Earnings call transcript: Silvaco's Q3 2025 revenue surges, stock dips

Published 12/11/2025, 23:56
 Earnings call transcript: Silvaco's Q3 2025 revenue surges, stock dips

Silvaco Group Inc. reported a robust performance in Q3 2025, with a record quarterly revenue of $18.7 million, marking a 70% year-over-year increase. Despite this growth, the company's stock fell by 2.47% in after-hours trading to $4.86, reflecting investor concerns over its ongoing net losses and future guidance. The company also provided insights into its strategic cost reduction initiatives and future growth plans.

Key Takeaways

  • Silvaco achieved a record Q3 revenue of $18.7 million, up 70% YoY.
  • Bookings soared to $22.8 million, a 131% increase YoY.
  • After-hours trading saw a 2.47% decrease in the stock price.
  • The company is implementing significant cost reduction measures.
  • Guidance for Q4 2025 suggests potential revenue between $14-$18 million.

Company Performance

Silvaco's performance in Q3 2025 highlights its strong revenue growth, driven largely by license sales, which accounted for 74% of total revenue. The company is making strides in AI and power analysis, key areas that are expected to fuel future growth. However, the net loss of $5.3 million under GAAP indicates ongoing financial challenges, which may have contributed to the stock's decline.

Financial Highlights

  • Revenue: $18.7 million, a 70% increase YoY.
  • Bookings: $22.8 million, up 131% YoY.
  • Gross Margin: GAAP at 77.9%, Non-GAAP at 81.5%.
  • Net Loss: $5.3 million (GAAP), $2.1 million (Non-GAAP).
  • Cash and Marketable Securities: $27.8 million.

Market Reaction

Following the earnings announcement, Silvaco's stock price fell by 2.47% in after-hours trading, settling at $4.86. This decline comes despite the company's strong revenue growth, possibly due to investor concerns over its net losses and cautious future guidance. The stock remains significantly below its 52-week high of $9.93, reflecting broader market challenges and sector-specific pressures.

Outlook & Guidance

Silvaco's guidance for Q4 2025 projects bookings of $15-$19 million and revenue between $14-$18 million. The company expects a non-GAAP gross margin of 78-82% and operating expenses of $16-$18 million. Long-term, Silvaco aims for low double-digit growth in the near term and mid-double-digit growth in the future, driven by its strategic focus on AI and power analysis.

Executive Commentary

CEO Wally Rines emphasized the importance of focusing on differentiated products to become leaders in their respective markets. He also highlighted the company's cost reduction program, which is expected to reduce annualized non-GAAP operating expenses by $15 million. Rines expressed confidence in the company's ability to gain market share in a growing industry.

Risks and Challenges

  • Continued net losses may affect investor confidence and stock performance.
  • The success of cost reduction measures is crucial for financial stability.
  • Competitive pressures in the AI and power analysis markets pose challenges.
  • Economic uncertainties could impact future revenue growth.
  • Execution risks associated with strategic acquisitions.

Q&A

During the earnings call, analysts inquired about the adoption challenges of the FTCO product, the strategic value of the Mixel acquisition, and the timeline for cost reduction efforts. The company addressed these concerns, reaffirming its commitment to innovation and operational efficiency as key drivers of future growth.

Full transcript - Silvaco Group Inc (SVCO) Q3 2025:

Conference Moderator: Good afternoon and welcome to Silvaco's third quarter, fiscal year 2025 conference call. All participants are on a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there'll be a question-and-answer session. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Greg McNiff, Investor Relations for Silvaco. Please proceed.

Greg McNiff, Investor Relations, Silvaco: Thank you. Joining me on the call today are Wally Rines, Silvaco's CEO and director, and Chris Segarelli, Silvaco's CFO. As a reminder, a press release highlighting the company's results, along with supplemental financial results and an earnings presentation, are available on the company's IR site at investors.silvaco.com. An archived replay of the call will be available on this website for a limited time after the call. Please note that during this call, management will be making remarks regarding future events and the future financial performance of the company. These remarks constitute forward-looking statements for purposes of the Safe Harbor Provisions of the Private Security Litigation Reform Act. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements.

It is important to also note that the company undertakes no obligation to update such statements except as required by law. The company cautions you to consider risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements contained in today's press release, earnings presentation, and on this conference call. The risk factors section in Silvaco's annual report on Form 10-K for the year filed 12/31/2024 and the most recent Form 10-Q filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission provide descriptions of these risks. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to the Silvaco CEO, Wally Rines. Wally.

Wally Rines, CEO and Director, Silvaco: Good afternoon. I'm pleased to be part of Silvaco, and I look forward to regular communication with you, our investors. Since I became CEO, I've engaged with customers, employees, and investors who provided invaluable feedback on our strengths, challenges, and most importantly, the road ahead. The conclusion is clear: Silvaco is a company with great potential, supported by a rich history, dedicated core customers, and strong foundational elements. Two broader themes came out of these discussions. First, our success requires us to focus on key products that are sufficiently differentiated to become leaders in their respective categories of use. Achieving this requires reduced attention on mature products and concentrated focus on a limited number of growth opportunities. I can see multiple areas where this shift in focus will pay off, namely in AI, interconnect IP, and power.

Second, it's clear that Silvaco allowed spending since the IPO to grow much faster than revenue. This was also clear to me from day one. We've already taken steps to reverse this trend, to strengthen our financials, and to free up resources needed to accelerate growth. I'm confident that these two areas—strategic focus on core growth drivers and financial discipline—are the keys to strengthening the business and delivering profitable growth. I'll provide more color on the first, and Chris will walk you through the second. Stepping into the CEO role at Silvaco is like déjà vu all over again for me. When I joined Mentor Graphics as CEO in 1993, the company had failed to meet expectations for many quarters. None of Mentor's products were number one in their categories. The company was not profitable, and cash conservation was an issue.

During my time at Mentor, I learned a great deal about the EDA business. We closed dozens of acquisitions, grew market value more than 10x before acquisition by Siemens, substantially increased profitability, and developed and grew a number of products, including Caliber and Tessent, which by themselves generated most of the company's profits. I find Silvaco in a similar position to where I find Mentor. The company has failed to meet expectations after the IPO, it's not yet profitable, and the products are not number one in their markets except in some very specialized categories. I believe that my Mentor playbook can be applied to Silvaco. The first step is focusing on two key areas: financial and operational discipline, and focusing on select core growth drivers. We believe the key to reinvigorating the business lies in focusing on the right markets with differentiated solutions to solve critical customer challenges.

We have a very clear example of this in Silvaco's AI machine learning product for process development called FTCO. Silvaco created this unique AI product that gives customers a valuable tool to solve real manufacturing challenges. This single product enabled Silvaco to establish a partnership with Micron. It will also be one of our foundational growth drivers looking forward. We can learn from FTCO as an example of building disruptive technology that can create meaningful value for our customers and for us. Another example is Mixel, the acquisition that closed in the third quarter. With Mixel, we expect the IP business to grow rapidly. Customers have nothing but praise for Mixel's perfect quality and responsiveness. Andy Wright, our new Head of the IP business, has breathed life and growth into the rest of Silvaco's once small IP business. I see synergies emerging that exceed our initial expectations.

The Silvaco sales force will become a force multiplier for Mixel, while the rest of the Silvaco IP business is learning from the world-class development processes that have earned Mixel such praise in the industry. My expectation is that the legacy Silvaco businesses can and will learn from Mixel best practices. In the EDA business, as in TCAD, we have years of legacy products, many of which continue to generate significant maintenance revenue. These can generate steady revenue with little cost if we increase the cost discipline in our business. Skilled engineers who support the mature products continue to add features and enhancements long after the products have stopped achieving new design wins. In general, the customers neither want nor do they adopt the new versions of the software.

Only a small amount of resources are required to keep the products useful, and skilled engineers can be moved to products with growth opportunities, providing them with increased motivation and excitement. One example of a growth product that solves key customer problems is Jivaro. It's been adopted by companies like Nvidia, Samsung, SK Hynix, and many others to accelerate post-layout SPICE simulations by more than a factor of 10 with sign-off accuracy. Looking across Silvaco, solutions that include AI, power analysis, and interconnect IP are consistently winning new customer engagements. As we de-emphasize areas that are subscale or generating immaterial new revenue, we can free up resources to accelerate our stronger products, including FTCO and TCAD. Our success also depends on establishing fiscal and operational discipline. The data speaks for itself. Since our company's IPO, financial performance has been disappointing.

Revenue growth has lagged peers, and operating expenses have grown much faster than revenue. Underestimation of the time and effort required to bring on the new FTCO customers produced disappointing results for what should be a key growth franchise. The fact that expenses have grown much faster than revenue is another problem. Expense reduction has therefore become our top priority. We have initiated a significant cost reduction program at the beginning of the quarter. Chris and I have set a clear expectation with the team that we will drive the business to profitability at current revenue levels so that growth can produce incremental profit. Chris will discuss these actions and early progress on this goal in more detail. Operational discipline also requires a strong focus on execution.

We've added several key new leaders to the team in the last few months, including our CFO, heads of the IP and EDA businesses, and our head of business development. The energy I see in this team is exactly what we need to create a culture of speed and high-quality execution. I see a team that's not satisfied with the status quo and one that wants to win. With our renewed focus on core growth drivers, we'll be able to invest at the right levels in the right areas to ensure that we close gaps with competitors and establish Silvaco as the leading name in EDA for our targeted growth segments, including AI, power, and interconnect IP. Another contributor to the company's underperformance has been delays in integrating and extracting value from our two most recent M&A transactions.

For Mixel, we underestimated the time required to activate the sales resources in Silvaco and to establish new modes of distribution, including off-the-shelf sales of non-customized IP. For Tech-X, growth remains dependent on overall market adoption of its plasma and optical solutions. Focus on this effort should accelerate realization of the value that Tech-X brings. Looking forward, we expect both Mixel and Tech-X to contribute meaningful growth in 2026. We remain optimistic on the longer-term contributions of both of these acquisitions. Now, taking a step back, there's a lot of value and strength from Silvaco's rich history. The company continues to benefit from the fact that users of EDA software are reluctant to change, and older products continue to generate maintenance revenue long after growth from new customers has slowed. This gives us a stable foundation upon which to build.

It also gives us many compelling assets with which to focus and grow. We have a lot of work in front of us. In the coming quarters, we expect to right-size the business, streamline the portfolio, and focus on key growth segments to enable us to deliver steady, profitable growth. We recognize it will take some time for you to see this redoubled focus in the numbers. I encourage you to watch for our OPEX to trend flat to down, gross margins to improve, and evidence of growth starting to materialize in 2026. Chris and I are firmly committed to an aggressive acceleration of Silvaco's business. I'm looking forward to increased personal interaction with Silvaco customers. We appreciate your support as we execute on these growth plans. I'm confident that we will deliver strong results as this new strategy is implemented.

I'd now like to turn the call over to Chris, who will discuss our financial results and the outlook in more detail. Chris.

Chris Segarelli, CFO, Silvaco: Thanks, Wally. Good afternoon, everyone. Silvaco delivered record quarterly revenue and bookings in Q3. Bookings increased 131% year over year to $22.8 million. Strength in the quarter was driven by closing a significant EDA contract with one of our core customers in the United States. Revenue came in at $18.7 million, up 70% year over year. 74% of revenue in the quarter came from license revenue, and the remaining 26% from maintenance and service. EDA saw the most growth sequentially in Q3, while TCAD and IP trended down slightly. From a geographic perspective, we saw the most growth in Q3 from the Americas, which spiked to 55% of total revenue in the quarter. APAC represented 40% of total revenue. EMEA stayed flattish and at 5% of revenue in the quarter. Looking down the P&L, GAAP gross margin in Q3 was 77.9%, up 326 basis points year over year.

Non-GAAP gross margin was 81.5%, up 179 basis points year over year. Gross margin improvement was driven by growth in revenue exceeding growth in cost of sales. Going forward, we expect gross margin to benefit from our cost reduction plans. GAAP operating loss expanded year over year but improved slightly quarter over quarter to a $9.3 million loss. Non-GAAP operating loss was $2.3 million, down slightly year over year. GAAP net loss in the quarter was $5.3 million, up from the $6.6 million loss posted in the same period last year. Non-GAAP net loss in the quarter was $2.1 million, down slightly from the $1.8 million loss posted in the same period last year. GAAP EPS was an $0.18 loss, and non-GAAP EPS was a $0.07 loss. Next, turning to the balance sheet and cash flow.

Cash and marketable securities was $27.8 million, including $12.4 million of restricted cash due to the NanGate settlement. Cash used in operating activities was $7.8 million. Remaining performance obligations, or RPO, at quarter-end stood at $48 million, with 54% expected to be recognized as revenue within the next 12 months. With OPEX up more than 50% year over year and cash down since the IPO, we have begun implementing a broad cost reduction program. We began with an early retirement incentive program in the U.S. and Asia and an early leaver program in Europe. We are taking other steps in addition to these programs, including reducing office footprints, reducing discretionary spend, and minimizing use of consultants and contractors. These steps, when taken together and when fully implemented, are expected to reduce annualized non-GAAP operating expenses by at least $15 million annually.

We also anticipate these actions to drive an increase in gross margin, enabling more leverage from future growth. Our guiding principle for Wally is to turn the business profitable at flat revenue. Achieving this goal will create a strong foundation for future profitable growth. Now, turning to guidance. For Q4 2025, we expect bookings of $15 million-$19 million, revenue of $14 million-$18 million, non-GAAP gross margin in the range of 78%-82%, and non-GAAP operating expenses of $16 million-$18 million. In closing, we believe that with improved financial discipline and a focus on key growth opportunities, we will set the stage for profitable growth going forward. With that, Operator, we will now take questions.

Conference Moderator: Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. If you have a question or a comment at this time, please press star 1 1 on your telephone. If your question has been answered or you are removing yourself from the queue, please press star 1 1 again. We will pause for a moment while we compile our Q&A roster. Our first question comes from Craig Ellis with B. Riley Securities. Your line is open.

Yeah, thanks for taking the question and appreciate all the color, team. Wally, I wanted to start with you, and it's a higher-level question relating to your transition from the board to the CEO role. It sounds like in a fairly short amount of time at that lower level of detail, you've got a real confident grasp of what you've got in the portfolio, both things that are advantaged in the marketplace and other businesses that have lost their advantage. And you talked about mixing out some revenue. One, is that read correct? And two, how significant is the revenue mix-out that is ahead of the company?

Wally Rines, CEO and Director, Silvaco: Thanks, Craig. Yes, indeed. Being on the board, you really don't get the level of visibility down to individual products and people that are making the difference in the company or that are holding us up from making further progress. The last few months now have given me the opportunity to see that in a lot of detail. I think your assessment is correct. There is substantial opportunity ahead. There are specific things that I'm quite certain will grow. And then there are others that could grow given the right level of focus. As I noted and as Chris noted in his comments, we've let the expense base grow faster than the revenue. That's been a limiter in the available resources we can put on these key growth areas.

Going forward, while painful, I think we will be able to right that trend and be able to free up the resources we need to take advantage of some very specific areas of strength. With that, I think we can restore confidence that Silvaco can do what it was originally intended to do as we went public.

Excellent. Chris, I'll ask the follow-up question to you. It's a two-parter. One, you did a good job speaking to the geographic areas where you hope to take about $15 million out of the business. The tactical question is, over what time period should we expect that to occur? The more strategic question is, as you've been in and have had a chance to assess the systems, the processes that are in place, the forecasting mechanisms, given the difficulty the business had in delivering forecasts, how do you feel about the dashboard that's in place for you and Wally? Do you feel like it's one that today can deliver reliable results, or are there some things you need to do to make either system or people or process changes so that the business can forecast more accurately? Thank you.

Chris Segarelli, CFO, Silvaco: Very good question, Craig, and thanks so much for that. Both questions are good. From a time period perspective, the way that we're looking at it, you should expect most of the cost to be out by the end of this year. That means you won't see as much of the impact in Q4, but you should see a reduction in OPEX in Q1. The rest of it should be throughout the rest of 2026. Expect to see a step down in Q1 OPEX as most of it is out by the end of the year. Fair question on the forecasting methodologies and tools as well. That's something that Wally and I looked at almost immediately from day one. I'll tell you, the tools are in place. We do see the data. The pipeline is robust.

We do review what is expected in the coming quarters. I am confident that what we have given is something we have high visibility into and something that we are confident in. That being said, Craig, you know me. I think there are things we can do to further improve and build upon that, and that is something that I will be working on with the team. I am confident that what you heard from us is something we are confident in, and we will deliver on.

Excellent. Thanks, Chris. Thanks, Wally.

Conference Moderator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Charles Shea with Needham & Company. Your line is open.

Hey, good afternoon. Wally, Chris. First off, Wally, never thought that we're going to have a conversation like this. Once again, looking forward to working with you and Chris. Maybe the first question, maybe for Wally, I understand the priority probably is to, if I may, just to get the house in order. Wally, you mentioned about Caliber, you mentioned about Tessent. Those were the two successful products of Mentor, which are basically the golden standard for the industry. I think it would be ideal for some of the Silvaco products to get there. What do you think? What kind of products in the portfolio today have the potential to get to what Caliber is, what Tessent is today? By the way, how do you get there?

The reason why I ask this is I did read your bibliography, and I knew it takes probably both effort and maybe you need a little bit of luck to really get there. Time has changed. What's your thought there in that question? Yeah, thank you.

Wally Rines, CEO and Director, Silvaco: Yeah, thank you, Charles. It's good to talk again. We've been talking over many years. You're right. When I just joined Mentor, you initiated the work that developed Caliber, and we did an acquisition that was the basis for Tessent. Yet it took quite a long time before those became the dominant industry standards in their space. I believe the way you do this is you start out with a focused market and a focused set of customers and see something that you can be the leader in. I've been searching within Silvaco, where are the seeds that can lead to the same kind of success?

A good example is where they've taken tools that were really created for IC design and applied them to displays, for example, and the manufacturing of those displays, where they built a franchise with six different display companies using the same flow. Once you build a franchise that's dominant or, excuse me, that is the leader in that area, you expand to next areas. You asked me, where do I see that potential? As I mentioned in the earlier comments, Silvaco has been very early into actually building machine learning models around process development. It's a market that others haven't been chasing. It's relatively specialized, and it takes a lot of work, and you need a TCAD foundation to build upon. That eliminates the number of companies that could do it.

I think that's the kind of basis that can lead to a franchise, that can lead to an industry-leading product. Similarly, if you're in the IP business, being a supplier of general-purpose IP may generate revenue, but it doesn't generate market advantage and profitability at the same level as if you pick specific types of IP and become the leader. I think the acquisition of Mixel was well thought out. Clearly, in MIPP, there are only two major suppliers. They have a strong reputation. You say, okay, what comes beyond? There are lots of I/O standards that they can expand into. Plus, there's the existing Silvaco business that's really quite successful, actually has more demand than we can currently service in areas like memory compilers and even in the standard cell-based libraries.

Lastly, of course, I mentioned the area of power where Silvaco models I found for silicon carbide, gallium nitride, and other things form a foundation for differentiated products. My strategy: do what others aren't doing. Pick things you can do better than anyone else. Build upon those franchises. That is indeed exactly what I plan to do here at Silvaco.

Thanks, Wally. You partially answered my second question, but I do want to maybe just double down on that to get a little bit more color. Speaking of Mixel, I know you just closed the deal last quarter, but it sounds like you think highly of the team, of the product. I wonder if you can walk us through again what exactly they do. I think I can see the press release, but surveys, but what exactly they do that makes you think this is a high-quality product, a high-quality team? What makes you think it's actually the benchmark for the rest of the Silvaco team, as you mentioned in the preparing marks? Thanks.

Yes. I am basing that on customer feedback, talking to actual users, asking them what they think. They are quite specific in saying if all of Silvaco produced the kind of quality and the execution to schedule and other things that Mixel had, we would be champions of the IP business. It is not just my impression talking to people. It is my conclusion from dealing with customers and looking at the track record. Twenty-seven years, and they have never had a customer find a bug in their IP. Really admirable. Another aspect is they have the vast majority of the people that are developing the products and supporting them based in Cairo, Egypt. I have a long history there at Mentor. I started the group, and it became a very valuable resource to us for having cost-effective engineers who are very well-educated, very experienced.

The Cairo University and Ain Shams have programs in EDA, and I found that's a very good basis to build upon. I put it all together. I think it's a great acquisition. I think you will see substantial growth next year because of that. I think the interaction with Mixel will greatly improve the performance of the existing Silvaco business. The two together will cause substantial growth in the coming year.

Thanks.

Conference Moderator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Blair Abernathy with Rosenblatt Securities. Your line is open.

Wally Rines, CEO and Director, Silvaco: Hi. Thanks for taking my call, guys. I appreciate it. I'm sorry I missed the very beginning of the call, but I wanted to ask a little bit about the pipeline. Wally, I know you've only really been getting into the weeds of it for a couple of months now, but how are you thinking about the pipeline of the business as it stands? Is the FTCO, how is that looking to you? I know it's a longer sales cycle, but how does that opportunity look from your standpoint at this point?

Yeah. First, with regard to the overall pipeline, there is a large base of very mature products that produce pretty stable maintenance revenue and give the opportunity to grow each year. So roughly half our total business can be generated just from those renewals, which do not require an enormous amount of effort. The rest of the business requires more direct effort. I think it has been highlighted before that the FTCO is a big opportunity. It is a big opportunity because Silvaco has gotten ahead of the game and because Silvaco has a teacher customer in Micron who has been quite vocal about expressing the value of it. The disappointing part is it has evolved very slowly. There was a continuing expectation last year that we would announce additional customers. That has not occurred.

The reason it hasn't occurred is there is an adoption process that requires an extensive amount of interaction with the customer, customizing it to the uniqueness of their processes. It requires a funnel of customer opportunities and then a lot of resources to go with it. Disappointment in how quickly it's arisen, optimism at what it can become, and how it can take AI into one more branch of EDA that other people are not focusing on, that Silvaco can and has the base business in TCAD to build upon and create success as we bring on those additional customers.

Okay. Great. Thank you for that. And then, Chris, just on the expense savings, is this out of the core business? Is there any of the acquisitions that you did this year that are impacted by that? And just to clarify, you said that you'll be completely done by the end of this fiscal?

Chris Segarelli, CFO, Silvaco: A majority of it will be, we believe, a majority of it will be out by the end of this fiscal year. By the end of the year, you will not see the benefit of that really until Q1, just from a full quarter's perspective. The rest of it will come out through 2026. The cost areas are pretty broad. For example, Mixel had an office in California. We have a headquarters in California. If we can put those two together and kind of save costs there, we will reduce office footprints in other places. It is mostly what I would call the core Silvaco side of the business is kind of what we are looking at when we do these actions. It is, again, to get us to right size the cost structure and then help us be more nimble and focus on growth.

Wally Rines, CEO and Director, Silvaco: Okay. Great. Thanks very much.

Conference Moderator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Chris Shankar with TD Cowen. Your line is open.

Thanks for taking my question. Wally, welcome back. Nice to have a seasoned operator at the helm.

Wally Rines, CEO and Director, Silvaco: Thank you.

I had two questions. Maybe the first one for Chris. When I look at your guidance, it looks like the revenues are looking a little lighter. I thought that Q4 season was strong for you. If I look at the full year revenue guide, it's only up like 2% despite all the acquisitions. I'm kind of wondering, are there any idiosyncratic things in Q4 or what is going on? A follow-up for Wally.

Chris Segarelli, CFO, Silvaco: Okay. No, that's a very fair question. So when we look at Q4, I think you're right. I mean, in Q3, the Mixel acquisition, for example, was a nominal addition to revenue, as you can see in the numbers. It'll be a stronger contributor in 2026. There is some sequential growth there in Q4, but it'll be stronger next year. Tech-X is more of a stronger grower in 2026 as well. When we look at next quarter, I mean, you saw the EDA strength in Q3. Based on how we recognize revenue, EDA will step down sequentially in Q4. But TCAD and the IP business are expected to increase sequentially, which is how we landed on these numbers. I would just point to what Wally said earlier. I mean, there was some expectation that a second FTCO engagement would materialize sooner than expected. We're still working on several engagements.

We're still confident in that, but we're not seeing that in Q4 of this year.

Got it. Super helpful, Chris. Wally, I'm just kind of curious. Do you have all the pieces of the pie to grow from here, or do you need more M&A to complete the product circle? Or is there a goal to increase term-based or software licenses as a percentage of revenue?

Wally Rines, CEO and Director, Silvaco: Yeah. We're somewhat limited in the number of acquisitions we can do going forward, just based upon the resources we have to do them. So what Chris and I have come down to is, look, we need to grow with the existing companies or the existing resources we have. We've done three good acquisitions that will add to growth. The overall business needs to be stable and growing, but at a lower level. Looking forward, we're planning things around no significant acquisitions for a while now.

As Chris noted, we want to be sure that at the current revenue levels, we can be profitable so that the growth we experience, both from these acquisitions and any growth in other parts of the business, will fall through as profitably and create a clear path ahead so we do not have to wait for the time that we accelerate our acquisitions once again.

It depends on what Wally and welcome back.

Thank you.

Conference Moderator: Again, ladies and gentlemen, if you have a question or a comment at this time, please press star 11 on your telephone. Our next question comes from Christian Schwab with Craig-Hallum Capital Group. Your line is open.

Great. Regarding the $15 million in OpEx reductions on a year-over-year basis, should we assume that kind of comes from the midpoint of your OpEx guidance for this quarter, meaning kind of $68 million minus $15 million to get to $53 million? Is $53 million kind of the target or $55 million or $51 million? Is this crystal clear to me?

Chris Segarelli, CFO, Silvaco: This is Chris. I can take that one. You can look at the midpoint of the guide in Q4 as the starting point. I would just comment that the $15 million will be realized when all of the actions are implemented over the course of 2026. You would not expect it to be all Q25 to 26. It will be mostly out by the end of this year. You will see a benefit in Q1. The rest will play out through the year. The full year-over-year impact would be less just given the timing of the reductions. I hope that gives you a good sense of how we are looking at it.

Yeah, that helps. On Mixel, it kind of sounded like there was some commentary about time to accelerate sales, etc. I know you guys have previously highlighted that you expected $3 million-$5 million in revenue quickly after closing the acquisition in the remainder of 2025. I assume you did not attain that goal. Can you give us an idea of what you do anticipate selling then?

Wally Rines, CEO and Director, Silvaco: We didn't attain it in the third quarter. We will see more growth in the fourth quarter. As you alluded to, I think here, the great machine of profitability in EDA is when you take a company with great product but limited distribution and combine it with a company that has worldwide distribution and maybe not as much in the way of products. That is the great way that the EDA industry grew. That is how Cadence started by acquiring ECAD and then built upon it. The same thing is true here. I think Mixel is a great example. They have basically one salesperson producing the level of revenue that they have today. You combine that with our sales force, and the inevitable result is that we can keep them fully loaded with demand, and then they can continue to add resource and grow the revenue.

It's almost a perfect model for the kind of acquisition for which there is leverage for a company like Silvaco.

Great. Then my last question, more longer term, on a multi-year timeframe basis. Given the product set that you have in hand and sounds like no meaningful acquisitions in the near term, if we never made another acquisition again, what type of top-line growth prospects do you think the company has? A range of outcomes.

The longer term clearly needs to be double-digit. We're in an industry that's growing double-digit, and we expect to gain share out in the future. So clearly, the long-term target is there. Getting there, we are below that clearly today. And so we'll have to increase as we head through 2026. But I don't think long-term is five years away. I think it's much closer. And we can return certainly to low double digits and then in the longer term, mid-double digits as we move forward.

Perfect. Thank you. No other questions.

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Risk Disclosure: Trading in financial instruments and/or cryptocurrencies involves high risks including the risk of losing some, or all, of your investment amount, and may not be suitable for all investors. Prices of cryptocurrencies are extremely volatile and may be affected by external factors such as financial, regulatory or political events. Trading on margin increases the financial risks.
Before deciding to trade in financial instrument or cryptocurrencies you should be fully informed of the risks and costs associated with trading the financial markets, carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience, and risk appetite, and seek professional advice where needed.
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