Browse the full insider trade history of MoSys, Inc., a listed issuer based in United States. Shares are quoted on US US, under the supervision of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Technology sector, MoSys, Inc. has logged 12 public disclosures. The latest transaction was disclosed on 14 December 2021 — Acquisition. Among the most active insiders: Newell Robert Y IV. All data is free.
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MoSys, Inc. (ticker: MOSY) is a U.S.-based technology company historically focused on fabless semiconductor design and, in some periods, intellectual property licensing. The stock has been listed on the NASDAQ market in the United States, making it relevant for investors who follow small-cap and micro-cap semiconductor names with a niche product profile. From a financial-analyst perspective, MoSys is best understood as a specialized provider of memory-centric integrated circuits rather than a broad-based chipmaker. The company was founded in 1991 and later reincorporated in Delaware in September 2000, and its historical operating base has been in the San Jose, California area, placing it within one of the world’s most important semiconductor ecosystems. MoSys’ core business has centered on developing and selling integrated circuits and related technologies designed for high-speed cloud networking, communications, security appliances, video, test and monitoring, data center, and computing applications. Its principal product family has been marketed under the Accelerator Engine name, including products such as Bandwidth Engine and Programmable HyperSpeed Engine. These solutions combine proprietary high-density embedded memory technology with high-speed serial interface capabilities to improve memory bandwidth, transaction access performance, and overall system efficiency. In practical terms, the company’s value proposition has been aimed at OEMs that need faster data access, lower latency, and improved performance without a full architecture redesign. The company operates in a highly competitive segment of the semiconductor industry. Unlike the largest memory suppliers or broad-line chip vendors, MoSys has historically pursued a niche strategy built around specialized architectures and application-specific performance advantages. That niche positioning can be attractive when a customer values differentiated technical capabilities, but it also means the company may be more exposed to customer program timing, product transitions, and the purchasing cycles of a relatively small set of end markets. For equity investors, that combination typically implies higher business risk, lower diversification, and greater sensitivity to execution. Recent public disclosures indicate that MoSys has faced meaningful strategic and commercial shifts in recent years, including weaker product revenue trends and customer-transition effects referenced in SEC filings and company communications. Nasdaq press materials also show the company has pursued financing and corporate actions as it managed its business profile. For investors tracking SEC Form 4 insider transactions, MOSY is therefore a name where insider activity can be informative, but should be interpreted carefully in light of the company’s micro-cap status, limited scale, and historically volatile operating footprint. Overall, MoSys remains a niche U.S. NASDAQ-listed semiconductor story with a long operating history, a specialized product set, and a competitive position shaped by technical differentiation rather than scale.