Live Chat

Arm IPO

Arm IPO sets price at $51 in biggest public offering this year

Shares of Arm Holdings, backed by Masayoshi Son’s SoftBank, are set to start trading on Thursday, September 15. Arm revealed on Wednesday that it had priced its shares at $51, at the upper end of the anticipated range of $47 to $51. This valuation placed the chip design company at a market capitalization of over $54 billion, making it the largest initial public offering since electric truckmaker Rivian's (RIVN) debut in 2021.

Based in the United Kingdom, Arm specializes in designing software for computer chips used in a wide range of devices, including cellphones, tablets, wearable technology, and automobiles. It licenses these designs to companies that manufacture and utilize the chips. In 2016, Japanese investment company SoftBank took the company private in a deal valued at $32 billion. Following the IPO, SoftBank will retain ownership of 90.6% of the company's shares.

According to Arm's own estimates, its chip architecture was present in 99% of the world's smartphones in 2022. The company reported that over 30 billion Arm chips were shipped in the fiscal year ending in March 2023, with more than 250 billion chips shipped since the firm's inception.

The company counts several major tech giants among its potential investors and technology users, including Intel (INTC), Nvidia (NVDA), Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOG), Samsung (SMSN), and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), among others.

A proposed sale of the firm to Nvidia (NVDA) in 2022 was abandoned due to regulatory concerns.

Choose your points of movement

Сalculate your hypothetical P/L (aggregated cost and charges) if you had opened a trade today.

Market

Currency Search
Currency
Index
Shares
ETFs
Bonds
Crypto
Commodity

Instrument

Search
Clear input
Occidental
Siemens
Morgan Stanley
GSX Techedu
Marston's
Alibaba
Skillz Inc
Macy's
Lemonade
Lululemon
Plug Power
Amazon.com
Verizon
Thermo Fisher
Mondelez
General Motors
LVMH
IAG
Cinemark
PETROCHINA
Royal Bank Canada
Anglo American
F5 Networks
Nikola Corporation
Zoom Video Communications
Air France-KLM
Comcast
UniCredit
The Cheesecake Factory
Barrick Gold
Bayer
Toro
Kuaishou
Gen Digital Inc
Tilray
Xiaomi
SMCI
Wish.com Inc
Adobe
DISNEY
Coinbase Inc
UiPath Inc
T-Mobile
Rio Tinto
Schlumberger
Invesco Mortgage
Hammerson
Volkswagen
Sartorius AG
ROBLOX Corp
ChargePoint Holdings Inc
UPS
Pinterest Inc
Continental
Jumia Technologies
Medtronic
PayPal
Twilio
Freeport McMoRan
UnitedHealth
SIG
Tesla
Lyft
Boeing Co
Annaly Capital
Santander
Teladoc
Li Auto
CrowdStrike Holdings
Deere
Fedex
Naspers
ProSiebenSat.1
Bilibili Inc
Costco
New Oriental
NVIDIA
Iberdrola
Gilead
American Express
Apple
Airbus
GoPro
Chevron
HSBC HK
Two Harbors Investment aration
easyJet
Inditex
BlackBerry
Anheuser-Busch Inbev
Deliveroo Holdings
Hubspot
Applied Materials
GameStop
British American Tobacco
Trade Desk
McDonald's
AMC Entertainment Holdings
Adidas
AIA
Bristol Myers
Novavax
TUI
Fresnillo
Shell plc (LSE)
Nasdaq
Ceconomy
Lithium Americas Corp
Rivian Automotive
Qorvo
MercadoLibre.com
Coca-Cola Co (NYSE)
HDFC Bank
Roku Inc
Infinera
Arista
Total
JnJ
Dave & Buster's
PG&E
ON Semiconductor
Diageo
XPeng Inc
ASML
Vodafone
Airbus Group SE
Campari
Telecom Italia
Glencore plc
HSBC
ZIM Integrated Shipping Services Ltd
Kraft Heinz
Spotify
Aurora Cannabis Inc
Etsy
Goldman Sachs
Norwegian Air Shuttle
Abbott
Snap
Linde PLC
Blackstone
Cellnex
Tencent
Barclays
Virgin Galactic
JP Morgan
Allianz
RTX Corp
Taiwan Semi
Wal-Mart Stores
Intel
DoorDash
Wayfair
SONY
II-VI
Norwegian Cruise Line
BioNTech
Palantir Technologies Inc
CNOOC
Cisco Systems
Electrolux
ALIBABA HK
Robinhood
Vonovia
British American Tobacco
SAP
Ford
Cameco
Peloton Interactive Inc.
Toyota
Amgen
AT&T
Infosys
Starbucks
Lloyds
Qualcomm
Canopy Growth
3D Systems
CarMax
LUCID
Eni
AMD
Target
IBM
FirstRand
Lumentum Holdings
Alphabet (Google)
Workday Inc
ASOS
Conoco Phillips
Moderna Inc
Trump Media & Technology Group
Fuelcell
MerckCo USA
Salesforce.com
Hermes
BASF
AstraZeneca
Christian Dior
Broadcom
Oracle
Vipshop
CCB (Asia)
Nio
Block
Uber
Accenture
Meta (Formerly Facebook)
Berkshire Hathaway
Wells Fargo
Blackrock
Rolls-Royce
Pfizer
Microsoft
Home Depot
Mastercard
Lufthansa
Marriott
AbbVie
China Life
Baidu
Eli Lilly
DeltaAir
Chipotle
BP
General Electric
eBay
Quanta Services
Netflix
Micron
Visa
Golar LNG
ADT
JD.com
American Airlines
Porsche AG
Palo Alto Networks
Teleperformance
Lockheed Martin
Upstart Holdings Inc
Delivery Hero SE
Airbnb Inc
Nel ASA
GoHealth
Shopify
Aptiv PLC
Bank of America
PepsiCo
Philip Morris
Exxon Mobil
Procter & Gamble
Beyond Meat
Snowflake
L'Oreal
Sea
Porsche
Deutsche Bank
Nike
Unilever
CAT
Prosus N.V.
Unity Software
Citigroup
Upwork Inc.
Vir Biotechnology

Account Type

Direction

Quantity

Amount must be equal or higher than

Amount should be less than

Amount should be a multiple of the minimum lots increment

USD Down
$-

Value

$-

Commission

$-

Spread

-

Leverage

-

Conversion Fee

$-

Required Margin

$-

Overnight Swaps

$-
Start Trading

Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.

All positions on instruments denominated in a currency that is different from your account currency, will be subject to a conversion fee at the position exit as well.

What is Arm?

Founded in 1990 through a joint venture between Apple, VLSI Technology, and Acorn Computer, a UK-based educational computing company, Arm is primarily involved in the design of circuits for chips —although it doesn't engage in chip manufacturing.

Based in the UK’s Cambridge, Arm provides two primary services. Firstly, it grants licenses for fundamental chip design standards that dictate how software controls chips. These protocols are essential for chips to process calculations as required by apps, ensuring proper software functionality. Secondly, Arm licenses designs for critical chip components — essentially miniature digital processors within the chips. This service saves chip designers the time and costs associated with developing these components from scratch.

In its early years, Arm focused on serving the emerging mobile phone industry, concentrating on providing circuit blueprints for devices that operated on batteries and required minimal power consumption. Over time, Arm has become ubiquitous in the smartphone market, boasting a market share estimated at over 99%. As it transitions into a publicly traded company, Arm is eyeing expansion into the realm of chips for personal computers, servers, and other devices.

“They’re a technology leader,” Nick Einhorn, director of research at Renaissance Capital, told Morningstar. “They’ve done very well in a lot of use cases, particularly smartphones.”

Arm’s market share is so dominant that they basically “are the market,” Einhorn adds. He believes Arm will “certainly” benefit as demand for CPUs continues to expand.

Arm's major clientele includes companies like Qualcomm (QCOM), known for designing processors at the core of mobile phones. Apple has also emerged as a significant customer in recent years as the Cupertino-based company shifted its focus to designing its own chips, including those for its computer lineup. Amazon (AMZN) also employs self-designed Arm-based chips in its data centers.

However, Arm faces competition, both from newcomers employing a rival open-source chip standard called RISC-V and from major tech firms that are increasingly incorporating their circuitry into chips, sometimes replacing Arm's designs. Investors in the company are placing their bets on the assumption that Arm's designs will remain widely used as chip demand continues to grow, and that its competitors won't be able to gain a competitive advantage.

In its most recent fiscal year ending in March, Arm reported revenue of $2.68 billion and a profit of $524 million.

While Arm has experienced consistent sales growth in recent years, it has encountered a decline in smartphone shipments in more recent times. Sales dipped by approximately 2.5% in its most recent quarter, which ended in June, to reach $675 million.

When is the Arm IPO

When is the Arm IPO?


Arm and its underwriters, led by top U.S. investment bank Goldman Sachs (GS), set the IPO share price at $51 on Wednesday, concluding a week-long roadshow to investors. Its American depositary shares are slated to commence trading on the Nasdaq (NDAQ) under the ticker symbol ARM on Thursday.

The UK-headquartered company filed its application for a U.S. listing confidentially earlier this year, having previously declared its intention to go public in New York rather than in London, dealing a blow to the London Stock Exchange.

Arm’s stated price falls at the upper end of the company's targeted range of $47 to $51 per share, resulting in a valuation of $54.5 billion. The valuation was notably lower than the $64 billion at which Arm's owner, SoftBank, recently appraised the company when it acquired a stake from its Vision Fund.

Arm stock price forecasts: Chip designer looks to ride AI wave heading into IPO

While most firms are waiting until the stock hits the market to make their predictions, NewStreet Research analyst Pierre Ferragy wasted no time to see what happens with the IPO. On Wednesday, Ferragu picked up coverage of Arm shares with a Buy rating and a $59 rarget price, as per Barron’s.

“Arm’s fundamentals have not changed in the last seven years: The company rides growth in semiconductor content across all end markets, driving up adoption of its IP,” Ferragu wrote.

Ferragu cited a “high-quality financial model,” a well-timed IPO and an “attractive” valuation as three primary reasons for being bullish on the stock. “The IPO happens at a low in the smartphone market, as penetration accelerates in networking, cloud, and autos, and in the early days of the migration to the v9 architecture,” Ferragu wrote, referring to the company’s latest chip design.

Market.com Chief Market Analyst Neil Wilson was more reserved, saying the offering came at an “interesting” time for the market:

“Arm will price its shares at $51 when it lists later in New York, implying a market cap of $54bn. It’s riding an AI wave and has lots of forced buyers as SoftBank plays the indices neatly and the broader market will be riding on this IPO to an extent. We’ve not really had a major tech IPO this year and it comes at an interesting time for the market.”

Javier Correonero, an equity analyst at Morningstar, said the stock looks overvalued heading into the Arm IPO:

“[Arm stock] is very, very expensive from a valuation point of view. Everything would have to go beyond perfect for them to be able to justify that $50 billion valuation.”


With a market valuation exceeding $54 billion, Correonero anticipates that Arm's stock will command a valuation approximately 20 times its revenue. This would make the stock "quite expensive" when contrasted with its competitors, some of which are experiencing growth rates more than three times that of Arm but are trading at lower multiples — typically around 12 to 15 times their sales. Nvidia is also trading at a 20-times multiple akin to Arm's, but industry experts project the former to achieve a growth rate of approximately 100% this year. Nvidia also boasts a significantly broader variety of business operations compared to Arm.

While analysts are split in their opinions of the Arm stock price and valuation, Masayoshi Son will be able to lean on the newly listed firm as a source of financing for SoftBank.

SoftBank, known for its recent shift towards a "defensive" strategy, reduced its investment in the Chinese e-commerce powerhouse Alibaba (BABA). This move is significant, considering that Son was one of the earliest investors in Alibaba, and the company's remarkable growth from a small player to a giant has been a key factor in establishing his reputation as a visionary in the tech industry.

As highlighted by the FT, market participants believe that Son may intend to borrow against Arm’s shares while retaining ownership of the company — just like he did with Alibaba.

“SoftBank has been wanting to monetise Arm for years,” Kirk Boodry, an analyst at Astris Advisory, recently told the Financial Times. “Arm is a quality asset, with punchy revenues and good margins. They can hold on to and still have the cash to use in other areas — in that respect it’s a perfect replacement for Alibaba.”

When considering shares for trading and price predictions, remember that trading CFDs involves a significant degree of risk and could result in capital loss.

Past performance is not indicative of any future results. This information is provided for informative purposes only and should not be construed to be investment advice.

Latest news

Monday, 23 December 2024

Indices

SPOT stock price: Spotify stock reaches all-time highs

Monday, 23 December 2024

Indices

DRCT stock price today: Direct Digital Holdings spikes on high-volume move

Monday, 23 December 2024

Indices

Stock Market Today: Dow Jones Closes Higher for Third Consecutive Day

GDP data

Sunday, 22 December 2024

Indices

Morning Note: GDP in the UK, Spain and Canada to Shake Markets Today

Live Chat