Magma Design Automation

Magma Design Automation
Public NASDAQ: LAVA
Industry Software & Programming
Founded 1997
Headquarters San Jose, California
Key people

Rajeev Madhavan, CEO
Roy Jewell, President

696 employees (1 May 2011)
Revenue $139.3 million USD (FY 2011)
Website www.magma-da.com

Magma Design Automation was a software company in the electronic design automation (EDA) industry. The company was founded in 1997 and maintained headquarters in San Jose, California, with facilities throughout North America, Europe, Japan, Asia and India. Magma software products were used in major elements of chip development, including: synthesis, placement, routing, power management, circuit simulation, verification and analog/mixed-signal design.

Magma was acquired by Synopsys in a merger finalized February 22, 2012 at a cash value of about $523 million, or $7.35 per Magma share.[1]


History

Magma was founded in 1997 by a team including Rajeev Madhavan, who served as chairman, CEO and president from the company's inception.[2] The company initially competed primarily with Cadence and Avanti Corporation in physical design but eventually broadened its product portfolio and competed with all three of the largest established EDA companies: Cadence, Mentor Graphics and Synopsys.[3] Magma had a particularly strong presence in the convergence device segment through key customers such as Qualcomm, Broadcom and Texas Instruments.[4] In 2001 Roy Jewell joined Magma as chief operating officer and later that year added the title of president.[5]

Magma completed an initial public offering on Nasdaq, under the ticker symbol LAVA, on November 20, 2001[6] — the last EDA company to go public[7] — and achieved its peak annual revenue of $214.4 million in its 2008 fiscal year.[8] Magma was the fourth largest EDA company by revenue.[9]

In 2002 Magma was named to the Red Herring 100 for innovation and business strategy.[10] In 2005 Forbes ranked Magma No. 2 on its list of fastest-growing technology companies.[11]

Key Products and Applications

Magma software was used to design chips for cell phones, networking, automotive products, electronic games, portable music players and digital media.

Companies Acquired

Magma acquired about a dozen companies during its existence,[12] among them Moscape (2000),[13] Silicon Metrics (2003),[14] Mojave (2004),[15] Knights Technology (2006),[16] ACAD Corp. (2006)[17] and Sabio Labs (2008).[18]

Patent Dispute

Magma was involved in a legal dispute with Synopsys beginning in September 2004, when Synopsys sued Magma for allegedly infringing two patents.[19] Claims and counter-claims accelerated, resulting in separate court cases in California and Delaware, and a number of disputed patents. On March 29, 2007, Magma and Synopsys announced the companies had agreed to settle all pending litigation between them. As part of the settlement Magma made a $12.5 million payment to Synopsys and each company cross-licensed four previously disputed patents to the other.[20]

Synopsys Acquisition

On November 30, 2011, Magma and Synopsys announced they had entered into a definitive agreement by which Synopsys would buy Magma for $507 million US$.[21] The merger was finalized on February 22, 2012, with cash value of the transaction at about $523 million, or $7.35 per Magma share.[22]

Key People

References

  1. "Synopsys Completes Acquisition of Magma Design Automation,” February 22, 2012
  2. Securities and Exchange Commission Form S-1, Amendment No. 7, November 19, 2001, (page 49)
  3. EDA Confidential, July 14, 2005
  4. “EDA Industry Update,” March 24, 2009
  5. Securities and Exchange Commission Form S-1, Amendment No. 7, November 19, 2001, (page 49)
  6. “Magma IPO up 46%”, CNN Money, November 20, 2001
  7. "The First EDA IPO in a Decade," Seeking Alpha, May 16, 2011
  8. “Magma Reports Revenue of $214.4 million for Fiscal 2008, 20.4 Percent above Prior Year,” May 1, 2008 at SEC archive
  9. Based on Annual Reports on Form 10-K filed with U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
  10. “Magma Named to the Red Herring 100; Recognized by Red Herring Editors for Innovation and Business Strategy,” May 13, 2002
  11. “Technology’s Growth Champs,” Forbes, February 14, 2005
  12. Semiconductor Engineering
  13. Semiconductor Engineering
  14. Semiconductor Engineering
  15. Semiconductor Engineering
  16. Semiconductor Engineering
  17. Semiconductor Engineering
  18. Semiconductor Engineering
  19. ”Synopsys sues Magma for patent infringement,” EE Times, September 17, 2004
  20. ”Patent resolution removes cloud over Magma,” EE Times, March 30, 2007
  21. Dylan McGrath (30 Nov 2011). "Synopsys to buy Magma for $507 million". EETimes.
  22. "Synopsys Completes Acquisition of Magma Design Automation,” February 22, 2012
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