Explore the full directors' dealings record of NXP Semiconductors N.V., a listed equity based in United States. Shares trade on US US, under the supervision of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Technology sector, NXP Semiconductors N.V. has logged 86 public disclosures. Market capitalisation: €54.9bn. The latest transaction was reported on 6 January 2026 — Cession. Among the most active insiders: Wuamett Jennifer. The full history is accessible without an account.
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NXP Semiconductors N.V. (ticker: NXPI) is a semiconductor company listed in the United States on the NASDAQ market, not the NYSE, and it is widely followed by global equity investors because of its exposure to automotive and industrial technology. NXP is headquartered in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, but it has a broad international footprint and meaningful visibility in the U.S. capital markets through its NASDAQ listing. The company operates in more than 30 countries and reported roughly 32,000 employees, which underscores its scale and global operating model. NXP’s origins trace back to Philips Semiconductor, and the company was formed in 2006 as an independent semiconductor business. Since then, it has built a portfolio focused on “smart edge” systems: chips and platform solutions that help devices sense, think, connect, and act closer to the point of use. That positioning is strategically important because it places NXP in markets where qualification cycles are long, customer relationships are sticky, and product reliability and security are critical. From a business-line perspective, NXP is best known for its automotive franchise. The company supplies solutions for advanced driver assistance, imaging radar, in-vehicle networking, domain and zonal control, electrification, and secure connectivity. It also serves Industrial & IoT customers with microcontrollers, processors, security products, and connectivity solutions for factory automation, smart devices, and embedded systems. Beyond those core end markets, NXP maintains offerings in mobile and communications infrastructure, including secure connectivity and power-management-related technologies. NXP’s competitive position is strengthened by its ability to sell system-level platforms rather than isolated chips. That matters in automotive, where OEMs and Tier 1 suppliers increasingly want integrated architectures that reduce complexity, support software-defined vehicles, and improve safety and cybersecurity. Recent company announcements reinforce that strategy. In 2025, NXP introduced its third-generation imaging radar processors, the S32R47 family, highlighting higher processing power, better power efficiency, and improved system cost for autonomous-driving use cases. Also in 2025, NXP announced a software-defined vehicle architecture collaboration with Rimac Technology and completed the acquisition of TTTech Auto, a move that expands its capabilities in safety-critical middleware and SDV architecture. For French, Belgian, and Swiss investors, NXP is a high-quality semiconductor name with a strong structural story: long-term automotive content growth, increasing demand for secure edge intelligence, and exposure to industrial digitalization. Its investor profile is typically associated with technology leadership, durable customer relationships, and disciplined capital allocation, making NXPI a notable U.S.-listed semiconductor play for portfolios seeking secular growth in connected and software-defined systems.