The author models Sivers' revenue potential using a low-end 10% allocation of Win Semi's w
The author models Sivers' revenue potential using a low-end 10% allocation of Win Semi's wafer capacity, projecting $341-512M annual array revenue and $205-307M gross profit at 50-60% margins against the current ~$1.1B market cap, implying a 3.6-5.4x MC/gross profit ratio by 2028. The demand side is supported by CW laser bottlenecks, with Lumentum buying CW openly and AMD signing LTAs, making any qualified capacity likely absorbed. Morgan Stanley also named Sivers among three leading CPO laser players alongside Coherent and Lumentum.
“Lot of people were curious about $SIVE capacity volume ramp modeling through fab-light (Win Semi + others): Using 10% of Win's wafer capacity as a low-end allocation (65% yield assumption, $50-$75 ASP): Sivers would support $341-$512M worth of annual array revenue. Given upper end of managements 50-60%+ gross margin target, would be roughly: $205–307M of annual gross profit. Against Sivers current ~$1.1B MC, would be ~: 3.6–5.4× MC/gross profit if this capacity scenario plays out in 2028. And at 15% would be $307–461M in gross profit (2.4–3.6× MC/gross profit) Sivers CEO also replied that they're working with more fabs for capacity. And from an older deck, there looks to be more qualifications since 2024. So capacity targets might be larger than what's stated here as CPO takes off. I also expect to see revenue pipeline projections hiked in future quarters, as more qualification suppliers to into HVM. _ As for demand side, CW also happens to be very bottlenecked. Lumentum are buying CW off the open market due to EML obligations from their ER transcript. And $AMD are signing LTAs to secure CW capacity (from Trendforce). So when Sivers is ramping with $GFS, $JBL, Ayar, $POET, O-NET and others... Given the current constraints, it's highly likely any independent qualified capacity that comes online would be absorbed. And as a cherry on top, Morgan Stanley named $SIVE (~$1.1B) as one of the three leading CPO laser players . Alongside $55B+ players Coherent and Lumentum in their recent note for a reason... _ TLDR: Sivers only needs a low end allocation from Win to make substantial gross income relative to current valuations. I think the largest revenue upside that isn't modeled in if they TAM expansion with M&A after US NASDAQ listing. By copying the Lumentum playbook with Cloud Light to build out entire transceiver modules or with optical engines.”Original post:X / @aleabitoreddit ↗
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Even a low-end 10% allocation of Win Semi's capacity could generate substantial gross profit relative to current market cap; demand is robust due to CW laser bottlenecks, with majors scrambling for capacity; Morgan Stanley recognizes Sivers as one of three leading CPO laser players.
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