Qorvo filings document material-event disclosures for an operating semiconductor company focused on connectivity and power solutions. The company’s Form 8-K records include furnished earnings releases, preliminary and quarterly operating results, material agreements, governance matters, shareholder-voting disclosures, risk-factor updates, and capital-structure information.
Formal disclosures also cover securities-law communications and related exhibits connected to corporate actions, while financial-condition reports document revenue, gross margin, operating income, and earnings-per-share measures.
Qorvo, Inc. Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Grant Brown sold 20,608 shares of Qorvo common stock in an open-market transaction on February 17, 2026, at an average price of $83.06 per share. The sale was executed under a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted on November 6, 2025.
Following this transaction, Brown directly owns 44,428 Qorvo shares, which includes 348 shares acquired on October 31, 2025 through the Qorvo, Inc. Employee Stock Purchase Plan.
Qorvo, Inc. insider plans to sell 8,226 common shares under Rule 144. The planned sale has an aggregate market value of $683,251.56, based on the filing, with trades expected around 02/17/2026 on the NASDAQ. The filing notes that 92,705,679 shares of this class were outstanding.
The shares to be sold were acquired through multiple restricted stock vesting events from the issuer between 2021 and 2024, all described as compensation grants. The signer represents they are not aware of any undisclosed material adverse information about Qorvo’s current or prospective operations.
Qorvo Inc. filed a notice of proposed insider share sales under Rule 144. The filing covers 20,608 shares of common stock, with an aggregate market value of $1,711,700.48, to be sold through Fidelity Brokerage Services LLC on NASDAQ around February 17, 2026.
The shares were acquired from Qorvo as compensation through multiple restricted stock vesting events between November 2024 and October 2025, plus an employee stock purchase plan buy on October 31, 2025. Qorvo reported 92,705,679 shares outstanding.
Skyworks Solutions and Qorvo describe legal and procedural details around their proposed mergers and how investors can access the full information. Skyworks has an effective Form S-4 registration statement that includes a joint proxy statement/prospectus, which was declared effective and mailed to stockholders in late December 2025.
The communication stresses that it is not an offer to sell securities and that any sale must be made only by a compliant prospectus. It also contains an extensive forward-looking statements disclaimer, highlighting that completion of the transaction, expected benefits, and future performance are uncertain and subject to numerous risks, including regulatory approvals, integration challenges, potential litigation, business disruption, staff retention, market conditions and geopolitical events.
Qorvo, Inc. stockholders approved the proposed merger with Skyworks Solutions, Inc. by adopting the Agreement and Plan of Merger at a special meeting. The merger proposal received 71,278,908 votes for, 137,926 against and 255,131 abstentions out of 71,671,965 shares present, representing about 77.35% of shares entitled to vote.
Stockholders also approved, on a non-binding advisory basis, the merger-related compensation for Qorvo’s named executive officers, with 70,309,265 votes for and 991,527 against. Completion of the transaction is still subject to regulatory approvals, absence of legal blocks, accuracy of representations, compliance with merger obligations and no continuing material adverse effect for either Qorvo or Skyworks.
Qorvo reports that both it and Skyworks received a “Second Request” from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission on February 5, 2026, extending the antitrust review of their planned merger. This additional information request lengthens the Hart-Scott-Rodino waiting period until 30 days after each company substantially complies.
The companies state they are working cooperatively with the FTC and note that the merger still depends on U.S. antitrust clearance, approvals under other antitrust and foreign investment regimes, and satisfaction of other conditions in the merger agreement. The filing also reiterates previously provided proxy and prospectus materials and includes extensive cautionary language about forward-looking statements and risks that could affect completion and benefits of the proposed transaction.
Qorvo, Inc. reports that both Qorvo and Skyworks Solutions have received “Second Requests” from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission in connection with their planned two-step merger structure. These additional information requests extend the Hart‑Scott‑Rodino antitrust waiting period until 30 days after each company substantially complies, unless shortened or further extended.
The companies state they are working cooperatively with the FTC. The merger remains conditioned on HSR waiting‑period expiration or termination, other required antitrust and foreign investment clearances, and satisfaction or waiver of remaining closing conditions under the Merger Agreement.
Skyworks Solutions used its Q1 FY2026 earnings call to highlight the previously announced combination with Qorvo, describing it as a highly strategic, transformative deal. Management expects the combined company to generate more than $500 million of synergies over time, support gross margins in the 50–55% range through cycles, and deliver robust free cash flow.
The transaction is framed as reducing historical mobile volatility, strengthening competitive position, enhancing Broad Market capabilities and expanding into defense and aerospace, with expected net leverage of approximately 1 at closing. Skyworks reported that initial regulatory filings are complete, a shareholder vote has been scheduled, and integration planning is underway. Closing is still targeted for early calendar 2027, subject to regulatory and shareholder approvals and other customary conditions.
Skyworks Solutions provides an update on its planned merger with Qorvo, detailing shareholder lawsuits and additional proxy disclosures. Two suits in New York and several demand letters allege disclosure deficiencies in the joint proxy statement/prospectus for the stock‑and‑cash merger.
Without admitting wrongdoing, Skyworks and Qorvo are voluntarily supplementing the proxy with more detail on Qorvo’s standalone projections, discounted cash flow and trading‑multiple analyses by Qatalyst, Goldman Sachs and Centerview, and precedent semiconductor deals. The filing also corrects and refines golden parachute estimates, including total potential payments of about $31.8 million for Qorvo CEO Robert Bruggeworth and updated amounts for other senior executives.
The companies maintain the merger disclosures already comply with law but say the extra information is intended to avoid cost, distraction and potential delays ahead of both firms’ February 11, 2026 special shareholder meetings.
Qorvo describes its pending two‑step merger with Skyworks Solutions, where Qorvo will ultimately become a wholly owned Skyworks subsidiary, and notes that both companies have scheduled special shareholder meetings on February 11, 2026 to vote on the deal.
The filing reports two New York state lawsuits and several shareholder demand letters alleging disclosure deficiencies in the joint proxy/prospectus. While Qorvo and Skyworks state they believe these claims lack merit and that existing disclosures comply with law, they are voluntarily issuing supplemental disclosures to avoid nuisance, potential delays and added cost.
The supplements expand detail on Qorvo’s standalone projections, valuation work by Qatalyst and Centerview (including discounted cash flow and trading/precedent transaction analyses), and correct specific figures in the golden parachute tables, such as revised total potential payments for named executives and a small adjustment to a bonus figure.