Identiv Sells IoT Assets to Trackonomy: What Are the Risks and Benefits to Partners and Customers?
By Tancred Taylor |
30 Jun 2026 |
IN-8198
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By Tancred Taylor |
30 Jun 2026 |
IN-8198
NEWSAn Unusual Acquisition |
In June 2026, Identiv announced the sale of its Internet of Things (IoT) assets to Trackonomy. The structure of the sale is slightly unusual: Identiv will sell its IoT assets (namely, its Thai manufacturing facility, German Research and Development (R&D) center, Intellectual Property (IP), salesforce, and the Identiv brand name) and contribute US$25 million to Trackonomy, in exchange for an equity position in Trackonomy worth US$50 million. Identiv will, however, remain a publicly traded company; it will change its name after deal closure and pivot to a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) and Physical Artificial Intelligence (AI) business model by acquiring “attractively valued” compliance software companies with an Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) between US$3 million and U$15 million. The purpose of this is to complement Trackonomy’s core business with high-value and vertical-specific software, and to add a defensible moat to compliance software by ingesting real-world data from Trackonomy’s sensing devices and infrastructure.
IMPACTHigh Impact on Partners & End Customers |
This is the latest high-impact Trackonomy acquisition that will raise eyebrows. After its acquisition of Bluetooth® chip vendor InPlay in September 2025, Trackonomy’s Bluetooth® Low Energy (LE) label solution competitors were nervous, lest their access to InPlay’s chips—the best suited for small form factor and low-power label devices—would be reduced or cut off. As a result, they started assessing alternative approaches, ranging from accelerated engagement with other silicon suppliers (many of which are developing their own products) to looking to build proprietary silicon in-house.
Ultra-High Frequency (UHF) Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) label manufacturers, by contrast, while circumspect, saw the acquisition as a potential “Impinj-style” play, whereby Trackonomy would help seed the broader market by helping to scale supply of Bluetooth® LE chips and labels by taking advantage of their high-volume UHF RFID label manufacturing capabilities. Bluetooth® LE labels are considered by UHF RFID label manufacturers a high-growth opportunity complementary to their UHF portfolio, as demonstrated, for instance, by Avery Dennison’s US$75 million investment in Wiliot in April this year, complementing its early US$30 million investment in the company back in 2019.
Trackonomy’s acquisition of a UHF RFID label manufacturer with significant experience and expertise in Bluetooth® LE label manufacturing will be harder to ignore or explain. Indeed, while Identiv’s core is in High-Frequency (HF) and UHF specialist label manufacturing, it is Identiv’s know-how in producing Bluetooth® LE labels at scale that will be of most interest to Trackonomy. Identiv was one of the first companies to start manufacturing Bluetooth® LE labels at scale through a partnership with Wiliot in 2022—a partnership that it has continued to expand, announcing earlier in June 2026 its intention to manufacture label designs based on Wiliot’s third-generation Pixel tags.
In other words, the news will likely receive a mixed reception from the label manufacturing ecosystem. From Trackonomy’s perspective, however, the rationale will be its shift to a fully vertically-integrated company, spanning silicon, labels (and other hardware), and software. Customers looking for supply chain visibility solutions have increasingly been assessing “unbundled” purchasing models—namely buying hardware separately from an Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEM), and integrating into in-house or existing software. This trend has been partially accelerated by the lower perceived defensibility of SaaS businesses with the growth of AI, as well as by the perception that margin stacking from solution providers reselling hardware can add significantly to a solution’s total cost.
With its vertically integrated solution, Trackonomy can reduce margin stacking—with typical margins of around 50% to 60% from Bluetooth® LE silicon suppliers, and around 30% from label manufacturers—to reduce total solution cost for a customer, and even allow it, should it choose to do so, to sell hardware as a loss-leader offset by gains on the sale of a high-margin E2E solution.
Another factor to consider is the triple-“I” alliance of Identiv, InPlay, and IFCO, wherein global crate pooler IFCO is leveraging InPlay’s chips and Identiv’s label manufacturing capabilities to equip its 400 million plastic crates with IoT capabilities. This process will take several years, but one of the outcomes was revealed in IFCO’s launch of its TRLLN offering shortly before the Trackonomy-Identiv announcement, enabling third parties to leverage IFCO’s data expertise to track and monitor their own Returnable Transport Asset (RTA) pools. The acquisition enables Trackonomy to share in this customer success, as well as to facilitate the deployment of the solution in the first place: both through lower costs via the InPlay/Identiv combination, and through Trackonomy’s own expertise in operationalizing labels through its Intellectual Property (IP) in physical label production and application.
A final point of importance is the messaging around Physical AI and the role of AI more broadly within this narrative. As noted, there is a growing perception that AI is reducing the defensibility of SaaS, both by reducing the barrier to creating applications and by changing the way that customers want to interact with data. The competitive moat that suppliers are looking to differentiate on is the ability to gather real-world data. In other words, the physical sensor layer and infrastructure become not a commodity, but a differentiator because of the quality of the data it is feeding into Information Technology (IT) systems.
This is an important part of both Trackonomy’s and Identiv’s strategies going forward. Trackonomy is intent on owning the physical data layer, intelligent infrastructure, and orchestration of Physical AI applications; while Identiv is looking to grow as a complementary wing of Trackonomy’s business by leveraging the latter’s physical infrastructure layer to add a differentiator to compliance SaaS software, seen as a high-value market in itself. There is a notable irony here, in that the conversation in the IoT space has frequently centered around the commoditization of hardware—but it is the SaaS market that is increasingly seen as the next commodity.
RECOMMENDATIONSAccelerating the Pace of Technology & Market Development |
This is an acquisition that is likely to reshape alliances in the smart label market, accelerate innovation, and contribute to restructuring business models around Physical AI. It is a high-risk acquisition as it relates to Trackonomy’s and Identiv’s partners, but with a potential correspondingly high reward, especially for Trackonomy’s customers who benefit from lower-cost and fully-integrated solutions. Questions remain around how the news will be received, in particular:
- Does Trackonomy want to continue enabling the Bluetooth® LE smart label ecosystem? And if so, will label manufacturing now-competitors want to continue to work with Trackonomy? Trackonomy may wish to continue selling InPlay chips to now-competitors to continue to expand the market; but label manufacturing vendors are likely to accelerate their assessment and co-developing with other silicon suppliers, driving innovation in this sphere. Trackonomy may have to decide at some point in the not-too-distant future: does it want to leverage existing suppliers as partners, or go at it itself? Lack of clarity on channel strategies is not typically well received, and Trackonomy will not be able to sit on the fence.
- What will the impact be on Wiliot? Trackonomy and Wiliot are the two most significant vendors in the smart label market today. Wiliot’s partnership with Identiv is plausibly in jeopardy as a result of this announcement, which could lead to its refocusing around other manufacturing partners (such as Avery Dennison or Tageos).
- How will customers receive the announcement? End customers like the ability to source labels from multiple suppliers to maintain purchasing leverage, supply capacity, and broader risk management. Trackonomy is likely to welcome other label manufacturers to work with it, rather than looking to gain 100% of each deal, and customers may force label manufacturers to do so. Nonetheless, there is a greater lock-in risk when one company owns both the chip supply and the label supply.
- How quickly will suppliers shift to a Physical AI business model? This implies a greater focus on owning the physical data layer, as well as the vertical-specific models and AI infrastructure. It also implies restructuring how customers consume data, and shifts more of the value to back-end orchestration from front-end platforms. This is a market that is moving rapidly, and suppliers must think strategically for a long-term roadmap instead of reactively and incrementally.
Written by Tancred Taylor
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