×

Altera returns to growth as AI, robotics fuel demand, CEO says

By Thomson Reuters Jul 10, 2026 | 1:42 PM

By Max A. Cherney

SAN FRANCISCO, July 10 (Reuters) – Altera, a maker of programmable chips spun out of Intel, is growing roughly 20% a year and more than doubling operating income as it prepares for ​an eventual public listing, Chief Executive Raghib Hussain told Reuters in ‌an interview.

Altera became fully independent last September after Intel agreed to sell a 51% stake to Silver Lake for $4.46 billion in a transaction valuing Altera at $8.75 billion. Intel retains a 49% stake.

Hussain, a former Marvell Technology executive who took the top job when Intel spun out ‌Altera, ​said the company grew more than 20% last year ⁠and expects mid-20% growth again ⁠this year, though as a private company it does not disclose specific figures.

“I believe in an engineer-to-engineer type of a discussion,” Hussain said. “We have brought engineering very close to the customers, so that actually already is showing ​up in our customer engagement.”

Intel had reported Altera revenue of $1.5 billion in 2024, which was down sharply from $2.9 billion in 2023. Altera’s revenue decline happened partly ⁠because buyers shifted their attention toward buying GPU ⁠chips for AI in 2023 and partly due to losing ​market share to its largest competitor, AMD-owned Xilinx.

Hussain is positioning Altera for growth ​from artificial intelligence and robotics, using the “field programmable gate array” chips it ‌makes, which are known as FPGAs in the industry, for connectivity, data pre-processing and sensor fusion alongside GPUs.

“If GPU is the brain, the FPGAs are the nervous system,” Hussain said, projecting FPGA content of $100 to several hundred dollars per robot could ⁠create a market worth “100 billion to several hundred billion dollars” over a decade.

On execution, Hussain said the company produced working prototypes of six new chips last year ⁠and has cut down its ‌dependence on transition service agreements from Intel from 125 ⁠agreements to 15.

He said Altera is the only programmable ​chip supplier ‌in full production with a new type of memory ​called DDR5 for ⁠use in mid- to high-programmable chips and that Altera built a memory stockpile that is insulating it from current shortages.

Altera manufactures its chips with both Intel Foundry and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co and is developing products on TSMC’s 2-nanometer and 3-nanometer technologies, Hussain said.

(Reporting by Max Cherney and writing by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; ​Editing by Nick Zieminski)