Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Austin-based audio chip leader with ~82% revenue from Apple; high-performance smart codecs, amplifiers, and haptic drivers in iPhone and MacBook power a $1.8B revenue base.
Cirrus Logic was founded in 1984 in Austin, Texas and has become the dominant supplier of high-performance audio chips to Apple. The company's digital-to-analog converters (DACs), analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), smart codecs, Class D audio amplifiers, and haptic feedback drivers are designed into every iPhone generation, providing the audio circuitry for the speaker, microphone, and headphone subsystems. Approximately 82% of Cirrus Logic's revenue comes from Apple.\n\nCirrus Logic's products are differentiated by their low-power, high-fidelity audio performance and integration of signal processing intelligence, including always-on voice activation and noise suppression. The company has expanded from audio into haptic actuator controllers and is developing mixed-signal IP for wearables, hearables (AirPods), and automotive infotainment. Revenue was approximately $1.8 billion in FY2025, reflecting Apple's continued premium device volume.\n\nWhile the concentrated customer base creates risk, Cirrus Logic's deep technical collaboration with Apple and long design cycle times (2–3 years for new device sockets) create strong customer stickiness. The company has been expanding its product roadmap into sensing and power management to reduce Apple dependency. Cirrus Logic is publicly traded (CRUS) and operates a fabless model, outsourcing manufacturing to foundries including TSMC and GlobalFoundries.
Franco-Italian semiconductor giant; ~$13B revenue. STM32 MCU family powers 4B+ IoT/embedded devices. Strong SiC power device position for automotive and industrial markets.
STMicroelectronics was formed in 1987 through the merger of Italy's SGS Microelettronica and France's Thomson Semiconducteurs in Geneva, Switzerland. The company has built a comprehensive portfolio spanning microcontrollers (MCUs), MEMS sensors, power management ICs, silicon carbide devices, and wireless connectivity chips serving automotive, industrial, IoT, and consumer electronics markets worldwide.\n\nSTMicro is perhaps best known for its STM32 family of ARM Cortex-M microcontrollers, which power billions of embedded applications from smart home devices and wearables to industrial controllers and medical devices. The company is also a major manufacturer of MEMS inertial sensors (accelerometers, gyroscopes) found in smartphones and automotive safety systems, and has a rapidly growing SiC power device business targeting EV inverters and industrial power converters. STMicro reported revenues of approximately $13 billion in FY2024 and guided for continued mid-to-high single digit growth in 2025 across most end markets.\n\nSTMicro operates 11 main manufacturing sites across Europe and Asia, giving it significant vertical integration and a degree of supply chain resilience. The company is jointly owned by French and Italian state entities holding approximately 27.5%, reflecting its strategic national significance. ST is expanding its Catania (Sicily) SiC manufacturing campus to meet surging EV demand and is a founding partner in multiple European semiconductor ecosystem initiatives.
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