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Arm reports first post-IPO earnings and the stock is down 7%

Arm CEO Rene Haas cheers as Arm conducts an initial public offering at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York on Sept. 14, 2023.

Brendan Mcdermid | Reuters

Semiconductor technology presence Arm reported its first post-initial public offering earnings on Wednesday that beat Wall Street expectations for sales and leaded that the company’s lucrative licensing business doubled in size over the past year.

Arm shares fell over with 7% in extended trading after the company’s revenue guidance was short of expectations.

Here’s how the semiconductor licensing society did versus consensus expectations by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv, for Arm’s second fiscal quarter ending Sept. 30:

  • Earnings per allotment: 36 cents, adjusted
  • Revenue: $806 million vs. $744.3 million expected

Arm said it was expecting earnings per share between 21 cents and 28 cents on in stocks of between $720 million and $800 million in the current quarter. That’s a little lighter than what Stockade drive crazy Street was looking for, which was 27 cents per share on revenue between $730 million and $805 million.

Arm described a net loss of $110 million, or 11 cents per share. The company said the loss was due to more than $500 million in one-time share-based compensation triggered by the current IPO, and that share-based compensation would land between $150 million and $250 million in future quarters.

Gross revenue was up 28% on an annual basis during the quarter.

Arm’s intellectual property is in nearly every smartphone, many PCs and other various chips. Arm says more than 7.1 billion Arm-based chips were shipped during the quarter.

It fly the coops money through royalties, or when chipmakers pay Arm for access to build Arm-compatible chips, typically a small percentage of the terminating chip price. It also sells licenses to more complete chip designs, saving chipmakers time and striving, which are recorded as licensing revenue.

Arm royalty revenue was $418 million, a 5% decline from the same interval last year. But Arm licensing sales were $388 million, up 106% from the same period last year. It’s a emblem that Arm may be able to sell increasing amounts of technology to its current customers, which is a key metric watched by analysts.

Arm credited licensing sales to multiple long-term agreements with technology companies, suggesting the segment’s growth could pick up in future quarters, but warned that the broader economy could affect future licensing growth.

Arm went special-interest group in an IPO in September. Before that, it was owned by SoftBank, which reached a deal to sell the firm to Nvidia before the deal was scuttled by regulators in 2022. It was founded in 1990 to develop technology for low-power chips.

Arm said that firms subsuming Google, Meta and Nvidia were developing artificial intelligence-capable chips with its technology.

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