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Form SD SEMTECH CORP

May 31, 2016 6:06 AM EDT

 

 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

WASHINGTON, DC 20549

 

FORM SD

 

SPECIALIZED DISCLOSURE REPORT

 

Semtech Corporation

(Exact name of the registrant as specified in its charter)

 

Delaware

 

1-6395

 

95-2119684

(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation of organization)

 

(Commission File Number)

 

(IRS Employer
Identification No.)

 

Delaware

 

200 Flynn Road

 

 

Camarillo, California

 

93012-8790

(Address of Principal Executive Offices)

 

(Zip Code)

 

Charles B. Ammann                 805-498-2111

(Name and telephone number, including area code, of the person to contact in connection with
this report)

 

Check the appropriate box to indicate the rule pursuant to which this form is being filed, and provide the period to which the information in this form applies:

 

x                                  Rule 13p-1 under the Securities Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13p-1) for the reporting period from January 1 to December 31, 2015.

 

 

 



 

Introduction

 

This Specialized Disclosure Report on Form SD (“Form SD”) of Semtech Corporation  for the year ended December 31, 2015 is presented to comply with Rule 13p-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Rule”). Rule 13p-1 requires disclosure of certain information when a registrant manufactures or contracts to manufacture products for which the minerals specified in the Rule are necessary to the functionality or production of those products.  Conflict minerals are defined by the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) as columbite-tantalite (coltan), cassiterite, gold, wolframite, or their derivatives, which are limited to tantalum, tin, and tungsten.  For products which contain necessary conflict minerals, the registrant must conduct in good faith a reasonable country of origin inquiry designed to determine whether any of the conflict minerals originated in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (“DRC”) or an adjoining country (as defined in paragraph (d)(1) of Item 1.01 of Form SD (“Item 1.01”), collectively defined as the “Covered Countries,” or are from recycled or scrap sources (as defined in paragraph (d)(6) of Item 1.01).  Unless the context otherwise requires, “Semtech,” “we,” “our” and “us” refers to Semtech Corporation and its consolidated subsidiaries.

 

Semtech is a global supplier of high performance analog and mixed-signal semiconductor products. We design, develop and market a wide range of products for commercial applications, the majority of which are sold into the enterprise computing, communications, high-end consumer and industrial end-markets. Our products are designed into a wide variety of end applications, including base stations, optical networks, datacenters, storage networks and computers and computer peripherals.   Our products are also designed into wireless local area network communication infrastructure equipment, smartphones and other handheld products, set-top boxes, digital televisions, broadcast studio equipment, automated meter reading, military and aerospace, medical, security systems, automotive, industrial and home automation, video security and surveillance and other industrial equipment. The end-customers for our products are primarily original equipment manufacturers that produce and sell electronics.

 

As a semiconductor manufacturer, we are knowledgeable of the design of our products including the materials needed to construct them. As a result, we know that many of our products contain tantalum, tin, tungsten and/or gold that is necessary to the functionality or production of those products.  Although many of our products contain these conflict minerals, we do not purchase ore or unrefined conflict minerals from mines and are many steps removed in the supply chain from the mining process. Semtech is considered a “fabless” semiconductor manufacturer since we outsource the manufacture of most of our products to third party fabrication facilities that are responsible for purchasing many of the raw materials necessary to the functionality or production of our products.  We purchase the remainder of the materials used in our products from a large network of suppliers. The origin of the conflict mineral content of our products cannot be determined with any certainty once the ores are smelted, refined and converted to ingots, bullion or other minerals containing derivatives. The smelters and refiners are consolidating points for ore and are in the best position in our supply chain to know the origin of the ores. We rely on our suppliers to assist with our reasonable country of origin inquiry and due diligence efforts, including the identification of smelters and refiners, for the conflict minerals contained in the materials which they supply to us.

 

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Item 1.01 Conflict Minerals Disclosure and Report

 

Conclusion Based on Reasonable Country of Origin Inquiry

 

Semtech has concluded in good faith that during 2015,

 

(a)                                 Semtech has manufactured and contracted to manufacture products as to which conflict minerals are necessary to the functionality or production of such products.

 

(b)                                 Based on a reasonable country of origin inquiry (“RCOI”), Semtech knows or has reason to believe that a portion of its necessary conflict minerals originated or may have originated in the Covered Countries and knows or has reason to believe that those necessary conflict minerals may not be solely from recycled or scrap sources.

 

Description of Reasonable Country of Origin Inquiry Efforts

 

For 2015, we conducted a supply chain survey with our direct suppliers to obtain country of origin information for the necessary conflict minerals in our products using the standard Conflict Minerals reporting templates (“CMRT”) established by the Electronic Industry Citizenship Coalition (“EICC”) and Global e-Substainability Initiative (“GeSI”), and launched our conflict minerals due diligence communication survey to these suppliers, who are foundries, materials, and turnkey and assembly service suppliers.  The CMRT requests direct suppliers to identify the smelters and refiners and countries of origin of the conflict minerals in products they supply to Semtech. We compared the smelters and refiners identified in the surveys against the lists of facilities which have received a “conflict free” designation by the Conflict-Free Smelter Program (“CFSP”) organized by the EICC and GeSI.

 

There is significant overlap between our RCOI efforts and our due diligence measures performed. Our due diligence measures performed are discussed further in the Conflict Minerals Report filed as Exhibit 1.02 hereto.

 

Conflict Minerals Disclosure

 

This Form SD and the Semtech Corporation Conflict Minerals Report for the Year Ended December 31, 2015, filed as Exhibit 1.01 hereto, are publicly available at http://investors.semtech.com/ and http://www.semtech.com/quality/ as well as the SEC’s EDGAR database at www.sec.gov.

 

Item 1.02      Exhibit

 

The Conflict Minerals Report required by Item 1.01 is filed as Exhibit 1.01 to this Form.

 

Item 2.01      Exhibits

 

The following exhibit is filed as part of this report.

 

Exhibit No.

 

Description

1.01

 

Semtech Corporation Conflict Minerals Report for the Year Ended December 31, 2015

 

3



 

SIGNATURE

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.

 

Date: May 31, 2016

SEMTECH CORPORATION

 

 

 

 

 

By:

/s/ Emeka Chukwu

 

 

Emeka Chukwu

 

 

Executive Vice President and

 

 

Chief Financial Officer

 

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Exhibit 1.01

 

Semtech Corporation

Conflict Minerals Report

for the Year Ended December 31, 2015

 

This  Conflict Minerals Report of Semtech Corporation (“Semtech”) for calendar year 2015  is filed in accordance with Rule 13p-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Rule 13p-1”). Numerous terms in this Report are defined in Rule 13p-1 and Form SD and the reader is referred to those sources for such definitions.  Unless the context otherwise requires, “Semtech” “we,” “our” and “us” refers to Semtech Corporation and its consolidated subsidiaries.

 

Semtech has determined that conflict minerals, which are defined as cassiterite, columbite-tantalite (coltan), gold, wolframite and their derivatives, which are limited to tantalum, tin, or tungsten  (“conflict minerals”),  are necessary to the functionality and/or production of many of our manufactured products.  We undertook a reasonable country of origin inquiry (“RCOI”) regarding the conflict minerals in our manufactured products.  This RCOI was reasonably designed to determine whether any of the conflict minerals originated in the Democratic Republic of the Congo or an adjoining country (the “Covered Countries”) and whether any of the conflict minerals may be from recycled or scrap sources.  Semtech also exercised due diligence on the source and chain of custody of the conflict minerals.

 

Company Overview

 

Semtech is a global supplier of high performance analog and mixed-signal semiconductor products. We design, develop and market a wide range of products for commercial applications, the majority of which are sold into the enterprise computing, communications, high-end consumer and industrial end-markets. Our products are designed into a wide variety of end applications, including base stations, optical networks, datacenters, storage networks and computers and computer peripherals.   Our products are also designed into wireless local area network communication infrastructure equipment, smartphones and other handheld products, set-top boxes, digital televisions, broadcast studio equipment, automated meter reading, military and aerospace, medical, security systems, automotive, industrial and home automation, video security and surveillance and other industrial equipment. The end-customers for our products are primarily original equipment manufacturers that produce and sell electronics.

 

Product Overview

 

Semtech’s product lines are classified in the following categories:  Signal Integrity Products, Protection Products, Wireless and Sensing Products, Power and High-Reliability Products and Systems Innovation Group.  The majority of our products contain various metals, including conflict minerals, which originate in mines around the world.

 

Signal Integrity Products. We design, develop and market a portfolio of optical communications, broadcast video, surveillance video, active cable transceiver and backplane products used in a wide variety of enterprise computing, industrial, communications and high-end consumer

 



 

applications. Our comprehensive portfolio of integrated circuits (“ICs”) for optical transceivers, backplane applications and high-speed interfaces ranges from 100Mbps to 100Gbps and supports key industry standards such as Fibre Channel, Infiniband, Ethernet, passive optical networks and SONET. Our broadcast video products offer advanced solutions for next generation video formats, ever increasing data rates and evolving input/output (“I/O”) and distance requirements. Our security and surveillance products for high-definition closed circuit television (“HDcctv”) enable upgrade of analog closed circuit television installations to full digital HD, leveraging the installed base of COAX cabling, and our fully integrated transmit and receive products enable the highest performance, longest reach HDcctv standards-compliant designs.

 

We also sell proprietary advanced wired communication, ultra-high speed Serializer/Deserializer products for long-haul optical transport communication. These ICs perform transmission functions used in high-speed networks at 40Gbps and 100Gbps.

 

Protection Products. We design, develop and market high performance protection devices, which are often referred to as transient voltage suppressors (“TVS”). TVS devices provide protection for electronic systems where voltage spikes (called transients), such as electrostatic discharge or secondary lightning surge energy, can permanently damage sensitive complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (“CMOS”) ICs. Our portfolio of protection solutions include filter and termination devices that are integrated with the TVS device. Our products provide robust protection while preserving signal integrity in high-speed communications, networking and video interfaces. These products also operate at very low voltage. Our protection products can be found in a broad range of applications including smart phones, LCD TVs, set-top boxes, tablets, computers, notebooks, base stations, routers, automobile, and industrial instruments.

 

Wireless and Sensing Products. We design, develop and market a portfolio of specialized radio frequency products used in a wide variety of industrial, medical and communications applications, and specialized sensing products used in industrial and consumer applications. Our wireless products feature industry leading and longest range industrial, scientific and medical radio, enabling a lower total cost of ownership and increased reliability in all environments, making them particularly suitable for machine to machine and Internet of Things (“IoT”) applications. Our unique sensing interface platforms can interface to any sensor and output digital data in any form. Specifically, the proximity sensing capability of our devices enable advanced user interface solutions for mobile and consumer products. Our wireless and sensing products can be found in a broad range of applications in the industrial, medical and consumer markets.

 

Power and High-Reliability Products. We design, develop and market power product devices that control, alter, regulate and condition the power within electronic systems. The highest volume product types within the power product line are switching voltage regulators, combination switching and linear regulators, smart regulators, charge pumps and wireless charging. Our Power products feature highly-integrated functionality for the communications, industrial and computing markets and low-power, small form factor and high-efficiency products for mobile phones, notebook computers, computer peripherals and other consumer devices. The primary application for these products is power regulation for enterprise computing,

 



 

communications, high-end consumer and industrial systems. Our high-reliability discrete semiconductor products are comprised of rectifiers, assemblies (packaged discrete rectifiers) and other products that are typically used to convert alternating currents into direct currents and to protect circuits against very high voltage spikes or high current surges.

 

Our high-reliability products can be found in a broad range of applications including industrial, military, medical, automotive, aerospace and defense systems, including satellite communications.

 

Systems Innovation Group. Our Systems Innovation Group combines the analog/mixed signal design competencies from our previous Sierra Monolithics, Inc. and Gennum Corporation acquisitions and is chartered with developing innovative analog/mixed signal intellectual property (“IP”) for emerging systems. These IP cores are targeted at the datacenter, cloud computing and storage networking markets and complement our rapidly growing library of analog/mixed signal IP Cores. We also have developed advanced products in Data Converter IP at the latest, cutting edge CMOS process nodes that are targeted at high performance communications systems.

 

Reasonable Country of Origin Inquiry and Due Diligence Process

 

Semtech as a purchaser is many steps removed from the mining of the conflict minerals that is necessary to the functionality or production of our semiconductor products. We do not purchase raw ore or unrefined conflict minerals, and do no purchasing in the Covered Countries. In order to manage the scope of this task, we relied upon our suppliers to provide information on the origin of the conflict minerals contained in components and materials supplied to us, including sources of conflict minerals that are supplied to them from sub-tier suppliers. Our suppliers are expected to provide the conflict minerals sourcing information to us per our Conflict Minerals Policy.  We have also implemented a vendor qualification requirement that requires the provision of such information upon engagement of a new vendor.

 

For this Report, we performed an analysis of our products and product components, and the role that suppliers play throughout our manufacturing and product delivery processes. We defined the scope of our conflict minerals due diligence by identifying and reaching out to our current suppliers that provide components or engage in manufacturing activities that are likely to contain conflict minerals. We adopted the standard Conflict Minerals reporting templates (“CMRT”) established by the Electronic Industry Citizenship Coalition (“EICC”) and Global e-Substainability Initiative (“GeSI”) and launched our conflict minerals due diligence communication survey to these suppliers, who are foundries, materials, and turnkey and assembly service suppliers.

 

We designed our due diligence measures to be in conformity, in all material respects, with the framework in the Second Edition of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains of Minerals from Conflict-Affected and High-Risk Areas and related supplements for gold, tin, tantalum and tungsten (“OECD Framework”).

 



 

Summarized below are the design components of our conflict minerals program as they relate to the five-step framework set forth in the OECD Framework:

 

1.  Establish strong company management systems:

 

·                  Adopted a Conflict Minerals Policy which provides that Semtech will seek to ensure, to the extent reasonably practicable in light of existing supply chain validation and auditing capabilities, that the products within our supply chain are not fabricated nor assembled with metals whose origin traces back to any “conflict areas” as identified by the EICC, the GeSI, and the  Dodd- Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010;

 

·                  Established a conflict minerals working group to oversee our due diligence process;

 

·                  Communicated with our direct suppliers and requested that they execute the CMRT; and

 

·                  Incorporated vendor qualification requirements related to conflict minerals in our standard qualification process so that current and future suppliers are obligated to participate in a supply chain survey and related due diligence activities.

 

2.  Identify and assess risks in our supply chain:

 

·                  Identified direct suppliers that supply products to Semtech that may contain conflict minerals;

 

·                  Conducted a supply-chain survey with direct suppliers using the CMRT to identify the smelters and refiners which contribute refined conflict minerals to Semtech products;

 

·                  Compared the smelters and refiners identified by direct suppliers via the supply-chain survey against the list of smelter and refiner facilities which have received a “conflict free” designation (such as EICC/GeSI Conflict Free Smelter Program’s (“CFSP”) lists for tantalum, tin, tungsten and gold) by participating in an independent third party smelter audit; and

 

·                  Reviewed other information provided by direct suppliers with respect to their investigations regarding smelters and refiners within their supply chain.

 

3.  Design and implement a strategy to respond to identified risks:

 

·                  Followed up with direct suppliers that did not respond to the survey or that provided incomplete responses.

 

4.  Support the development and implementation of independent third party audits of smelters’ and refiners’ sourcing:

 

Semtech does not have a direct relationship with conflict minerals smelters and refiners, nor do we perform direct audits of these entities that provide our supply chain with conflict minerals.  However, we do rely upon third parties, including the CFSP, to coordinate and conduct third-party audits of these facilities.  We rely upon the published results of these third-party audits to validate the responsible sourcing practices of the smelters and other processing facilities in our supply chain.

 



 

5.  Report on supply chain due diligence:

 

In addition to this Report which discloses our supply chain due diligence, further information about our supply chain due diligence is disclosed in our Conflict Minerals Policy which is posted on our website at www.semtech.com/images/quality/Metals-Procured-from-Conflict-Areas-Policy.pdf

 

Results of Due Diligence

 

As a result of Semtech’s due diligence efforts, we received survey responses to the CMRT from 77 suppliers representing no less than 98% of our manufacturing spend on suppliers that we believe provide components to us, or engage in manufacturing activities for us, that may contain conflict minerals (the “Covered Components/Materials”). 89% percent of the responding suppliers stated that they did, in fact, provide Covered Components/Materials.  Of those suppliers providing Covered Components/Materials, the large majority confirmed that the Covered Components/Materials they provided to us either (a) did not contain conflict minerals sourced from the Covered Countries, or (b) originated entirely from recycled or scrap sources.

 

In connection with these responses, we gathered the names of approximately 253 unique smelters and refineries from our supply chain.  197 of the smelters are on the list of smelters and refineries that have received a “conflict free” designation from the CFSP as of May 26, 2016. The suppliers that were able to provide information about the smelters and refiners in their supply chains were not able to provide information sufficient to allow us conclusively to determine whether identified facilities were used to process the conflict minerals in the Covered Components/Materials.  Although Semtech requested information regarding the specific parts and products suppliers provided to us for our own products, the suppliers that were able to provide information about the smelters and refiners in their supply chains in many cases provided this information to us for their entire supply chain, rather than for the specific facilities that contributed conflict minerals used in the Covered Components/Materials. As a result, we are unable to validate whether the Covered Components/Materials in fact contain conflict minerals from these smelters and refiners.

 

Accordingly, based on the due diligence measures described in this Report, we have been unable to determine whether the conflict minerals contained in the Covered Components/Materials originated in the Covered Countries or came from recycled or scrap sources, or to conclusively determine the countries of origin of these conflict minerals or the facilities used to process them.

 

Further, on account of this lack of information, Semtech is unable to determine and to describe the facilities used to process conflict minerals necessary to the functionality or production of our semiconductor products or their country of origin. Semtech’s efforts to determine the mine(s) or location of origin with the greatest possible specificity included the use of the due diligence measures described above.

 



 

Risk Mitigation/Future Due Diligence Measures

 

During calendar year 2015 Semtech took steps to increase response rates from suppliers that provide Covered Components/Material by integrating the CMRT survey into its supplier qualification process, establishing timelines for periodic requests for updates of CMRT information, and expanding the membership of our internal conflict minerals working group. Semtech intends to undertake the following steps to improve its due diligence during the next compliance period to further mitigate the risk that its necessary conflict minerals do not benefit armed groups, including:

 

·                  Increasing the response rate and completeness of suppliers’ CMRT and smelter surveys by following up with suppliers that have not returned surveys or have provided incomplete or unclear responses;

 

·                  Continuing to encourage our direct suppliers to purchase materials from smelters or refiners who have obtained a “conflict free” designation from an industry program such as the CFSP;

 

·                  Working with direct suppliers to provide responses to the surveys at a product level instead of a company or divisional level;

 

·                  Comparing due diligence results to information collected via independent conflict free smelter validation programs in addition to the CSFP as they are established; and

 

·                  Continuing the design and implementation of a plan to monitor and track suppliers identified as not meeting the requirements set forth in our Conflict Minerals Policy to determine their progress in meeting those requirements.

 




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