Skywater Technology expanding with big acquisition even as it struggles with federal funding delays

The Bloomington-based semiconductor company expects the purchase of a semiconductor business in Texas to double its annual revenue.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
August 7, 2025 at 5:24PM
Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar and Representative Dean Phillips took a tour of SkyWater Technology in Bloomington with CEO Tom Sonderman Tuesday morning. The visit was used to discuss U.S. manufacturing competitiveness and supply constraints in chip manufacturing.
Skywater Technology, which has its base in Bloomington, has acquired a semiconductor plant in Texas that it believes will double its revenue. (Brian Peterson/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Skywater Technology closed its second quarter with a major acquisition expected to double annual revenue, even as it deals with federal defense funding delays that contributed to a sales decline in the spring months.

The $93 million deal for Fab 25, a semiconductor plant in Austin, Texas, increases Skywater’s U.S. semiconductor capacity as the U.S. looks to increase homegrown semiconductor manufacturing and lessen dependence on foreign sources.

The Bloomington-based company’s stock on Thursday increased almost 45% to close at $12.85 a share.

“Fab 25 adds a strategic sweet spot in capabilities” and will be transformative for the company, Skywater CEO Thomas Sonderman said on an analysts call Wednesday.

Skywater bought Fab 25 from Germany-based Infineon Technologies, one of the 10 largest semiconductor companies. The deal, which closed June 30, comes with a multiyear supply agreement with Infineon worth more than $1 billion.

But Sonderman told analysts there will be capacity to add new customers as well.

Thomas Sonderman, CEO of SkyWater Technology, speaks as U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar stands by his side when the company received $16 million in CHIPS Act funding. (Ayrton Breckenridge/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

The deal also includes critical intellectual property from Infineon that will help Skywater’s customers design chips cheaper and get them to market faster including workhorse technologies and tools used in designing and manufacturing premium computer chips.

The acquisition also adds about 1,000 employees and increases Skywater’s production capacity four times, according to a company official.Meanwhile, the company continues to deal with Department of Defense funding delays because the 2025 federal budget remains under resolution.

Sonderman told analysts he believed the funding delays were temporary and were not affecting its partnership with the Defense Department.

“We are developing multiple new products and platforms that are of high strategic value for the U.S. government,” Sonderman said.

Skywater won $16 million in the CHIPS Act passed under the Biden administration, plus about $19 million from the state’s Minnesota Forward Fund, to upgrade and expand its capabilities.

The company also said it expects to add another $320 million in funding from customer funded co-investments over the next few years.

Skywater’s losses widened in the second quarter, which ended June 30, but on the high end of its expectations. This year, its quarterly loss was $10 million, or 21 cents a share; it was a loss of $1.9 million, or 4 cents a share, in the same period in 2024.

Revenue was $58 million, down 14% from the same period in 2024.

Highlights for the quarter include installation of new tooling at Skywater’s Florida facility and gains in the quantum computing market after adding capabilities in that growth area.

The addition of Fab 25 means Skywater now expects 2026 revenue to be $600 million, up from $342 million in 2024.

The company’s shares hit their 52-week high of $16.06 a share in December after receiving the CHIPS Act funding.

about the writer

about the writer

Patrick Kennedy

Reporter

Business reporter Patrick Kennedy covers executive compensation and public companies. He has reported on the Minnesota business community for more than 25 years.

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