Today an agreement between MediaTek subsidiary Richtek and Intel has been made for Richtek to acquire Intel’s power management solutions and controller product line known as Enpirion. The agreement will enable the sale of the division, subject to regulatory approval, for $85 million, and is expected to close in Q4.

Intel’s Enpirion business has been part of the company under the Programmable Solutions Group, formerly known as Altera, which was acquired by Intel in December 2015 for $16.7 billion. Altera had previously acquired Enpirion in May 2013 for $140 million, indicating a net loss over the seven years.

The Enpirion PowerSoC product line has been a series of system-on-a-chip DC-to-DC power converters, enabling higher power density and lower electrical noise compared to discrete power converter equivalents. The SoC nature also allows for on-the-fly adjustment at the time of delivery. This enables power delivery of a wide array of key products such as FPGAs and ASICs. Enpirion’s product portfolio also includes voltage bus converters, DDR memory terminators, high frequency technology, and 70A power rails.

In various reports, MediaTek has supposedly pointed to Enpirion’s high-frequency and high-efficiency power solutions as a key part of the acquisition, citing MediaTek’s push into enterprise-level system applications. The current belief is that MediaTek is planning to develop its ASIC business in a more serious manner than previously, targeting AI acceleration for hyperscalers.

For Intel, the sale of the Enpirion business clearly isn’t for the money – it sheds a division from the Programmable Solutions Group, allowing them to focus better on growth markets, according to Intel’s official statements. Chances are that Intel has an Enpirion equivalent elsewhere in the company to fill the gap, or might be involved in a purchasing agreement for the ex-Altera products that might use Enpirion. I highly suspect that Intel wasn’t actively marketing the product line for new customers that much anyway, and doesn’t see the market for potential revenue growth.

An Intel spokesperson gave us the following quote for this story:

Intel and Richtek, a subsidiary of MediaTek’s discrete power business, have signed an agreement for Richtek to acquire Intel’s Enpirion FPGA power product line. This transaction will enable Intel’s Programmable Solutions Group to focus on its core FPGA business and increase investment in high-growth opportunities that help position Intel to win key transitions to support 5G, edge computing, artificial intelligence, and the cloud.

If we get a MediaTek statement, we will add it to the article.

It sounds as if the agreement is more for the IP than the people. Update from Intel: Intel has confirmed that the whole business (people + IP) are involved in the acquisition. It will be interesting to see what plans MediaTek has that involve the product line.

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  • Kurosaki - Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - link

    When are the GPU reviews coming? 😁
  • shabby - Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - link

    Good question, since the ampere review is delayed there's almost no point to release the 6800 review without ampere numbers to compare it to. So in a way both reviews need to come out at the same time.
  • kobblestown - Friday, November 20, 2020 - link

    Maybe when you can actually buy them.
  • Silver5urfer - Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - link

    MBA chair at Intel doing all sorts of stuff to keep the boat afloat, but selling these won't net them anything in return. The biggest mistake was selling 5G business to Apple. Worst of all.
  • yeeeeman - Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - link

    Exactly! Been telling here over and over than management and the CEO especially has been terrible after 2015 and currently Bob Swan is just doing everything he can to stay glued to his seat instead of admitting the fact that he is not able to run such a company.
  • Kurosaki - Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - link

    To be fair, though. Who is?
  • chenderit - Wednesday, November 25, 2020 - link

    Exactly. The board spent half a year to look for CEO, but nobody in the world would want to take the hot seat.
  • heickelrrx - Thursday, November 19, 2020 - link

    I think this is a good thing, Intel become too big as a company and losing their focus this led into manufacturing problem

    I hope this move allow Intel regain their focus and core business
  • quorm - Thursday, November 19, 2020 - link

    I don't know that losing focus is related to their manufacturing problems. Either way, this line of business is just too small to effect them one way or another.
  • lmcd - Thursday, November 19, 2020 - link

    Imo staying afloat until Alder Lake has to be the goal. If that isn't enough then well, rip

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