Navitas Semiconductor has built a compelling story around next-generation power chips. The company makes gallium nitride (GaN) and silicon carbide (SiC) semiconductors — materials that improve efficiency, reduce heat, and shrink power systems compared to traditional silicon. Those qualities matter a lot in AI servers, EV powertrains, and industrial systems.
Navitas Semiconductor Corporation, NVTS
The strategic logic is easy to follow. As electrification expands across the economy, better power management becomes more valuable. That gives companies like Navitas a potentially long runway. The problem is that a great long-term theme doesn’t always pay the bills today.
Right now, the business is still very small. Full-year 2025 revenue came in at $45.9 million — a steep drop from $83.3 million in 2024. Q4 2025 revenue was just $7.3 million. Q1 2026 guidance sits at $8.0M to $8.5M.
Set those numbers against a market cap of roughly $3.26 billion, and you can see why the stock divides opinion.
Investors aren’t buying Navitas for what it earns today. They’re buying it for what it could earn if GaN and SiC power chips get widely adopted across AI infrastructure and electrification markets. That’s a real possibility. It’s also a high-risk bet.
The biggest part of the bull case right now is AI infrastructure. Navitas has been pushing into high-voltage power architectures for data centers, including new 10 kW DC-DC platforms and GaN-based solutions for high-performance computing.
At APEC 2026, the company said it would showcase ultra-compact 240W and 300W GaNFast solutions aimed at AI applications. That signals where management is placing its biggest bets.
Barron’s previously flagged enthusiasm linked to Nvidia’s evolving data-center power architecture, which drew attention to how closely Navitas is now associated with next-phase AI infrastructure. For a small company, that kind of spotlight can move sentiment fast.
To keep investing through thin revenue, Navitas raised serious cash. Its 2025 filing shows financing activities brought in $194.6 million, primarily from $200 million in PIPE and ATM offerings. That gives the company time to develop products and pursue customers.
The catch is dilution. Shareholders are now counting on management to convert that runway into real revenue growth, not just extend losses. The company has also been cutting costs aggressively, announcing a 19% workforce reduction to sharpen its focus on AI data centers, EV, and mobile.
That restructuring reflects a company making hard choices to stay competitive in the markets it believes matter most.
At APEC 2026, Navitas confirmed it will demonstrate its latest GaNFast AI solutions — the most recent public signal of where the product roadmap stands.
Navitas is targeting the right markets, and the technology case around GaN and SiC is real. But the business is still tiny, revenue has been falling, and the valuation already prices in a lot of future success. NVTS is better viewed as a speculative growth name than a proven operator. If AI power wins start converting into meaningful revenue, the story could change quickly.
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