Just over a month ago, Imagination Technologies dropped the bombshell announcement that their largest customer, Apple, would be phasing out their use of Imagination’s GPU IP in their SoC GPU designs. Specifically, Apple expects that they will no longer be using Imagination’s IP for new products in 15 to 24 months. This put Imagination in a significant pinch, as Apple is a full half of the company’s overall revenue and 69% of their GPU revenue. As a result, Imagination stands to lose the bulk of their GPU revenue starting two years down the line.

At the time the company announced that they would be engaging with Apple to discuss “potential alternative commercial arrangements” to the companies’ current agreement, and now a month later, Imagination has published a further update on that. Discussions in the last month have not made what Imagination considers satisfactory progress, and as a result they are escalating the discussion to go through the dispute resolution clause of their current contract.

Just what this will entail is unknown since the contract isn’t public, but as Imagination so delicately puts it, they’re seeking to reach an agreement with Apple “through a more structured process.” It’s unknown what will happen if this process fails, but for the moment it does not appear that a further escalation is off the table. If nothing else, Imagination will have the option of taking Apple to court for patent and IP violations once the current agreement expires. Though the company is also making it clear that they’d rather not go that far; it’s hard to imagine Imagination wants to go toe-to-toe with the most valuable company in the world, especially once their revenue takes a significant hit.

Meanwhile in Imagination’s bombshell of the month, alongside today’s Apple update, the company is also announcing that they are going to be refocusing the company to focus entirely on the GPU business. To that end, the company is putting their remaining non-GPU businesses – the MIPS CPU business and the Ensigma communications business – on the market. Imagination is not listing an expected price for either business at this time – or if they have already lined up any suitors – but the company believes that given the improved fiscal performance of these two divisions, that they are in a good position to sell the two divisions.

MIPS and Ensigma have been two of Imagination’s major efforts to diversify the company away from their original core business of GPU IP. MIPS was acquired by Imagination for $60M $100M in 2012 – about 4.5 years ago – while Ensigma has been part of the company since the turn of the millennium. MIPS in particular has been a long-running architecture in the embedded space, and along with x86, is the other alternative CPU architecture supported by Google’s Android OS. So the news that the engineering team and product portfolio behind the #2 architecture in mobile and embedded are being sold is a major development. MIPS and Ensigma are now joining Imagination’s Pure business, which is also in the process of being sold off.

In announcing this latest sale, Imagination noted that they are doing this to strengthen their balance sheet. At the risk of reading too much into a short fiscal statement, this doesn’t sound like a move that they are making with gusto, but rather something they have to do to save the company. Selling these divisions means that the company’s efforts to diversify have failed, but given their situation, it appears that focusing on their core competency is their best bet. Still, it does risk certain efforts in the long-term, such as Imagination’s OmniShield virtualization security technology, since that was a synergy play between owning both CPU and GPU IP.

As for Imagination’s GPU business, the sale of MIPS and Ensigma means that Imagination will be transitioning to a pure-play GPU IP provider. The company continues to develop new IP here, including the recent Furian architecture, so they have products. The question that remains is how they will survive (and ideally thrive) a post-Apple world; even if the companies sign a new agreement, Imagination’s fate is going to be based on how well they can sell GPU IP to the remaining SoC vendors, particularly in the STB and Android mobile spaces. With all other businesses in the process of being sold, the fate of Imagination’s GPU business will determine the fate of Imagination itself.

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  • melgross - Thursday, May 4, 2017 - link

    That doesn't matter. He's a writer, and like every other writer, needs his work checked. It's not a slur on him. It's what I already said, you can't reliably check your own work.
  • Meteor2 - Friday, May 5, 2017 - link

    I think we're the copy editors...
  • melgross - Saturday, May 6, 2017 - link

    You're right.
  • melgross - Saturday, May 6, 2017 - link

    Heck, look at my typos in this thread.
  • tynopik - Thursday, May 4, 2017 - link

    "stands to lose of their GPU revenue"
  • BrokenCrayons - Thursday, May 4, 2017 - link

    There's got to be some sort of logic I'm not following here. Imagination's GPU business is in greatest danger give their failing relationship with Apple. However, the divisions being considerd for sale are the company's brighter spots that aren't GPU related. That seems a rather contrary and short-sighted approach to inject liquidity that offsets a lack of proper asset managment in the years prior to this change.
  • TheinsanegamerN - Thursday, May 4, 2017 - link

    "short-sighted approach to inject liquidity"

    That's every business these days. Nobody thinks past the next quarter anymore.
  • beginner99 - Thursday, May 4, 2017 - link

    Assuming MIPS actually made money from them and you are the CEO: You either just go down or you can sell of the good parts, take some money to the bank and let the rest die off (you actually leave before that happens). Do you actually think high-level sociopath manager care if the company survives and employees have a job? They don't. They care about making money and power.
  • melgross - Thursday, May 4, 2017 - link

    It's a good thing your name here starts with "beginner". You have a lot to learn, if you can get over your jaundiced ideas. While occasionally that will happen, mostly those running the company are simply lost as to what to do to solve the problem. They are advised to sell of the "better parts" to save the base of the company's operations. That advice rare,y works out, but it's given over and again.
  • Meteor2 - Friday, May 5, 2017 - link

    Well the alternative is bankruptcy in short-order. Gaining cash buys time. Then either a company sorts itself out (highly unlikely, as it's the same people still running the place who messed up in the first place), or it gets bought or files. But at least it's a chance.

    I wonder why they couldn't keep MIPS and sell the GPU side to Apple? With the R&D they could then afford, perhaps they'd start towards being the next ARM...

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