Analog Devices appears ready to roll out its next major portfolio move, with reports indicating the analog-and-mixed-signal giant is in advanced talks to acquire closely held power-management startup Empower Semiconductor for approximately $1.5 billion in cash.

If finalized, the transaction would mark a significant step in ADI’s strategy to deepen its presence in the fast-growing AI and data-center power?delivery ecosystem.
Empower Semiconductor, a Silicon Valley-based chipmaker, specializes in high-density, low-voltage power-management ICs tailored for AI processors, GPUs, and other compute-heavy workloads.
Its technology enables tighter regulation and more efficient power delivery at the point-of-load critical for training and inference clusters that push thousands of watts into tightly packed server nodes. For Analog Devices, the deal would effectively plug a high-performance power-management play into an already broad analog and mixed-signal portfolio serving automotive, industrial, and communications markets.
According to sources familiar with the matter, the two companies are working toward a potential announcement as early as this week, with the transaction structured as an all-cash acquisition.
While the exact terms and post-deal integration plan have not yet been detailed, the move underscores Analog Devices’ renewed appetite for bolt-on acquisitions after earlier transformative deals such as its $20+ billion combination with Maxim Integrated. That earlier merger significantly expanded ADI’s product breadth and R&D headcount, creating an analog powerhouse with over 10,000 engineers and a multi-billion-dollar R&D engine.
Strategically, the Empower acquisition aligns with Analog Devices’ push to capture more value from the AI-driven hardware boom. As hyperscale data centers and AI-cluster builders demand higher power-density solutions and tighter system-level efficiency, power-management ICs at the edge of the processor are becoming a hot target for consolidation.
Bringing Empower’s architecture and IP in-house would allow ADI to fuse its legacy analog expertise with cutting-edge power-delivery techniques, potentially creating more integrated power-management stacks for OEMs designing next-generation AI accelerators and servers.
On the financial side, a $1.5 billion price tag for a private, specialized AI-power player suggests Analog Devices is valuing Empower’s technology stack and design talent more than near-term revenue. Markets will likely scrutinize whether the deal strengthens ADI’s already solid margins and free-cash-flow profile, especially as the broader analog sector grapples with uneven demand cycles.
Still, for a company with a multi-billion-dollar revenue base and a market-cap in the tens of billions, the acquisition would be a targeted, rather than transformative, addition designed to sharpen its competitive edge in a high-growth niche.
If the deal closes as expected, it could reshape how leading AI chipmakers source their power-management blocks and give Analog Devices a new story line beyond its traditional industrial and automotive strongholds.





