Lattice’s $1.65B AMI Acquisition Doubles the Value of Neutral XPU Control to the AI Factory

Lattice's $1.65B AMI Acquisition Doubles the Value of Neutral XPU Control to the AI Factory

Analyst(s): Brendan Burke
Publication Date: May 6, 2026

Lattice Semiconductor is making a $1.65 billion move to acquire AMI, aiming to control the full stack of AI data center management and security. The deal combines Lattice’s low-power FPGAs with AMI’s dominant firmware and management software, targeting a unified solution for hyperscalers and server OEMs. Lattice expects to double its addressable market and cross $1 billion in annual revenue by Q4 2026, positioning itself as an infrastructure platform company.

What is Covered in This Article:

  • Lattice’s acquisition of AMI and its impact on platform security and control
  • The shift toward integrated management in AI and cloud data centers
  • Competitive positioning as a neutral, full-stack provider
  • Execution and integration risks for Lattice post-acquisition

The News: Lattice Semiconductor will acquire AMI for $1.65 billion, funded through $1 billion in cash, $650 million in stock, and $950 million in new debt. AMI brings core platform firmware (Aptio BIOS) and infrastructure management software (MegaRAC, Tektagon, Data Center Manager) used by major hyperscalers and server OEMs. Lattice expects the deal to be immediately accretive to margins, free cash flow, and EPS, and to double its serviceable addressable market from $6B to $12B. The combined company targets a $1 billion+ annual revenue run rate by Q4 2026, shifting Lattice from a niche FPGA vendor to a full-stack infrastructure platform provider.

Lattice’s $1.65B AMI Acquisition Doubles the Value of Neutral XPU Control to the Data Center

Analyst Take: Lattice’s AMI acquisition is a bet that the future of AI data centers depends on who controls the IT management and security stack. AMI’s Data Center Manager delivers vendor-agnostic, agent-free telemetry across GPUs, firmware, power, and cooling from a single console, complementing platforms like NVIDIA’s DSX Air by governing the device and firmware layer while DSX Air rationalizes the physical infrastructure beneath it. By combining hardware and software into a complete stack from silicon up to orchestration, Lattice is positioning itself as the connective tissue of modern AI infrastructure. As XPU rack systems push data center operators to make every layer visible and coordinated from day one, that integration promises to compress deployment from months of manual standup into a repeatable process. The result is a platform that can enable neutral control of increasingly heterogeneous systems.

AMI: The Invisible Layer Powering AI Data Centers

AMI is the dominant provider of platform firmware and management software. Its Aptio BIOS and MegaRAC, Tektagon, and Data Center Manager products are used by AWS, Google, Dell, Microsoft, Meta, and Supermicro. 47% of AMI’s revenue is already AI-driven. AMI’s Data Center Manager (DCM) gives operators a single control plane for all infrastructure, regardless of vendor or device type. DCM provides real-time visibility across servers, GPUs, networking, power, storage, and cooling. It tracks GPU utilization, power draw, and thermal behavior, flags anomalies, and supports liquid-cooling systems. DCM manages firmware lifecycle, pushing updates via Redfish, and communicates via Redfish, SNMP, IPMI, and SSH. A new LLM-powered chatbot, AMILiA, lets operators query infrastructure state in natural language. The results of less downtime, lower operational costs, and faster diagnosis are critical for increasing tokens per watt in the AI factory era.

Strategic Logic: Hardware/Software Integration

Lattice brings low-power FPGAs that act as companion chips alongside processors. AMI brings the firmware and management layer. Together, they can offer a unified solution rather than individual components. This integration lets Lattice target a broader market, aiming to double its serviceable addressable market from $6B to $12B. AMI is already generating over $200M in revenue in 2026, and the deal is immediately accretive to Lattice’s financials. The combined company expects to reach a $1 billion+ annual revenue run rate by Q4 2026. Lattice and AMI both position themselves as ecosystem-neutral, working alongside Nvidia, AMD, Intel, and Broadcom.

Integration and Ecosystem Neutrality Risks

Integrating firmware and programmable logic across diverse hardware and software stacks is complex. The market is fragmented across networking, as highlighted by Futurum’s H2 2025 survey, which found that 47% of data center operators use InfiniBand networking, while 28% use Ethernet RoCE. Lattice must prove its solution works across this diversity without adding operational friction. The company’s neutral positioning is key. Lattice and AMI serve as companion players, not direct competitors to major chip vendors. If Lattice fails to deliver smooth integration or appears to threaten its ecosystem partners, adoption could stall, especially among hyperscalers with custom requirements.

What to Watch:

  • Will hyperscalers and enterprise data centers standardize on Lattice-AMI for secure management within 18 months?
  • Will Nvidia, AMD, Intel, and Broadcom support or resist a unified management and security stack?
  • Can Lattice deliver smooth cross-stack compatibility and operational simplicity with demonstrable impacts on time-to-deployment and fleet uptime?
  • Does Lattice achieve its $1 billion+ annual revenue run rate by Q4 2026?
  • Will the new platform meet emerging regulatory and customer standards for data center security by 2027?

See the complete press release on the Lattice acquisition of AMI.

Disclosure: Futurum is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.
Analysis and opinions expressed herein are specific to the analyst individually and data and other information that might have been provided for validation, not those of Futurum as a whole.

Other Insights From Futurum:

Lattice Semiconductor Q4 FY 2025: Record Comms & Compute, AI Servers +85%

Lattice Semiconductor Q3 FY 2025 Delivers Record Comms & Compute Revenue

Lattice Launches New FPGA for Quantum Security

Author Information

Brendan Burke, Research Director

Brendan is Research Director, Semiconductors, Supply Chain, and Emerging Tech. He advises clients on strategic initiatives and leads the Futurum Semiconductors Practice. He is an experienced tech industry analyst who has guided tech leaders in identifying market opportunities spanning edge processors, generative AI applications, and hyperscale data centers. 

Before joining Futurum, Brendan consulted with global AI leaders and served as a Senior Analyst in Emerging Technology Research at PitchBook. At PitchBook, he developed market intelligence tools for AI, highlighted by one of the industry’s most comprehensive AI semiconductor market landscapes encompassing both public and private companies. He has advised Fortune 100 tech giants, growth-stage innovators, global investors, and leading market research firms. Before PitchBook, he led research teams in tech investment banking and market research.

Brendan is based in Seattle, Washington. He has a Bachelor of Arts Degree from Amherst College.

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