UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM SD
SPECIALIZED DISCLOSURE REPORT
Applied Micro
Circuits Corporation
(Exact name of the registrant as specified in its charter)
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Delaware |
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000-23193 |
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94-2586591 |
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization) |
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(Commission
File Number) |
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(IRS Employer
Identification No.) |
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215 Moffett Park Drive, Sunnyvale, CA |
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94089 |
(Address of principal executive offices) |
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(Zip code) |
L. William Caraccio, (408) 542-8600
(Name and telephone number, including area code, of the
person to contact in connection with this report.)
Check the appropriate box to
indicate the rule pursuant to which this form is being filed and provide the period to which the information in this form applies:
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Rule 13p-1 under the Securities Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13p-1) for the reporting period from January 1 to December 31, 2014. |
INFORMATION TO BE INCLUDED IN THE REPORT
Section 1Conflict Minerals Disclosure
Item 1.01 Conflict Minerals Disclosure and Report
Pursuant to Rule 13p-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and the requirements of Form SD, a copy of the registrants Conflict
Minerals Report covering the calendar year ended December 31, 2014 is provided as Exhibit 1.01 hereto. Reference is hereby made to such report.
Conflict Minerals Disclosure
The foregoing Conflict
Minerals Report is also publicly available on the registrants website at www.apm.com/company/corporate-social-responsibility. The information contained on such website is not incorporated by reference into this report on Form SD or the
foregoing Conflict Minerals Report and should not be considered part of this report on Form SD or such Conflict Minerals Report.
Item 1.02
Exhibit
The registrants Conflict Minerals Report with respect to the calendar year ended December 31, 2014 is filed as Exhibit 1.01 to
this Form SD.
Section 2Exhibits
Item 2.01 Exhibits
The following exhibit is filed as
part of this report:
Exhibit 1.01 Conflict Minerals Report as required by Items 1.01 and 1.02 of this Form.
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the duly
authorized undersigned.
APPLIED MICRO CIRCUITS CORPORATION
(Registrant)
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By: |
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/s/ L. William Caraccio |
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May 29, 2015 |
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L. William Caraccio |
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(Date) |
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Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary |
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Exhibit 1.01
Conflict Minerals Report
Applied Micro
Circuits Corporation (AppliedMicro, the Company, we, us, or our) has included this Conflict Minerals Report as an exhibit to our Form SD as required by Rule 13p-1 under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and Form SD (collectively, the Conflict Minerals Rule), with respect to the calendar year ended December 31, 2014.
About AppliedMicros Business
AppliedMicro is a
global leader in silicon solutions for next-generation cloud infrastructure and data centers, as well as connectivity products for edge, metro and long haul communications equipment. We are a fabless semiconductor company, meaning that
we do not own our own manufacturing facilities and rely on third-party contractors to manufacture, assemble, test and package our products. In this report, these third parties are referred to as our suppliers.
Our products include the X-Gene® ARM® 64-bit
Server on a Chip solutions, designed for cloud data center and enterprise applications. Our connectivity products include framer/mapper devices for Optical Transport Network equipment and physical layer (PHY) devices that transmit
and receive signals in a very high-speed serial format. Our embedded computing products, including our ARM-based HeliX products, are deployed in applications such as control- and data-plane functionality, wireless access points, residential
gateways, wireless base stations, storage controllers, network attached storage, network switches and routing products, and multi-function printers. For a further discussion of our products, see our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
ended March 31, 2015, available on the SECs website at www.sec.gov.
The Conflict Minerals Rule
The Conflict Minerals Rule was adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission to implement reporting and disclosure requirements related to so-called
conflict minerals as directed by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010. The Conflict Minerals Rule was adopted in response to violence and human rights abuses taking place in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo (the DRC) and its adjoining countries, where so-called Conflict Minerals may be mined or processed, and may be funding armed groups in those countries. For purposes of the Conflict Minerals Rule, and as used in this
report, (i) Conflict Minerals are currently defined as columbite-tantalite (coltan), cassiterite, gold, wolframite and the derivatives tantalum, tin and tungsten, without regard to the location of origin of the minerals or
derivative metals, and (ii) an armed group is an armed group that is identified as a perpetrator of serious human rights abuses in annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices under sections 116(d) and 502B(b) of the United
States Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 relating to the DRC or an adjoining country.
The Conflict Minerals Rule imposes certain reporting obligations on
SEC reporting companies such as us, where the products that they manufacture or contract to manufacture may contain Conflict Minerals that are necessary to the products functionality or production. These requirements apply to SEC
reporting companies even if the Conflict Minerals used in their products do not fund armed conflict.
The first reporting period under the Conflict
Minerals Rule was the calendar year ending December 31, 2013. This Conflict Minerals Report is intended to provide the SEC-required disclosures in respect of the period ended December 31, 2014. We plan to make annual filings of this type
for so long as required by SEC rules and regulations.
Due Diligence Program
In response to the Conflict Minerals Rule, we designed due diligence measures relating to Conflict Minerals that we believe conform, in all material respects,
with the applicable criteria set forth in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Developments (the OECD) Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains of Minerals from Conflict-Affected and High-Risk
Areas, Second Edition (the OECD Guidance). The OECD Guidance sets forth a due diligence framework with the goal of helping companies to avoid contributing to armed conflict and other
human rights abuses through their mineral sourcing practices. For more information about the OECD Guidance, please see the copy that OECD makes publicly available on their website, www.oecd.org. This reference is made for general information
only, and the contents of that website are not incorporated by reference into this report.
In furtherance of our Conflict Minerals due diligence, we
implemented the following measures in respect of the calendar year ended December 31, 2014.
Staffing and Management System; Risk Assessment
We have a multidisciplinary team of personnel, including members of our supply chain/operations staff and internal legal counsel, to further our
efforts to comply with SEC reporting requirements and Conflict Minerals due diligence efforts. Our supply chain/operations staff identified the suppliers for which due diligence appeared appropriate, with a focus on the likelihood that Conflict
Minerals are contained in products that we contract to have them manufacture for us. Our staff also considered the fact that all of the relevant suppliers are believed to be among the most commonly used suppliers of similar manufacturing, assembly,
testing and packaging services to the worldwide semiconductor industry. They also consulted with the other members of this multidisciplinary team concerning our due diligence efforts.
We decided to utilize the Conflict Minerals Reporting Template developed by the Electronic Industry Citizenship Coalition and Global e-Sustainability
Initiative (the EICC/GeSI Template) to make inquiries of the suppliers deemed most likely to be relevant. We believe that the EICC/GeSI Template is in widespread use for these purposes, in our industry.
Approach to Identified Risks
We requested that the
identified suppliers submit to us a completed EICC/GeSI Template. We received responses from all of those suppliers, and reviewed all such responses.
We also reviewed the relevant suppliers publicly available Conflict Minerals policies or related corporate
social responsibility information, where available, to further assist in our risk assessments.
Third-Party Audits
The OECD Guidance contemplates independent third-party audits of supply chain due diligence at identified points in the supply chain. In some cases,
suppliers EICC GeSI Templates indicated that a potentially relevant smelter or refiner of Conflict Minerals is on the list maintained by the EICC/GeSI Conflict-Free Sourcing Initiative, which is designed to identify smelters and refiners that
have undergone third-party review with respect to the sourcing of Conflict Minerals. In those cases, we confirmed that the identified facility is on such list. However, we do not have a direct relationship with smelters and refiners of minerals or
metals used in our products, and we did not conduct third-party audits of those smelters and refiners or of the mines or other entities supplying them. We also did not engage a third-party auditor to audit our suppliers, our due diligence
procedures, or the results of our due diligence.
Reporting on Supply Chain Due Diligence
The OECD Guidance also contemplates reporting on supply chain due diligence. We have filed a Form SD and this Conflict Minerals Report for 2014 with the SEC,
and made this Conflict Minerals Report publicly available on our corporate website.
Due Diligence Findings
As noted above, as a fabless semiconductor company, we do not have direct relationships with the smelters and refiners of minerals or metals used in our
products, and our due diligence processes are subject to inherent limitations based on the necessity of seeking information from our direct suppliers, and those suppliers seeking information within their own supply chains.
Nothing came to our attention, as a result of the due diligence conducted with respect to calendar year 2014 as
described above, that indicated that Conflict Minerals necessary to the functionality or production of our products had directly or indirectly financed or benefitted armed groups in the DRC or an adjoining country in calendar year 2014. However, we
were not able to determine, after exercising the due diligence described above, the sources of all Conflict Minerals necessary to our products functionality or production, or whether or not any such Conflict Minerals may have, in fact,
directly or indirectly financed or benefitted armed groups in the DRC or an adjoining country.
We endeavored to determine the location of origin of the
Conflict Minerals contained in our products by requesting that the selected suppliers provide us with completed EICC/GeSI Templates. However, our suppliers responses did not identify all smelters and refiners of potentially relevant Conflict
Minerals, and in a limited number of cases, the suppliers were uncertain as to the country of origin of those Conflict Minerals. In addition, the suppliers responses addressed their operations and supply chain across all customers in our
industry rather than representing a product-by-product analysis specific to our particular products. For these reasons, we were unable to identify all of the facilities that were used to process the Conflict Minerals that may have been necessary to
the functionality or production of our products in 2014, or to determine the relevant countries of origin of such Conflict Minerals.
Risk Mitigation
Plans for 2015
We intend to take the following additional steps to mitigate the risk that our necessary Conflict Minerals will finance or benefit
armed groups in the DRC or adjoining countries during calendar year 2015:
1. Encourage suppliers that provided information for 2014 to provide relevant
information for 2015, through ongoing outreach with these suppliers.
2. Assess the potential relevance of Conflict Minerals issues to new suppliers, and
where applicable, conduct due diligence regarding the supply chain for our products with those suppliers. We anticipate that we will continue to rely primarily on the EICC-GeSI Template for our supplier inquiries, although we may consider
alternative or supplemental questionnaires as practices evolve in this area.
3. Communicate to new potentially relevant suppliers our sourcing expectations, including through the
dissemination of our Conflict Minerals Policy to them either directly or by reference to our website. In addition, if we have reason to believe that new potentially relevant suppliers do not appear to understand the requirements of the Conflict
Minerals Rule or its underlying public policy goals, we plan to work with them to provide them with further information concerning the rule and the principles underlying its adoption.
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