Founding and early growth
Lattice was founded on April 3, 1983, by C. Norman Winningstad, Rahul Sud, and Ray Capece,[9] with investment from Winningstad, Harry Merlo, Tom Moyer, and John Piacentini.[9] Lattice was incorporated in Oregon in 1983 and reincorporated in Delaware in 1985. Co-founder Sud left as president in December 1986, and Winningstad left in 1991 as chairman of the board.[9] Early struggles led to chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization in July 1987.[9] The company emerged from bankruptcy after 62 days and moved from its headquarters in an unincorporated area near Beaverton to a smaller building in Hillsboro, Oregon.[10] Over the next year, the company shrank from 140 to 64 employees but posted record revenues.[11]
Cyrus Tsui became the company's chief executive officer in 1988.[12] On November 9, 1989, Lattice became a publicly traded company when its shares were listed on the NASDAQ after an initial public offering.[13] The initial share price was $6, and raised almost $14 million for the company.[13] In July 1990, a second stock offering of nearly 1.5 million new shares raised $22.6 million at $16.25 per share.[14]
In 1995, the company attempted to assert trademark rights in the term Silicon Forest beyond the use of its trademark for the use in semiconductor devices.[15] It had registered the mark in 1985, but later conceded it could not prevent the usage of the term as a noun.[15] Forbes ranked the company as their 162nd best small company in the United States in 1996,[16] and Lattice began to double the size of its Hillsboro headquarters.[12]
In 2000, annual revenues topped $560 million with profits of $160 million.[17] Its stock price reached an all-time high of $41.34, adjusted for splits.[17] For the next five years, however, the company recorded no annual profit.
Acquisitions and leadership changes
On March 19, 2001, Lattice acquired Integrated Intellectual Property, Inc. (I2P), a semiconductor intellectual property (IP) company headquartered in Santa Clara, California [18][19]. This move strengthened Lattice's internal intellectual property development programs and marked I2P's successful exit as one of the early pure-play semiconductor IP firms of the dot-com era.
Lattice purchased Agere Corporation's FPGA division in 2002.[20] In 2004, the company settled charges with the United States government that it had illegally exported certain technologies to China, paying a fine of $560,000.[21] In 2005, Tsui was replaced as CEO by Steve Skaggs[20]