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Arm delivered higher-than-expected Q3 results.
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Guidance suggests growth rate could persist throughout next fiscal
year.
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Share price surges more than 72% after the report.
Arm Holdings is the biggest UK chip designer which architects, develops,
and licenses high-performance, low-cost, and energy-efficient IP solutions
for CPUs, GPUs, NPUs and interconnect technologies, on which many of the
world’s leading semiconductor companies rely to develop their products. Arm
licenses the instruction sets for modern chips to partners, who then make
chips with customizations for their unique applications.
Arm span off from Japan’s SoftBank and went public in September 2023 and
listed on the Nasdaq; however, SoftBank still owns roughly 90% of Arm’s
shares. Arm’s IPO in the U.S. was the biggest in 2023, valuing the company
at $65 billion on the first day of trading.
The company reported its third quarter earnings results on the 7
th
of February 2024. Arm posted a revenue of $824 million for the quarter
ending in December, up 14% year-on-year, smashing analysts’ expectations.
The chip designer reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.29 and lifted
its full-year guidance from a range of $1.00-$1.10 to $1.20-$1.24. Revenue guidance for the fourth quarter was revised higher to $850 million, beating estimates.
Arm’s revenue was supported by surging demand for new artificial
intelligence (AI) applications. The December quarter earnings have improved
significantly from the prior quarter in which Arm endured high remuneration
costs associated with its listing.
Source: TradingView
The stock price rallied strongly on the back of better-than-expected
profit, driven by royalty revenue and better-than-expected licensing
revenue. Investors were also encouraged by Arm’s raised fiscal year revenue
guidance to a range of $3.15 billion-$3.2 billion from $2.9 billion-$3.1
billion previously.
The share price surged more than 72% since the third quarter result,
lifting Arm’s market capitalisation to $152.7 billion, which helped the
company to rank among the world’s most valuable chip companies. The upbeat
guidance reinforces the view that ARM is a key beneficiary of the AI boom,
and especially premium smartphones.
Arm is largely a technology licensing company. The company earns royalties
from licensing its designs, used by some of the biggest chipmakers in the
world, such as NVIDIA – one of the largest customers for Arm.
Arm’s primary market – smartphone technology, is seeing a recovery from
contraction. Arm’s royalty revenue from smartphones had improved as device
sales rose and Arm’s V9 designs are in all of the premium smartphones such
as Apple and Samsung. Arm provides the computing power needed to run
Google’s latest large language model Gemini Nano.
The company is also expanding into new markets as demand for AI surges. Arm
continues to gain market share in the growth markets of cloud servers and
automotive, which drive new streams of royalty growth.
Despite the bright outlook, the share price almost doubled in three trading
sessions and investors might witness some profit taking after such a
monstrous run. While shares of the company are tightly held as SoftBank
sold less than 10% of Arm during the IPO, which is considered to be
beneficial for the value of the shares, traders should brace for some
volatility in the coming month as the 180-day lockup period expires on the
14 th of March 2024 and SoftBank would have the opportunity to
sell shares at its discretion.
Overall, the world is in the early stages of AI adoption and growth is
likely to remain robust in the years ahead. While Arm is also a beneficiary,
chipmakers NVIDIA and AMD have a central position in the AI boom as they
produce most of the processors used for AI models, such as those that power
ChatGPT.