Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today to discuss TI's acquisition of Silicon Labs. I'm Mike Beckman, Head of Investor Relations for Texas Instruments, and I'm joined by TI's Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer Haviv Ilan, Silicon Labs President and Chief Executive Officer Matt Johnson, and TI's Chief Financial Officer Rafael Lizardi. For any of you who have not yet read the press release, you can find it on our website at ti.com/ir. This call is being broadcast live over the web and can be accessed through our website. In addition, today's call is being recorded and will be available via replay on our website, along with the complete presentation and transcript for your convenience.
This call will include forward-looking statements, including expectations or predictions of financial and business performance, industry outlook, and timing of completion of the transaction, each of which are based on current expectations and assumptions that involve risks and uncertainties that could cause TI's results to differ materially from management's current expectations. These constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. We encourage you to review the notice regarding forward-looking statements contained in the transaction press release published today, as well as TI's most recent SEC filings for a more complete description. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Haviv.
Thank you, Mike. It is great to be with you all this morning. Earlier today, we announced an agreement for Texas Instruments to acquire Silicon Labs, a leader in embedded wireless connectivity solutions with a broad portfolio, deep engineering expertise, and long-standing customer relationships. This transaction represents an important milestone for our company and accelerates the embedded processing strategy we've been executing over the last several years. As many of you know, Silicon Labs has a strong portfolio in mixed- signal solutions and low-power wireless connectivity and has demonstrated double-digit growth in the last decade. By combining Silicon Labs wireless connectivity IP and engineering expertise with TI's internally owned technology in manufacturing and reach of market channels, TI will enhance its global leadership in embedded wireless connectivity solutions.
I'll now take a moment to share why this transaction with Silicon Labs is strategically and financially compelling and why now is the right time. To begin, this transaction enhances our global leadership in embedded wireless connectivity solutions and expands TI's portfolio with 1,200 additional products that support a variety of wireless connectivity standards. Wireless connectivity is a fast-growing space, with more devices getting connected every day. Silicon Labs has a large and diverse customer base and has delivered about 15% revenue CAGR since 2014. This transaction also utilizes TI's industry-leading, dependable, low-cost manufacturing capacity to provide customers with greater assurance of supply. We've also found a strong cultural fit. Our teams share the same high-performing culture, and I respect Silicon Labs technical expertise, winning spirit, and strong results. Together, our teams will deliver cutting-edge products and technologies to meet our customers' needs.
Finally, from a financial perspective, we expect the transaction to generate compelling annual manufacturing and operational synergies of more than $450 million within three years after close. We expect the transaction to be accretive to earnings per share, excluding transaction-related costs in the first full year post-close. TI is a great business model built around four sustainable competitive advantages. As a reminder, TI's competitive advantages are a strong foundation of manufacturing and technology, a broad portfolio of analog and embedded processing products, the reach of our market channels, and diversity and longevity of our products, markets, and customer positions. The acquisition of Silicon Labs will further strengthen all of TI's competitive advantages and drive free cash flow per share growth over the long term. In addition, Silicon Labs comprehensive platform, including hardware, software, tools, and services, has earned them a strong reputation in the industry and a loyal customer base.
Silicon Labs strong engineering culture is expected to further advance TI's technology leadership. By combining Silicon Labs comprehensive portfolio with TI's scale and competitive advantages, we will be better positioned to serve more customers and accelerate growth. I would now like to turn the call over to Matt, who will share more about why this is an exciting opportunity.
Thanks, Haviv. It's great to be here today and have the opportunity to address you all. I share Haviv's enthusiasm for this transaction and truly believe TI is the ideal partner to accelerate Silicon Labs growth. It's an honor to be combining Silicon Labs with a partner with such a storied place in our industry, and I'd like to thank the entire Silicon Labs team for the sustained execution and dedication that made today's announcement possible. Turning to our company for a moment, you've heard Haviv say that Silicon Labs has an intense commitment to engineering and innovation, and you can see that in the composition of our team. Approximately 70% of our employees are engineers, allocated across software and hardware disciplines.
From my conversations with TI, it's clear that they deeply value the expertise that Silicon Labs brings to the table and that they are highly focused on identifying opportunities to scale our operations and optimize our manufacturing processes to better serve new and existing customers. Our focus on engineering innovative products has earned us a strong reputation in the industry, and we've built a loyal customer base, especially across industrial applications. Not only are we proud of the growth we've achieved over more than a decade, we've also worked hard to build a high-quality revenue base across thousands of customers. We've established diverse and long-lived positions across the industrial market in a broad set of end equipments. There are significant growth opportunities available, and these will be further enhanced with TI's dependable and low-cost manufacturing capabilities and extensive reach of channels.
Thank you for the time today, and with that said, I'd like to turn the call back to Haviv.
Thanks, Matt. As I said before, Silicon Labs has delivered about 15% revenue CAGR over the past decade. We see additional opportunity for growth as part of TI, supported by increased customer access, manufacturing capacity, and cross-sell opportunities. Silicon Labs extensive wireless connectivity portfolio is an important part of the increasingly connected world, where we see secular content growth in areas like industrial automation, medical, and energy infrastructure, just to name a few. With our direct customer relationships, sales force, website, and e-commerce capabilities, we believe we can further accelerate growth. Manufacturing is a key differentiator for TI and is a core value driver for this transaction. Our manufacturing footprint includes low-cost 300-millimeter wafer fabs, as well as internal assembly and test capabilities.
This footprint will allow us to transfer Silicon Labs manufacturing from external foundries and outside assembly and tests into TI's facilities, providing their customers with dependable and affordable supply at scale. Specifically, TI's defined process technologies are optimized for Silicon Labs wireless connectivity portfolio, including our latest 28-nm process node. We expect the transaction to deliver meaningful synergies with efficiencies across TI's wafer fabs with optimized process technologies, low-cost assembly and test, and our direct market channels. The transaction is expected to drive more than $450 million of annual manufacturing and operational synergies within three years post-close. We expect this transaction to be accretive to TI's earnings per share, excluding transaction-related costs in the first full year post-close. I'll now turn it over to Rafael to recap the details of the transaction.
Thanks, Haviv. Let me now provide a brief summary of the transaction details. Silicon Labs shareholders will receive $231 per share in cash. We plan to fund the transaction with cash on hand and by raising additional debt. And importantly, we remain committed to our capital return strategy to return 100% of free cash flow to shareholders over time via dividends and share repurchases. We expect to close in the first half of 2027. The transaction is subject to regulatory approvals, Silicon Labs shareholder approval, and other customary closing conditions. With that, I'll turn it back over to Haviv.
Thanks, Rafael. In closing, this acquisition enhances our global leadership in embedded wireless connectivity solutions. It leverages each company's strengths to better serve our combined customers and deliver sustained, long-term value for TI's shareholders. With that, let me turn it back over to Mike.
Thanks, Haviv. Operator, you can now open the lines for questions. In order to provide as many of you as possible an opportunity to ask your questions, please limit yourself to a single question. After our response, we'll provide you with an opportunity for an additional follow-up. Operator?
Thank you. We'll now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you'd like to be placed in the question queue, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you'd like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing star one. Once again, have star ones be placed in the question queue, and we ask you to please ask one question and one follow-up, then return to the queue. Our first question today is coming from Timothy Arcuri from UBS, who is now live.
Thanks a lot. Haviv, you talked about cost synergies, but are there any revenue synergies? I mean, it seems like SLAB has a very diversified customer base. Is there sort of anything unique in the portfolio that's synergistic with yours that unlocks revenue in your embedded portfolio?
Thanks, Tim. First, let me answer that what we presented today, the $450 million of synergies by three years after the deal, you can think about 2030 as a good time to think about that. That does not include any revenue synergies. Just to be fair, I think about how to measure, and I decided I want to run the math without any revenue synergies. Having said that, I think we will see some opportunities based on our very large sales force and ti.com. A wireless connectivity chip is what we call I call an alpha socket, right? This is where customers are making one of their first choices on the board. But once you get that early look and you get selected, there is a great opportunity to cross-sell power, the sensing signal chain, etc.
I do believe the synergies are there, and our sales team is tasked to bring them on once we close the deal, but they are not assumed in the financial model.
Do you have a follow-up, Tim?
I do, yeah. I think SLAB has a next-generation 22-nm process. How will you bring that internally? I think Lehi goes down to 28-nm. Thanks a lot.
Yeah, so let me start first with what we have internally, and then I'll let Matt talk about their view from their perspective. First, TI's 28-nm process is now in development. We are starting to see test chips coming out, I would say, the end of last year and more in 2026. I think it's a great time to offer that technology to the Silicon Labs engineers immediately after close. Now, our 28-nm process is developed from the ground up for this type of products. If you think about the memory options, if you think about the way we've designed cost versus power versus performance, this is not a logic, I would say, first type of process development task. It's really done for TI's MCUs, wireless connectivity solutions, high-speed mixed- signal analog, and will serve very well the IP of Silicon Labs.
I do believe that Silicon Labs proved over the years that they are very capable of moving between fabs. We've seen some of that, some of these examples during our thorough due diligence, and I'll let Matt say a few words about that.
Yeah, sure. Thanks, Haviv. Yeah, I think the way to think of it is our Series 2 platform is still early days in its lifecycle and pretty experienced there in doing multi-foundry, multi-fab on that platform. And we're just starting to ramp Series 3, which is already expected to be multi-foundry, multi-fab as well. What's key about that is, as Haviv said, what TI has from a manufacturing perspective is extremely attractive to what Silicon Labs does. You have a process technology that's optimized for the exact type of products we do, which is incredibly exciting. So I think there's a tremendous opportunity to port in multiple areas. And given that we develop on a platform, you can port a few devices and really start to impact a lot of volume quickly. So it's a really awesome combination, and that's one of the reasons we're so excited.
Thanks, Tim. Let's move on to our next caller, please.
Thank you. Next question is coming from Vivek for Bank of America. Your line is now live.
Thanks for taking my question. I think the acquisition is a surprise because the narrative has been that TI prefers catalog, analog, and that your embedded business had been fixed after undergrowing for many years. I mean, Silicon Labs is a great business, but it is not catalog, analog. And I imagine there is some level of product overlap in microcontrollers and connectivity. So the question is, what does Silicon Labs give you that your embedded business isn't able to do now or in the next one or two years? And does your internal roadmap get impacted? Are there any dissynergies that we have to worry about before this deal is able to close?
Vivek, thanks for the question. Let me say a few words first about our embedded journey. If you go back to maybe 10 years ago, as you remember, Vivek, all of our embedded products were done externally. We were focused more on a big chip type of big SoC type of solutions, maybe remnants of our old days of running big SoCs for wireless and also base stations. We have transitioned this business between 2019 and 2025 tremendously towards a more mixed- signal type of business. Think about low-power MCUs with a lot of analog content. Think about real-time control with DSPs and for power conversion or for motor drive. And of course, our radar sensing solutions and wireless connectivity. I look at wireless connectivity as almost a twinning between analog and embedded.
It is the content if you look at the die of a solution, it is dominated by a lot of analog, RF, power management, and yes, some digital. This is a great fit to what we are building internally. So if you think about what happened in 2022 and 2023, we have acquired the site in Lehi from Micron. We have transitioned it from a memory fab into an analog mixed- signal EP fab, really focusing on 65-nm and now ramping, starting to ramp 28-nm in terms of R&D and in production by the end of this year. If you look at the fit of the products, as Matt mentioned before, into that technology, we see a great fit. And we also have now experience of transitioning some of our portfolio from the foundries, mainly in Taiwan, into Lehi. We love the yield we are seeing.
We love the throughput we are getting out of the fab. That's an asset we never had 10 years ago. So to me, right now is the perfect time to go and look at more options to add into our portfolio utilizing our competitive advantages. Specifically to your wireless connectivity question and the overlap, if at all, look, TI's wireless connectivity business is growing. It's going slower than Silicon Labs, and it's also focused. Most of the momentum we see right now is coming from the automotive market. Silicon Labs automotive business is less than 5% of the revenue. They don't operate in wireless BMS, car entry, wireless TPMS, etc., but they have a very strong position in the garage door opener in the car that we don't do. If you go to the industrial market, this is where you see a ton of momentum coming from Silicon Labs.
They have done the work to build the stack of chips, software and firmware application level to support hundreds of end equipment. We are very excited about that. This is something that would take TI, I would say, decades to replicate in order to be able to be a leader in this market. I think we could have, but it would have taken too long. When you look at the footprint of Silicon Labs, that 85% of their business in industrial with such a rich portfolio of software suite and tools that are tailored to each and every application with a variety of standards that TI does not have, I think it's a great complementary portfolio.
Do you have a follow-up, Vivek?
Yes. Thanks. Very helpful answer, Haviv. For my follow-up, just kind of a few clarifications. What is kind of the next few milestones from a shareholder or a regulatory perspective that we should keep in mind? And when is the earliest you can get SiLabs products onto your own fabs? Thank you.
Yeah, so again, let me start with the second part of the question, Vivek, and I will let Rafael also talk a little bit about what we expect in terms of time. But in terms of the 2030 COGS synergies that you see on the presentation, we have been busy in the last several years transitioning a couple of six-inch fabs into our own 300-mm wafer fabs internally. And we have learned what it takes. Luckily, in the case of Silicon Labs, we don't need to move hundreds of dies from one process to another. Actually, we talk about somewhere between 10 and 15 dies, which is actually very efficient. So that work can start immediately after close. And we believe that our plan presents, I would say, a nominal to conservative time to complete all that work by 2030.
My expectation is that we hit the ground running as soon as we can, and we can do it even quicker, but that's going to be a little bit of upside to the COG plan we showed you today. So I expect the teams, and again, during the due diligence work that we've done, we see the fit of the platform, and the team is eager to start to work as soon as we can. And I'm expecting us to meet or beat our execution plan. A little bit about the next milestone, Rafael, anything there?
Yeah, no. So of course, the Silicon Labs shareholders need to approve this. That should happen within a few months. And then we need regulatory approval from multiple countries. And that's what takes until about the first half of 2027, as we said during the prepared remarks.
Thanks, Vivek. Let's move on to the next caller.
Our next question today is coming from Joshua Buchalter from TD Cowen. Your line is now live.
Hi, good morning. This is Sam on for Josh. Congrats to both teams on the deal announcement. Building on an earlier question, am I correct in hearing that you're able to substantially bring the entire portfolio in-house, or are there still going to be some products and processes that will remain at foundry?
I would say the answer is the vast majority. Think about Series 2 and Series 3. Matt, every company has some very nice, call it legacy, but very profitable tail of the portfolio. But I would say about 75% of the revenue of 2030 would be moving inside the TI. Matt, anything to add there?
Easy way to think of it is exactly that, and all the growth can move inside quite quickly.
Sam, do you have a follow-up?
Yes, I do. Thank you for that. And then a quick one. Will this change how TI looks at their distribution strategy as it is today, or are we going to kind of operate legacy TI in terms of how you've used the channel or don't use the channel?
Look, at a high level, Sam, we see the channel as an advantage for the combination of the companies, right? Some of the customers we've reviewed, of course, during the due diligence, the customer base of Silicon Labs, and we are very impressed by it. But some of the customers they have, we support directly. And there is always a benefit, in our opinion, to support customers directly in terms of just the transparency, the information flow, the level of support we can bring in. And of course, also, there is a little bit of synergies on the margin that we can take into TI. All of that is part of the plan. There are customers that are continued to be supported for TI and for Silicon Labs by the disty partners, and I think that will continue.
Our main disty partner is continuing to be the plan of record for us moving forward.
Thanks, Sam. Let's move on to the next caller, please.
Our next question today is coming from Matthew Prisco from Cantor Fitzgerald. Your line is now live.
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the question. Maybe to start, can you help break down that expected $450 in manufacturing and operational synergies? How should we think about linearity of that synergy recognition here? And can you offer some more color on the primary drivers?
Yeah. Again, I think we showed a chart in our presentation. More than 50% of the synergies will come from COGS. And the longer you wait, the better it gets because by 2030, we don't complete the entire COGS transition, but I would say most of it. I think by 2031 or 2032, it's all done. So you can think about this as a growing number in terms of percentages. Of course, it's not immediate. We will try to do whatever we can as soon as we can, but it takes time to develop the die, to qualify it, to get customer approvals and qualification. And as I said before, we have a lot of experience with that. We've done it for two fabs with tens of thousands of customers and hundreds of dies. Okay?
This effort here is going to be, I believe, more focused, as I mentioned, 10-15 dies. I would say the OpEx synergies are more immediate. Of course, TI is a very large company. Silicon Labs doesn't have the same scale of TI. So there are some natural synergies, obviously, on the SG&A side, but even some of the fixed R&D functions. If you think about areas like IT and your test team or your process definition or design team, that type of synergies are straightforward, and I think the Silicon Labs team will enjoy them from day one. I don't know if that is the color you were looking for.
You have a follow-up, Matt?
Yeah, that's perfect. Thank you. Yeah, and then as a follow-up, maybe how should we be thinking about potential for incremental investment required by you guys in the front end to bring SLAB products in-house? And then maybe on the back end, how should we be thinking about your capacity to support SLAB's needs and potential further investments there? Thank you.
Yeah. When we looked at the Silicon Labs run at a pretty good efficiency of revenue per wafer. The cost of wafer is pretty high, but they still have a respectable GPM, I think, above 60% right now. In terms of the load on our fabs, I would say we just absorb it. You would not see material change, if at all, on our CapEx plan in the next five years. That would be my high-level answer. The same is for the assembly and test. Our volumes are well above 10 billion units a quarter. We've looked at the volume of Silicon Labs, again, very efficient revenue per P/N, and we call it portfolio. That would be easily absorbed in our existing assembly and test facilities. The packages they use, namely QFN and a little bit of WCSP, we have the internal capacity there.
You can imagine or you can model "zero delta" investment from our side.
Thanks, Matt. Move on to the next caller, please.
Our next question is coming from Joe Quattrocci from Wells Fargo. Your line is now live.
Yeah. Thanks for taking the question. I was wondering if you could maybe just share a little bit more thoughts on just how do you think about just the mix of cash and debt that's required for the deal? And obviously, you're going to generate a lot of free cash flow between now and deal close, but also talking about committing still 100% of free cash flow to dividends and share repurchase. So just any kind of help there in terms of how we should think about that and maybe how much cash should we think about you needing to have on the balance sheet?
Yeah. Let me take that. So first, as we said in the prepared remarks, we'll use cash on hand and incremental debt right now. And while we do that, to answer your second question, we're committed to continue to return all free cash flow to owners of the company over the long term, as we have been doing for many, many years. So with that combination of things, we'll issue incremental debt, probably in the neighborhood of $7 billion or so. That'll be a combination of investment-grade bonds and then some commercial paper. And we'll issue that probably later this year, the investment-grade debt, in order to and then the commercial paper will be closer to when the deal will close. I'll also add that the combined entity is expected to be leverage neutral within 18-24 months post-close.
Any follow-up?
Yeah, that's helpful. You talked about regulatory approval across multiple countries. I assume China is one of those?
Yes. We expect that to be one of the countries that we'll have to go through. Our business, as a reminder, in China-headquartered companies is about 20% of our revenue. I think, Matt, for you guys, it's a little bit less than 15%. We are planning to go through it. Again, I believe this is something that can also serve our China customers that allows Silicon Labs to be competitive across the geographies. China is always a market where cost leadership is very important to succeed there. I think our customers in China will value the combination. I do believe that we will get that through. I have high confidence that, as we said, by the first half of 2027, we'll get that approved.
Thanks, Joe. Move on to the next caller, please.
Our next question is coming from Jim Schneider from Goldman Sachs. Your line is now live.
Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. You already addressed, I think, fairly clearly the synergy you expect from a portfolio perspective with Silicon Labs industrial presence in wireless connectivity and what that means to TI. Can you maybe tell or talk about any of the Texas Instruments native product portfolio that is going to be particularly synergistic in terms of Silicon Labs designs? Think about the other way around.
Yeah. Again, as I said before, Jim, if you think about some of the applications that we looked at, some of the boards that they run, in the center of the board, you will see I call it a wireless MCU, right? It's almost like the if you think about servers, the main chip is the CPU or the GPU. In many of the applications where Silicon Labs is playing, the host, the master of the system is that wireless connectivity solution. So for us, it means great news. It gives you usually, when customers design a board or a new system, they start with what I call this alpha part. And this alpha part will be the wireless connectivity in many, many applications. I'll let Matt say a few words about it in a minute. What we are excited about is everything around: power management, obviously.
Many of the applications are battery-based. There is also battery management that TI is a market leader in that will be important. Many times, the wireless solution collects information. So there is a sensing signal chain attached to the wireless MCU. We think that will let us a very early look into that and will help us to sell more sockets per board. And in some cases, the wireless connectivity solution behaves like a front end, and then you need a higher-level process or a higher-performing MCU that can drive that. We have that also in our embedded portfolio. So overall, I am excited about the cross-selling opportunity. But as I said, to be prudent and not to justify the deal on revenue synergies, it's currently valued in our Excel sheet at zero. We think it's going to be much higher.
Maybe, Matt, you can talk a little bit about the applications you operate in and what happens when a customer selects your solution.
Yeah, absolutely. Just the first thing I do is reiterate what Haviv said, that at Silicon Labs, we've had more opportunity than we can keep up with in the core wireless space for a long time. And we've seen a lot of opportunity around the silicon in the areas that were just mentioned, but we had to focus on that one area. However, there's literally silicon all around that can support and not only support it, but it can also, over time, allow further differentiation on the application and solution as well. So there's really something there that we just haven't been able to get to, but we will be able to do now. That's exciting.
If you just look across a few example applications, what Haviv said, pick applications that Silicon Labs has talked about historically, take in healthcare like continuous glucose monitors where you have core silicon, but you also have an analog front end that's right there that's supporting it. You put those together, you can do something special, and that's a huge opportunity. Same in electronic shelf labels. Think of metering where there's this position across gas, water, and electric where if you can combine not only the compute and wireless but all supporting analog and power management, you have a complete solution for customers, literally. So there's quite a bit of excitement around this, and I think we're just seeing the tip of the iceberg of what's possible there over time.
Jim, do you have a follow-up?
Yeah, just quickly. To clarify, would you expect to discontinue TI's sort of organic efforts or product lines in connectivity after the close of this deal?
No, the short answer is no. Again, the momentum we are building right now is predominantly on the automotive market. This is where we see the highest growth. Our revenue there is about 50% of our overall revenue. Our revenue is lower than Silicon Labs. Of course, once we get together, we can attack the IoT, the industrial market we say industrial, but we are talking about hundreds of end equipments. And even when I talked with Matt, they themselves cannot attack all of them. So there's going to be some, I would say, better partitioning to utilize our joint R&D force. I want to add one more point that I think is very helpful for the synergies.
Labs' has a great software team that has been able to deliver not only the wireless stack, which is the bare minimum, which we do today, they also have a higher level of software that many application builders need. So you will see, again, that software suite running in the future on TI's portfolio. So there is not going to be a shutdown of activities or roadmap items in TI. There's going to be an acceleration of how we attack this broad market.
Thanks, Jim. Moving on to our next caller, please.
Certainly. Our next question is coming from Stacy Rasgon from Bernstein Research. Your line is now live.
Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. For my first one, look, I'm probably characterizing this too harshly, so I apologize in advance. But the signal that I think you're sending and it seems like manufacturing is the key driver of this. So the signal that seems to be emerging for this is we built all this capacity. We thought we could fill it. We can't fill it, and so we're buying stuff to fill it. So I guess, why is that not a fair characterization, number one? And number two, SLAB isn't actually that big. So maybe that's the answer. They can't fill it. But I mean, should we be expecting more deals like this to leverage the capacity footprint that you have?
I think you've answered it in your question. That's not going to move the needle anyhow, Stacy. I think the reason we buy Silicon Labs is their position and their portfolio. And if you look at our pitch - I don't know if you had the chance to look at the beginning of today's call - that's what drove the excitement. That's what drove the enthusiasm of us going after this asset. I will say that every deal has to make sense financially. And the reason it does is mainly built on COGS. But that's not the reason we are doing this. As you said, in terms of wafers per day versus our overall footprint, because Silicon Labs has such a high-performing, lucrative margin or revenue per wafer, it doesn't move the needle.
But I do believe, and I'll let Rafael comment here, that every deal has to make sense financially. And we are happy that our synergies are built on tangible. We have an exact plan, die by die, how we are going to do it in the next coming years. I think that's very important. Many times, deals are justified on revenue synergies that are harder to measure. I think the fact that we can do it in a very tangible way is very important.
Yeah. No, I'll just.
This is not a test. This is not a test case, is what you're saying?
Say that again, Stacy?
I said this is not a test case?
No. I mean, I've been looking at Silicon Labs for many, many years. I think we were not ready internally, based on our execution plan on embedded, to go after it. But then I think about our embedded portfolio, Stacy, and I always mention low-power MCU. I mention real-time control. I mention wireless connectivity. I mention the radar systems, right? I want to be a leader. TI should be a leader over the long term in all areas. We got to the conclusion that the best way to be a leader in wireless connectivity is to acquire it. And I think we will certainly be once the deal closes. In terms of real-time control, I think we are heading there. We're seeing a ton of momentum on our DSPs, on power conversion and motor control. In terms of radar, I think we are on our way to be there as well.
It's just going to take several more years. The last point, and you said it's not a test case, is maybe you are alluding to MCUs. I think MCUs, in general, are harder to bring in. When you look at an MCU company, you look at tens of different architectures, probably thousands, if not tens of thousands, of DIEs. When I talked with Amichai in the team, this one we'll have to do organically. And it's going to take time. But we plan to be a leader in the low-power MCU market. I think we will do it organically rather than inorganically because doing it inorganically, I think, is impossible. So hopefully, that gives you a little bit of more color on the way we think about our future, Stacey.
Stacy, thanks for the questions. Moving on to the next caller and our last caller for the call today.
Certainly. Our final question today is coming from Chris Caso from Wolfe Research. Your line is now live.
Yes, thank you. Rafael, just one quick clarification for you on something you said earlier. So if the plan is to borrow $7 billion against the deal, then is it right to conclude that this transaction wouldn't really affect TI's buyback in terms of cash return to investors?
No, it will not. We'll continue to return all free cash flow to owners through dividends and buybacks over time. What the deal does is that we issue the debt in order to fund the deal. That way, the free cash flow stays available to return. And of course, this deal makes sense financially. So over time, we're going to grow free cash flow. We're going to accelerate the growth of free cash flow versus a standalone basis. So then we'll have more free cash flow to return to the owners of the company. I think that's a very important point I just want to reiterate because that's how we review the deal with the board. When we look at 2030, for example, of TI's free cash flow with and without Silicon Labs, it's obvious that our free cash flow per share will be higher with Silicon Labs.
Moreover, we will have a great portfolio in leadership in wireless connectivity. So that combination is a very attractive one.
Chris, do you have a follow-up?
I do. And I guess just pointing out that this is the first significant acquisition that TI has made since I guess it was National Semiconductor, which is a while ago. So perhaps you could just talk about has the philosophy changed here with regard to M&A? How are you thinking about that going forward? And what's changed in TI's thinking? And was it particularly Silicon Labs, or is it perhaps a rethink in TI's position in M&A in general?
Short answer is no, no change. We always talked about analog and mixed- signal as the target. I explained why we think an MCU portfolio is very hard to bring in because it's usually so diverse and dispersed among architectures and software suites and very, very hard to achieve the efficiency of the synergy when you bring it in. As I said, wireless connectivity or Silicon Labs, we land at our embedded processing organization. But I see it as a twin between analog and embedded. It's really a mixed- signal solution, very diverse customer base on a very diverse set of applications on a very efficient die base. This is why we like the deal here, and this is why we'll continue to look at the future deal with the same criteria that we've looked at in the last 10 years.
Chris, thank you for the questions. Thank you all for joining us today. A replay of this call will be available on our website as well as the slides that were used on this call. With that, have a great day.