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ON Semi tanks 24% following Synaptics deal as CEO defends core business

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Why This Matters

The acquisition of Synaptics by ON Semiconductor marks a strategic move into physical AI, expanding its market reach and product offerings in sensing and wireless connectivity. Despite a significant stock decline, the deal underscores the industry's shift towards edge AI and real-time decision-making systems, vital for autonomous vehicles and robotics. This development signals both growth opportunities and increased competition in the rapidly evolving AI hardware landscape.

Key Takeaways

ON Semiconductor CEO Hassane El-Khoury defended the company's core business as shares tanked 24% and headed for their worst day since March 2020, after announcing its largest acquisition ever.

The maker of power and sensing components for the automotive industry on Thursday announced plans to buy edge AI and wireless connectivity solutions company Synaptics in an all-stock deal to capitalize on physical artificial intelligence.

The pivot into physical AI grows its addressable market by an additional $30 billion, or $243 billion, by 2030, On Semiconductor said in a release.

"That is the strategic value of it, complementary to everything we have done on a very strong foundation," El-Khoury told CNBC's "Squawk on the Street" on Friday.

The acquisition also opens new markets for the company, including an AI-centric compute platform, he said.

ON Semiconductor is betting on a world with physical systems capable of sensing and making decisions in real time, such as robots and autonomous vehicles.

Synaptics' Astra platform, which uses AI processors and wireless connectivity, will bolster its Edge AI capabilities, ON Semiconductor said. Edge AI refers to running AI locally on hardware.

"There is no overlap on the product, which is why this deal is very exciting from a [research and development] and a product perspective," El-Khoury said.

The executive also told CNBC that the company's data center business is running smoothly and accelerating.

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