CEVA CEVA, Inc.
CATEGORY BREAKDOWN
METRIC BREAKDOWN
Revenue Growth (YoY)
Year-over-year revenue growth rate
> 50% strong
Gross Margin
Revenue retained after direct costs
> 50% strong
Cash Runway
Months of cash at current burn rate
> 24 months ideal
Debt / Equity
Total debt relative to shareholder equity
< 25% strong
Price / Sales
Market cap relative to trailing revenue
< 3x strong
Rule of 40
Growth rate plus operating margin
> 40 excellent
Insider Ownership
Percentage of shares held by insiders
> 20% strong
Share Dilution (12M)
Share count increase over last 12 months
< 5% ideal
SCORE HISTORY
RESEARCH NOTE
BUSINESS SUMMARY
CEVA is a semiconductor IP-licensing company that develops and licenses digital signal processor (DSP) cores, neural-network processing IP, wireless connectivity IP (Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, 5G modems), and audio processing IP to chip manufacturers globally. Customers integrate CEVA IP into their own silicon designs for smartphones, IoT devices, automotive, and emerging AI-edge applications.
The IP-licensing model means CEVA doesn't manufacture chips — chip companies (Qualcomm peers, smartphone-OEM-internal chip teams, IoT and automotive silicon designers) license CEVA's processor IP and integrate it into their own designs, paying royalties on each shipped chip plus upfront license fees.
Revenue mix is license fees (upfront payments for IP-portfolio access) plus per-chip royalty revenue (recurring revenue scaling with customer-shipment volume).
MARKET OPPORTUNITY
The semiconductor-IP-licensing market structurally serves chip designers who want capability without internal-DSP-development effort:
- Smartphone-modem and audio chips — historical core market; CEVA IP is in many smartphone modem designs through carrier-and-OEM-internal-team integrations
- IoT and edge-AI — emerging high-growth category as connected devices proliferate and on-device-AI-inference becomes standard
- Automotive radar and vision — growing IP demand as ADAS and emerging autonomous-driving applications expand
- Wireless connectivity — Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and 5G connectivity IP licensed across many design wins
Revenue is structurally cyclical with semiconductor-industry cycles plus chip-shipment-volume timing. The 2022-2024 period saw mixed industry conditions; current environment has been more stable.
REVENUE QUALITY
- Revenue varies with chip-industry cycle
- Gross margin — high characteristic of IP-licensing economics
- Operating margin — improving as multi-year design wins translate to royalty revenue
- P/S — modest reflecting semiconductor-IP-multiple compression
What hides in the data: license-fee versus royalty-revenue mix is the key economic signal. License fees are timing-driven (lumpy); royalty revenue compounds over multi-year customer-shipment volumes. Higher royalty-mix indicates a more durable revenue base.
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
The defensible asset is the multi-decade IP portfolio combined with deep customer-relationship integration:
- DSP-architecture IP that has been refined over 20+ years of semiconductor cycles
- Customer-design-integration depth — once a chip company integrates CEVA IP into a design, switching out involves redesign cost that compounds over multi-year design cycles
- Multi-vertical IP coverage (mobile, IoT, automotive, audio) provides counter-cyclical smoothing across customer-end-market exposures
What it is not: a moat against ARM at the broader-CPU IP scale or against in-house chip-team capabilities at hyperscaler-affiliated companies. CEVA competes on specialized DSP-and-connectivity-IP rather than general-purpose computing.
GROWTH THESIS
The structural growth drivers are continued IoT-and-edge-device proliferation (which expands the addressable base for CEVA's connectivity and DSP IP) and growing on-device-AI inference requirements (which favor specialized neural-network IP that CEVA has been investing in).
Wireless-connectivity-IP demand grows with each new device-category that adopts Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, or 5G connectivity standards.
KEY RISKS
Semiconductor-cycle correlation is the dominant variable. IP-licensing revenue follows chip-shipment-volume cycles with some lag; cycle compressions affect revenue trajectory directly.
Secondary risks include increased internalization of DSP design at major chip companies (reducing third-party IP-licensing demand), competitive pressure from open-source IP architectures (RISC-V proliferation in some categories), and customer-concentration in specific high-volume design wins.
VERDICT
CEVA is one of the more durable semiconductor-IP-licensing companies at small-cap scale, with multi-decade IP portfolio and broad vertical exposure. The 55.7/100 score reflects semiconductor-cycle-positioning skepticism more than operational quality.
For investors who want semiconductor-IP-licensing exposure outside of ARM at a smaller-scale specialty position with diverse end-market exposure, CEVA is a credible position. For investors needing scale or wanting general-CPU-IP exposure, ARM and other alternatives are appropriate.
Report last updated: May 5, 2026
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DATA INFO
Last updated: May 4, 2026
Sources: SEC EDGAR, Financial Modeling Prep, Yahoo Finance. Not financial advice.