By Mary Catherine O'Connor
Dec. 19, 2005—
Impinj, a Seattle, Wash.-based semiconductor company that manufactures passive
RFID tags and interrogators, says it has closed its fourth round of funding, totaling $26.5 million. The funding was led by
GF Private Equity Group, based in Ignacio, Colo. Impinj president and CEO Bill Colleran says this is likely to be the company's final round of funding.
"We'll be profitable for this fourth quarter," says Colleran. "This is a little ahead of schedule and is due to more demand for our [
Gen 2] products than we expected. This quarter is especially busy because companies are ramping up for
Wal-Mart's next mandate deadline [January 2006]." Since its founding in September 2000, Impinj has raised a total of $75 million.
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Bill Colleran
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Impinj expects 2006 to be a break-even year, though it might see a similar spike in
inlay sales to pharmaceutical manufacturers ramping up to meet the FDA's recommendations and some states' impending requirements for keeping a pedigree that tracks the movement of drugs through the supply chain.
Within the next 18 months, Colleran says, Impinj might be making an initial public offering. "This depends on the state of capital markets, and how the markets for our end products continue to grow," he says.
GF Private Equity Group is a new investor in Impinj, as is
VentureTech Alliance, which has offices in San Jose, Calif., Seattle and Taiwan, and is also a stakeholder in
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), which manufactures Impinj's integrated circuits.
The remaining investment firms involved in the $26.5 million funding are
ARCH Venture Partners,
Madrona Venture Group,
Mobius Venture Capital and
Polaris Venture Partners. All of these companies have previous Impinj investments, says Colleran, and seats on Impinj's board of directors.
Also contributing to this fourth round of funding are returning investors
Unilever Technology Ventures,
UPS Strategic Enterprise Fund (investment arms of Unilever and the United Parcel Service, respectively), and an investment firm called the Viterbi Group.
Colleran says Impinj will use the $26.5 million in many different parts of its business, from marketing to operations. "We'll be growing the business aggressively on all fronts," he says, "and our present profitability and the amount of cash we've just raised should serve us so that we shouldn't need to get more funding [going forward]," he says.
Impinj announced earlier this year that it would be shipping more than 50 million of its Gen 2 chips in 2005, and that it had established supplier partnerships with
Alien Technology and
Texas Instruments (see
Impinj to Ship 50M Gen 2 Chips in 2005 and
TI Buys Impinj Gen 2 Chips for Inlays). Colleran says a number of large retailers are currently testing the Gen 2 Speedway
interrogator (
reader) that Impinj announced in April (see
Impinj Announces Gen 2 Tags, Reader), and that the unit will go into production in January. The Speedway design is being licensed to third parties that will manufacture the units and sell them under different brand names.