is fully constrained. |
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4. | Allocation of the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract, and |
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5. | Recognition of revenue when, or as, we satisfy a performance obligation. |
When entering into a new contract, we evaluate certain factors including the customer’s ability to pay, or credit risk.
The following is a description of our revenue recognition policy by principal activity:
Hardware Product Revenue
We generate revenue by supplying standard hardware products, which must be programmed before they can be used in an application. Standard hardware products may be programmed by us, distributors, end customers, or third parties. Contracts with customers for hardware products generally do not include other performance obligations such as services, extended warranties, or other material rights. Our promise to transfer hardware products is identified as a distinct performance obligation. We recognize revenue on hardware products when we transfer control of the promised products to the customer. Transfer of control of hardware products occurs when our performance obligation is satisfied, which typically occurs upon shipment from our manufacturing site or headquarters. We recognize revenue in an amount that reflects the consideration we expect to receive in exchange for those products, which also represents the standalone selling price ("SSP") of our performance obligation. Hardware product prices are fixed. We elected a practical expedient in which we do not assess whether a contract has a significant financing component since our standard payment terms are less than one year. We allocate the transaction price of customer contracts to each distinct product based on its relative SSP. The sale of hardware products does not typically involve significant judgment or estimates by management. However, we do record an allowance for hardware product sales returns, which requires some judgment by management.
We recognized hardware product revenue of approximately $6.1 million, or 30% of total revenue, $4.0 million, or 19% of total revenue, and $8.1 million, or 50% of total revenue, in the Fiscal Years ended December 29, 2024, December 31, 2023, and January 1, 2023, respectively.
Hardware Product Sales Return Allowance
While the terms and conditions of the sale of hardware products generally do not allow for refunds or product returns other than for warranty repairs, we do record an allowance for hardware product sales returns. The allowance for sales returns is based on a historical returns analysis of the prior four quarters that is performed on a quarterly basis. Amounts recorded for hardware product sales returns were $1 thousand, $8 thousand, and $2 thousand for the years ended December 29, 2024, December 31, 2023, and January 1, 2023, respectively, on our consolidated statements of operations. While hardware product sales returns have not been material to the company in recent reporting periods, we note there is an inherent uncertainty in estimating this allowance. In the case where actual results may significantly vary from management estimates, we may be required to make future adjustments to our revenues and operating results.
eFPGA IP Revenue
eFPGA IP revenue is comprised of eFPGA intellectual property revenue, eFPGA-related professional services revenue, and eFPGA-related support and maintenance revenue. We recognize eFPGA intellectual property revenue from licensing our eFPGA intellectual property to customers and recognize eFPGA-related professional services revenue from the fees associated with the custom development and integration of our technology solutions into hardware products. We recognize eFPGA revenue from support and maintenance services for post-implementation customer support ratably over the service term. Renewals of support and maintenance contracts create new performance obligations for which we recognize as revenue ratably over the service term. The majority of our revenue is derived from sales of eFPGA IP licenses and professional services.
eFPGA IP contractual arrangements often include promises to transfer intellectual property licenses, to customize hardware products, and to provide professional services and technical support services. We must determine whether the promised goods and services are distinct performance obligations that should be accounted for separately or are a single, combined performance obligation and should be accounted for together. In accordance with ASC 606, we must evaluate whether the customer can benefit from each good or service on its own or together with other resources that are readily available to the customer and whether the transfer of each good or service can be separately identifiable. We also must evaluate when control of the performance obligation is transferred to and accepted by the customer. We note these determinations, in addition to identifying contractual terms and conditions within the contract, including termination for convenience clauses, enforceable rights to payment for performance completed-to-date, and consideration of the alternative use of the asset, require significant judgment. In these judgments, we consider the context of the contract, historical experience with similar contracts, and the interdependency of the promised goods and services.
Additionally, judgment is required by management to allocate the transaction price to the separately identifiable performance obligations in the contract. We allocate the transaction price of the contract to each performance obligation based on its relative SSP. We rarely sell eFPGA intellectual property licenses on a standalone basis. Generally, we will provide eFPGA-related professional services and support and maintenance services to customers in conjunction with eFPGA IP licenses based on unique contractual arrangement terms and conditions. As such, we are required to estimate the SSP for each performance obligation.
In instances where the SSP is not directly observable because we do not sell the promised goods or services separately, we typically determine the SSP using either the adjusted market assessment approach, residual approach, or the expected cost plus a margin approach, depending on the characteristics and context of the deliverable. The selected method is applied by us consistently for similar arrangements and deliverables. The factors used to select the most appropriate estimation method, as well as select the most appropriate SSP include, but are not limited to, the extent of internal costs required to provide the promised performance obligation, margins achieved on standalone sales of similar products, profit objectives, cost structure, location-specific factors, and competition.
In other instances, we may have more than one SSP for individual performance obligations due to the stratification of those items by classes of customers and circumstances. In these instances, we may use information such as our overall pricing objectives, taking into consideration market conditions and other factors, including the value of its contracts, customer type, customer tier, type of the technology used, customer demographics, and geographic locations, among other factors. We also provide eFPGA-related professional services on a time-and-material basis.
Generally, we satisfy eFPGA-related contractual performance obligations over time as the customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefits provided by our performance as we perform, our performance creates or enhances an asset that the customer controls as it is created or enhanced, or our performance does not create an asset with an alternative use to the company and we have an enforceable right to payment for performance completed to date. When we satisfy performance obligations over time, we recognize revenue by applying an over-time methodology that faithfully depicts our performance toward satisfaction of the performance obligation.
Due to the nature of the work performed under contractual arrangements, the selection and application of an over-time methodology is complex and involves significant judgment. In the case of the selection of an input method, the key factors reviewed by management to estimate costs to complete each contract include, but are not limited to, the estimated labor days-effort necessary to complete the project, budgeted hours, hourly cost to the company, profit margins, and engineering hours at cut-off when projects extend beyond a reporting period. In the case of the selection of an output method, key factors reviewed by management include, but are not limited to, the specific deliverables specified in the contracts with customers and the duration of performance, inclusive of delays. We have methods and controls in place for tracking labor-days incurred in completing eFPGA IP contracts, as well as quantifying changes in estimates used within the chosen methodology. We consider labor-days to be a critical estimate as any significant variation of labor and time required to complete a contractual arrangement could cause a revenue claw-back from prior periods and deferral of revenue to future periods.
When the expected consideration from a revenue contract with a customer is less than the expected costs of fulfilling the contract, we are required to first impair any capitalized costs associated with the contract. We are also required to recognize a provision for contract losses as a liability on our balance sheet. This would result in an unfavorable impact to income from operations.
We recognized eFPGA IP revenue of approximately $13.1 million, or 65% of total revenue, $16.8 million, or 79% of total revenue, and $7.5 million, or 47% of total revenue, in the Fiscal Years ended December 29, 2024, December 31, 2023, and January 1, 2023, respectively.
SaaS and Other Revenue
SaaS & Other Revenue is comprised primarily of software as a service ("SaaS") revenue and software-related professional services revenue. SaaS revenue is generated when we license our software to customers and allow customers to access the software over a short-term subscription basis. We grant the customer the right to access and use software at the outset of the arrangement and throughout the entire term of the arrangement. We recognize SaaS revenue ratably over the license term. We recognize revenue from software-related professional services as services are provided to the customer.
Other miscellaneous revenue is comprised primarily of royalties from licensing our technology. We recognize royalty revenue on the later of (i) the subsequent sale or usage, or (ii) satisfaction of a performance obligation to which some or all of the sales-based royalty has been allocated.
We recognized SaaS and Other Revenue of approximately $0.9 million, or 4% of total revenue, $0.4 million, or 2% of total revenue, and $0.6 million, or 3% of total revenue, in the Fiscal Years ended December 29, 2024, December 31, 2023, and January 1, 2023, respectively.
Practical Expedients, Elections, and Exemptions
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Taxes collected from customers and remitted to government authorities and that are related to the sales of our products are excluded from revenues. |
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• | Sales commissions are expensed when incurred because the amortization period would have been one year or less. These costs are recorded in selling, general, and administrative expense in the consolidated statements of operations. |
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• | We do not disclose the value of unsatisfied performance obligations for (i) contracts with original expected lengths of one year or less or (ii) contracts for which we recognize revenue at the amount to which we have the right to invoice for the services performed. |
Valuation of Inventories
Hardware product inventories are stated at the lower of standard cost or net realizable value. Standard cost approximates actual cost on a first-in, first-out basis. We routinely evaluate quantities and values of our inventories in light of current market conditions and trends and record reserves for quantities in excess of demand and for product obsolescence. The evaluation may take into consideration historic usage, expected demand, anticipated sales price, the stage in the product life cycle of our customers’ products, new product development schedules, the effect new products might have on the sale of existing products, product obsolescence, customer design activity, customer concentrations, and product merchantability, among other factors. Actual consumption of inventories could differ from forecasted demand and this difference could have a material impact on our gross margin and inventory balances based on additional provisions for excess or obsolete inventories or a benefit from inventories previously written down. We also regularly review the cost of inventories against estimated market value and record a lower of cost or market reserve for inventories that have a cost in excess of estimated market value, which could have a material impact on our hardware product gross margin and hardware product inventory balances based on additional write-downs to net realizable value or a benefit from inventories previously written down. Estimates of market value for our products require subjective criteria such as anticipated demand and market acceptance for unique products. Differences between these estimates and actual results could result in gross margin volatilities from period to period.
Our hardware products have historically had an unusually long product life cycle and obsolescence has not been a significant factor in the valuation of inventories. However, as we continue to develop new products, we believe our new product life cycle may be shorter, which could increase the potential for obsolescence. A significant decrease in demand could result in an increase in excess inventory on hand. Although we make every effort to ensure the accuracy of our forecasts of future product demand, any significant unanticipated changes in demand or frequent new product developments could have a significant impact on the value of our inventory and our results of operations.
Goodwill
Goodwill represents the excess fair value of consideration transferred over the fair value of net assets acquired in a business combination. The carrying value of $0.2 million associated with our goodwill is not amortized but is annually tested for impairment during our fourth fiscal quarter, and more often if there is an indicator of impairment. We either perform a qualitative assessment under ASC 350, including the consideration of factors such as macroeconomic conditions, industry and market considerations, and overall financial performance, or a quantitative assessment under ASU No. 2017-14, which involves comparing the carrying value of the reporting unit to its fair value. Subsequent to our annual impairment testing in the fourth quarters of 2024 and 2023, there were no indicators of impairment that gave cause for additional impairment testing of goodwill. No impairment of goodwill has been recognized to date.
Long-Lived and Intangible Assets
Our long-lived assets include property and equipment, software, tooling, furniture and fixtures, leasehold improvements, and internal-use software. These assets are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and amortization. Depreciation and amortization of long-lived assets is calculated on a straight-line basis over the estimated useful lives of the assets, generally one to ten years, with the amortization period of internal-use software being generally five years and the amortization period of leasehold improvements being the shorter of the lease term or the estimated useful lives of the assets, which is generally three to five years. We note the estimation of the useful lives of our long-lived assets involves judgment and estimation by management. In the determination of an asset’s useful life, we consider the following factors: obsolescence, competition, historical product life cycles, and industry and market considerations, among others. Refer to Note 5 for additional information on the useful life ranges of our long-lived assets.
We recognize assets for pre-production design and development costs for which there is a contractual reimbursement by the customer. These assets are classified under 'tooling' within property and equipment and are depreciated over the estimated useful lives of the assets, generally seven years. Refer to Note 4 for additional information.
We capitalize costs related to the development and enhancement of hosted services we provide to our customers and the development and enhancement of other internally used engineering software as internal-use software. Costs incurred in the application development phase are capitalized and amortized on a straight-line basis over their useful lives, which are generally five to seven years. Costs related to planning and other preliminary project activities and post-implementation activities are expensed as incurred. We also capitalize costs related to internally used enterprise-level business and finance software in support of our operational needs as software.
Acquired intangible assets with finite useful lives are amortized on a straight-line basis over the periods benefited. We review the recoverability of our long-lived assets annually and when events or changes in circumstances occur that indicate that the carrying value of the asset or asset group may not be recoverable. We assess possible impairment based on our ability to recover the carrying value of the asset or asset group from the expected future pre-tax cash flows (undiscounted and without interest charges) of the related operations, as well as the useful lives applied to the assets. If these cash flows are less than the carrying value of the asset or asset group, an impairment loss is recognized for the difference between the estimated fair value and the carrying value, and the carrying value of the related assets is reduced by this difference. The measurement of impairment requires management to estimate future cash flows and the fair value of long-lived assets. In estimating future cash flows and the fair value of our long-lived assets, we consider changes in legal factors and the business climate, product and technology obsolescence, and competition. We performed an annual impairment assessment in the fourth quarters of 2024 and 2023 and deemed no impairment was necessary for the current or prior year. Subsequent to our annual impairment testing in the fourth quarters of 2024 and 2023, there were no indicators of impairment that gave cause for additional impairment testing of our long-lived assets. No impairment of intangible assets has been recognized to date. Additionally, we did not recognize any gains or losses on the disposal of equipment in the years ended December 29, 2024 or December 31, 2023.
Results of Operations
The following table sets forth the percentage of revenue for certain items in our statements of operations for the periods indicated:
Fiscal Years |
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2024 |
2023 |
2022 |
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Statements of Operations: |
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Revenue |
100 | % | 100 | % | 100 | % | ||||||
Cost of revenue |
41 | % | 32 | % | 46 | % | ||||||
Gross profit |
59 | % | 68 | % | 54 | % | ||||||
Operating expenses: |
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Research and development |
32 | % | 30 | % | 31 | % | ||||||
Selling, general and administrative |
44 | % | 38 | % | 46 | % | ||||||
Operating income (loss) |
(17 | )% | — | % | (23 | )% | ||||||
Interest expense |
(2 | )% | (1 | )% | (1 | )% | ||||||
Interest income and other (expense) income, net |
— | % | (1 | )% | (2 | )% | ||||||
Income (loss) before income taxes |
(19 | )% | (2 | )% | (26 | )% | ||||||
Provision for income taxes |
— | % | — | % | — | % | ||||||
Net income (loss) |
(19 | )% | (2 | )% | (26 | )% |
Comparison of Fiscal Years 2024 and 2023
Revenue. The table below sets forth the changes in revenue for Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024, compared to Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023 (in thousands, except percentage data):
Fiscal Years |
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2024 |
2023 |
Year-Over-Year Change |
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Amount | % of Total Revenues | Amount | % of Total Revenues | Amount | Percentage | |||||||||||||||||||
New products |
$ | 16,128 | 80 | % | $ | 18,211 | 86 | % | $ | (2,083 | ) | (11 | )% | |||||||||||
Mature products |
3,984 | 20 | % | 2,987 | 14 | % | 997 | 33 | % | |||||||||||||||
Total revenue |
$ | 20,112 | 100 | % | $ | 21,198 | 100 | % | $ | (1,086 | ) | (5 | )% |
New products revenue consists of revenues from the sale of hardware products manufactured on 180 nanometer or smaller semiconductor processes, eFPGA IP license, professional services, QuickAI, and SensiML AI software as a service (SaaS) revenues. Mature products include all products produced on semiconductor processes larger than 180 nanometer.
Total revenue decreased approximately $1.1 million, or (5)% in Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024 as compared to the Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023. The decrease in total revenue was comprised of a decrease of $2.1 million in new product revenue, partially offset by an increase of $1.0 million in mature product revenue.
New Products Revenue. The table below sets forth the changes in new products revenue for Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024, compared to Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023 (in thousands, except percentage data):
Fiscal Years |
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2024 |
2023 |
Year-Over-Year Change |
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Amount |
% of Total Revenues |
Amount |
% of Total Revenues |
Amount |
Percentage |
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Hardware products |
$ | 2,547 | 13 | % | $ | 1,230 | 6 | % | $ | 1,317 | 107 | % | ||||||||||||
eFPGA IP |
13,120 | 65 | % | 16,839 | 79 | % | (3,719 | ) | (22 | )% | ||||||||||||||
SaaS & Other |
461 | 2 | % | 142 | 1 | % | 319 | 225 | % | |||||||||||||||
Total new products revenue |
$ | 16,128 | 80 | % | $ | 18,211 | 86 | % | $ | (2,083 | ) | (11 | )% |
The decrease in new product revenue was primarily driven by a decrease in eFPGA IP revenue, partially offset by increases in new hardware product revenue and SaaS & Other revenue. eFPGA IP revenue is comprised primarily of eFPGA intellectual property revenue, eFPGA-related professional services revenue, and eFPGA-related support and maintenance revenue. eFPGA IP revenue decreased approximately $3.7 million, or (22)%, as compared to the Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023. The decrease in eFPGA IP revenue was primarily comprised of a $3.5 million decrease in eFPGA-related professional services revenue. SaaS & Other revenue increased approximately $0.3 million, or 225% as compared to the Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023. The increase in SaaS & Other revenue was driven by a $0.3 million increase in SaaS IP revenue. New hardware revenue increased by approximately $1.3 million, or 107%, in the Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024 compared to the Fiscal Year endedDecember 31, 2023. The increase in new hardware product revenue was primarily comprised of an increase of $1.1 million in connectivity product revenue and $0.2 million in display product revenue.
Contract liabilities (deferred revenue) associated with eFPGA-related professional services revenue was $0.4 million and $1.0 million and were included in deferred revenue on the consolidated balance sheets as of December 29, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively. Contract assets associated with eFPGA-related professional services revenue was $2.7 million and $3.6 million on the consolidated balance sheets as of December 29, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively.
Gross Profit. The table below sets forth the changes in gross profit for Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024, compared to Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023 (in thousands, except percentage data):
Fiscal Years |
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2024 |
2023 |
Year-Over-Year Change |
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Amount | % of Total Revenues | Amount | % of Total Revenues | Amount | Percentage | |||||||||||||||||||
Revenue |
$ | 20,112 | 100 | % | $ | 21,198 | 100 | % | $ | (1,086 | ) | (5 | )% | |||||||||||
Cost of revenue |
8,226 | 41 | % | 6,711 | 32 | % | 1,515 | 23 | % | |||||||||||||||
Gross profit |
$ | 11,886 | 59 | % | $ | 14,487 | 68 | % | $ | (2,601 | ) | (18 | )% |
Gross profit in Fiscal Year 2024 compared to Fiscal Year 2023 decreased approximately $2.6 million, or (18)%. The change in gross profit reflects a decrease in revenue of $1.1 million, or (5)%, accompanied by an increase in cost of revenue of $1.5 million, or 23%. The decrease in revenue was driven by a $2.1 million decrease in new product revenue, primarily due to reductions in eFPGA IP professional services revenue, partially offset by a $1.0 million increase in mature product revenue. The $1.5 million increase in cost of revenue was primarily comprised of increases in labor, tooling, and tooling-related depreciation expense, offset by decreases in consulting costs, all collectively associated with performing for revenue contracts, including device production, and additionally further offset by changes in inventory reserves.
In Fiscal Years 2024 and 2023, we capitalized costs associated with internal-use software of approximately $1.1 million and $1.1 million, respectively. For Fiscal Years 2024 and 2023, we recognized $0.7 million and $0.6 million, respectively in amortization expense of internal-use software in cost of revenues on our consolidated statements of operations.
Our hardware products have historically had a long product life cycle and obsolescence has not been a significant factor in the valuation of inventories. However, as we pursue opportunities in the IoT market and continue to develop new products, we believe our product life cycle may be shorter, which will increase the potential for obsolescence. In general, our standard manufacturing lead times are longer than the binding forecasts we receive from customers. The sale of inventories previously written-off was approximately $0.1 million and $0.1 million in Fiscal Years 2024 and 2023, respectively. We wrote down approximately $0.1 million and $0.6 million to inventory reserves in Fiscal Years 2024 and 2023.
Operating Expenses. The table below sets forth the changes in operating expenses for Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024 compared to Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023 (in thousands, except percentage data):
Fiscal Years |
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2024 |
2023 |
Year-Over-Year Change |
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Amount | % of Total Revenues | Amount | % of Total Revenues | Amount | Percentage | |||||||||||||||||||
Research and development |
$ | 6,544 | 32 | % | $ | 6,448 | 30 | % | $ | 96 | 1 | % | ||||||||||||
Selling, general and administrative |
8,773 | 44 | % | 7,969 | 38 | % | 804 | 10 | % | |||||||||||||||
Total operating expenses |
$ | 15,317 | 75 | % | $ | 14,417 | 68 | % | $ | 900 | 6 | % |
Research and Development Expenses. Our research and development expenses consist primarily of personnel, overhead, and other costs associated with System on Chip ("SoC") and software development, programmable logic design, and AI and eFPGA development. R&D expenses were $6.5 million and $6.4 million in Fiscal Years 2024 and 2023, respectively, which represented 32% and 30%, respectively, of revenue for those periods. The $0.1 million increase in R&D expenses in Fiscal Year 2024 as compared to Fiscal Year 2023 was primarily attributable to increases in employee salaries, financing arrangement expenses, and reductions in the allocation of R&D expenses to cost of revenues, partially offset by a decrease in consulting costs, software maintenance costs, and amortization expense associated with software tools. R&D costs allocable to cost of revenues are included in cost of revenue in the consolidated statements of operations.
Selling, General and Administrative Expenses. Our selling, general and administrative ("SG&A") expenses consist primarily of personnel and related overhead costs for sales, marketing, finance, administration, human resources, and general management. SG&A expenses were $8.8 million and $8.0 million in Fiscal Years 2024 and 2023, respectively, which represented 44% and 38%, respectively, of revenue for those periods. The $0.8 million increase in SG&A expenses in Fiscal Year 2024 as compared to Fiscal Year 2023 was primarily attributable to an increase in salaries and stock-based compensation costs, partially offset by a decrease in incentive compensation.
Interest Expense and Interest Income and Other (Expense) Income, net. The table below sets forth the changes in interest expense and interest income and other (expense) income, net, for the Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024, as compared to Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023 (in thousands, except percentage data):
Fiscal Years |
Year-Over-Year Change |
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2024 |
2023 |
Amount |
Percentage |
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Interest expense |
$ | (406 | ) | $ | (215 | ) | $ | 191 | 89 | % | ||||||
Interest income and other (expense) income, net |
$ | (1 | ) | $ | (116 | ) | (115 | ) | (99 | )% | ||||||
Total interest expense and interest income and other (expense) income, net |
$ | (407 | ) | $ | (331 | ) | $ | 76 | 23 | % |
Interest expense relates primarily to our line of credit facility. Interest income and other (expenses) income, net, relates to the interest earned on our money market accounts and foreign exchange gain or losses recorded.
Provision for Income Taxes. The table below sets forth the changes in provision for income taxes in the Fiscal Year ended December 29, 2024 compared to the Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2023 (in thousands, except percentage data):
Fiscal Years |
Year-Over-Year Change |
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2024 |
2023 |
Amount |
Percentage |
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Provision for income taxes |
$ | 3 | $ | 2 | $ | 1 | 50 | % |
Income tax expense for the Fiscal Year 2024 and 2023 relates primarily to foreign income tax provisions.
As of the end of Fiscal Year 2024, our ability to utilize our U.S. deferred tax assets in future periods is uncertain and, accordingly, we have recorded a full valuation allowance against the related U.S. deferred tax assets. We will continue to assess the realizability of deferred tax assets in future periods.
Comparison of Fiscal Years 2023 and 2022
For discussion related to the results of operations and changes in financial condition for Fiscal Year 2023 compared to Fiscal Year 2022, please refer to “Part II, Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Conditions and Results of Operations” in our Fiscal Year 2023 Form 10-K, which was originally filed with the SEC on March 27, 2024.
Key Performance Indicators
Sales, operating income, and net income are some of the key performance indicators that management uses to manage the business. Management uses sales, operating income (loss), and net income (loss) to evaluate the company's financial condition and operating performance, as well as evaluate income generated in deciding whether to reinvest profits into the company or to use such profits for other purposes, such as for acquisitions or share repurchases. These key performance indicators are also used to monitor budget versus actual results, as well as in competitive analyses by benchmarking to our competitors.
Liquidity and Capital Resources
We have historically financed our operating losses and capital investments through the sale of our common stock, financing arrangements, operating leases, and cash flows provided by operations. We also have the ability to draw advances from our revolving facility with Heritage Bank of Commerce ("Heritage Bank"). As of December 29, 2024, our principal sources of liquidity consisted of cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash of $21.9 million, inclusive of $18 million in advances from our $20 million revolving facility. The revolving credit facility with Heritage Bank expires on December 31, 2025, and the Company fully expects to renew it before expiration.
Our principal contractual commitments include purchase obligations, re-payments of advances from our revolving facility, and payments under financing arrangements and operating leases. Purchase obligations include amounts that are recorded on our consolidated balance sheets, as well as amounts that are not recorded on our consolidated balance sheets. Purchase obligations that are recorded on our consolidated balance sheets are largely comprised of open purchase order commitments to suppliers and to subcontractors. Our risk associated with these purchase obligations is limited to the termination liability provisions within those contracts and as such, we do not believe they represent a material liquidity risk to us. Purchase obligations not recorded on our consolidated balance sheets represent significant future obligations associated with ongoing eFPGA IP revenue contracts. These obligations are dependent on numerous variables and therefore, it is difficult to predict the amount and timing of payments which could differ materially from our estimates.
Credit Agreement
On December 21, 2018, we entered into an Amended and Restated Loan and Security Agreement with Heritage Bank (as amended, the "Loan Agreement") which among other things, provided a revolving facility ("Revolving Facility") allowing us to draw advances up to $15.0 million. The Revolving Facility includes a number of customary and restrictive financial covenants including maintaining certain minimum cash levels with the lender. On December 8, 2023, we entered into the Seventh Amendment to the Loan Agreement, which increased the line of credit to $20.0 million, extended the maturity date from December 31, 2024 to December 31, 2025, and increased the annual facility fee to $60 thousand from $45 thousand, payable each December 31st. Advances under the Revolving Facility bear a variable annual interest rate equal to one half of one percentage point (0.50%) above the prime rate. On December 29, 2024, we had an $18 million outstanding balance on the Revolving Facility with an interest rate of 8.00%. On December 31, 2023, we had a $20 million outstanding balance on the Revolving Facility with an interest rate of 9.00%. We were in compliance with all loan covenants under the Loan Agreement, as of the end of the current reporting period.
Heritage Bank has a first-priority security interest in substantially all of the company’s tangible and intangible assets to secure any outstanding amounts under the Loan Agreement. See Note 7 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information.
Common Stock Offerings
On March 6, 2025, we entered into common stock purchase agreements with certain institutional investors for the sale of an aggregate of 256 thousand shares of common stock in a registered direct offering pursuant to an effective shelf registration statement on Form S-3. These share placements resulted in gross proceeds of approximately $1.5 million. Issuance costs related to the offering are accounted for as a reduction in proceeds, and they were immaterial. Refer to Note 16 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information.
On February 25, 2025, we entered into an At Market Issuance Sales Agreement with Needham & Company, LLC (the "Agent"), pursuant to which we may offer and sell, from time to time, through the Agent, as sales agent, shares of the Company's common stock, having an aggregate offering price of up to $20,000,000.
On December 5, 2024, we entered into common stock purchase agreements with certain institutional investors and their affiliated entities for the sale of an aggregate of 424 thousand shares of common stock in a registered direct offering pursuant to an effective shelf registration statement on Form S-3, resulting in net cash proceeds of approximately $3.2 million. Issuance costs related to the offering were $27 thousand and are accounted for as a reduction in proceeds.
On March 13, 2024, we entered into common stock purchase agreements with certain institutional investors and their affiliated entities for the sale of an aggregate of 223 thousand shares of common stock in a registered direct offering pursuant to an effective shelf registration statement on Form S-3, resulting in net cash proceeds of approximately $3.5 million. Issuance costs related to the offering were $24 thousand.
On September 14, 2022 and February 9, 2022, we entered into common stock purchase agreements with certain investors for the sale of an aggregate of 487 thousand and 310 thousand shares of common stock, respectively, in registered direct offerings pursuant to an effective shelf registration statement on Form S-3, resulting in net cash proceeds of approximately $3.2 million and $1.5 million, respectively. Issuance costs related to the September 14, 2022 and February 9, 2022 offerings were immaterial.
On August 17, 2022, we filed a new Registration Statement on Form S-3 with the SEC to replace a previously expired Registration on Form S-3, under which we may sell, from time-to-time common stock, preferred stock, depositary shares, warrants, debt securities, and units, individually or as units comprised of one or more of the other securities or a combination thereof. Our registration statement became effective on August 26, 2022.
See Note 11 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information.
Cash Flows
As of December 29, 2024, most of our cash and cash equivalents were invested in a Heritage Bank money market account. As of December 29, 2024, our interest-bearing debt consisted of $3.1 million outstanding under finance arrangements and $18 million outstanding under our Revolving Facility. See Note 7 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information.
Cash balances held at our foreign subsidiaries were approximately $0.1 million and $0.1 million as of December 29, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively. Earnings from our foreign subsidiaries are currently deemed to be indefinitely reinvested. We do not expect such reinvestment to affect our liquidity and capital resources and we continually evaluate our liquidity needs and ability to meet global cash requirements as a part of our overall capital deployment strategy. Factors which affect our liquidity, capital resources, and global capital deployment strategy include anticipated cash flows, the ability to repatriate cash in a tax efficient manner, funding requirements for operations and investment activities, acquisitions and divestitures, and capital market conditions.
Our cash flows were as follows (in thousands):
Fiscal Year |
||||||||||||
2024 |
2023 |
2022 |
||||||||||
Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities |
$ | 27 | $ | 4,847 | $ | (4,056 | ) | |||||
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities |
(6,465 | ) | (6,339 | ) | (814 | ) | ||||||
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities |
3,712 | 6,897 | 4,466 |
Net Cash provided by (used in) Operating Activities
In Fiscal Year 2024, net cash provided by operating activities was $27 thousand, which was primarily due to non-cash charges of $8.6 million. Non-cash charges primarily consisted of stock-based compensation expense of $4.6 million, depreciation and amortization of long-lived assets and certain definite-lived intangible assets of $3.9 million, and write-down of inventories of $0.1 million. Non-cash charges were partially offset by a net loss of $3.8 million and changes in working capital of $4.7 million. Changes in working capital consisted of a decrease in trades payable of $3.6 million, a decrease in accrued liabilities of $1.1 million, an increase in accounts receivable of $0.8 million, a decrease in deferred revenue of $0.6 million, and a decrease in lease liabilities of $0.3 million, partially offset by a decrease in contract assets of $0.9 million, a decrease in other assets of $0.6 million, and a decrease in inventories of $0.3 million. Historically, our operating cash flows represented cash used in operating activities.
In Fiscal Year 2023, net cash provided by operating activities was $4.8 million, which was primarily due to non-cash charges of $5.3 million. Non-cash charges primarily consisted of stock-based compensation expense of $2.5 million, depreciation and amortization of long-lived assets and certain definite-lived intangible assets of $2.2 million, and write-down of inventories of $0.6 million. Non-cash charges were partially offset by a net loss of $0.1 million and changes in working capital of $0.3 million. Changes in working capital consisted of an increase in contract assets of $1.6 million, an increase in other assets of $1.2 million, and a decrease in lease liabilities of $0.4 million, partially offset by a decrease in accounts receivable of $1.0 million, an increase in accrued liabilities of $1.0 million, and an increase in deferred revenue of $0.8 million. Historically, our operating cash flows represented cash used in operating activities.
Net Cash provided by (used in) Investing Activities
Net cash used in investing activities in Fiscal Year 2024 was approximately $6.5 million, which was primarily attributable to capital expenditures related to property and equipment of $5.4 million, $0.1 million in expenditures related to intangible assets, and the capitalization of internal-use software in the amount of $1.1 million, partially offset by stock-based compensation capitalized to property and equipment and internal-use software in the amount of $9 thousand and $149 thousand, respectively.
Net cash used in investing activities in Fiscal Year 2023 was approximately $6.3 million, which was primarily attributable to capital expenditures primarily related to property and equipment of $5.6 million and the capitalization of internal-use software in the amount of $1.0 million, partially offset by stock-based compensation capitalized to internal-use software in the amount of $0.2 million.
Net Cash provided by (used in) Financing Activities
In Fiscal Year 2024, net cash provided by financing activities was $3.7 million, primarily attributable to proceeds from the issuance of common stock in the amount of $7.1 million, partially offset by $1.4 million in payments related to financing arrangements primarily for tooling related to revenue contracts with customers and $2.0 million in greater payments than borrowings on the Company's revolving line of credit.
In Fiscal Year 2023, net cash provided by financing activities was $6.9 million, primarily attributable to an increase in our revolving credit facility in the amount of $5.0 million and proceeds from the issuance of common stock in the amount of $2.5 million, partially offset by $0.7 million in payments related to financing arrangements primarily for tooling related to revenue contracts with customers.
We require substantial cash to fund our business. However, we believe that our existing cash and cash equivalents, together with available financial resources from the revolving facility will be sufficient to satisfy our operations and capital expenditures over the next twelve months. Our revolving facility will expire on December 31, 2025. Further, any violations of debt covenants may restrict our access to any additional cash draws from the revolving line of credit and may require our immediate repayment of the outstanding debt amounts. After the next twelve months, our cash requirements will depend on many factors, including our level of revenue and gross profit, the market acceptance of our existing and new products, the levels at which we maintain inventories and accounts receivable, costs of securing access to adequate manufacturing capacity, new product development efforts, capital expenditures, and the level of our operating expenses. In order to satisfy our longer-term liquidity requirements, we may be required to raise additional equity or debt financing. There can be no assurance that financing will be available at commercially acceptable terms or at all.
Material Cash Requirements
The following discussion describes the material cash requirements from known contractual obligations and other obligations, and the effect such obligations are expected to have on our liquidity and cash flows in future fiscal periods. The following summarizes our material cash requirements as of December 29, 2024:
Payments Due by Period |
||||||||||||||||||||
Total |
Less than 1 year |
1-3 Years |
4-5 Years |
More than 5 Years |
||||||||||||||||
Operating lease obligations |
$ | 816 | $ | 339 | $ | 477 | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||||
Financing arrangements |
3,404 | 2,123 | 1,281 | — | — | |||||||||||||||
Revolving Facility (1) |
18,000 |
18,000 |
— |
— |
— |
|||||||||||||||
Purchase obligations: |
||||||||||||||||||||
Wafer purchases (2) |
— | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||
Other purchase commitments |
1,272 | 1,192 | 80 | — | — | |||||||||||||||
Total material cash requirements |
$ | 23,492 | $ | 21,654 | $ | 1,838 | $ | — | $ | — |
(1) |
The current maturity date on our Revolving Facility is December 31, 2025. See Note 7 to the consolidated financial statements for additional information. |
(2) | Certain wafer manufacturers require us to forecast wafer starts several months in advance. We are committed to take delivery of and pay for a portion of forecasted wafer volume. |
Concentration of Suppliers
We depend on a limited number of contract manufacturers, subcontractors, and suppliers for wafer fabrication, assembly, programming, and testing of our hardware products and for the supply of programming equipment. These services are typically provided by one supplier for each of our hardware products. We generally purchase these single or limited source services through standard purchase orders. Since we rely on independent subcontractors to perform these services, we cannot directly control product delivery schedules, costs, or quality levels. Our future success also depends on the financial viability of our independent subcontractors. These subcontract manufacturers produce products for other companies and we must place orders in advance of expected delivery. As a result, we have only a limited ability to react to fluctuations in demand for our products, which could cause us to have an excess or a shortage of inventories of a particular product, and our ability to respond to changes in demand is limited by these suppliers’ ability to provide products with the quantity, quality, cost, and timeliness that we require. The decision not to provide these services to us or the inability to supply these services to us, such as in the case of a natural or financial disaster, would have a significant impact on our business. Increased demand from other companies could result in these subcontract manufacturers allocating available capacity to customers that are larger or have long-term supply contracts in place and we may be unable to obtain adequate foundry and other capacity at acceptable prices, or we may experience delays or interruption in supply. Additionally, volatility of economic, market, social, and political conditions in countries where these suppliers operate may be unpredictable and could result in a reduction in product revenue or increase our cost of revenue and could adversely affect our business, financial condition, and results of operations.
Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements
We do not maintain any off-balance arrangements within the meaning of Item 303(b) of Regulation S-K.
Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements
See Note 2 to the consolidated financial statements for a full description of recent accounting pronouncements, including the expected dates of adoption and estimated effects on financial condition and results of operations, which is incorporated by reference herein.
ITEM 7A. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK
Not applicable.
ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
To the Board of Directors and
Shareholders of QuickLogic Corporation
Opinion on the Consolidated Financial Statements
We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheet of QuickLogic Corporation and Subsidiaries (collectively, the “Company”) as of December 29, 2024, and the related consolidated statements of operations, stockholders’ equity, and cash flows, for the year then ended, and the related notes (collectively referred to as the “consolidated financial statements”). In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the consolidated financial position of the Company as of December 29, 2024, and the results of their operations and their cash flows as of and for the year ended December 29, 2024, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.
Basis for Opinion
These consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’s consolidated financial statements based on our audit. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (“PCAOB”) and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) and the PCAOB.
We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. The Company is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal control over financial reporting. As part of our audit, we are required to obtain an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion.
Our audit included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the consolidated financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the consolidated financial statements. Our audit also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the consolidated financial statements. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
Critical Audit Matters
The critical audit matters communicated below are matters arising from the current period audit of the consolidated financial statements that were communicated or required to be communicated to the audit committee and that: (1) relate to accounts or disclosures that are material to the consolidated financial statements and (2) involved our especially challenging, subjective, or complex judgments. The communication of critical audit matters does not alter in any way our opinion on the consolidated financial statements, taken as a whole, and we are not, by communicating the critical audit matters below, providing separate opinions on the critical audit matters or on the accounts or disclosures to which they relate.
Inventory Valuation for Excess or Obsolete Inventory – Refer to Notes 1 and 4 in the Consolidated Financial Statements
As described in Notes 1 and 4 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company’s total inventories, net balance was $1.7 million, for both current and non-current, as of December 29, 2024. The Company values its inventories at lower of standard cost or net realizable value. Standard cost approximates actual cost on a first-in, first-out basis. The Company writes down inventory that has become obsolete, has a cost basis in excess of its expected net realizable value, or in excess of expected requirements.
The estimate of excess or obsolete inventories is subjective and dependent on the estimates of future demand for a particular product, which significantly relies on the Company’s historical sales. The determination of the inventory valuation in regard to excess or obsolete inventory requires management to make significant assumptions and subjective judgments about the future salability of the inventory and the value of obsolete inventory. These assumptions include the assessment of market conditions and trends, sales forecasts, historical sales, anticipated sales price, product obsolescence, customer concentrations, and other factors.
We identified the inventory valuation for excess or obsolete inventory as a critical audit matter due to the significant judgment required by management in estimating the allowance for inventory that is in excess or obsolete. The complexity and subjectivity of these estimates are heightened by the need to consider historical sales trends, expected product life, forecasted sales demand, and product mix. This involved significant audit effort and the use of auditor judgment when performing audit procedures and evaluating the results of those procedures.
How the Critical Audit Matter Was Addressed in the Audit
Our audit procedures related to the inventory valuation of excess or obsolete inventory, and the associated assumptions that the Company identified, included the following, among others:
• | Evaluating the internal controls related to the inventory valuation of excess or obsolete inventory and determining if those controls were designed and implemented appropriately. |
• | Evaluating the appropriateness of management’s process for developing the estimates related to the inventory valuation of excess or obsolete inventory by: |
• | Evaluating management’s methodology utilized to calculate the estimates. |
• | Performing inquiries with management as to the composition of the reserve for aged inventory items without recent sales. |
• | Assessing the appropriateness of the formulaic calculation and management adjustments by product type. |
• | Evaluating the reasonableness of the significant assumptions used by management including those related to future demand by: |
• | Evaluating management’s ability to sell inventory on hand based on the Company’s historical sales. |
• | Performing inquiries with non-financial personnel, regarding obsolete or excess inventory items and other factors to corroborate management’s assertions regarding qualitative judgments about excess or obsolete inventories. |
• | Evaluating qualitative factors included within the determination of significant assumptions used by management. |
• | Testing the completeness, accuracy, and relevance of the underlying data used in management’s estimates. |
Revenue Recognition of Professional Services Contracts
As described in Notes 1 and 14 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company’s eFPGA-related professional services revenue was approximately $13.1 million for the year ended December 29, 2024. eFPGA-related professional services contracts often include promises to transfer intellectual property licenses to customize hardware products and to provide professional services and technical support services to customers. Judgment is required by management to allocate the transaction price to the separately identifiable performance obligations in the contract based on each performance obligation’s relative standalone selling price. eFPGA intellectual property is rarely sold on a standalone basis, and as such, management is required to estimate the standalone selling price related to each performance obligation. Management uses a variety of methods to determine the standalone selling price of each performance obligation, including an adjusted market assessment approach, residual approach or the expected cost plus a margin approach, depending on the characteristics and context of the deliverables.
We have identified the determination of the standalone selling price as a critical audit matter. Auditing this element of revenue recognition involved especially challenging auditor judgment in the determination of distinct performance obligations and an increased extent of auditor effort due to; (i) the use of significant management judgment in determining the standalone selling price when observable inputs are not readily available and (ii) the inherent, unique nature of each performance obligation within each professional service contract.
How the Critical Audit Matter Was Addressed in the Audit
Our audit procedures related to determination of the standalone selling price of professional services contracts, and the associated assumptions that the Company identified, included the following, among others:
• | Evaluating the internal controls related to the Company’s review and application of the revenue recognition guidance and determining if those controls were designed and implemented appropriately. |
• | Evaluating the appropriateness of management's methodology used to determine the standalone selling price for a sample of contracts including: |
• | Obtaining and reading contract source documents, including master agreements, and other related documents. |
• | Assessing management’s application of the methodology based on the relevant guidance under Accounting Standards Codification 606, Revenue from Contracts with Customers. |
• | Evaluating the appropriateness of management’s determination of the standalone selling price, including: |
• | Assessing assumptions utilized by management in determining the standalone selling price when comparative information is not readily observable. | |
• | Corroborating management’s assumptions through review of similar contracts when available and applicable depending on the nature of the contract. |
• | Performing inquiries with individuals outside of the accounting department to corroborate management’s assertions and assumptions and performing sensitivity analysis to unobservable inputs. |
• | Testing the application of management’s methodology to each selected professional services contract. |
• | Testing the mathematical accuracy of management’s calculations of the standalone selling price of a selection of professional services contracts. |
/s/
We have served as the Company's auditor since 2024.
March 25, 2025
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
To the Shareholders and the Board of Directors of
QuickLogic Corporation
Opinion on the Financial Statements
We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheet of QuickLogic Corporation (the “Company”) as of December 31, 2023, the related consolidated statements of operations, stockholders’ equity, and cash flows for the years ended December 31, 2023 and January 1, 2023, and the related notes (collectively referred to as the “consolidated financial statements”). In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the consolidated financial position of the Company as of December 31, 2023, and the consolidated results of its operations and its cash flows for the years ended December 31, 2023 and January 1, 2023, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.
Basis for Opinion
These consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’s consolidated financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (“PCAOB”) and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.
We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. The Company is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal control over financial reporting. As part of our audits we are required to obtain an understanding of internal control over financial reporting but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion.
Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the consolidated financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures to respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the consolidated financial statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the consolidated financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
/s/ Moss Adams LLP
San Francisco, California
March 26, 2024, except for Note 14 to the consolidated financial statements, as to which the date is March 25, 2025.
We served as the Company’s auditor from 2016 to 2024.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(in thousands, except par value amount)
December 29, | December 31, | |||||||
2024 | 2023 | |||||||
ASSETS | ||||||||
Current assets: | ||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash | $ | $ | ||||||
Accounts receivable, net of allowances for credit losses of $ and $ , as of December 29, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively | ||||||||
Contract assets | ||||||||
Note receivable | ||||||||
Inventories | ||||||||
Prepaid expenses and other current assets | ||||||||
Total current assets | ||||||||
Property and equipment, net | ||||||||
Capitalized internal-use software, net | ||||||||
Right of use assets, net | ||||||||
Intangible assets, net | ||||||||
Non-marketable equity investment | ||||||||
Goodwill | ||||||||
Inventories, non-current | ||||||||
Note receivable, non-current | ||||||||
Other assets | ||||||||
TOTAL ASSETS | $ | $ | ||||||
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY | ||||||||
Current liabilities: | ||||||||
Revolving line of credit | $ | $ | ||||||
Trade payables | ||||||||
Accrued liabilities | ||||||||
Deferred revenue | ||||||||
Notes payable, current | ||||||||
Lease liabilities, current | ||||||||
Total current liabilities | ||||||||
Long-term liabilities: | ||||||||
Lease liabilities, non-current | ||||||||
Notes payable, non-current | ||||||||
Other long-term liabilities | ||||||||
Total liabilities | ||||||||
Commitments and Contingencies (Note 15) | ||||||||
Stockholders' equity: | ||||||||
Preferred stock, $ par value; shares authorized; shares issued or outstanding | ||||||||
Common stock, $ par value; shares authorized; and shares issued and outstanding as of December 29, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively | ||||||||
Additional paid-in capital | ||||||||
Accumulated deficit | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||
Total stockholders' equity | ||||||||
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY | $ | $ |
The accompanying notes form an integral part of these Consolidated Financial Statements.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(in thousands, except per share amounts)
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Statements of Operations: | ||||||||||||
Revenue | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
Cost of revenue | ||||||||||||
Gross profit | ||||||||||||
Operating expenses: | ||||||||||||
Research and development | ||||||||||||
Selling, general and administrative | ||||||||||||
Operating income (loss) | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||||
Interest expense | ( | ) | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||
Interest income and other (expense) income, net | ( | ) | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||
Income (loss) before income taxes | ( | ) | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||
Provision for income taxes | ||||||||||||
Net income (loss) | $ | ( | ) | $ | ( | ) | $ | ( | ) | |||
Net income (loss) per share: (1) | ||||||||||||
Basic and diluted | $ | ( | ) | $ | ( | ) | $ | ( | ) | |||
Weighted average shares: (1) | ||||||||||||
Basic and diluted |
(1) Note: Net income (loss) equals total comprehensive income (loss) for all years presented.
The accompanying notes form an integral part of these Consolidated Financial Statements.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(in thousands)
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Cash flows provided by (used in) operating activities: | ||||||||||||
Net income (loss) | $ | ( | ) | $ | ( | ) | $ | ( | ) | |||
Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net cash provided by (used in) operating activities: | ||||||||||||
Depreciation and amortization | ||||||||||||
ROU asset amortization | ||||||||||||
Stock-based compensation | ||||||||||||
Write-down of inventories | ||||||||||||
Other | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||||
Changes in operating assets and liabilities: | ||||||||||||
Accounts receivable | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||||
Contract assets | ) | ) | ||||||||||
Inventories | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||||
Other assets | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||||
Trade payables | ( | ) | ||||||||||
Accrued liabilities | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||||
Deferred revenue | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||||
Lease liabilities | ( | ) | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||
Other long-term liabilities | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||||
Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities | ( | ) | ||||||||||
Cash flows provided by (used in) investing activities: | ||||||||||||
Capital expenditures for property and equipment | ( | ) | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||
Capitalized internal-use software | ( | ) | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||
Purchases of intangible assets | ( | ) | ||||||||||
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities | ( | ) | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||
Cash flows provided by (used in) financing activities: | ||||||||||||
Payment of notes payable | ( | ) | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||
Proceeds from notes payable | ||||||||||||
Proceeds from line of credit | ||||||||||||
Repayment of line of credit | ( | ) | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||
Proceeds from issuance of common stock | ||||||||||||
Proceeds from issuance of common stock to investors | ||||||||||||
Stock issuance costs | ( | ) | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities | ||||||||||||
Net increase (decrease) in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||||
Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash at the beginning of the period | ||||||||||||
Cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash at the end of the period | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
Supplemental disclosures of cash flow information: | ||||||||||||
Interest paid | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
Income taxes paid | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
Supplemental schedule of non-cash investing and financing activities: | ||||||||||||
Purchases of assets with financing arrangements | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
Stock-based compensation capitalized as internal-use software | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
Stock-based compensation capitalized as tooling and fixed assets | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
Purchases of property and equipment in accounts payable and accrued liabilities | $ | $ | $ |
The accompanying notes form an integral part of these Consolidated Financial Statements.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
(in thousands)
Common Stock | ||||||||||||||||||||
Par Value | Additional Paid-In | Accumulated | Total Stockholders' | |||||||||||||||||
Shares | Amount | Capital | Deficit | Equity | ||||||||||||||||
Balance at January 2, 2022 | $ | $ | $ | ( | ) | $ | ||||||||||||||
Common stock issued under stock plans and employee stock purchase plans | ||||||||||||||||||||
Common stock offering, net of issuance costs | ||||||||||||||||||||
Stock-based compensation | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Net loss | — | ( | ) | ( | ) | |||||||||||||||
Balance at January 1, 2023 | ( | ) | ||||||||||||||||||
Common stock issued under stock plans and employee stock purchase plans | ||||||||||||||||||||
Common stock offering, net of issuance costs | ||||||||||||||||||||
Stock-based compensation | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Net loss | — | ( | ) | ( | ) | |||||||||||||||
Balance at December 31, 2023 | ( | ) | ||||||||||||||||||
Common stock issued under stock plans and employee stock purchase plans | ||||||||||||||||||||
Common stock offering, net of issuance costs | ||||||||||||||||||||
Stock-based compensation | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Net loss | — | ( | ) | ( | ) | |||||||||||||||
Balance at December 29, 2024 | $ | $ | $ | ( | ) | $ |
The accompanying notes form an integral part of these Consolidated Financial Statements.
NOTE 1 — THE COMPANY AND BASIS OF PRESENTATION
QuickLogic Corporation was founded in 1988 and reincorporated in Delaware in 1999. The Company provides innovative, programmable silicon and software platforms to enable its customers to develop custom hardware products in a fast time-to-market and cost-effective way. Specifically, QuickLogic is a fabless semiconductor company with a variety of products: embedded FPGA ("eFPGA") intellectual property ("IP"), low power, multi-core semiconductor system-on-chips ("SoCs"), discrete FPGAs, and AI software. QuickLogic's customers can use its eFPGA IP for hardware acceleration and pre-processing in their Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) products, the Company's SoCs to run its customers' software and build their hardware around, and the Company's discrete FPGAs to implement their custom functionality. The Analytics Toolkit from SensiML Corporation ("SensiML"), the Company's wholly-owned subsidiary, provides an end-to-end Artificial Intelligence / Machine Learning solution with accurate sensor algorithms using AI technology. The full range of products, software tools, and eFPGA IP enables the practical and efficient programmability for the Company's customers across Aerospace, and Defense, Consumer/Industrial IoT, and Consumer Electronics markets.
QuickLogic’s Fiscal Year ends on the Sunday closest to December 31. Fiscal Years2024, 2023, and 2022 ended on December 29, 2024, December 31, 2023, and January 1, 2023, respectively.
Liquidity
The Company has financed its operations and capital investments through the sale of common stock, financing arrangements, operating leases, a revolving line of credit, and cash flows from operations. As of December 29, 2024, the Company’s principal sources of liquidity consisted of cash and cash equivalents of $
The Company's principal contractual commitments include purchase obligations, re-payments of draw-downs from the revolving line of credit, and payments under operating and finance arrangements. Purchase obligations are largely comprised of open purchase order commitments to suppliers. The Company's risk associated with the purchase obligations is limited to the termination liability provisions within those contracts and as such, the Company does not believe they represent a material liquidity risk. See Note 7 for additional information.
Heritage Bank has a first-priority security interest in substantially all of the Company’s tangible and intangible assets to secure any outstanding amounts under a loan agreement. See Note 7 for additional information.
Principles of Consolidation
The consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, in the United States of America or ("US GAAP"), and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission, ("SEC"), and include the accounts of QuickLogic and its wholly-owned subsidiaries. All intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated.
Certain prior period amounts and disclosures in the consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes have been reclassified or modified to conform to the current period's presentation.
Critical Accounting Policies and Use of Estimates
The preparation of these consolidated financial statements in conformity with U.S. GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and the disclosures of commitments and contingencies at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting periods.
The methods, estimates, and judgments the Company uses in applying its most critical accounting policies have a significant impact on the results it reports in its consolidated financial statements. The SEC has defined critical accounting policies as those that are most important to the portrayal of the Company's financial condition and results of operations and requires it to make its most difficult and subjective judgments, often as a result of the need to make estimates of matters that are inherently uncertain.
Although these estimates are based on the Company’s knowledge of current events and actions it may undertake in the future, actual results may ultimately materially differ from these estimates and assumptions. Areas where management uses subjective judgment include, but are not limited to, revenue recognition, inventory valuation, including the identification of excess quantities, market value, and obsolescence, and valuation of goodwill and long-lived and intangible assets. The Company believes that it applies judgments and estimates in a consistent manner and that such consistent application results in consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes that fairly represent all periods presented. However, any factual errors or errors in these judgments and estimates may have a material impact on the Company's financial statements.
Revenue Recognition
The Company recognizes revenue in accordance with Accounting Standards Codification ("ASC") Topic 606 and related Accounting Standards Updates ("ASUs").
The Company earns revenue from principal activities by (i) delivering standard hardware products, (ii) delivering and providing eFPGA IP products and professional services, (iii) and providing software as a service to customers, as well as (iv) other miscellaneous revenue.
In accordance with ASC 606, the Company applies a five-step model for recognizing revenue
1. | Identification of the contract, or contracts, with a customer, | |
2. | Identification of the performance obligations in the contract, | |
3. | Determination of the transaction price. The Company estimates the transaction price based on the amount expected to be received for transferring the performance obligations in the contract, which may include both fixed consideration and variable consideration. The Company's contracts with customers containing variable consideration are generally sales-based royalties, which is fully constrained. | |
4. | Allocation of the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract, and | |
5. | Recognition of revenue when, or as, the Company satisfies a performance obligation. |
When entering into a new contract, the Company evaluates certain factors including the customer’s ability to pay, or credit risk.
The following is a description of the Company's revenue recognition policy by principal activity:
Hardware Product Revenue
The Company generates revenue by supplying standard hardware products, which must be programmed before they can be used in an application. Standard hardware products may be programmed by the Company, distributors, end customers, or third parties. Contracts with customers for hardware products generally do not include other performance obligations such as services, extended warranties, or other material rights. The Company's promise to transfer hardware products is identified as a distinct performance obligation. The Company recognizes revenue on hardware products when it transfers control of the promised products to the customer. Transfer of control of hardware products occurs when its performance obligation is satisfied, which typically occurs upon shipment from the Company's manufacturing site or headquarters. The Company recognizes revenue in an amount that reflects the consideration it expects to receive in exchange for those products, which also represents the standalone selling price ("SSP") of its performance obligation. Hardware product prices are fixed. The Company elected a practical expedient in which it does not assess whether a contract has a significant financing component since its standard payment terms are less than one year. The Company allocates the transaction price of customer contracts to each distinct product based on its relative SSP. The sale of hardware products does not typically involve significant judgment or estimates by management. However, the Company does record an allowance for hardware product sales returns, which requires some judgment by management.
Hardware Product Sales Return Allowance
While the terms and conditions of the sale of hardware products generally do not allow for refunds or product returns other than for warranty repairs, the Company does record an allowance for hardware product sales returns. The allowance for sales returns is based on a historical returns analysis of the prior four quarters that is performed on a quarterly basis. Amounts recorded for hardware product sales returns were $
eFPGA IP Revenue
eFPGA IP revenue is comprised of eFPGA intellectual property revenue, eFPGA-related professional services revenue, and eFPGA-related support and maintenance revenue. The Company recognizes eFPGA intellectual property revenue from licensing its eFPGA intellectual property to customers and recognizes eFPGA-related professional services revenue from the fees associated with the custom development and integration of the Company's technology solutions into hardware products. The Company recognizes eFPGA revenue from support and maintenance services for post-implementation customer support ratably over the service term. Renewals of support and maintenance contracts create new performance obligations for which the Company recognizes as revenue ratably over the service term. The majority of the Company's revenue is derived from sales of eFPGA IP licenses and professional services.
eFPGA IP contractual arrangements often include promises to transfer intellectual property licenses, to customize hardware products, and to provide professional services and technical support services. The Company must determine whether the promised goods and services are distinct performance obligations that should be accounted for separately or are a single, combined performance obligation and should be accounted for together. In accordance with ASC 606, the Company must evaluate whether the customer can benefit from each good or service on its own or together with other resources that are readily available to the customer and whether the transfer of each good or service can be separately identifiable. The Company also must evaluate when control of the performance obligation is transferred to and accepted by the customer. The Company notes these determinations, in addition to identifying contractual terms and conditions within the contract including termination for convenience clauses, enforceable rights to payment for performance completed-to-date, and consideration of the alternative use of the asset require significant judgment. In these judgments, the Company considers the context of the contract, historical experience with similar contracts, and the interdependency of the promised goods and services.
Additionally, judgment is required by management to allocate the transaction price to the separately identifiable performance obligations in the contract. The Company allocates the transaction price of the contract to each performance obligation based on its relative SSP. The Company rarely sells eFPGA intellectual property licenses on a standalone basis. Generally, the Company will provide eFPGA-related professional services and support and maintenance services to customers in conjunction with eFPGA IP licenses based on unique contractual arrangement terms and conditions. As such, the Company is required to estimate the SSP for each performance obligation.
In instances where the SSP is not directly observable because the Company does not sell the promised goods or services separately, the Company typically determines the SSP using either the adjusted market assessment approach, residual approach, or the expected cost plus a margin approach, depending on the characteristics and context of the deliverable. The selected method is applied by the Company consistently for similar arrangements and deliverables. The factors used to select the most appropriate estimation method, as well as select the most appropriate SSP include, but are not limited to, the extent of internal costs required to provide the promised performance obligation, margins achieved on standalone sales of similar products, profit objectives, cost structure, location-specific factors, and competition.
In other instances, the Company may have more than one SSP for individual performance obligations due to the stratification of those items by classes of customers and circumstances. In these instances, the Company may use information such as its overall pricing objectives, taking into consideration market conditions and other factors, including the value of its contracts, customer type, customer tier, type of the technology used, customer demographics, and geographic locations, among other factors. The Company also provides eFPGA-related professional services on a time-and-material basis.
Generally, the Company satisfies eFPGA-related contractual performance obligations over time as the customer simultaneously receives and consumes the benefits provided by the Company’s performance as it performs, the Company's performance creates or enhances an asset that the customer controls as it is created or enhanced, or the Company’s performance does not create an asset with an alternative use to the Company and the Company has an enforceable right to payment for performance completed to date. When the Company satisfies performance obligations over time, it recognizes revenue by applying an over-time methodology that depicts the Company’s performance toward satisfaction of the performance obligation.
The Company’s over-time methodologies include, but are not limited to the following:
• | Revenue recognition model measured using an input method such as units of labor, | |
• | Revenue recognition model measured using an output method reflecting a generally consistent effort to satisfy performance obligations throughout the contractual arrangement term, | |
• | Revenue recognition model measured using an output method such as the specific deliverables produced, | |
• | Revenue recognition model measured using an input method such as time and material for professional engineering services. For revenue derived from time and material inputs, the Company estimates a fully-burdened overhead rate for the labor and any materials required. |
Due to the nature of the work performed under contractual arrangements, the selection and application of an over-time methodology is complex and involves significant judgment. In the case of the selection of an input method, the key factors reviewed by management to estimate costs to complete each contract include, but are not limited to, the estimated labor days-effort necessary to complete the project, budgeted hours, hourly cost to the Company, profit margins, and engineering hours at cut-off when projects extend beyond a reporting period. In the case of the selection of an output method, key factors reviewed by management include, but are not limited to, the specific deliverables specified in the contracts with customers and the duration of performance, inclusive of delays. The Company has methods and controls in place for tracking labor-days incurred in completing eFPGA IP contracts, as well as quantifying changes in estimates used within the chosen methodology. Management considers labor-days to be a critical estimate as any significant variation of labor and time required to complete a contractual arrangement could cause a revenue claw-back from prior periods and deferral of revenue to future periods.
When the expected consideration from a revenue contract with a customer is less than the expected costs of fulfilling the contract, the Company is required to first impair any capitalized costs associated with the contract. The Company is also required to recognize a provision for contract losses as a liability on its balance sheet. This would result in an unfavorable impact to income from operations.
SaaS & Other Revenue
SaaS & Other Revenue is comprised primarily of software as a service ("SaaS") revenue and software-related professional services revenue. SaaS revenue is generated when the Company licenses its software to customers and allows customers to access the software over a short-term subscription basis. The Company grants the customer the right to access and use software at the outset of the arrangement and throughout the entire term of the arrangement. The Company recognizes SaaS revenue ratably over the license term. The Company recognizes revenue from software-related professional services as services are provided to the customer.
Other miscellaneous revenue is comprised primarily of royalties from licensing the Company’s technology. The Company recognizes royalty revenue on the later of (i) the subsequent sale or usage, or (ii) satisfaction of a performance obligation to which some or all of the sales-based royalty has been allocated.
Practical Expedients, Elections, and Exemptions
• | Taxes collected from customers and remitted to government authorities and that are related to the sales of the Company's products are excluded from revenues. | |
• | Sales commissions are expensed when incurred because the amortization period would have been one year or less. These costs are recorded in selling, general, and administrative expense in the consolidated statements of operations. | |
• | The Company does not disclose the value of unsatisfied performance obligations for (i) contracts with original expected lengths of one year or less or (ii) contracts for which it recognizes revenue at the amount to which it has the right to invoice for the services performed. |
Valuation of Inventories
Hardware product inventories are stated at the lower of standard cost or net realizable value. Standard cost approximates actual cost on a first-in, first-out basis. The Company routinely evaluates quantities and values of its inventories in light of current market conditions and trends and records reserves for quantities in excess of demand and for product obsolescence. The evaluation may take into consideration historic usage, expected demand, anticipated sales price, the stage in the product life cycle of the Company's customers’ products, new product development schedules, the effect new products might have on the sale of existing products, product obsolescence, customer design activity, customer concentrations, and product merchantability, among other factors. Actual consumption of inventories could differ from forecasted demand and this difference could have a material impact on the Company's gross margin and inventory balances based on additional provisions for excess or obsolete inventories or a benefit from inventories previously written down. The Company also regularly reviews the cost of inventories against estimated market value and records a lower of cost or market reserve for inventories that have a cost in excess of estimated market value, which could have a material impact on its hardware product gross margin and hardware product inventory balances based on additional write-downs to net realizable value or a benefit from inventories previously written down. Estimates of market value for the Company's products require subjective criteria such as anticipated demand and market acceptance for unique products. Differences between these estimates and actual results could result in gross margin volatilities from period to period.
The Company's hardware products have historically had an unusually long product life cycle and obsolescence has not been a significant factor in the valuation of inventories. However, as the Company continues to develop new products, the Company believes its new product life cycle may be shorter, which could increase the potential for obsolescence. A significant decrease in demand could result in an increase in excess inventory on hand. Although the Company makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of its forecasts of future product demand, any significant unanticipated changes in demand or frequent new product developments could have a significant impact on the value of its inventory and its results of operations.
Goodwill
Goodwill represents the excess fair value of consideration transferred over the fair value of net assets acquired in a business combination. The carrying value of goodwill is not amortized but is annually tested for impairment during the Company's fourth fiscal quarter, and more often if there is an indicator of impairment. The Company either performs a qualitative assessment under ASC 350, including the consideration of factors such as macroeconomic conditions, industry and market considerations, and overall financial performance, or a quantitative assessment under ASU No. 2017-14, which involves comparing the carrying value of the reporting unit to its fair value. Subsequent to the Company's annual impairment testing in the fourth quarter of 2024 and 2023, there were no indicators of impairment that gave cause for additional impairment testing of goodwill. No impairment of goodwill has been recognized to date.
Long-Lived and Intangible Assets
The Company’s long-lived assets include property and equipment, software, tooling, furniture and fixtures, leasehold improvements, and internal-use software. These assets are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and amortization. Depreciation and amortization of long-lived assets is calculated on a straight-line basis over the estimated useful lives of the assets, generally
to years, with the amortization period of internal-use software being generally years and the amortization period of leasehold improvements being the shorter of the lease term or the estimated useful lives of the assets, which is generally to years. The Company notes the estimation of the useful lives of its long-lived assets involves judgment and estimation by management. In the determination of an asset’s useful life, the Company considers the following factors: obsolescence, competition, historical product life cycles, and industry and market considerations, among others. Refer to Note 5 for additional information on the useful life ranges of the Company’s long-lived assets.
The Company recognizes assets for pre-production design and development costs for which there is a contractual reimbursement by the customer. These assets are classified under 'tooling' within property and equipment and are depreciated over the estimated useful lives of the assets, generally
years. Refer to Note 4 for additional information.
The Company capitalizes costs related to the development and enhancement of hosted services it provides to its customers and the development and enhancement of other internally used engineering software as internal-use software. Costs incurred in the application development phase are capitalized and amortized on a straight-line basis over their useful lives, which are generally
to years. Costs related to planning and other preliminary project activities and post-implementation activities are expensed as incurred. The Company also capitalizes costs related to internally used enterprise-level business and finance software in support of the Company’s operational needs as software.
Acquired intangible assets with finite useful lives are amortized on a straight-line basis over the periods benefited. The Company reviews the recoverability of its long-lived assets annually and when events or changes in circumstances occur that indicate that the carrying value of the asset or asset group may not be recoverable. The Company assesses possible impairment based on its ability to recover the carrying value of the asset or asset group from the expected future pre-tax cash flows (undiscounted and without interest charges) of the related operations, as well as the useful lives applied to the assets. If these cash flows are less than the carrying value of the asset or asset group, an impairment loss is recognized for the difference between the estimated fair value and the carrying value, and the carrying value of the related assets is reduced by this difference. The measurement of impairment requires management to estimate future cash flows and the fair value of long-lived assets. In estimating future cash flows and the fair value of its long-lived assets, the Company considers changes in legal factors and the business climate, product and technology obsolescence, and competition. The Company performed an annual impairment assessment in the fourth quarter of 2024 and 2023 and deemed no impairment was necessary for the current or prior year. Subsequent to the Company's annual impairment testing in the fourth quarter of 2024 and 2023, there were no indicators of impairment that gave cause for additional impairment testing of the Company’s long-lived assets. No impairment of intangible assets has been recognized to date. Additionally, the Company did recognize any gains or losses on the disposal of equipment in the years ended December 29, 2024 or December 31, 2023.
NOTE 2 — OTHER RELEVANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
Cash Equivalents and Restricted Cash
The Company considers all short-term, highly liquid investments with an original or a remaining maturity at purchase of ninety days or less to be cash equivalents. The Company’s investment portfolio included in cash equivalents is generally comprised of investments that meet high credit quality standards. The Company’s investment portfolio consists of money market accounts and funds. Restricted cash represents amounts pledged as cash security related to the use of credit cards.
Contract Balances
Due to the terms in contractual agreements with customers, the timing of revenue recognition may differ from the timing of invoicing to customers, and these timing differences result in accounts receivables, contract assets, or contract liabilities on the Company’s consolidated balance sheets.
The Company records a contract asset when revenue is recognized prior to invoicing if the Company does not have the unconditional right to invoice the customer. The Company records a contract liability (deferred revenue) when revenue is recognized subsequent to invoicing and also when consideration is received in advance of satisfying performance obligations. Balances in contract assets are transferred to accounts receivable when the Company has an unconditional right to invoice the customer. Balances in contract liabilities (deferred revenue) are recognized as revenue once the performance obligations are satisfied, as control of goods and services are transferred to the customer, all revenue recognition criteria have been met, and any constraints have been resolved. Payment terms and conditions vary by term of contracts with the customer. The Company's contracts do not include a significant financing component. The Company's invoicing terms provide customers with simplified and predictable ways of purchasing the Company's goods and services and not to facilitate financing arrangements. The timing between invoicing and when payment is due is not significant. The Company defers costs until related revenue is recognized.
The Company had contract assets associated with eFPGA-related professional services revenue of approximately $
Assets Recognized from Costs to Obtain a Contract with a Customer
The Company recognizes an asset for the incremental costs of obtaining a contract with a customer if it expects the benefit of those costs to be longer than one year. The Company has concluded that none of the costs it has incurred to obtain and fulfill its ASC 606 contracts during the years ended December 29, 2024 and December 31, 2023 met the capitalization criteria and as such, there are no costs deferred nor recognized as assets on the consolidated balance sheets at December 29, 2024 and December 31, 2023.
Current Expected Credit Losses
The current expected credit loss ("CECL") reserve required under ASU 2016-13 "Financial Instruments - Credit Losses - Measurement of Credit Losses on Financial Instruments (Topic 326)" ("ASU 2016-13"), reflects the Company's current estimate of potential credit losses related to its financing receivables and contract assets. As of January 1, 2023 and December 31, 2023, the Company's CECL reserve was
Subsequent changes to the CECL reserve are recognized through a provision for or reversal of current expected credit loss reserve on the Company's consolidated statement of operations. ASU 2016-13 specifies the reserve should be based on relevant information about past events, including historical loss experience, market conditions, and reasonable and supportable macroeconomic forecasts for the duration of each financing receivable. For each financing receivable and contract asset, the Company performs an annual quantitative assessment of the impact of CECL using a probability-of-default method. This includes estimating the probability that the loan will default before its maturity (probability of default) and the amount of the loss if the loan defaults (loss given default). These two factors result in an expected loss percentage that is applied to the balance of each financing receivable to determine the expected credit loss. The Company adjusts these factors for current conditions, including the financial condition of the borrower, the probability that it will grant the borrower a concession through modification of the loan terms, and reasonable and supportable forecasts of future losses as necessary.
For its trade accounts receivable, the Company estimates the current expected credit loss at the end of each reporting period based on the aging of the trade receivable balance, current and historical customer trends, and communications with its customers. Amounts are written off only after considerable collection efforts have been made and the amounts are determined to be uncollectible.
The Company provides an allowance for credit losses for its trade accounts receivable based on both historical experience and a specific identification basis. As of December 29, 2024 and December 31, 2023, the allowance for credit losses was $
Leases
The Company accounts for leases under ASC 842 and related ASUs. Under ASC 842, all significant lease arrangements are generally recognized at the lease commencement date. Right-of-use ("ROU") assets and lease liabilities are recorded in the Company's consolidated balance sheet. The Company determines if an arrangement is a lease at inception, including considering whether the Company has the right to obtain substantially all of the economic benefits from and direct the use of an identified asset for a period of time. When an arrangement is a lease, the Company determines if it is an operating lease or a finance lease. Lease liabilities represent the present value of the Company's future lease payments over the expected lease term, which includes options to extend or terminate the lease when it is reasonably certain those options will be exercised. The present value of a lease liability is determined using the Company's incremental collateralized borrowing rate at lease inception. ROU assets represent the Company's right to control the use of the leased asset during the lease and are recognized in an amount equal to the lease liability for leases with an initial term greater than 12 months. An ROU asset may also include lease payments related to initial direct costs and prepayments and excludes lease incentives. The Company does not apply lease recognition requirements to lease arrangements having terms of twelve months or less. Instead, it recognizes payments in the consolidated statement of operations as rental costs on a straight-line basis over the lease term. The Company has lease agreements which contain lease and non-lease components; non-lease components are generally accounted for separately.
The Company’s ROU assets were approximately $
Fair Value of Financial Instruments
Fair value is an exit price, representing the amount that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants. As such, fair value is a market-based measurement that is determined based on assumptions that market participants would use in pricing an asset or a liability. Assets and liabilities recorded at fair value are measured and classified in accordance with a three-tier fair value hierarchy based on the observability of the inputs available in the market used to measure fair value:
• | Level 1 - Observable inputs that reflect quoted prices (unadjusted) for identical assets or liabilities in active markets. |
• | Level 2 - Inputs that are based upon quoted prices for similar instruments in active markets, quoted prices for identical or similar instruments in markets that are not active, and model-based valuation techniques for which all significant inputs are observable in the market or can be derived from observable market data. Where applicable, these models project future cash flows and discount the future amounts to a present value using market-based observable inputs including interest rate curves, foreign exchange rates, and credit ratings. |
• | Level 3 - Unobservable inputs that are supported by little or no market activities. |
The fair value hierarchy requires an entity to maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable inputs when measuring fair value. The determination of fair value involves the use of appropriate valuation methods and relevant inputs into valuation models. The carrying value of cash equivalents, accounts receivable, accounts payable, and accrued liabilities approximate their fair values due to their relatively short maturities.
The Company's financial assets consisting of an investment in non-marketable equity without a readily determinable fair value are measured under a measurement election alternative to the requirement to carry equity interests at fair value. In the Fiscal Year ended January 2, 2022, the Company recognized revenue from a contractual arrangement with an unaffiliated customer on the sale of eFPGA IP. The eFPGA IP included an eFPGA intellectual property license, know-how, and eFPGA-related professional services. Consideration in the contractual arrangement was comprised of cash and non-cash consideration. Non-cash consideration consisted of shares of common stock in the customer. The customer was, and continues to be, a privately-held company and its common stock is not publicly traded. The Company applied significant judgement to estimate the fair value of the shares as a portion of the total contractual consideration. The Company recognized a $
In determining the fair value of the investment at acquisition of the common stock, the Company applied the Black-Scholes Option Pricing model using a back-solve technique and applied significant judgment to quantify inputs used in the model, in accordance with the AICPA Accounting and Valuation Guide, Valuation of Privately Held Company Equity Securities Issued as Compensation (2013). The Company has neither significant influence nor control over the investee. Post-acquisition, the Company accounts for the non-marketable equity investment under a practical expedient under ASC 321, in which equity investments without a readily determinable fair value are measured to fair value at “cost minus impairment.” Under the “cost minus impairment” method, when the non-marketable equity investment is determined to be impaired on the basis of a qualitative assessment, the carrying value of the non-marketable equity security is adjusted to fair value and is measured at cost, less any impairment. The Company reviews its non-marketable equity investment for impairment periodically. The carrying value of non-marketable equity securities is classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy. Any losses, should they occur, from impairments of non-marketable equity investments are recorded in the statements of operations within interest income and other (expense) income, net. The non-marketable equity investment is classified as a non-current asset on the consolidated balance sheets. There was
Variable Interest Entities
A variable interest entity (VIE) is a legal entity that 1) does not have sufficient equity at risk to finance its activities without additional subordinated financial support or 2) is structured such that equity investors lack the ability to make significant decisions relating to the entity’s operations through voting or similar rights and/or do not substantively participate in the gains and losses of the entity.
Consolidation of a VIE by its primary beneficiary is not solely based on majority voting interest, but is based on whether the reporting entity has a controlling financial interest in the VIE. To have a controlling financial interest, the reporting entity must have the power to direct the activities of a VIE that most significant impact the VIE's economic performance, as well as the obligation to absorb losses or the right to receive benefits that could potentially be significant to the VIE.
When the Company enters into various arrangements with unaffiliated entities in the normal course of business, it assesses the entity to determine whether it qualifies as a VIE and if so, whether the Company is the primary beneficiary and should consolidate the entity. These assessments include a review of the entity's capital structure, related contractual relationships and terms, nature of the entity’s operations and purpose, nature of the entity’s interests issued, and the Company's involvement with the entity, including the breadth of the Company's decision-making ability and its ability to influence activities that significantly affect the economic performance of the VIE.
As of December 29, 2024, the Company held one interest in a VIE; its $
Cost of Revenues
The Company records costs of revenue associated with hardware product revenues, eFPGA IP revenue, and SaaS revenue. Hardware product costs include the cost of materials, contract manufacturing fees, shipping costs, and quality assurance. Hardware product costs also include indirect costs such as warranty, excess and obsolete inventory charges, general overhead costs, and depreciation and amortization of certain capitalized software. eFPGA IP and SaaS costs include costs related to services under contractual agreements over the term of their respective agreements. These costs are primarily comprised of employee salary and benefits and other employee-related costs to perform work on revenue-generating contracts with customers, software tool utilization costs, and contract engineering costs.
At times, the Company reclassifies certain costs and expenses to better attribute usage of labor and resources to their functional utilization. The Company allocated $
Hardware Product Warranty Costs
The Company warrants product hardware against defects in material and workmanship under normal use for twelve months from the date of shipment. The Company’s liability is limited to the cost of repair or replacement of the defective part. The Company does not consider activities related to such warranties to be a separate performance obligation under ASC 606. The terms and conditions of sale generally do not allow for refunds or product returns other than for warranty repairs. The Company does not have significant product warranty-related costs or liabilities for the years ended December 29, 2024, December 31, 2023, and January 1, 2023.
Foreign Currency Transactions
All of the Company’s revenue transactions and inputs to its cost of revenue are denominated in U.S. dollars. The Company conducts sales and marketing activities in various countries outside of the United States. The Company's foreign operations' monetary assets and liabilities are translated into U.S. dollars at current period-end exchange rates and non-monetary assets and related elements of expense are translated using historical exchange rates. The Company's foreign operations' income and expenses are transacted in local foreign currency and translated to U.S. dollars using the average exchange rates in effect during the period. Gains and losses from the foreign currency transactions of the Company's foreign operations are recorded as interest income and other (expense) income, net in the consolidated statements of operations. The impact from foreign currencies was not significant for each of the Fiscal Years ended December 29, 2024, December 31, 2023, and January 1, 2023.
Operating expenses denominated in foreign currencies represented approximately
Advertising
Advertising and promotion expenses are charged to “selling, general, and administrative” expense in the consolidated statements of operations as incurred. Advertising and promotion expenses were $
Defined Contribution Post-Retirement Benefit Plans
In July 2024, the Company started an employer match program for its 401(k) post-retirement benefit plan. In the fiscal year ended December 29, 2024, the Company recognized $
Stock-Based Compensation
The Company grants stock-based compensation under its stock plan (the "Plan") to eligible employees and non-employee directors and grants stock-based compensation under an employee stock purchase plan ("ESPP") for all eligible employees. The Company accounts for stock-based compensation under the provisions of the amended authoritative guidance and related interpretations, which require the measurement and recognition of expense related to the fair value of stock-based compensation awards. The fair value of stock-based compensation awards is measured at the grant date and re-measured upon modification, as appropriate. The Company uses the Black-Scholes option pricing model to estimate the fair value of employee stock options and rights to purchase shares. The fair value of restricted stock awards, restricted stock units, and performance-based restricted stock units is based on the closing price of the Company’s common stock on the date of grant.
Using the Black-Scholes pricing model requires the Company to develop highly subjective assumptions, including the expected term of awards, expected volatility of its stock, expected risk-free interest rate, and expected dividend rate over the term of the award. The expected term of awards is based primarily on the Company's historical experience with similar grants. The expected stock price volatility for both stock options and ESPP shares is based on the historic volatility of the Company's stock, using the daily average of the opening and closing prices, and measured using historical data appropriate for the expected term. The risk-free interest rate assumption approximates the risk-free interest rate of a Treasury Constant Maturity bond with a maturity appropriate for the expected term of stock awards under the Plan or the maturity appropriate for the term of the purchase period for the ESPP Plan. The dividend yield assumption is based on the Company's intent not to issue a dividend under its dividend policy. This fair value is expensed over the requisite service period of the award.
Stock-based compensation expense is measured at the grant date based on the fair value of the award less expected forfeitures, over the requisite service period, which is typically the vesting period. Expected forfeitures are an estimate based on the historical pre-vest cancellation experience and is applied to all share-based awards. Equity compensation awards that contain a service condition are expensed using the straight-line attribution method over the requisite service period. Performance-based awards are expected to vest based on the achievement of a performance goal and are expensed over the estimated vesting period, which is estimated by management. The Company regularly reviews the assumptions used to compute the fair value of its stock-based awards and it revises its assumptions as appropriate. See Notes 11 and 12 for additional information.
Interest Income
The Company's interest income is comprised of interest earned on its money market accounts and financing receivables. As of December 29, 2024, the Company had one note receivable related to the conversion of accounts receivable for a customer. Interest is accrued as earned and is reflected as an increase in the balance of the note receivable, as well as recognized as interest income on the Company's consolidated statement of operations. All accrued and unpaid interest will be due and payable to the Company on the maturity date of the note receivable. Refer to Note 9 for additional information.
Accounting for Income Taxes
As part of the process of preparing the Company's consolidated financial statements, the Company is required to estimate its income taxes in each of the jurisdictions in which it operates. This process involves estimating the Company's actual current tax exposure together with assessing temporary differences resulting from different tax and accounting treatment of items, such as deferred revenue, allowance for credit losses, the impact of equity awards, depreciation and amortization, and employee-related accruals. These differences result in deferred tax assets and liabilities, which are included on the Company's consolidated balance sheets. The Company must then assess the likelihood that its deferred tax assets will be recovered from future taxable income. To the extent the Company believes that recovery is not likely, it must establish a valuation allowance. To the extent the Company establishes a valuation allowance or increases this allowance in a period, it must include an expense within the tax provision in the consolidated statements of operations.
The Company accounts for uncertainty in income taxes using a two-step approach for recognizing and measuring uncertain tax positions. The first step is to evaluate the tax position for recognition by determining if the weight of available evidence indicates that it is more likely than not that the position will be sustained on audit, including resolution of related appeals or litigation processes, if any. The second step is to measure the tax benefit as the largest amount that is more than 50% likely of being realized upon settlement. The Company classifies the liability for unrecognized tax benefits as current to the extent that it anticipates payment (or receipt) of cash within one year. Interest and penalties related to uncertain tax positions are recognized in the provision for (benefit from) income taxes. Accrued interest and penalties are included within the accrued liabilities in the consolidated balance sheets.
Comprehensive Income (Loss)
The net income (loss) in the consolidated statements of operations for each of the years ended December 29, 2024, December 31, 2023, and January 1, 2023 is the same as the consolidated comprehensive income (loss). The Company has no reportable items for other comprehensive income ("OCI") under comprehensive income nor under accumulated other comprehensive income on its consolidated balance sheet.
Concentrations of Credit and Suppliers
Financial instruments, which potentially subject the Company to concentrations of credit risk, consist principally of cash and cash equivalents and accounts receivable. Cash and cash equivalents are maintained with high-quality institutions. The Company’s accounts receivables are denominated in U.S. dollars and are derived primarily from sales to customers located in North America, Europe and Asia Pacific. The Company performs ongoing credit evaluations of its customers and generally does not require collateral. See Note 14 for information regarding concentrations associated with accounts receivable.
The Company depends on a limited number of contract manufacturers, subcontractors, and suppliers for wafer fabrication, assembly, programming, and testing of its hardware products and for the supply of programming equipment. These services are typically provided by one supplier for each of the Company’s hardware products. The Company generally purchases these single or limited source services through standard purchase orders. Since the Company relies on independent subcontractors to perform these services, it cannot directly control its product delivery schedules, costs, or quality levels. The Company’s future success also depends on the financial viability of its independent subcontractors.
Business Combinations
When the Company acquires a business, it allocates the purchase price to the acquired tangible assets and assumed liabilities, including deferred revenue, liabilities associated with the fair value of contingent consideration, and acquired identifiable intangible assets with finite lives. Any residual purchase price is recorded as goodwill. The allocation of the purchase price requires the Company to make significant estimates in determining the fair values of these acquired assets and assumed liabilities, intangible assets with finite useful lives, and goodwill. These estimates are based on information obtained from management of the acquired companies, the Company's assessment of this information, and historical experience. These estimates can include, but are not limited to, the cash flows that an acquired business is expected to generate in the future, the cash flows that specific assets acquired with that business are expected to generate in the future, the appropriate weighted average cost of capital, and the cost savings expected to be derived from acquiring an asset. These estimates are inherently uncertain and unpredictable, and if different estimates were used, the purchase price for the acquisition could be allocated to the acquired assets and assumed liabilities differently from the allocation that the Company has made to the acquired assets and assumed liabilities. In addition, unanticipated events and circumstances may occur that may affect the accuracy or validity of such estimates, and if such events occur, the Company may be required to adjust the value allocated to acquired assets or assumed liabilities and may impact the useful life assigned to intangible assets with finite useful lives, which would impact amortization expense of intangible assets with finite useful lives and results of operations.
The Company recognizes assets acquired (including goodwill and identifiable intangible assets with finite useful lives) and liabilities assumed at fair value on the acquisition date. Subsequent changes to the fair value of such assets acquired and liabilities assumed are recognized in earnings, after the expiration of the measurement period, a period not to exceed 12 months from the acquisition date. Acquisition-related expenses and acquisition-related restructuring costs are recognized in earnings in the period in which they are incurred.
Recent Accounting Standards Adopted
New Accounting Pronouncements Pending Adoption
In November 2024, the FASB issued 2024-03, Income Statement - Reporting Comprehensive Income - Expense Disaggregation Disclosures (Subtopic 220-40) to improve the disclosures about a public entity's expenses and address requests from investors for more detailed information about the types of expenses in commonly presented expense captions. For public entities, the amendments in this Update are effective for annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2026 and interim periods within annual periods beginning after December 15, 2027. Early adoption is permitted. The Company is currently evaluating the impact of this new guidance on its consolidated financial statements. The adoption of ASU 2024-03 is not expected to have a significant impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements
In March 2024, the FASB issued ASU 2024-02, Codification Improvements - Amendments to Remove References to Concept Statements to remove references to its concept statements from the FASB Accounting Standards Codification. For public entities, the amendments in this Update are effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2024. Early adoption is permitted for any fiscal year or interim period for which financial statements have not yet been issued or made available for issuance. The Company is currently evaluating the impact of this new guidance on its consolidated financial statements. The adoption of ASU 2024-02 is not expected to have a significant impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements
In December 2023, the FASB issued ASU No. 2023-09, Income Taxes (Topic 740) Improvements to Income Tax Disclosures to enhance the transparency and decision usefulness of income tax disclosures by providing information to better assess how an entity's operations and related tax risks and tax planning and operational opportunities affect its tax rate and prospects for future cash flows. For public entities, the amendments in this Update are effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2024. Early adoption is permitted for annual financial statements that have not yet been issued or made available for issuance. The Company is currently evaluating the impact of this new guidance on its consolidated financial statements. The adoption of ASU 2023-09 is not expected to have a significant impact on the Company's consolidated financial statements
NOTE 3 — EARNINGS (LOSS) PER SHARE
Basic earnings (loss) per share was computed by dividing earnings (loss) available by the weighted average number of common shares outstanding during the period. Diluted earnings (loss) per share was computed using the weighted average number of common shares outstanding during the period plus potentially dilutive common shares outstanding during the period under the treasury stock method. In computing diluted earnings (loss) per share, the weighted average stock price for the period is used in determining the number of shares assumed to be purchased from the exercise of stock options and warrants. For periods in which the Company has reported a net loss, diluted net loss per share attributable to common stockholders is the same as basic net loss per share attributable to common stockholders as dilutive common shares are not assumed to have been issued if their effect is anti-dilutive. For periods in which the Company has reported a net income, diluted earnings per share attributable to common stockholders is different from basic earnings per share attributable to common stockholders as dilutive common shares would increase the amount of shares outstanding reduced by the amounts of treasury shares repurchased from the proceeds at the average market price for the period.
Approximately
NOTE 4 — BALANCE SHEET COMPONENTS
December 29, | December 31, | |||||||
2024 | 2023 | |||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Inventories: | ||||||||
Work-in-process | $ | $ | ||||||
Finished goods | ||||||||
$ | $ | |||||||
Prepaid expenses and other current assets: | ||||||||
Prepaid taxes | $ | $ | ||||||
Deferred charges | ||||||||
Other prepaid taxes, royalties, and other prepaid expenses | ||||||||
Other | ||||||||
$ | $ | |||||||
Property and equipment: | ||||||||
Equipment | $ | $ | ||||||
Software tools | ||||||||
Tooling | ||||||||
Software | ||||||||
Furniture and fixtures | ||||||||
Leasehold improvements | ||||||||
Accumulated depreciation and amortization | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||
$ | $ | |||||||
Capitalized internal-use software: | ||||||||
Capitalized software held for internal use | $ | $ | ||||||
Accumulated amortization | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||
$ | $ | |||||||
Accrued liabilities: | ||||||||
Accrued compensation | $ | $ | ||||||
Accrued employee benefits | ||||||||
Accrued payroll tax | ||||||||
Other | ||||||||
$ | $ |
The majority of the Company's deferred charges balance as of December 29, 2024 relates to the Company's software tools and related subscriptions. The Company's deferred charges balance as of December 31, 2023 relates primarily to the Company's software subscriptions, as well as legal and revolving credit facility fee accruals. The Company amortizes its deferred charges over their estimated useful lives using the straight-line method.
As of December 29, 2024 and December 31, 2023, work-in-process ("WIP") inventories, net consist primarily of $
The Company capitalized $
The Company recorded depreciation and amortization expense of $
Depreciation and amortization expense included approximately $
Accounts receivable, net of allowances for credit losses of $
NOTE 5-— PROPERTY, PLANT, AND EQUIPMENT
Property, plant, and equipment are stated at cost, less accumulated depreciation and amortization. Depreciation begins at the time the asset is placed in service. Maintenance and repairs are charged to operations as incurred. Depreciation is computed using the straight-line method over the following estimated useful lives of the assets:
Useful Lives | |
| |
Tooling | |
The amortization period of leasehold improvements made at the inception of the lease is directly related to the initial lease term, while the amortization period for subsequent leasehold improvements is directly related to the initial lease term adjusted for extensions.
NOTE 6-— INTANGIBLE ASSETS
The following table provides the details of the carrying value of intangible assets recorded from the 2019 acquisition of SensiML at December 29, 2024 (in thousands):
December 29, 2024 | ||||||||||||||||
Remaining Useful Life | Gross Carrying Amount | Accumulated Amortization | Net Carrying Amount | |||||||||||||
Developed technology | $ | $ | ( | ) | $ | |||||||||||
Customer relationships | — | ( | ) | |||||||||||||
Trade names and trademarks | ( | ) | ||||||||||||||
Total acquired identifiable intangible assets | $ | $ | ( | ) | $ |
The following table provides the details of the carrying value of intangible assets recorded from the 2019 acquisition of SensiML at December 31, 2023 (in thousands):
December 31, 2023 | ||||||||||||||||
Remaining Useful Life | Gross Carrying Amount | Accumulated Amortization | Net Carrying Amount | |||||||||||||
Developed technology | $ | $ | ( | ) | $ | |||||||||||
Customer relationships | — | ( | ) | |||||||||||||
Trade names and trademarks | ( | ) | ||||||||||||||
Total acquired identifiable intangible assets | $ | $ | ( | ) | $ |
The following table provides the details of future annual amortization of SensiML intangible assets, based upon the current useful lives at December 29, 2024 (in thousands):
Amount | ||||
Annual Fiscal Years | ||||
2025 | $ | |||
2026 | ||||
2027 | ||||
2028 | ||||
Total | $ |
In the fiscal year ended December 29, 2024, the Company capitalized $
December 29, 2024 | ||||||||||||||||
Remaining Useful Life | Gross Carrying Amount | Accumulated Amortization | Net Carrying Amount | |||||||||||||
Capitalized patent litigation costs | $ | $ | ( | ) | $ | |||||||||||
Total intangible assets related to patents | $ | $ | ( | ) | $ |
The following table provides the details of future annual amortization of intangible assets related to our patents, based upon the current useful lives at December 29, 2024 (in thousands):
Amount | ||||
Annual Fiscal Years | ||||
2025 | $ | |||
2026 | ||||
2027 | ||||
2028 | ||||
2029 | ||||
Thereafter | ||||
Total | $ |
NOTE 7 — DEBT OBLIGATIONS
Revolving Line of Credit
Financing Arrangements
The amount of net assets purchased through financing arrangements on the consolidated balance sheets were $
Amounts due to be paid in Fiscal Years 2025, 2026, and 2027 are $
NOTE 8 — LEASES
The Company's principal research and development and corporate facilities are leased office buildings located in the United States. These lease facilities are classified as operating leases. Operating leases generally have lease terms of
The following table provides the activity related to operating leases (in thousands):
December 29, 2024 | December 31, 2023 | |||||||
Operating lease costs: | ||||||||
Fixed | $ | $ | ||||||
Short term | ||||||||
Total | $ | $ | ||||||
Right-of-use assets obtained in exchange for obligations lease: | ||||||||
Operating leases | $ | $ | ||||||
Total | $ | $ |
The following table provides the details of supplemental cash flow information (in thousands):
December 29, 2024 | December 31, 2023 | |||||||
Cash paid for amounts included in the measurement of lease liabilities: | ||||||||
Operating cash flows used for operating leases | $ | $ | ||||||
Total | $ | $ |
Non-cash ROU assets related to operating leases included in the operating cash flows for the fiscal year ended December 29, 2024 and December 31, 2023 were $
The following table provides the details of ROU assets and lease liabilities (in thousands):
December 29, 2024 | December 31, 2023 | |||||||
Right-of-use assets: | ||||||||
Operating leases | $ | $ | ||||||
Total | $ | $ | ||||||
Lease liabilities: | ||||||||
Operating leases | $ | $ | ||||||
Total | $ | $ |
The following table provides the details of future lease payments for operating leases as of December 29, 2024 and (in thousands):
Annual Fiscal Years | Operating | |||
2025 | $ | |||
2026 | ||||
2027 | ||||
Total lease payments | ||||
Less: Interest | ||||
Present value of lease liabilities | $ |
The following table provides the details of lease terms and discount rates:
December 29, 2024 | ||||
ROU assets: | ||||
Weighted-average remaining lease term (years) | ||||
Operating leases | ||||
Weighted-average discount rates: | ||||
Operating leases | % |
NOTE 9 — FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS
The Company's cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash balances were $
On April 28, 2023, the Company converted accounts receivable for a customer in the amount of approximately $
In the third quarter of 2021, in connection with a revenue contract with the same non-affiliated customer, the Company received shares of the customer's common stock. The full transaction price under the revenue contract was cash plus a non-cash consideration, which consisted of a certain amount of the customer's equity. The Company considered the non-cash consideration to be an investment in the customer. The full transaction price was the amount of consideration which the Company received under the contract in exchange for transferring the promised goods and services to the customer. Since the non-cash consideration was shares of common stock that were not publicly traded, the fair value was not readily determinable. The Company considered various valuation methods such as market multiples, guideline public company method, and the Black-Scholes Option Pricing model. Due to limited data for the valuation, the Company ultimately selected the Black-Scholes method using back-solve techniques as that was determined to be the most suitable with the available data. The Black-Scholes Option Pricing model is a valuation approach that can be used to determine the value of common shares for companies in which there are no, or infrequent, transactions involving common shares. The Company believed that its valuation method for the non-public equity under this arrangement fell under Level 3 in the fair value hierarchy because the value method relied on unobservable market inputs. The initial fair value of the non-cash consideration is listed below:
Fair Value at Valuation Date Using: | ||||||||||||||||
Total | Quoted Prices in Active Markets for Identical Assets (Level I) | Significant Other Observable Inputs (Level 2) | Significant Unobservable Inputs (Level 3) | |||||||||||||
Non-marketable equity investment | $ | $ | $ | $ |
In arriving at the estimated value for the non-cash consideration, the Company utilized inputs relying on significant judgment in accordance with the AICPA Accounting and Valuation Guide, Valuation of Privately Held Company Equity Securities Issued as Compensation (2013). The key assumptions below were utilized:
• | Discount for lack of marketability: | |
• | Expected Term: | |
• | Risk Free Interest Rate: | |
• | Dividend: | |
• | Volatility: |
NOTE 10 — INCOME TAXES
The following table presents the U.S. and foreign components of consolidated income (loss) before income taxes and the provision for (benefit from) income taxes (in thousands):
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Income (loss) before income taxes: | ||||||||||||
U.S. | $ | ( | ) | $ | ( | ) | $ | ( | ) | |||
Foreign | ( | ) | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||
Income (loss) before income taxes | $ | ( | ) | $ | ( | ) | $ | ( | ) | |||
Provision for income taxes: | ||||||||||||
Current: | ||||||||||||
Federal | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
State | ( | ) | ||||||||||
Foreign | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||||||
Subtotal | ( | ) | ||||||||||
Deferred: | ||||||||||||
Federal | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
State | ||||||||||||
Foreign | ( | ) | ||||||||||
Subtotal | ( | ) | ||||||||||
Provision for income taxes | $ | $ | $ |
The following table presents the rate reconciliation between income tax provisions at the U.S. federal statutory rate and the effective rate reflected in the consolidated statements of operations (in thousands):
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Income tax benefit at statutory rate | $ | ( | ) | % | $ | ( | ) | % | $ | ( | ) | % | ||||||||||||
State taxes | ( | ) | % | - | % | - | % | |||||||||||||||||
Foreign taxes | - | % | - | % | - | % | ||||||||||||||||||
Stock compensation and other permanent differences | - | % | ( | ) | % | - | % | |||||||||||||||||
162(m) | - | % | % | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
R&D tax credits | ( | ) | % | ( | ) | % | ( | ) | % | |||||||||||||||
Expired tax attributes | - | % | - | % | - | % | ||||||||||||||||||
Future benefit of deferred tax assets not recognized | - | % | ( | ) | % | ( | ) | % | ||||||||||||||||
Provision for income taxes | $ | - | % | $ | - | % | $ | - | % |
Based on the available objective evidence, management believes it is more likely than not that the U.S. net deferred tax assets will not be fully realizable. Accordingly, the Company has provided a full valuation allowance against its U.S. federal and state deferred tax assets at December 29, 2024. Any future release of the valuation allowance may be recorded as a tax benefit increasing net income. The Company believes it is more likely than not it will be able to realize its foreign deferred tax assets.
Deferred tax balances are comprised of the following (in thousands):
December 29, 2024 | December 31, 2023 | |||||||
Deferred tax assets: | ||||||||
Net operating losses | $ | $ | ||||||
Accruals and reserves | ||||||||
Credits carryforward | ||||||||
Depreciation and amortization | ||||||||
Stock-based compensation | ||||||||
Operating lease liability | ||||||||
Gross deferred tax assets | ||||||||
Deferred tax liabilities: | ||||||||
Right-of-use asset | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||
Withholding tax on future distribution | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||
Gross deferred tax liabilities | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||
Net deferred tax assets | ||||||||
Valuation allowance | ( | ) | ( | ) | ||||
Total deferred tax liability | $ | ( | ) | $ | ( | ) |
Beginning January 1, 2022, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (the "Tax Act”) eliminated the option to deduct research and development expenditures in the current year and requires taxpayers to capitalize such expenses pursuant to Internal Revenue Code (“IRC”) Section 174. The capitalized expenses are amortized over a 5-year period for domestic expenses and a 15-year period for foreign expenses. As a result of this provision of the Tax Act, the Company capitalized $
As of December 29, 2024, the Company had federal and state income tax net operating loss ("NOL") carryforwards of approximately $
Due to the Company's history of losses, it believes that it is more likely than not that the deferred tax assets and benefits from these federal and state NOL and credit carryforwards will not be realized as of December 29, 2024. Accordingly, the Company established a valuation allowance of $
Events which may restrict utilization of a company’s net operating loss and credit carryforwards include, but are not limited to, certain ownership change limitations as defined in Internal Revenue Code Section 382(a) ("Section 382") and similar state provisions. In the event the Company has had a change of ownership, utilization of carryforwards could be restricted to an annual limitation. The annual limitation may result in the expiration of net operating loss carryforwards and credit carryforwards before utilization.
The Company performed a Section 382 Study related to ownership changes in fiscal year 2023, covering the period starting January 1, 2005 through December 31, 2023. Per the Section 382 Study, there were no Section 382 ownership changes during this period. As a result, the future utilization of the Company's NOL and R&D credit carryovers generated since 2005 are not subject to any limitations, assuming the Company does not experience an ownership change in the future.
Foreign withholding taxes associated with the repatriation of earnings of foreign subsidiaries were not provided for on the undistributed earnings of certain foreign subsidiaries as of the end of fiscal 2024. The Company intends to reinvest these earnings indefinitely in the Company’s foreign subsidiaries. The Company believes that future domestic cash generation will be sufficient to meet future domestic cash needs. In previous years, the Company recorded a deferred tax liability of approximately $
Uncertain Tax Positions
Changes in gross unrecognized benefits are as follows (in thousands):
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Beginning balance of unrecognized tax benefits | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
Additions (subtractions) for tax positions related to the prior year | ( | ) | ||||||||||
Additions for tax positions related to the current year | ||||||||||||
Lapse of statutes of limitations | ( | ) | ||||||||||
Ending balance of unrecognized tax benefits | $ | $ | $ |
Out of $
The Company is not currently under tax examination in the U.S. and the Company’s historical net operating loss and credit carryforwards may be adjusted by the Internal Revenue Service and other tax authorities until the statute closes on the year in which such tax attributes are utilized. The Company estimates that its unrecognized tax benefits will not change significantly within the next twelve months.
The Company is subject to U.S. federal income tax as well as income taxes in many U.S. states and foreign jurisdictions in which the Company operates. The U.S. tax years from 2005 forward remain effectively open to examination due to the carryover of unused net operating losses and tax credits.
Significant components of the Company's income taxes paid are as follows (in thousands):
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Federal | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
State and local | ||||||||||||
Japan | ||||||||||||
Taiwan | ||||||||||||
India | ||||||||||||
China | ||||||||||||
Other foreign jurisdictions | ||||||||||||
Total income taxes paid | $ | $ | $ |
NOTE 11 — STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
Common and Preferred Stock
As of December 29, 2024, the Company is authorized to issue
Issuance of Common Stock
On December 5, 2024, the Company entered into common stock purchase agreements with certain investors for the sale of an aggregate of
On March 21, 2023, the Company entered into common stock purchase agreements with certain investors for the sale of an aggregate of
On September 14, 2022 and February 9, 2022, the Company entered into common stock purchase agreements with certain investors for the sale of an aggregate of
On August 17, 2022, the Company filed a new Registration Statement on Form S-3 with the SEC to replace a previously expired Registration on Form S-3, under which the Company may sell, from time-to-time common stock, preferred stock, depositary shares, warrants, debt securities, and units, individually or as units comprised of one or more of the other securities or a combination thereof. The Company's registration statement became effective on August 26, 2022.
NOTE 12 — EMPLOYEE STOCK PLANS
2009 Stock Plan
On April 24, 2019, the QuickLogic Corporation 2009 Stock Plan ("2009 Stock Plan") was replaced by the 2019 Stock Plan and the remaining balance of available shares under the 2009 Stock Plan were cancelled.
2019 Stock Plan
On April 24, 2019, the Company’s Board of Directors and shareholders approved the QuickLogic Corporation 2019 Stock Plan ("2019 Stock Plan"). The 2019 Stock Plan was extended
On December 23, 2019, the Company filed a Certificate of Amendment to the Company's Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporate with the Secretary State of Delaware to effect a 1-for-
The Company's Board of Directors approved and on April 22, 2020, stockholders subsequently ratified an increase in the total number of shares available for future awards under the 2019 Stock Plan. The approved increase in the total number of shares available for future awards was
The Company's Board of Directors approved and on May 12, 2021, stockholders subsequently ratified an increase in the total number of shares available for future awards under the 2019 Stock Plan. The approved increase in the total number of shares available for future awards was
The Company's Board of Directors approved and on May 10, 2022, stockholders subsequently ratified an increase in the total number of shares available for future awards under the 2019 Stock Plan. The approved increase in the total number of shares available for future awards was
As of December 29, 2024, approximately
Options typically vest at a rate of
2009 Employee Stock Purchase Plan
The 2009 Employee Stock Purchase Plan, or 2009 ESPP, was adopted in March 2009 and subsequently approved by the Company's stockholders on April 22, 2009. Under the 2009 ESPP,
The Company's Board of Directors approved and on April 23, 2015, stockholders subsequently ratified an increase in the total number of shares available for sale under the 2009 ESPP. The approved increase in the total number of shares available for sale was
The Company's Board of Directors approved and on April 26, 2017, stockholders subsequently ratified an increase in the total number of shares available for sale under the 2009 ESPP. The approved increase in the total number of shares available for sale was
On December 23, 2019, the Company filed a Certificate of Amendment to the Company's Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporate with the Secretary State of Delaware to effect a 1-for-
The Company's Board of Directors approved and on April 22, 2020, stockholders subsequently ratified an increase in the total number of shares available for sale under the 2009 ESPP. The approved increase in the total number of shares available for sale was
In November 2020, the Board of Directors approved to increase the maximum number of shares available to be purchased per six-month offering from
As of December 29, 2024, approximately
NOTE 13 — STOCK-BASED COMPENSATION
The Company provides stock-based incentive compensation awards to eligible employees and non-employee directors. Awards that may be granted under the program include non-qualified and incentive stock options, restricted stock awards, restricted stock units ("RSU"), and performance-based restricted stock units ("PRSU") and are based on the closing price of the Company’s common stock on the date of grant. To date, awards granted under the program consist of stock options, RSUs, and PRSUs. The majority of stock-based awards granted under the program vest over
years. Stock options granted under the program have a maximum contractual term of ten years.
Stock-based compensation expense recognized in the Company’s consolidated statements of operations for the years ended December 29, 2024, December 31, 2023, and January 1, 2023, respectively is as follows (in thousands):
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||
Stock-based compensation expense included in: | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | |||||||||
Cost of revenue | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
Research and development | ||||||||||||
Selling, general and administrative | ||||||||||||
Total costs and expenses | $ | $ | $ |
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||
Stock-based compensation expense by type of award: | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | |||||||||
ESPP | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
RSU and PRSU | ||||||||||||
Total costs and expenses | $ | $ | $ |
The Company capitalized stock-based compensation amounts to capitalized internal-use software and tooling, net of $
Stock-Based Compensation Award Activity
A roll forward of shares available for grant under the 2019 Plan (in thousands) is as follows:
Shares Available for Grant | ||||
Balance at January 1, 2023 | ||||
RSUs and PRSUs granted | ( | ) | ||
Options forfeited or expired | ||||
RSUs and PRSUs forfeited | ||||
Balance at December 31, 2023 | ||||
Options forfeited or expired | ||||
RSUs and PRSUs granted | ( | ) | ||
RSUs and PRSUs forfeited | ||||
Balance at December 29, 2024 |
Stock Options
A roll forward of stock options under the 2019 Plan is as follows:
Number of Shares | Weighted Average Exercise Price | Weighted Average Remaining Term | Aggregate Intrinsic Value | |||||||||||||
(in thousands) | (in years) | (in thousands) | ||||||||||||||
Balance outstanding at January 3, 2021 | $ | |||||||||||||||
Forfeited or expired | ( | ) | ||||||||||||||
Balance outstanding at January 2, 2022 | ||||||||||||||||
Forfeited or expired | ( | ) | ||||||||||||||
Balance outstanding at January 1, 2023 | ||||||||||||||||
Forfeited or expired | ( | ) | ||||||||||||||
Balance outstanding at December 31, 2023 | ||||||||||||||||
Forfeited or expired | ( | ) | ||||||||||||||
Outstanding, exercisable, and vested at December 29, 2024 | $ | $ | — |
The intrinsic value for the stock options, based on the Company’s closing stock price of $
Restricted Stock Units
The Company grants RSUs to employees with various vesting terms. RSUs entitle the holder to receive, at no cost, one common share for each restricted stock unit on the date vested. The Company withholds shares in settlement of employee tax withholding obligations on the vesting of restricted stock units.
As of December 29, 2024, there was approximately $
A roll forward summarizing RSU activity and related weighted average grant date fair values is as follows:
RSUs Outstanding | ||||||||
Number of Shares | Weighted Average Grant Date Fair Value | |||||||
(in thousands) | ||||||||
Nonvested at January 2, 2022 | $ | |||||||
Granted | ||||||||
Vested | ( | ) | ||||||
Forfeited | ( | ) | ||||||
Nonvested at January 1, 2023 | ||||||||
Granted | ||||||||
Vested | ( | ) | ||||||
Forfeited | ( | ) | ||||||
Nonvested at December 31, 2023 | ||||||||
Granted | ||||||||
Vested | ( | ) | ||||||
Forfeited | ( | ) | ||||||
Nonvested at December 29, 2024 | $ |
2009 ESPP Stock Plan
The Company issued
The weighted average grant date fair value and the weighted-average assumptions used to estimate the fair value of ESPP option rights granted is as follows:
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Expected life (months) | ||||||||||||
Risk-free interest rate | % | % | % | |||||||||
Volatility | % | % | % | |||||||||
Dividend yield | ||||||||||||
Weighted average fair value of ESPP options granted | $ | $ | $ |
NOTE 14 — INFORMATION CONCERNING SEGMENTS, PRODUCT LINES, GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION, ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE AND REVENUE CONCENTRATION
The Company identifies its business segments based on business activities, management responsibility, and geographic location. For all periods presented, the Company operated in a single reportable business segment.
The Company has
reportable operating segment based on how its Chief Operating Decision Maker (CODM) manages the business and in a manner consistent with the availability of discrete financial information and the internal reporting provided to the CODM. The CODM, the Company's Chief Executive Officer (CEO), reviews detailed income statements, balance sheets, and sales reports in order to assess performance of the Company. The CODM does not review assets at a different asset level or category than at the consolidated level and the consolidated statements of operations are presented to the CODM without further disaggregation. Significant segment expenses also include depreciation, amortization, and stock-based compensation, which are disclosed within the consolidated statements of cash flows. The Company does not have any significant intra-entity sales or transfers.
Sales, operating income, and net income are some of the key variables monitored by the CODM and management when determining the Company's financial condition and operating performance. The CODM uses sales, operating income (loss), and net income (loss) to evaluate income generated in deciding whether to reinvest profits into the segment or to use such profits for other purposes, such as for acquisitions or share repurchases. These key variables are also used to monitor budget versus actual results, as well as in competitive analyses by benchmarking to the Company’s competitors.
The following is a breakdown of revenue by product family (in thousands):
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
New products | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
Mature products | ||||||||||||
Total revenue | $ | $ | $ |
New products revenue consists of revenues from the sale of hardware products manufactured on 180 nanometer or smaller semiconductor processes, eFPGA IP license, professional services, QuickAI and SensiML AI software as a service (SaaS) revenues. Mature products include all products produced on semiconductor processes larger than 180 nanometer. Associated royalty revenues are included within their respective device's classification.
The following is a breakdown of new products revenue (in thousands):
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Hardware products | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
eFPGA IP | ||||||||||||
SaaS & Other | ||||||||||||
Total new products revenue | $ | $ | $ |
eFPGA IP revenue is comprised primarily of eFPGA intellectual property license revenue, eFPGA-related professional services revenue, and eFPGA-related support and maintenance revenue. eFPGA-IP revenue related to professional services was approximately $
Contract assets were approximately $
Contract liabilities of $
Of its remaining unsatisfied performance obligations not currently on the Company's balance sheet, the Company expects to recognize $
During the year ended January 1, 2023, the Company entered into a multiple-year agreement with a customer to provide professional services over multiple phases of which each phase has to be separately approved prior to commencement of work. Other contractual terms include a termination for convenience clause including the enforceable right to payment for performance completed to date.
The Company assessed the agreement under ASC 606 noting the following judgments, estimates, and conclusions:
• | Each funded phase comprised a separate contract. |
• | There were monthly performance obligations associated with stated milestones. |
• | The application of the output method resulted in the allocation of the transaction price for the contract on a straight-line basis for the stated milestones. |
• | Further, revenue for the contract is recognized at a point in time when control of the asset is transferred to and accepted by the customer. |
Associated with this agreement, the Company recognized professional services revenue amounting to $
The Company derives revenue from sales to customers located in North America, Europe and Asia Pacific. North America includes revenue from the United States. Revenue from the United States was $
The following is a breakdown of revenue by shipping destination (in thousands):
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Asia Pacific | $ | $ | $ | |||||||||
North America | ||||||||||||
Europe | ||||||||||||
Total revenue | $ | $ | $ |
The following distributors and customers accounted for 10% or more of the Company's revenue for the periods presented. Distributor amounts represent revenue from the Company's goods and services sold to a distributor. Customer amounts represent revenues from both distributor and from the Company to an end customer. As such, revenue to a distributor may also include information related to customers.
Fiscal Years | ||||||||||||
2024 | 2023 | 2022 | ||||||||||
Distributor "A" | % | * | % | |||||||||
Distributor "B" | * | * | % | |||||||||
Customer "A" | % | % | % | |||||||||
Customer "C" | * | * | % | |||||||||
Customer "F" | * | * | % |
* Represents less than 10% of revenue as of the date presented.
The following distributors and customers accounted for 10% or more of the Company's accounts receivable and contract asset balance as of the dates presented:
December 29, | December 31, | |||||||
2024 | 2023 | |||||||
Distributor "A" | % | * | ||||||
Distributor "D" | % | * | ||||||
Customer "A" | % | % | ||||||
Customer "K" | % | * |
* Represents less than 10% of trade accounts receivable and contract assets, net, as of the date presented.
Approximately
NOTE 15 — COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
Commitments
The Company's principal contractual commitments include purchase obligations, re-payments of draw downs from the revolving line of credit, and payments under operating leases and financing arrangements. Purchase obligations are largely comprised of open purchase order commitments to suppliers and to subcontractors under professional services agreements. The Company's risk associated with the purchase obligations under professional services agreements is limited to the termination liability provisions within those contracts, and as such, it does not believe they represent a material liquidity risk to the company.
Certain wafer manufacturers require the Company to forecast wafer starts several months in advance. The Company is committed to take delivery of and to pay for a portion of the forecasted wafer volume. The Company did not have any non-cancellable purchase commitments with various wafer foundries as of December 29, 2024.
Purchase Obligations
Purchase obligations represent contractual agreements to purchase goods or services entered into in the ordinary course of business. Purchase obligations are legally binding and amongst other things, specify a minimum or a range of quantities, pricing, and approximate timing of the transaction. Purchase obligations include amounts that are recorded on the Company's consolidated balance sheets, as well as amounts that are not recorded on the Company's consolidated balance sheets. The Company had $
Litigation
From time to time, the Company may become involved in legal actions arising in the ordinary course of business including, but not limited to, intellectual property infringement and collection matters. Absolute assurance cannot be given that any such third-party assertions will be resolved without costly litigation; in a manner that is not adverse to the Company’s consolidated financial position, results of operations, or cash flows; or without requiring royalty or other payments which may adversely impact gross profit.
NOTE 16 — SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
On January 7, 2025, the Company announced its Board of Directors was actively exploring options for its wholly owned subsidiary, SensiML. Preliminary discussions commenced with potential strategic partners regarding the possible sale of SensiML or its assets. As of the announcement date, the Company started accounting for its SensiML subsidiary under restructuring activities in accordance with ASC 420.
Additionally, as of the filing date of March 25, 2025, for the Company's fiscal 2024 annual report on Form 10-K, there have not been any new material developments regarding the disposal of SensiML. As such, the Company is unable to estimate any financial effects related to the disposal of SensiML. The Company continues to evaluate various options for the future of SensiML.
On February 25, 2025, the Company entered into an At Market Issuance Sales Agreement (the "Sales Agreement") with Needham & Company, LLC (the "Agent"), pursuant to which the Company may offer and sell, from time to time, through the Agent, as sales agent, shares of the Company's common stock, par value $
On March 6, 2025, the Company entered into Common Stock Purchase Agreements with certain institutional investors for the sale of an aggregate of
On March 14, 2025, the Company entered into the Eighth Amendment (the “Eighth Amendment”) to their Amended and Restated Loan and Security Agreement (as amended, the “Loan Agreement”) dated December 21, 2018, with Heritage Bank of Commerce. The Eighth Amendment, which became effective on March 17, 2025, amends the Loan Agreement to, among other things, extend the loan maturity date for one year through December 31, 2026.
ITEM 9. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE
None.
ITEM 9A. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures
We maintain disclosure controls and procedures designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed in the reports we file or submit pursuant to the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or the Exchange Act, is recorded, processed, summarized, and reported within the time periods specified in the rules and forms of the SEC, and that such information is accumulated and communicated to our management, including our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.
Management, with the participation of the Chief Executive Officer and Financial Officer, has performed an evaluation of our disclosure controls and procedures as required by the applicable rules of the Exchange Act. Based on this evaluation, our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer have concluded that, as of December 29, 2024 our disclosure controls and procedures were effective.
Management’s Annual Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
Our management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting as defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Internal control over financial reporting is the process designed by, or under the supervision of, our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, and effected by our board of directors, management and other personnel, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of consolidated financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and includes those policies and procedures that: (i) pertain to the maintenance of records that in reasonable detail accurately and fairly reflect our transactions and dispositions of assets; (ii) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of consolidated financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the Company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the Company; and (iii) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of our assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.
Because of its inherent limitations, cost-effective internal control over financial reporting cannot provide absolute assurance of achieving financial reporting objectives. Internal control over financial reporting is a process that involves human diligence and compliance and is subject to lapses in judgment and breakdowns resulting from human failures. Internal control over financial reporting also can be circumvented by collusion or improper management override. Because of such limitations, there is a risk that material misstatements may not be prevented or detected on a timely basis by internal control over financial reporting. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions or that the degree of compliance with established policies or procedures may deteriorate.
Under the supervision and with the participation of our management, including our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, we conducted an assessment of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting as of the end of the period covered by this Annual Report on Form 10-K. In making this assessment, we used the criteria based on the framework set forth by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission in “Internal Control - Integrated Framework (2013).” Based on the results of this assessment, management (including our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer) has concluded that, as of December 29, 2024 our internal control over financial reporting was effective.
Changes in Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
There were no changes in our internal control over financial reporting that occurred during our most recent fiscal quarter that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.
Insider Trading Arrangements
For the three months ended December 29, 2024,
of our directors or officers (as defined in Rule 16a-1(f) of the Exchange Act) adopted or terminated a "Rule 10b5-1 trading arrangement" or "non-Rule 10b5-1 trading arrangement" (as those terms are defined in Item 408 of Regulation S-K).ITEM 9C. DISCLOSURE REGARDING FOREIGN JURISDICTIONS THAT PREVENT INSPECTIONS
Not applicable.
The information required by Part III is incorporated by reference from the definitive Proxy Statement regarding our 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, which Proxy Statement is anticipated to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission within 120 days after the end of the Fiscal Year covered by this Annual Report.
ITEM 10. DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
Information regarding the background of our officers is contained herein under Item 1, "Executive Officers and Directors."
Information regarding the background of our directors is hereby incorporated by reference from our definitive Proxy Statement relating to the 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, which Proxy Statement is anticipated to be filed within 120 days after the end of the Fiscal Year covered by this Annual Report.
There are no family relationships between any of our directors, executive officers, or persons nominated or chosen to be a director or officer, and no such persons have been involved during the last ten years, in any legal proceedings material to their abilities or integrity.
We have adopted a Code of Conduct and Ethics, including provisions enumerated in Item 406 of Regulation S-K. A copy is posted on our website at https://ir.quicklogic.com/governance-docs. Any changes to or waiver from this Code of Conduct and Ethics will be posted to this page on our website.
Insider Trading Policy
We have adopted an insider trading policy governing the purchase, sale, and other dispositions of our securities by our officers, directors, employees, and other individuals associated with us that we believe is reasonably designed to promote compliance with insider trading laws, rules and regulations, and any applicable listing standards. A copy of our insider trading policy is filed as Exhibit 19.1 to this Annual Report on Form 10-K.
The Company complies with insider trading laws, rules and regulations, and any applicable listing standards in any transactions involving its own securities.
ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
The information required by this item is hereby incorporated by reference from our definitive Proxy Statement relating to the 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, which Proxy Statement is anticipated to be filed within 120 days after the end of the Fiscal Year covered by this Annual Report.
ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS
The information required by this item is hereby incorporated by reference from our definitive Proxy Statement relating to the 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, which Proxy Statement is anticipated to be filed within 120 days after the end of the Fiscal Year covered by this Annual Report.
ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS, RELATED TRANSACTIONS AND DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE
The information required by this item is hereby incorporated by reference from our definitive Proxy Statement relating to the 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, which Proxy Statement is anticipated to be filed within 120 days after the end of the Fiscal Year covered by this Annual Report.
ITEM 14. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTING FEES AND SERVICES
The information required by this item is hereby incorporated by reference from our definitive Proxy Statement relating to the 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, which Proxy Statement is anticipated to be filed within 120 days after the end of the Fiscal Year covered by this Annual Report.
ITEM 15. EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES
(a) |
1. Financial Statements |
Reference is made to Item 8 for a list of all financial statements and schedules filed as a part of this Annual Report.
2. Financial Statement Schedules |
All schedules are omitted because they are not applicable or the required information is shown in the consolidated financial statements or notes thereto.
(b) | Exhibits |
The exhibits listed under Item 15(b) hereof are filed with or incorporated by reference as part of this Annual Report.
Exhibit Number |
Description |
Form |
Exhibit |
Filing Date |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3.1 |
Fourth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of QuickLogic Corporation |
8-K |
3.1 |
4/28/2017 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3.2 |
8-K |
3.1 |
12/24/2019 |
||
|
|
|
|
|
|
3.3 |
8-K |
3.2 |
05/02/2005 |
||
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.1 |
S-1/A |
4.1 |
10/12/1999 |
||
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.2 |
8-K |
4.1 |
05/29/2018 |
||
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.3 |
10-K |
4.3 |
3/13/2020 |
||
|
|
|
|
|
|
10.1 |
Form of Indemnification Agreement for directors and executive officers |
10-Q |
10.24 |
11/13/2002 |
_______________
* Indicates management contract or compensatory plan or arrangement.
** Filed herewith.
*** Furnished herewith.
None.
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the registrant has duly caused this Annual Report on Form 10-K to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized on this March 25, 2025.
|
QUICKLOGIC CORPORATION |
|
|
|
|
|
By: |
/s/ Brian C. Faith |
|
|
Brian C. Faith President and Chief Executive Officer |
|
QUICKLOGIC CORPORATION |
|
|
|
|
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By: |
/s/ Elias Nader |
|
|
Elias Nader Chief Financial Officer and SVP, Finance |
Signature | Title | Date | ||
/s/ Brian C. Faith | President and Chief Executive Officer; Director | |||
Brian C. Faith | (Principal Executive Officer) | March 25, 2025 | ||
/s/ Elias Nader | Chief Financial Officer and SVP, Finance | |||
Elias Nader | (Principal Financial Officer) | March 25, 2025 | ||
/s/ Timothy Saxe | ||||
Timothy Saxe | Senior Vice President Engineering and Chief Technology Officer | March 25, 2025 | ||
/s/ Michael R. Farese | ||||
Michael R. Farese | Chairman of the Board | March 25, 2025 | ||
/s/ Joyce Kim | ||||
Joyce Kim | Director | March 25, 2025 | ||
/s/ Andrew J. Pease | ||||
Andrew J. Pease | Director | March 25, 2025 | ||
/s/ Christine Russell | ||||
Christine Russell | Director | March 25, 2025 | ||
/s/ Gary H. Tauss | ||||
Gary H. Tauss | Director | March 25, 2025 |
FENWICK | QuickLogic Corporation | |
Trademark Status Report (by mark) | December 29, 2024 |
Trademark |
TM Image |
Country |
Class |
App. Date Reg. Date |
App. No. Reg. No. |
Status |
PASIC |
United States |
9 |
2/20/1990 |
74030976 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
6/23/1992 |
1696813 |
|||||
POLARPRO |
EUTM |
9, 38, 41 |
3/6/2006 |
004941159 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
1/31/2007 |
004941159 |
|||||
POLARPRO |
Hong Kong |
9 |
3/6/2006 |
300593073 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
7/7/2006 |
300593073 |
|||||
POLARPRO |
Israel |
9 |
3/6/2006 |
188207 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
8/7/2007 |
188207 |
|||||
POLARPRO |
Malaysia |
9 |
3/9/2006 |
06003574 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
6/9/2010 |
06003574 |
|||||
POLARPRO |
Singapore |
9 |
3/16/2006 |
T0604912Z |
Registered - Renewed |
|
3/16/2006 |
T0604912Z |
|||||
POLARPRO |
South Korea |
9 |
3/7/2006 |
4020060011642 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
9/1/2006 |
400676749 |
|||||
POLARPRO |
Taiwan |
9 |
3/20/2006 |
095013441 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
11/16/2006 |
1236319 |
|||||
POLARPRO |
United Kingdom |
9, 38, 41 |
3/6/2006 |
UK00904941159 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
1/31/2007 |
UK00904941159 |
|||||
POLARPRO (and design) |
![]() |
EUTM |
9 |
12/1/2006 |
A0006570 |
Registered |
12/1/2006 |
IR 907167 |
|||||
POLARPRO (and design) |
![]() |
Japan |
9 |
12/1/2006 |
A0006570 |
Registered |
12/1/2006 |
IR 907167 |
|||||
POLARPRO (and design) |
![]() |
United Kingdom |
9 |
12/1/2006 |
UK00800907167 |
Registered |
12/1/2006 |
UK00800907167 |
Trademark |
TM Image |
Country |
Class |
App. Date Reg. Date |
App. No. Reg. No. |
Status |
POLARPRO (and design) |
![]() |
WIPO |
9 |
12/1/2006 |
A0006570 |
Registered |
12/1/2006 |
IR 907167 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
Australia |
9 |
3/8/2005 |
1045371 |
Registered - DNR - Allow |
|
8/6/2007 |
1045371 |
to Lapse |
||||
QUICKLOGIC |
Canada |
9 |
1/6/2015 |
1709541 |
Registered |
|
9/8/2016 |
TMA948769 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
China |
9 |
2/5/2015 |
16314201 |
Registered |
|
5/14/2016 |
16314201 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
China |
9 |
3/9/2005 |
4531068 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
12/14/2007 |
4531068 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
EUTM |
9, 16, 42 |
3/8/2005 |
004326931 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
4/20/2006 |
004326931 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
EUTM |
9, 38, 42 |
11/11/2014 |
013447826 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
3/6/2015 |
013447826 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
Hong Kong |
9 |
3/7/2005 |
300381276 |
Registered - DNR - Allow |
|
6/26/2006 |
300381276 |
to Lapse |
||||
QUICKLOGIC |
India |
9 |
3/7/2005 |
1342958 |
Registered - DNR - Allow |
|
10/27/2008 |
1342958 |
to Lapse |
||||
QUICKLOGIC |
Israel |
9 |
3/7/2005 |
179090 |
Registered - DNR - Allow |
|
3/7/2005 |
179090 |
to Lapse |
||||
QUICKLOGIC |
Japan |
9 |
12/1/2014 |
2014100965 |
Registered |
|
10/2/2015 |
5797249 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
Japan |
9 |
3/7/2004 |
2005019257 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
6/24/2005 |
4875059 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
Singapore |
9 |
3/8/2005 |
T0503155C |
Registered - DNR - Allow |
|
10/10/2005 |
T0503155C |
to Lapse |
||||
QUICKLOGIC |
South Korea |
9 |
3/8/2005 |
4020050009713 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
12/9/2005 |
400642609 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
South Korea |
9 |
1/28/2015 |
4020150006538 |
Registered |
|
11/11/2015 |
401142362 |
Trademark |
TM Image |
Country |
Class |
App. Date Reg. Date |
App. No. Reg. No. |
Status |
QUICKLOGIC |
Taiwan |
9 |
1/26/2015 |
104004596 |
Registered |
|
10/1/2015 |
01730543 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
Taiwan |
9 |
3/8/2005 |
094010095 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
1/16/2006 |
1191870 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
United Kingdom |
9, 16, 42 |
3/8/2005 |
UK00904326931 |
Registered - DNR - Allow |
|
4/20/2006 |
UK00904326931 |
to Lapse |
||||
QUICKLOGIC |
United Kingdom |
9, 38, 42 |
11/11/2014 |
UK00913447826 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
3/6/2015 |
UK00913447826 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
United States |
9 |
9/4/2014 |
86385987 |
Registered |
|
11/3/2015 |
4843994 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC |
United States |
9 |
9/9/2004 |
78481189 |
Registered |
|
11/8/2005 |
3013357 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC (and design) (new) |
![]() |
Canada |
9 |
1/6/2015 |
1709542 |
Registered |
9/8/2016 |
TMA948771 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC (and design) (new) |
![]() |
China |
9 |
2/5/2015 |
16314202 |
Registered |
5/14/2016 |
16314202 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC (and design) (new) |
![]() |
EUTM |
9, 38, 42 |
11/11/2014 |
013447842 |
Registered - Renewed |
3/6/2015 |
013447842 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC (and design) (new) |
![]() |
Japan |
9 |
12/1/2014 |
2014100966 |
Registered |
10/2/2015 |
5797250 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC (and design) (new) |
![]() |
South Korea |
9 |
1/28/2015 |
4020150006534 |
Registered |
11/11/2015 |
401142361 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC (and design) (new) |
![]() |
Taiwan |
9 |
1/26/2015 |
104004598 |
Registered |
3/16/2016 |
01758796 |
|||||
QUICKLOGIC (and design) (new) |
![]() |
United Kingdom |
9, 38, 42 |
11/11/2014 |
UK00913447842 |
Registered - Renewed |
3/6/2015 |
UK00913447842 |
QUICKLOGIC (and design) (new) |
![]() |
United States |
9 |
9/4/2014 |
86385990 |
Registered |
11/3/2015 |
4843995 |
|||||
VIALINK |
United States |
9 |
2/20/1990 |
74030945 |
Registered - Renewed |
|
6/30/1992 |
1698304 |
|||||
Record Count 42 |