1950-1999 The company was founded in the 1950s as
Microwave Associates by the engineers Vessarios Chigas, Louis Roberts, Hugh Wainwright and Richard M. Walker. The company was initially a small supplier of
magnetrons to the
U.S. Army Signal Corps. In 1969, the company appointed as its president Lawrence Gould, who had joined the company in 1953 while finishing his PhD at
MIT. After suffering a stroke in 1986, DiBona was replaced by Thomas Burke in 1987, who was killed in a September 1989 automobile accident.
Thomas Vanderslice, former CEO of
Apollo Computer, was named the final CEO of the independent M/A-COM in December 1989. The company divested of DCC and Linkabit operations between 1986 and 1990. However, it faced severe financial pressures with the drop in defense spending in the 1990s. Vanderslice sold the company to
AMP Inc., in an all-stock transaction completed in June 1995 that was valued at $316 million. In 1999, AMP itself was acquired by
Tyco Electronics.
2000–2010 In 2001, Tyco acquired
Com-Net Ericsson and placed the company under the administration of MACOM, as part of the deal, the company acquired the
EDACS radio systems team and products and merged them with its own
OpenSky resources. The deal also allowed MACOM to become the second largest two-way radio communications manufacturer in the United States. The combined company subsequently developed a
P25 radio offering, and has grown its critical communications systems business to be a large player in the modern wireless two-way communications market. In June 2003,
XMA Corporation, located in
Manchester, New Hampshire, purchased from MACOM the
Omni Spectra line of coaxial
attenuators and terminations. On May 13, 2008, Tyco Electronics announced that it would sell its RF Components and Subsystem Business to
Cobham plc for $425 million. Tyco Electronics retained the wireless communications part of MACOM, but renamed it Tyco Electronics Wireless Systems. On September 29, 2008, Tyco Electronics and Cobham announced the completion of the sale of Tyco Electronics’ M/A-COM Radio Frequency Components and Subsystems business to Cobham plc. Tyco Electronics kept its Wireless Systems business unit, and changed its name from M/A-COM to Tyco Electronics Wireless Systems. On March 30, 2009, the company acquired all of the outstanding stock of M/A-COM Technology Solutions Inc., the primary operating subsidiary of MACOM and the related foreign operating subsidiary, M/ACOM Technology Solutions Limited from Cobham. Cobham plc announced that it had sold M/A-COM's commercial business segment, M/A-COM Technology Solutions, to
John Ocampo, the owner of
GaAs Labs, on March 31, 2009. In May 2010, MACOM acquired
Mimix Broadband, a
fabless supplier of
GaAs semiconductors.
2011–present In May 2011, MACOM acquired
Optomai Inc., a semiconductor company that developed integrated circuits and modules for 40 and 100-Gbit/s
fiber optic networks. The company announced it had reached a deal to purchase
Mindspeed Technologies, a network infrastructure semiconductor business in November 2013. In February 2014, the company announced that it had sold Mindspeed's wireless business to
Intel Corporation. On February 13, 2014, the company purchased
Nitronex LLC, a privately held designer of
gallium nitride semiconductors for $26 million. That same year, MACOM also purchased the RF and microwave company
IKE Micro and SiPh services company,
Photonic Controls. In November 2014, MACOM reached an agreement to buy
BinOptics Corporation, a provider of
InP lasers that started at
Cornell University, for $230 million. In November 2015, the company announced that it planned to acquire the Japanese optical subassembly supplier,
FiBest Limited, before the end of the first quarter in 2016. In December 2015, MACOM acquired
Aeroflex's diode business, Aeroflex Metelics from Cobham for $38 million in cash. In January 2017, MACOM acquired
Applied Micro Circuits Corporation. In February 2023, MACOM announced it had acquired the assets and operations of the
Limeil-Brévannes semiconductor manufacturer, OMMIC SAS for €38.5 million. In August 2023, it was announced MACOM had entered into a definitive agreement to acquire the RF business of
Wolfspeed. ==Operations==