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STMicroelectronics’ new STM32 series redefines entry-level microcontroller performance and value for smart devices everywhere

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STMicroelectronics (NYSE: STM) launched the STM32C5 series on March 5, 2026, a new entry-level MCU family built on ST’s 40 nm process with Arm Cortex-M33 cores.

Key facts: production starts now, on-chip Flash from 128Kbyte up to 1Mbyte, prices from $0.64 for 10,000-unit orders, wide -40°C to 125°C operating range, and enhanced security and STM32Cube development tools.

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Positive

  • Production started March 5, 2026
  • On-chip Flash up to 1 Mbyte
  • Prices start at $0.64 for 10,000-unit orders
  • Wide temperature range: -40°C to 125°C
  • Includes Cortex-M33 performance at entry price

Negative

  • Security standards are targeted, not stated as certified
  • Starter price applies to 10,000-unit order quantity

Key Figures

Stock move: 5.41% MCU volume pricing: $0.64 Smallest package: 3mm x 3mm +5 more
8 metrics
Stock move 5.41% Price change over prior 24 hours before this news
MCU volume pricing $0.64 Starting price for 10,000-unit STM32C5 orders
Smallest package 3mm x 3mm UFQFPN20 package size for STM32C5
Largest package 20mm x 20mm LQFP144 package size for STM32C5
On-chip Flash range 128Kbyte–1Mbyte STM32C5 embedded Flash memory options
Ambient temperature range -40°C to 125°C Supported ambient operating temperature
Junction temperature 140°C Maximum junction temperature at full rated frequency
Security target level SESIP3 / PSA Level 3 Target certifications for STM32C5 MCU security

Market Reality Check

Price: $33.33 Vol: Volume 10,042,121 is abov...
normal vol
$33.33 Last Close
Volume Volume 10,042,121 is above the 20-day average of 8,663,875, indicating elevated interest into this product launch. normal
Technical Price at 33.33 is above the 200-day MA 27.75 and within 5% of the 52-week high 35.07.

Peers on Argus

STM gained 5.41% while key semiconductor peers like MCHP (-3.61%), ON (-3.05%), ...

STM gained 5.41% while key semiconductor peers like MCHP (-3.61%), ON (-3.05%), and ASX (-2.21%) traded lower, pointing to stock-specific strength tied to the STM32C5 launch rather than a sector-wide move.

Historical Context

5 past events · Latest: Mar 02 (Positive)
Pattern 5 events
Date Event Sentiment Move Catalyst
Mar 02 Wearables design win Positive -5.6% Motion sensing and secure wireless tech adopted in Snapdragon Wear Elite platform.
Mar 02 Investor webcasts Neutral -0.4% Announced March investor calls on Cloud AI and Intelligent Sensing topics.
Feb 26 Annual report filing Neutral -2.2% Published 2025 Form 20-F with full U.S. GAAP audited financials.
Feb 25 Conference appearance Positive +1.5% CEO scheduled to speak at Morgan Stanley TMT investor conference.
Feb 10 Automotive MCU AI Positive +2.9% Introduced Stellar P3E automotive MCU with embedded neural network accelerator.
Pattern Detected

Recent STM news has often seen muted or negative next-day moves, even on seemingly positive technology updates, with only some product and event headlines aligning with positive price reactions.

Recent Company History

Over the last few weeks, STM has released a series of technology and investor-focused updates, including the Stellar P3E automotive MCU with AI acceleration, support for Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Wear Elite platform, publication of the 2025 Form 20-F, and upcoming AI-themed investor webcasts. Price reactions have been mixed, with several positive-sounding technology announcements followed by negative moves. Today’s STM32C5 entry-level MCU launch fits the pattern of product innovation but, unlike some prior updates, coincides with a stronger positive move despite peers trading lower.

Market Pulse Summary

This announcement introduced the STM32C5, an entry-level microcontroller line combining Arm Cortex‑M...
Analysis

This announcement introduced the STM32C5, an entry-level microcontroller line combining Arm Cortex‑M33 performance, up to 1Mbyte of Flash, and industrial‑grade temperature tolerance from -40°C to 125°C. It extends STM’s MCU portfolio into cost-sensitive, connected devices with higher security targets such as SESIP3 and PSA Level 3. In context of recent AI and sensor product news, investors may focus on adoption breadth, pricing at $0.64 in volume, and ecosystem traction.

Key Terms

cortex-m33, direct memory access (dma), aes, iec 61508, +1 more
5 terms
cortex-m33 technical
"The new STM32C5 MCUs leverage an innovative implementation of the advanced Arm® Cortex®-M33 embedded processor."
Cortex-M33 is a low-power processor core design used inside microcontrollers and system-on-chip products; think of it as the compact, efficient engine that runs small devices. It combines energy-saving performance with built-in security features, so chips using it can handle tasks like sensor control, connectivity, and protected data handling without draining batteries. Investors track its use because widespread adoption signals demand for chips in IoT, industrial, and embedded markets, affecting manufacturers' revenue and competitive position.
direct memory access (dma) technical
"There is also direct memory access (DMA), which helps save power, sharpen system responses, and simplify software."
A hardware feature that lets a device move large blocks of data directly into a computer’s memory without asking the main processor to carry it step by step; imagine a delivery truck unloading straight into a warehouse instead of passing every box through a single clerk. For investors, this matters because it can make products faster, more power-efficient and lower-cost to operate, which improves performance, customer appeal and margins for companies building hardware or data-heavy software.
aes technical
"cryptographic engines (symmetrical encryption with AES and hashing algorithm), and temporal isolation (HDP)..."
Adverse events (AEs) are any unwanted or unexpected medical problems that occur in people taking a drug or being treated in a clinical trial, ranging from mild side effects to serious health issues. Investors track AEs because they act like warning lights on a company’s development program—the number, severity, or pattern of AEs can delay or block approvals, change market expectations for a product, and materially affect a company’s future revenue and valuation.
iec 61508 regulatory
"STM32C5 enables compliance with industrial safety standards, including IEC 61508 SIL-2 and IEC 60335-1/60730-1 Class-B..."
IEC 61508 is an international safety standard that sets rules for designing and testing electronic control systems so they continue to behave safely when parts fail; think of it as a blueprint for making airbag- or seatbelt‑level protections inside machines and software. For investors, compliance signals lower regulatory and legal risk, can be required to sell into certain industries, and often means higher upfront engineering costs but reduced chance of costly recalls or shutdowns later.
secure boot technical
"temporal isolation (HDP) to protect processes such as secure boot and firmware update."
Secure boot is a built‑in firmware feature that checks the software a device starts with—like a bouncer checking IDs—allowing only software with a trusted digital seal to run. For investors it matters because it reduces the risk of malware, fraud or tampering that can harm a product’s reputation, trigger recalls or invite regulation, and therefore affects a company’s cybersecurity costs, customer trust and long‑term value.

AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

STMicroelectronics’ new STM32 series redefines entry-level microcontroller performance and value for smart devices everywhere

  • STM32C5 with Cortex®-M33 and 40 nm for enhanced speed and Flash density
  • Increased performance with cost efficiency
  • Comprehensive ecosystem to enhance end-device capabilities and accelerate time to market


Geneva, March 5, 2026 -- STMicroelectronics (NYSE: STM), a global semiconductor leader serving customers across the spectrum of electronics applications, has announced a new generation of entry-level microcontrollers (MCUs) to boost the performance of billions of tiny smart devices throughout factories, homes, cities, and infrastructures while meeting extreme cost, size, and power limitations.

The new STM32C5 series is aimed at consumer and professional devices like smart thermostats, electronic door locks, industrial smart sensors, robotic actuators, wearable electronics, and computer peripherals.

The new STM32C5 elevates the precision, speed and reliability of competitively priced MCUs to realize the potential in these opportunities. It builds on two decades of STM32 heritage and is part of our ambition to deliver the broadest, most scalable and secure portfolio from entry-level devices to advanced MCUs that redefine the application reach of embedded systems,” said Patrick Aidoune, Group Vice President and General Purpose and Automotive Microcontrollers Division General Manager, STMicroelectronics.

Thanks to an improved design based on ST’s proprietary 40nm manufacturing process, the STM32C5 MCUs can run tasks noticeably faster than many entry-level chips used today. This gives products more room to include modern features such as improved sensing, smoother control, and enhanced user experiences—all while keeping dynamic power consumption low.

The STM32C5 MCUs integrate built-in protections that help safeguard products against tampering and cyber risks. These security features support safer connected devices, a growing priority across consumer and industrial markets.

Users of the new STM32C5 series can enjoy an upgraded STM32Cube environment, now with size-optimized, production-grade drivers to leverage the many hardware features. The modernized ecosystem also introduces enhanced code generation and development tools as well as extended production-ready software examples. Benefiting from continuous updates, the STM32Cube environment is all about helping developers code faster and more efficiently, while maximizing the end-product capabilities.

“At SIT, we work in safety-critical gas and HVAC environments where reliability is essential. For our new generation of Burner Integrated Control platform, choosing the STM32C5 was a natural decision as it provides strong and predictable real-time performance, enabling us to manage combustion, flame detection, and safety interlocks with accuracy, even within a compact footprint. We were able to reuse a large part of our validated firmware, speeding up development, simplifying certification; and the result is a robust and scalable control platform designed for long-term reliability and compliance,” explained Dennis Agnello, Electronics Business Line Director, Heating & Ventilation, SIT Group.

The STM32C5 provides the performance and feature set enabling us to develop a cost-efficient next generation AC charger for both public and private use, fully aligned with latest security, encryption, and interface requirements for metering and EV charging solutions. Throughout the project, ST provided the flexibility and comprehensive ecosystem support we needed to reduce development time and solve key functional and cost challenges to bring our product faster to the market,” said Enrique Osorio, R&D Director, Circontrol (Grupo Circutor).

STM32C5 MCUs are entering production now, targeting packages from 3mm x 3mm UFQFPN20 to 20mm x 20mm LQFP144. STM32 Nucleo evaluation boards, and a display extension board from Riverdi with TouchGFX development software for building entry-level graphical user interfaces, are ready to assist development.

Prices start at $0.64 for orders of 10,000 units.

Technical information

The new STM32C5 MCUs leverage an innovative implementation of the advanced Arm® Cortex®-M33 embedded processor. While Arm’s core delivers advanced performance and efficiency, ST’s proprietary 40 nm manufacturing process is cost-efficient, supports higher clock speed, and enables memory above 512Kbyte where lower density technologies are uncompetitive. STM32C5 MCUs come with on-chip Flash from 128Kbyte, making Cortex-M33 performance accessible at an attractive price for entry-level applications otherwise limited to lower-performing Cortex-M0 and Cortex-M23 devices. Devices are available with up to 1Mbyte, providing generous code and data storage for product designers to create sophisticated new features.

Implementing the Arm Cortex-M33 core at the 40 nm node brings improved arithmetic performance to entry-level devices at competitive cost and low power. This accelerates computations such as embedded digital filters in sensor signal conditioning, noise suppression, and debouncing. In addition, the power supply scheme, comprising a single low-dropout (LDO) regulator, permits extra user I/O pins. There is also direct memory access (DMA), which helps save power, sharpen system responses, and simplify software. Moreover, with two instances, each having at least four channels to permit two fetches in parallel, DMA on the STM32C5 is a valuable tool for developers to boost application performance.

The MCUs target SESIP3 and PSA Level 3 security certifications, with memory protection, tamper protection, cryptographic engines (symmetrical encryption with AES and hashing algorithm), and temporal isolation (HDP) to protect processes such as secure boot and firmware update. The STM32C59x and STM32C5A3 variants have additional security including hardware unique key support (HUK), secure key storage and hardware cryptographic accelerators for symmetric and asymmetric operations with protection against side-channel attacks.

Designed for demanding industrial environments, the device delivers robust performance even in harsh networking conditions. It supports a wide ambient temperature range from -40°C to 125°C, with a junction temperature up to 140°C. Even at the maximum operating temperature, the device can run at its maximum rated frequency, ensuring consistent performance across the full temperature range. STM32C5 enables compliance with industrial safety standards, including IEC 61508 SIL-2 and IEC 60335-1/60730-1 Class-B, by integrating essential hardware and software features.

Enhancements to the development ecosystem include a new STM32CubeMX flavor, STM32CubeMX2, which introduces a preview feature that allows faster access to reference code thereby accelerating development and easing code reuse. Also new in the STM32CubeC5 embedded software offer, the latest code-size optimized hardware abstraction layer (HAL2), gives access to all MCU features and allows more of the MCU’s memory to be used for application code.

Alex Fabre, Embedded Software Expert at ST Authorized Partner RTONE, has experienced the new tools, commenting: “STM32 HAL2 makes developing with the STM32C5 and other family members faster and more efficient. It is much lighter, closer to hardware functions, and porting our code to other STM32 MCUs is extremely easy.”

The comprehensive ecosystem also gives developers:

  • STM32C5 hardware evaluation tools enabling faster prototyping and offering reference hardware design guidelines
  • A new examples library offering faster access to a large number of STM32C5 production-ready code examples, simplifying the use of the STM32C5 features and accelerating development
  • A choice of two free integrated development environments (STM32CubeIDE and STM32CubeIDE for VSCODE) for faster development and debug
  • STM32Cube ecosystem with optimized porting of popular middleware including FreeRTOS, LwIP, USBX and FileX

More information on the STM32C5 can be found here: www.st.com/stm32c5

STM32 is a registered and/or unregistered trademark of STMicroelectronics International NV or its affiliates in the EU and/or elsewhere. In particular, STM32 is registered in the US Patent and Trademark Office.

About STMicroelectronics

At ST, we are 48,000 creators and makers of semiconductor technologies mastering the semiconductor supply chain with state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities. An integrated device manufacturer, we work with more than 200,000 customers and thousands of partners to design and build products, solutions, and ecosystems that address their challenges and opportunities, and the need to support a more sustainable world. Our technologies enable smarter mobility, more efficient power and energy management, and the wide-scale deployment of cloud-connected autonomous things. We are on track to be carbon neutral in all direct and indirect emissions (scopes 1 and 2), product transportation, business travel, and employee commuting emissions (our scope 3 focus), and to achieve our 100% renewable electricity sourcing goal by the end of 2027. Further information can be found at www.st.com   

 For more information, please contact:


INVESTOR RELATIONS

Jérôme Ramel
EVP Corporate Development & Integrated External Communication
Tel: +41.22.929.59.20
jerome.ramel@st.com    

  

MEDIA RELATIONS

Alexis Breton
Group VP Corporate External Communications
Tel: +33.6.59.16.79.08
alexis.breton@st.com

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FAQ

What are the STM32C5 key specs announced by STMicroelectronics (STM) on March 5, 2026?

The STM32C5 uses Arm Cortex-M33 on ST’s 40 nm process with Flash from 128Kbyte to 1Mbyte. According to company, it supports -40°C to 125°C, DMA, and aims for SESIP3 and PSA Level 3 security certifications.

When will STM32C5 microcontrollers be available to developers and what are starter prices (STM)?

STM32C5 MCUs are entering production now with development boards and tools available. According to company, prices start at $0.64 for orders of 10,000 units and Nucleo boards and display extensions are ready.

How does the STM32C5 compare on memory and performance for entry-level applications (STM)?

STM32C5 brings Cortex-M33 performance and Flash above 512Kbyte to entry-level devices, improving speed and efficiency. According to company, variants offer from 128Kbyte up to 1Mbyte to enable more advanced features.

What security features does the STM32C5 series offer and what is their status (STM)?

STM32C5 includes memory protection, tamper protection, AES and hashing, and hardware crypto options in select variants. According to company, the family targets SESIP3 and PSA Level 3 security certifications rather than claiming completed certifications.

What development ecosystem and tools support STM32C5 for faster time to market (STM)?

The STM32C5 is supported by STM32Cube updates including STM32CubeMX2, HAL2, STM32CubeIDE options, middleware ports, and example libraries. According to company, these tools provide production-grade drivers and code-size optimized libraries to speed development.
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