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Metric
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Value
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Price (as of market close 12/05/25)
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$158.26
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Market capitalization
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$6.08 billion
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Revenue (TTM)
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$359.8 million
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1-year price change
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-10%
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* 1-year price change calculated using Dec. 5, 2025 as the reference date.
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Offers endpoint ICs (radios-on-a-chip), reader ICs, readers, gateways, and software for wireless item connectivity and identification.
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Generates revenue primarily through sales of hardware and software that enable item-level connectivity, supporting use cases such as retail self-checkout, loss prevention, and supply chain tracking.
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Serves retailers, supply chain and logistics providers, aviation, automotive, healthcare, manufacturing, and other sectors via distributors, system integrators, value-added resellers, and software partners.
Impinj is a technology company specializing in cloud connectivity platforms that wirelessly connect and track individual items for enterprise and industrial applications. The company leverages proprietary endpoint ICs and systems, including readers and gateways, to enable use cases such as retail self-checkout, loss prevention, and warehouse pallet and carton tracking for its partners. With a diversified customer base across sectors such as retail, supply chain and logistics, aviation, automotive, and healthcare, Impinj extends its item connectivity solutions to a broad range of industries.
Daniel Patrick Gibson serves on the board of directors of Impinj and is the chief investment officer of Sylebra Capital LLC, which is a major investor in the company.
Sylebra Capital’s sale of Impinj shares may have come at an inopportune time, as the stock was down around 10% year over year at the time of the sale. The mid-cap stock has a five-year beta around 1.5, which means it swings more more extremely, both up and down, compared to the market benchmark S&P 500 index. Over longer periods of time, however, Impinj has proven to be a solid investment, up 335% over five years as of Jan. 8, and even up 14% since just the start of 2026.
Impinj makes RFID technology, including chips, readers, software, and systems, connecting physical items to the Internet of Things. Beginning in 2020, retail legend Walmart mandated that its apparel suppliers add RFID tags to their items in order to help track the items as they were shipped, received, and sold in stores. Walmart has since expanded that mandate to other product categories including automotive, books, home goods, and electronics. Bottom line: If suppliers want to do business with Walmart, they’ll have to use the technology that companies like Impinj sell. Plus, it’s likely that other retailers are following Walmart’s lead on the issue.
That places Impinj, which also supplies its solutions to other industries including airlines, healthcare, hospitality, and manufacturing, in a prime position to benefit. According to Simply Wall Street, Impinj recently surpassed shipments of 5 billion of its M800 series endpoint IC products, in part as a result of Walmart’s expanded RFID requirements, further solidifying it as a leader in this industry.
Open-market sale: The sale of securities on a public exchange, available to all investors, not through private transactions.
Indirect holdings: Ownership of securities through another entity, such as a fund or advisory client, rather than directly in one’s own name.
Direct holdings: Securities owned and held in the name of the individual or entity, not through intermediaries.
Weighted average price: The average price of securities sold or bought, weighted by the number of shares in each transaction.
Form 4: A required SEC filing that reports insider trades of a company’s securities by officers, directors, or significant shareholders.
Advisory clients: Entities or individuals whose investments are managed by an investment advisor or firm.
Master fund: An investment fund structure pooling assets from multiple sources, often used by hedge funds for efficiency.
Transaction value: The total dollar amount received or paid in a securities transaction, typically calculated as price times quantity.
Lot size: The number of shares or units involved in a single securities transaction.
Value-added reseller: A company that adds features or services to a product and resells it, often in technology sectors.
Endpoint IC: An integrated circuit (chip) designed to connect individual items wirelessly for identification or tracking.
TTM: The 12-month period ending with the most recent quarterly report.
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Sarah Sidlow has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Walmart. The Motley Fool recommends Impinj. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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