Credo Semiconductor pays up to $1.3 billion for DustPhotonics in photonic consolidation
San Jose connectivity specialist absorbs Israeli startup's silicon photonics IP as AI infrastructure spending reshapes chip M&A logic.
Credo Semiconductor closed its acquisition of Israeli photonic chip startup DustPhotonics for up to $1.3 billion, marking one of the larger chip-sector consolidations in the current cycle and accelerating Credo's transition from SerDes specialist to integrated high-speed connectivity provider. The deal brings DustPhotonics' silicon photonics technology directly into Credo's roadmap as hyperscalers demand tighter integration between electrical and optical layers in next-generation data center architectures.
The transaction includes $800 million upfront in cash and stock, with earn-outs that could push the total to $1.3 billion contingent on product milestones through 2026. DustPhotonics employs approximately 150 engineers across facilities in Yokneam and Jerusalem, focused on optical transceivers and co-packaged optics technologies. Integration begins immediately, with Credo planning to retain the Israeli engineering team and maintain both sites as centers for photonic development. The company expects the combined entity to generate $50 million in incremental revenue by fiscal 2026, mostly from hyperscale customers deploying 1.6T and 3.2T Ethernet switches.
The logic is straightforward. Credo generates roughly $380 million annually selling electrical connectivity chips—primarily active electrical cables and retimers—into the same customer base now demanding optical solutions as rack densities climb. Hyperscalers are moving optical modules closer to the switch ASIC to reduce latency and power consumption, a shift that favors vendors offering both electrical and optical IP. DustPhotonics was developing co-packaged optics prototypes for multiple Tier 1 customers before the acquisition, technology that typically takes 18 to 24 months to productize. Credo effectively bought time and design wins.
The deal also reflects wider pressure on photonics startups. DustPhotonics raised approximately $180 million across multiple rounds, most recently at a valuation near $600 million in 2022. With optical component pricing under pressure from Chinese suppliers and hyperscalers insisting on second sources, standalone photonics companies face margin compression and extended sales cycles. Broadcom and Marvell already bundle optical and electrical connectivity; Credo needed scale to compete. The $1.3 billion figure represents roughly 3.4 times Credo's current market cap, signaling management's belief that vertical integration unlocks valuation multiples reserved for platform plays rather than component suppliers.
Operators should watch Credo's next earnings call for updated guidance on Israel site retention and whether DustPhotonics' Tier 1 design wins remain intact post-acquisition—customer concentration risk is material when two or three hyperscalers represent most of the addressable market. Allocators should track whether Credo can maintain DustPhotonics' technical talent; Israeli photonics engineers command competitive offers from Intel, NVIDIA, and private startups. Merger integration timelines matter less than whether key architects stay through the first product release cycle in mid-2025.
The Israeli government will likely fast-track regulatory approval given national interest in retaining semiconductor IP domestically. Credo's stock closed up 4.2 percent on the announcement, suggesting the market views the price as reasonable relative to avoided R&D spend and compressed time-to-market for optical products. The real test is whether Credo can cross-sell electrical and optical solutions into the same rack architecture refresh cycles without cannibalizing its existing SerDes revenue. Hyperscalers refresh switches every 24 to 30 months; the next wave begins in Q2 2025.