History
Although Tundra was incorporated as an entity in 1995, its history goes back to 1983 as Calmos Semiconductor, which was subsequently acquired in 1989 by Newbridge Networks Corporation, where it became known as Newbridge Microsystems and in 1995 was spun out as Tundra Semiconductor. In June 2009 Tundra was acquired by IDT.Calmos
Former MicroSystems International and Mosaid employee John Roberts founded Calmos Microsystems in April 1983. The company was initially run out of his home in Kanata and moved to a facility on Edgewater Road in Kanata once the company had raised funding of $800,000. The company originally planned to design and produce gate array integrated circuits, or chips, for Canadian and U.S. customers. During the design phase the market dried up and forced the company to focus on developing application-specific circuits. These application-specific circuits would later be incorporated into a larger circuits for other applications. It ended up being a profitable niche that saw the company through the early 1980s memory market slump. By October 1985, Calmos had raised additional funds bringing the total to $1.4 Million, had grown to 15 employees and had yearly revenue of $1.5 Million. In order to increase sales and grow the business John Roberts looked for a CEO with experience in the U.S. Semiconductor market.Newbridge Microsystems
Newbridge Networks primarily acquired Calmos Microsystems for its single chip high-speed public key data encryption system, which became a selling point for Newbridge Networks systems to the U.S. federal government. The rest of the original Calmos Product line though revenue generating and profitable was not a major reason for the acquisition, these products continued to be sources of revenue well after the division was spun out as Tundra, most notably this include the 8085 variant which was sold as late as 1999. In December 1995, Newbridge Microsystems assets were sold into a new corporate entity known as Tundra Semiconductor.Newbridge Affiliate
At the time of the Tundra spun out the company raised $10 Million (CDN) A built-in market: Kanata-based Tundra finds a semiconductor niche,The Ottawa Citizen, October 21, 1996, Page: A10 in third-party investment from Venture Capital Funds and Mutual funds, Terry Matthews also made a personal investment and Newbridge retained a 38% ownership in the new entity meaning Tundra Semiconductor became a member of the Newbridge affiliate program. A benefit of the spin out from direct Newbridge Networks ownership was that Tundra was now free to sell to Newbridge competitors In 1997, Canadian Industry Minister John Manley announced that Tundra Semiconductor would receive a $400,000 loan for R&D use. Chowaniec stated to a Rideau Club luncheon that Tundra had $11 million in revenue in 1996 and expected to generate $20 million or $21 million in revenue achieve profitability in 1997 and hoped to increase sales revenues by another 50 per cent in 1998. He also made reference to the fact that the company was having difficulty in recruiting the talent it needed to move the company forward with about 20 positions for engineers that were unfilled. The company employee count during this period grew from 50 to 70.Buoyant market looks right for Tundra to go public: Newbridge affiliate will use IPO to raise cash for research and development, Ottawa Citizen, December 12, 1998, Page: H1 / FRONTTechnology and Innovation
In early 1990, Newbridge Microsystems licensed DY4 VME Interface Chip Set. This became the beginning of the companies involvement in system interconnect development that Tundra was later to become a leader in. At about this time Calmos Founder John Roberts left the company to become C.E.O. of the Strategic Microelectronics Consortium and later founded another startup SiGe Microsystems which also spunout Sigem."Creating companies `acts of madness': New company just the latest high-tech achievement for John Roberts", The Ottawa Citizen, October 7, 1997 Page: E38 In 1994 Newbridge Microsystems also developed the SPRITE T1, the first T1 Wide Area Network access card for a Sun Microsystems Computer Co. Netra Internet Server. SPRITE T1 was an SBus card that enabled full T1 WAN service directly in to a Sun Netra Internet Server. By early 1995 Newbridge Microsystems had announced a strategic relationship with Motorola Inc. for the development of a PCI to 68K bridge product family. This was to be the beginning of a long partnership between Newbridge Microsystems (Tundra) and Motorola which continues today with Tundra's PowerPC system products.Acquisitions
In February 1988 the company acquired the integrated circuit division of Siltronics for $500,000. The purchase brought with it revenue of $2 to $3 million and all of the inventory, machinery, customer lists and unfilled orders for Siltronics's bipolar integrated circuit product line. Calmos also hired 24 of the existing Siltonics staff including founder and vice-presidentIPO & public company
The company held its first AGM on October 20, 1997 where Adam Chowaniac stated the company's intention to go public in 12–18 months. However, Tundra's hopes to go public in 1998 were dashed by the Asian financial crisis that also affected the stock markets.Tundra postpones decision to go public, The Ottawa Citizen, October 16, 1998, Page: E5 Although this complicated their future growth plans, Tundra continued to grow from its profits and through the continued support of its private investors. Part of this continued growth was the opening of a Mountain View office for sales and customer support. The company began trading on Monday, February 8, 1999 on the Toronto Stock Exchange. The Shares placement was at $9.25 but the shares were in such demand that they opened well above this price at $13.10 and closed their first day of trading at $13.24." The IPO also allowed Newbridge Networks to sell a portion of its ownership, cutting it from 37% to 17%. By march the company announced that its stake had fallen to 10.3%. By September 1999 the companies had completed a secondary offering of one million shares for $15.6 million and the stock was trading at $17.25. The company also announced plans to move into a mixed-retail and office space campus in the Kanata Centrum Area which never came to fruition. In February 2000 the company recorded revenues of $10.435 million and earnings of $1.222 million (eight cents a share) in the third fiscal quarter ended Jan. 30, compared with $7.311 million in revenue and $539,000 earnings (five cents a share) for the same 1999 period. The stock subsequently hit a new all-time high of $51.75. The company had an internal goal of becoming a billion dollar company in revenue by 2008. At the time the company expected revenue growth to stay at 20 to 50% annually "for the next couple years", according to an interview with Adam Chowaniac.Tundra raises the bar: Chip-design company sets billion-dollar goal for 2008, The Ottawa Citizen, September 17, 1999,Page: D1 / FRONT Tundra shares, buoyed by excellent third-quarter results in late February, hit an all-time intraday high of $78 on March 8, 2000. In late April the company was added to the TSE 300 Composite, the TSE 200, and the Standard and Poor/TSE Canadian SmallCap Indices.Success on the first pass: Tundra Semiconductor develops multi-port bus switch in record-setting time,The Ottawa Citizen, April 24, 2000, Page: B1 For the fiscal year ended April 30, 2000, revenue was $40.672 million, up 46 per cent from $27.809 million the year before. Earnings for the year were $4.614 million, or 31 cents per fully diluted share, a 111% gain over the $2.184 million, or 19 cents per share.Tundra stretches record to 15 quarters of growth, The Ottawa Citizen, June 1, 2000, Page: D3 At about this time R&D initiatives that had been in the pipeline from the IPO funding started to come online. Tundra announced the deployment of a multi-port bus switch called the PowerSpan, which the company claimed was the industry's first multi-port PowerPC-to-PCI Bus Switch. While the bulk of sales came from existing VME and QSpan products, the PowerSpan and the TSI 920 (A voice signals to digital messages converter), were expected to start contributing significant revenue number in the next fiscal year.References
{{reflist, 3 Computer companies of Canada Companies established in 1983 Companies based in Ottawa