IMMR Immersion Corporation
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
Immersion Corporation is a haptic-technology IP-licensing company — the company holds an extensive patent portfolio on touch-feedback, haptic-feedback, and force-feedback technologies covering smartphones, gaming controllers, automotive interfaces, and consumer-electronics applications.
The business model is licensing royalties plus settlement-and-litigation revenue. Customers include major smartphone OEMs (historical agreements with Samsung, others), gaming-console makers (Sony PlayStation has a long-running licensing relationship), automotive-system suppliers, and consumer-electronics manufacturers.
The strategic dynamic shifted in 2024-2025 with the acquisition of Barnes & Noble Education — Immersion now holds a controlling stake in BNED, providing additional revenue diversification but also introducing operational complexity outside the core IP-licensing model.
MARKET OPPORTUNITY
The haptic-IP-licensing market is structurally tied to the cycle of new-device adoption and OEM-licensing-renegotiation:
- Smartphone-OEM licensing — historical revenue source; renegotiation cycles drive lumpy revenue patterns
- Gaming-console partnerships — long-running Sony PlayStation relationship is an established recurring revenue source
- Automotive-haptic adoption — touch-feedback in automotive interfaces is an expanding category
- VR/AR haptic implementations — emerging category with potential for licensing expansion
Macro context: revenue growth of 4487% YoY is materially distorted — the figure reflects litigation-and-settlement revenue plus the BNED consolidation. Through-cycle revenue is much smoother and lower than the headline figure suggests.
REVENUE QUALITY
Standard P/S analysis is materially misleading for IMMR:
- Reported revenue $1.56B TTM — distorted by BNED consolidation revenue plus settlement revenue; underlying core-licensing revenue is much smaller
- Gross margin 95% — reflects the IP-licensing model where direct cost is minimal; BNED has different economics
- Operating margin — TTM positive
- P/S ~0.14 — calculated on the inflated-revenue figure; the actual run-rate-licensing P/S is materially different
What investors should track: core-licensing run-rate revenue separately from settlement-and-litigation revenue and BNED consolidation revenue. The three lines have very different through-cycle stability characteristics.
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
The defensible asset is the patent portfolio plus the licensing-relationship history:
- Multi-decade haptic-and-touch-feedback patent estate that has survived multiple validity challenges
- Existing licensing relationships with major OEMs that provide recurring revenue and deal-renewal optionality
- Litigation-and-settlement track record that supports IP-licensing leverage
What it is not: a moat in the operating-business sense. Immersion is fundamentally a patent-licensing company plus a now-controlled-stake-in-education-services-company; neither has typical operating-moat characteristics.
GROWTH THESIS
The investment thesis has three components:
- Recurring-licensing-revenue base continues across smartphone, gaming, and automotive applications
- Settlement-and-litigation realizations monetize patent-portfolio value through OEM negotiations
- BNED operational improvement under controlling ownership provides the second-engine alongside core IP-licensing
KEY RISKS
Three specific risks:
-
Patent-portfolio aging. As patents expire, the licensing-revenue base structurally compresses unless replenished by new patent-grants or acquisitions.
-
OEM renegotiation pressure. Smartphone-OEM licensing is concentrated; meaningful renegotiation downward would compress the recurring-licensing line.
-
BNED operational risk. The B&N Education business adds operational complexity that the historical IP-licensing-pure-play didn't carry. Underperformance there compounds beyond the IP-licensing thesis.
VERDICT
The 80.5/100 score is misleading for Immersion's operating profile — fundamental-screening frameworks designed for operating businesses don't apply cleanly to IP-licensing-plus-controlled-stake structures. The right framing is core-licensing-run-rate plus BNED-equity-value-realization plus litigation-pipeline-value.
For investors who understand IP-licensing economics and can decompose Immersion's three revenue streams analytically, IMMR is a unique structural position. For investors using fundamental-screening frameworks designed for operating businesses, the score will systematically mislead.
The single metric to watch next is core-licensing run-rate revenue disclosed separately from settlement-and-litigation lines. Continued stability or growth in core-licensing supports the long-duration thesis; compression signals the patent-portfolio-aging concern.
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.