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Viavi Solutions

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Viavi Solutions
NameViavi Solutions
TypePublic
IndustryTelecommunications, Optical Instruments
Founded2015
HeadquartersSan Jose, California
Key peopleOleg Khaykin
ProductsNetwork test and measurement equipment, optical components
Revenue(example) US$1.1 billion (2019)

Viavi Solutions is an American multinational company that provides network test, monitoring and assurance, and optical components for telecommunications, cable, and enterprise markets. It formed through a 2015 corporate split and serves customers across the telecommunications, semiconductor, aerospace, and defense sectors. The company operates in a competitive landscape alongside legacy and contemporary firms active in optical instrumentation and network assurance.

History

Viavi Solutions traces its corporate lineage to a series of technology companies and corporate restructurings involving firms such as JDS Uniphase Corporation, Agilent Technologies, and Hewlett-Packard. The 2015 separation that created the company followed strategic divestitures similar to those executed by Lucent Technologies and Alcatel-Lucent in response to shifts in the telecommunications industry and demand from carriers like AT&T, Verizon Communications, and Deutsche Telekom. Key executives with backgrounds at Broadcom Inc., Cisco Systems, and Nokia influenced early strategy, while investor interest from firms connected to New York Stock Exchange listings and indexes such as the S&P 500 framed market expectations. The company expanded its footprint through acquisitions reflective of consolidation trends seen in transactions involving Ericsson, CommScope, and Ciena Corporation.

Products and Services

Viavi manufactures optical components and network test equipment used by operators including Comcast, Vodafone, China Mobile, and NTT DOCOMO. Its product portfolio parallels offerings from suppliers such as EXFO, Keysight Technologies, and Tektronix, encompassing field-test instruments, protocol analyzers, and fiber-optic instruments employed in deployments by Sprint Corporation, T-Mobile US, and cable operators like Charter Communications. The company supplies components relevant to systems from Huawei Technologies, ZTE Corporation, and Samsung Electronics, and serves markets that include satellite operators like Intelsat and aerospace firms such as Boeing and Lockheed Martin. Viavi’s solutions are integrated into network buildouts associated with projects led by infrastructure providers including Nokia and Ericsson, and are used in labs alongside measurement platforms from National Instruments and Rohde & Schwarz.

Corporate Structure and Governance

The company is governed by a board of directors with executives who have previously held positions at firms like Broadcom Inc., Intel Corporation, Qualcomm, and Applied Materials. Public reporting obligations place the company subject to listing rules of the NASDAQ Stock Market and oversight practices similar to those adopted by peers such as Analog Devices and Texas Instruments. Institutional shareholders often include asset managers such as BlackRock, Vanguard Group, and State Street Corporation, while strategic partnerships have been forged with manufacturers like Corning Incorporated and distributors including Arrow Electronics. Governance frameworks reflect standards promulgated by bodies akin to the Securities and Exchange Commission and practices observed at multinational corporations like General Electric.

Financial Performance

Viavi’s revenue and profitability have been influenced by capital expenditure cycles of major carriers including AT&T and Verizon Communications, macroeconomic trends tracked by indices like the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and sector dynamics mirrored at companies such as Ciena Corporation and Commscope. The company reports quarterly results and files financial statements in formats similar to those submitted by Agilent Technologies and Keysight Technologies, with performance metrics compared by analysts from banks such as Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and J.P. Morgan Chase. Market capitalization fluctuates with contracts from hyperscalers like Amazon Web Services, Google, and Microsoft, and with broader semiconductor demand tied to firms like Intel Corporation and NVIDIA Corporation.

Research and Development

R&D efforts occur in laboratories that collaborate with universities and institutes akin to Stanford University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Georgia Institute of Technology, and engage standards bodies such as the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and the 3rd Generation Partnership Project. The company invests in photonics, coherent optics, and network analytics technologies that overlap with research pursued at Bell Labs and corporate research centers at Huawei Technologies and Samsung Electronics. Partnerships with equipment manufacturers and participation in consortiums similar to the Open Networking Foundation and ETSI support innovation in areas relevant to 5G deployments undertaken by Nokia and Ericsson.

Litigation and Controversies

Like many technology firms, the company has navigated intellectual property disputes and competitive litigation scenarios comparable to cases involving Qualcomm, Broadcom Inc., and Intel Corporation. Regulatory and contractual disputes often resemble enforcement actions handled by authorities such as the U.S. Department of Justice and litigation venues including the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. The company’s legal posture has been shaped by precedent from high-profile cases involving Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics, and by patent portfolios held by entities like Avago Technologies and Broadcom. Potential export-control considerations echo issues faced by Huawei Technologies and ZTE Corporation in international trade contexts.

Category:Telecommunications companies of the United States