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From: Glenn Petersen6/4/2023 6:04:42 AM
   of 6018
 
I think that Softbank invested $355 million into Zume,

Fallen Pizza Startup Zume Shuts Down After Raising Millions

-- The company pulled in about $450 million from SoftBank, others

-- Baking pizza with robots in trucks was a technical challenge



A robot places a pizza into an oven at Zume Pizza in Mountain View, California, in 2016.Photographer: Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Photo
----------------------------
By Sarah McBride
Bloomberg
June 3, 2023, 2:10 AM UTC

Zume Inc., a one-time robot pizza business that came to represent the excesses of pre-pandemic venture investing, has shut operations, two people familiar with the matter said.

The company had raised about $450 million from SoftBank Group Corp.’s Vision Fund and others. It has retained Sherwood Partners, a restructuring firm, to sell its assets, one of the people said. The Information first reported the shuttering.

Zume did not respond to requests for comment.

Founded in 2015, the company was one of many attempting to use robots to make pizza. The concept never took off, and the technology was plagued by technical challenges, such as keeping melting cheese from sliding off while the pizzas baked in moving trucks.

In January 2020, the company cut over half its employees and switched to compostable packaging, based on the know-how of a southern California company it had acquired, Pivot Packaging.

Fallen Pizza Startup Zume Shuts Down After Raising Millions - Bloomberg (archive.ph)

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From: Glenn Petersen6/14/2023 6:21:30 AM
   of 6018
 
Arm in talks with big clients about investing in IPO -sources

Reuters
June 13, 20233:05 PM CDT Updated 12 hours ago

June 12 (Reuters) - SoftBank Group Corp's (9984.T) Arm is in talks with some of its biggest customers and end users about bringing on one or more anchor investors in the chip designer's initial public offering (IPO), two sources familiar with the matter said.

Arm is talking to at least ten companies, including Intel Corp (INTC.O), Alphabet Inc (GOOGL.O), Apple Inc. (AAPL.O), Microsoft Corp. (MSFT.O), TSMC (2330.TW), and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd. (005930.KS), about their potential participation in the IPO, one of the sources said.

The talks are preliminary and any decision about an anchor investment in Arm's IPO won't come till August, the source added. The investment would not come with any board seat or control, according to the source.

Arm plans to sell its shares on Nasdaq later this year, seeking to raise $8 billion-$10 billion, Reuters reported earlier in April.

Arm's designs are used to manufacture chips made by most of the world's major semiconductor companies, including Intel, AMD (AMD.O), Nvidia (NVDA.O) and Qualcomm (QCOM.O). It was not immediately clear what impact any IPO investment by one or more of those companies would have on Arm's commercial relationships.

The chip designer had filed with regulators confidentially for a U.S. stock market listing in April, setting the stage for this year's largest IPO.

Arm and Intel declined a Reuters request for comment. Bloomberg News first reported on the cornerstone investment deliberations.

Alphabet, Apple, Microsoft, TSMC and Samsung didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.

Reporting by Anirban Sen and Echo Wang in New York and Yana Gaur in Bengaluru; Editing by Rashmi Aich, Dhanya Ann Thoppil and Edward Tobin

Arm in talks with big clients about investing in IPO -sources | Reuters

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To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (6005)6/21/2023 5:12:46 AM
From: Glenn Petersen
   of 6018
 
Masayoshi Son says SoftBank ready to go on ‘counteroffensive’

Billionaire chief talks up AI and reveals he had breakdown in October where he questioned his achievements as an entrepreneur


Kana Inagaki in Tokyo
2 HOURS AGO
Financial Times

SoftBank chief Masayoshi Son has said the company will go on the “counteroffensive” after nearly three years of asset sales and hoarding cash to resume the technology group’s investments in artificial intelligence.

In his first major presentation to investors since November, the 65-year-old founder of the Japanese conglomerate said he would devote the rest of his life to being “an architect for the future of humanity”.

“We have done enough being on the defensive,” Son said on Wednesday at the company’s annual shareholders’ meeting in Tokyo. “I feel that the timing for us to go on the counteroffensive is soon. I’m very excited.”

Following heavy losses incurred by SoftBank’s Vision Funds in recent years, the tech conglomerate halted new investments and used almost all of its shares in Chinese ecommerce group Alibaba for financing. As a result, the group is now sitting on more than ¥5tn ($35bn) in cash.

“I regret big mistakes,” Son said in response to a shareholder’s question on whether the Vision Funds’ investments were actually focused on artificial intelligence.

“But still, we made investments in roughly 500 companies...and I think at least I have found more than several that are going to be big successes out of the 500. I think that’s enough.”

In May, SoftBank’s chief financial officer Yoshimitsu Goto said the company would not miss opportunities to invest in new technology such as ChatGPT but cautioned that it was not ready to accelerate its deal activity following record annual investment losses of ¥5.3tn. Ahead of Son’s presentation, shares in SoftBank rose as much as 4 per cent. Investor sentiment has improved ahead of the blockbuster listing of its UK chip designer Arm in New York.

During the AGM, Son revealed he had a crisis in October where he broke down in tears for a few days and questioned how much he had achieved as an entrepreneur.

“I realised that what I really wanted to become was an architect, to design the future of humanity,” Son said. “I want to achieve several [of my inventions] one by one and Arm will provide the key. By using Arm’s position and combining it with my ideas, there will be an amazing opportunity.”

The SoftBank boss warned that companies would fall behind if they shunned the use of generative AI but also called for regulations to ensure the technology would not be misused.

“There is a risk of scarier consequences than the atomic bomb if [AI] is misused by the wrong people .?.?. so regulations should be debated and introduced,” he said.

Masayoshi Son says SoftBank ready to go on ‘counteroffensive’ | Financial Times (archive.ph)

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To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (6006)7/12/2023 5:18:22 AM
From: Glenn Petersen
   of 6018
 
Nvidia in talks to be an anchor investor in Arm IPO

World’s most valuable semiconductor group discusses acquiring stake in SoftBank-owned chip designer ahead of New York listing

Tabby Kinder in San Francisco, Qianer Liu in Hong Kong, Nicholas Megaw in New York, Kana Inagaki in Tokyo and Tim Bradshaw in London
Financial Times

3 HOURS AGO

Chip designer Arm is in talks to bring in Nvidia as an anchor investor, while the SoftBank-owned company presses ahead with plans for a New York listing as soon as September, several people briefed on the talks said.

Nvidia, the world’s most valuable semiconductor company, was forced last year to abandon its planned $66bn acquisition of Arm after the deal was challenged by regulators.

The Silicon Valley-based chipmaker is one of several existing Arm partners, including Intel, that the UK-based company is hoping will take a long-term stake at the initial public offering stage, according to the people.

The prospective investors are still negotiating with Arm over its valuation. One person familiar with the discussions said Nvidia wanted to come in at a share price that would put Arm’s total value at $35bn to $40bn, while Arm wants to be closer to $80bn.

The aim of bringing in large anchor investors as Arm launches an IPO in New York would be to help to support the stock as SoftBank, which bought Arm for £24bn ($32bn) in 2016, sells down its stake.

Many private tech companies and their advisers are watching closely to see if Arm can succeed in launching its IPO in 2023 after a year-long slump in new listings.

Securing the advance support of a few anchor investors is a popular tactic during difficult IPO markets, serving as a way to ensure demand and reassure other potential investors.

Arm and Nvidia declined to comment. A person close to the situation said the talks had not been concluded and might not lead to an investment.

Arm is expected to be the most valuable company to go public in the US since automaker Rivian, which listed with an initial market capitalisation of $70bn in late 2021.

It is widely considered to be a less risky prospect than many IPO candidates given its previous record as a public company.

People close to SoftBank said its founder Masayoshi Son has been personally involved in seeking anchor investors for Arm. Son has been focusing on expanding the chip designer’s revenue ahead of its IPO. SoftBank declined to comment.

Arm and Nvidia have contacted regulators in the US to smooth over any potential concerns about what is likely to be a small minority investment, in the low hundreds of millions of dollars, according to people close to the discussions.

When Nvidia first announced plans to take over Arm in September 2020, competition authorities in the US and Europe objected. They said the deal might restrict rivals’ access to Arm’s intellectual property, which can be found in the vast majority of smartphones and a growing portion of the automotive market, as well as give Nvidia access to competitively sensitive information.

Nvidia is already an Arm customer but its talks to invest in the company point to bigger ambitions to expand from its core business in “graphics processing units” — dedicated chips for accelerating specialised tasks, including 3D rendering and training artificial intelligence — into the “central processing units” that handle most other computing functions.

One person familiar with the plans said Arm was keen to bring in Nvidia in its bid as a way to position AI as central to the UK group’s growth plans. “AI will be every third word in the offering document,” the person said. “Nvidia is so important as its involvement implies AI.”

The move would bring Nvidia into closer competition with Intel, whose CPUs have long dominated the PC and data centre markets.

Nvidia, which became the first chipmaker to hit a $1tn valuation in May, recently produced its first CPU using Arm’s designs as part of a so-called superchip, dubbed Grace Hopper and designed for artificial intelligence and high-performance computing.

Global listing volumes plummeted last year as investors were put off by falling stock prices, rising market volatility and the uncertain economic outlook. However, activity has begun to pick up in recent weeks, thanks in part to a broader upswing in stock prices led by Nvidia.\

Additional reporting by Richard Waters

Nvidia in talks to be an anchor investor in Arm IPO | Financial Times (archive.ph)
```

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From: Glenn Petersen8/2/2023 4:49:11 AM
   of 6018
 
SoftBank’s Arm Targets $60 Billion-Plus Value for September IPO

-- Chip design firm may raise as much as $10 billion in debut

-- Nvidia, Intel are in discussions to be anchor investors

By Min Jeong Lee, Giles Turner, and Ian King
Bloombeerg
August 2, 2023 at 12:45 AM EDT

SoftBank Group Corp.’s semiconductor unit Arm Ltd. is targeting an initial public offering at a valuation of between $60 billion and $70 billion as soon as September, a sign of bullish interest in artificial-intelligence chips, according to people familiar with the matter.

The roadshow is scheduled to start the first week of September with pricing for the IPO the following week, said one of the people, asking not to be named because the talks are private. The latest target for Arm’s valuation underscores a shift in market mood in favor of technologies linked to generative AI and chips. Earlier this year, bankers were pitching a range of valuations for the chip designer from $30 billion to $70 billion, Bloomberg News has reported.

SoftBank, led by Masayoshi Son, and Arm Chief Executive Officer Rene Haas long considered the bottom of that range too low. Arm executives may still be gunning for a valuation of as high as $80 billion, but the odds of achieving such a target are uncertain, one of the people said. The chip company is looking to raise as much as $10 billion in the IPO, Bloomberg News has reported.

Arm has “had a hugely important but behind-the-scenes and not-very-well-understood role for a very long time,” said Bob O’Donnell, president of TECHnalysis Research. “There’s this raised awareness now of what Arm does and the role that it plays.”



Rene Haas, chief executive officer of Arm.Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg
-----------------------------------------

SoftBank and Arm declined to comment.

Arm made a confidential filing for a US listing in April. A handful of big industry names, including Nvidia Corp. and Intel Corp., have been engaged in preliminary talks to become anchor investors in the IPO, which could be the year’s biggest market debut.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Barclays Plc and Mizuho Financial Group Inc. were named as IPO banks in the filing, Bloomberg News has reported.

While the Cambridge, UK-based company’s technology is used in almost every smartphone on the planet, its place in the industry has long been obscure. Arm sells the blueprints needed to design microprocessors, and licenses technology known as instruction sets that dictate how software programs communicate with those chips. The power efficiency of Arm’s technology helped make it ubiquitous on phones, where battery life is critical.

Haas, who took over as CEO last year, is now working to expand beyond the smartphone market, which has stagnated in recent years. He’s targeting more advanced computing, particularly the chips for data centers for cloud computing and artificial intelligence applications.

Processors for that market are among the most expensive — and profitable — in the industry. Amazon.com Inc. has adopted Arm-based chips for its Amazon Web Services because it says they are more efficient both in terms of energy and economics. They are used by 40,000 AWS customers.

Estimates for Arm’s value have fluctuated wildly in tandem with chip stocks since SoftBank acquired the company for $32 billion in 2016, de-listing it from the London Stock Exchange. SoftBank founder Son has regularly talked up the potential for Arm’s future growth and dominance in chip IP. In February last year, Son said he wants Arm’s debut to be “the biggest” in the history of the semiconductor industry.

A successful Arm IPO would mark a rare victory for SoftBank, which struggled after an ill-fated foray into startup investing. The company’s Vision Fund arm lost 6.9 trillion yen ($48 billion) in the last two fiscal years as the value of its holdings tumbled.

— With Edwin Chan

SoftBank’s Arm Targets $60 Billion-Plus Value for September IPO - Bloomberg (archive.ph)

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From: Glenn Petersen8/18/2023 2:32:52 PM
   of 6018
 
SoftBank buys Vision Fund's stake in Arm at valuation of $64 bln-sources

By Anirban Sen
Rueters
August 18, 202311:39 AM CDT
Updated 2 hours ago

NEW YORK, Aug 18 (Reuters) - SoftBank Group Corp (9984.T) has acquired the 25% stake in Arm Ltd it does not directly own from its Vision Fund unit in a deal that values the chip designer at $64 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.

Details of the transaction will be unveiled on Monday when Arm makes public the filing for its blockbuster stock market launch, the sources said, requesting anonymity as these discussions are confidential.

SoftBank is now expected to sell fewer Arm shares in the initial public offering (IPO) and would likely be retaining a stake of as much as 90% in the company, according to the sources, adding that Arm's capital raising from the IPO would be less than the range of $8 billion to $10 billion it was earlier planning.

SoftBank is currently in talks to list Arm at a valuation of $60 billion to $70 billion in the IPO, which is expected to happen in September, Reuters has previously reported. SoftBank, which took Arm private for $32 billion in 2016, sold a 25% stake in the company to Vision Fund 1 (VF1) for $8 billion in 2017.

The deal removes a potential overhang for Arm's stock following the IPO, because VF1 had initially planned to cash out its stake in the stock market over time following the listing, while SoftBank has indicated it will remain a long-term strategic investor.

Reuters was first to report earlier in August that SoftBank was in talks to buy the stake from the Vision Fund. The Wall Street Journal reported the financial terms of the deal earlier on Friday.

The deal also delivers a major victory for VF1's biggest investors, including Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund and Abu Dhabi's Mubadala. They nursed losses after many of SoftBank's bets on startups such as workspace provider WeWork Inc (WE.N) and ride-sharing firm Didi Global (92Sy.MU) soured.

Arm's plans to go public come as the U.S. IPO market shows early signs of a recovery after a barren spell that lasted a year and a half. Grocery delivery service Instacart and marketing automation firm Klaviyo Inc are also expected to go public in New York in September, the sources said.

Reporting by Anirban Sen in New York Additional reporting by Milana Vinn in New York and Stephen Nellis in San Francisco Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Mark Potter

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

SoftBank buys Vision Fund's stake in Arm at valuation of $64 bln-sources | Reuters

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To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (6009)8/21/2023 5:26:24 PM
From: Glenn Petersen
   of 6018
 
The Arm F-1: F-1 (sec.gov)

Arm files for Nasdaq listing, as SoftBank aims to sell shares in chipmaker it bought for $32 billion

PUBLISHED MON, AUG 21 20234:29 PM EDT
UPDATED 5 MIN AGO
Kif Leswing @KIFLESWING
Arjun Kharpal @ARJUNKHARPAL
CNBC.com

KEY POINTS

-- Arm, which is owned by SoftBank, filed on Monday to list on the Nasdaq.

-- The U.K.-based chipmaker is looking to go public during a historically slow period for U.S. IPOs.

-- SoftBank agreed to acquire Arm for $32 billion in 2016.

Arm, the chipmaker owned by Japan’s SoftBank, filed for a Nasdaq listing on Monday, positioning itself to go public during a historically slow period for tech IPOs.

The company wants to trade under the ticker symbol “ARM.”

Arm reported $524 million in net income on $2.68 billion in revenue in its fiscal 2023, which ended in March, according to the filing. Arm’s 2023 revenue was slightly down from the company’s 2022 sales of $2.7 billion.

The U.K.-based company filed confidentially for a listing in the U.S. earlier this year after previously announcing it would go public in the U.S. over the U.K., dealing a blow to the London Stock Exchange.

Arm is one of the most important chip companies. It sells licenses to an instruction set at the heart of nearly every mobile chip, and increasingly, PC and server chips as well. In recent years, it has aimed to sell more complete chip designs, which is more lucrative.

ARM chips are made by companies including Amazon, Alphabet, AMD, Intel, Nvidia, Qualcomm, and Samsung, according to the filing. Its technology is also included in Apple’s chips for iPhones. Arm said that its technology was included in over 30 billion chips shipped in its fiscal 2023. Arm typically takes a fee on every chip that is shipped using its technology.

SoftBank originally sought to sell Arm to chip giant Nvidia, but the deal faced major pushback from regulators, who raised concerns over competition and national security. SoftBank took Arm private in 2016 in a deal valued at $32 billion.

Arm did not provide a projected share price, so it’s not yet possible to estimate its valuation.

A critical component

Arm, with just under 6000 employees, plays a pivotal role in the world of consumer electronics, designing the architecture of chips that are found in 99% of all smartphones, making it a key provider of technology to Apple, Google and Qualcomm.

The company was founded in 1990 as a joint venture between several companies and Apple to create a low-power processor for battery-powered devices. It first went public in 1998, before being taken private in 2016 by SoftBank.

But the company is also facing headwinds from a slowdown in demand for products like smartphones, which has hit chip firms across the board. Arm’s net sales fell 4.6% year-on-year in the second quarter, while the unit swung to a loss, according to SoftBank’s earnings release. SoftBanks’ beleaguered Vision Fund, meanwhile, has racked up billions of dollars in losses of late due to tech bets that soured in a high interest rate environment.

In its filing, Arm made the case that its technology would be essential for AI applications, although it focuses on central processors, not the graphics processors that are required for creating big AI models. “The CPU is vital in all AI systems, whether it is handling the AI workload entirely or in combination with a co-processor, such as a GPU or an NPU,” Arm said in the filing.

Arm identified x86, the instruction set used in Intel and AMD processors, as well as RISC-V, an open source instruction set backed by several big tech companies, as sources of competition.

Arm is poised to hit the market at a time when investors are flocking to next-generation semiconductors because of the demand spurred by artificial intelligence, most notably the soaring popularity of generative AI applications. Nvidia, the chipmaker most at the heart of the generative AI boom, has seen its stock price triple this year.

However, the tech IPO market has been largely dormant for the past 20 months, with no notable venture-backed deals since Dec. 2021. Last October, Intel spun out self-driving car technology company Mobileye. That stock is up just 17% since its first day close.

Some tech investors may be looking to ARM’s offering as an indication of demand for new offerings. Grocery delivery company Instacart is among late-stage startups that are reportedly preparing to submit IPO paperwork to the SEC.

Arm files for Nasdaq listing, as SoftBank sells shares in chipmaker (cnbc.com)

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From: Glenn Petersen9/1/2023 9:01:02 PM
   of 6018
 
Exclusive: Arm signs up big tech firms for IPO at $50 bln-$55 bln valuation -sources

By Echo Wang
Reuters

September 1, 20236:39 PM CDT
Updated an hour ago

NEW YORK, Sept 1 (Reuters) - Customers of Arm Holdings Ltd including Apple Inc (AAPL.O), Nvidia Corp (NVDA.O), Alphabet Inc (GOOGL.O) and Advanced Micro Devices Inc (AMD.O) have agreed to invest in the chip designer's initial public offering, according to people familiar with the matter.

Intel Corp (INTC.O), Samsung Electronics Co Ltd (005930.KS), Cadence Design Systems Inc (CDNS.O) and Synopsys Inc (SNPS.O) have also agreed to participate as investors in the offering, the sources added. The talks are ongoing and some other potential investors are also in discussions to invest in the IPO, the sources added.

SoftBank Group Corp (9984.T), which owns Britain-based Arm, is targeting a valuation between $50 billion and $55 billion, Reuters reported earlier on Friday. Arm's clients have agreed to invest in that valuation range, the sources said.

While it is possible that demand for Arm's shares will lead to a higher valuation by the time the IPO prices, the move represents a climb-down from the $64 billion valuation at which SoftBank acquired the 25% stake in the company it did not already own from its $100 billion Vision Fund last month.

Apple, Nvidia and the other strategic investors have agreed to invest between $25 million and $100 million each in the blockbuster IPO, the sources said. Arm and SoftBank have set aside 10% of the shares to be sold in the IPO for its clients, Reuters has previously reported.

Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O), which had previously held talks to invest in the IPO, has decided not to participate, one of the sources said, requesting anonymity as the discussions are confidential.

A scramble among Arm's clients, comprising the world's biggest technology companies, to snap up shares in the IPO is testing the semiconductor designer's adherence to not picking sides in the chip industry.

The interest is fueled by a desire by companies to expand their commercial relationship with Arm and make sure rivals do not gain an edge, Reuters has previously reported.

While an investment in the IPO would not come with a seat on Arm's board or ability to dictate strategy, it could strengthen ties with each participating company and make it harder for a competitor to acquire Arm later.

Arm and SoftBank did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

AMD, Intel, Synopsys and Nvidia declined to comment. Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Samsung and Cadence did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The Wall Street Journal reported on Arm's valuation target earlier on Friday.

Reporting by Echo Wang in New York; Editing by Anirban Sen and Rosalba O'Brien

Exclusive: Arm signs up big tech firms for IPO at $50 bln-$55 bln valuation -sources | Reuters

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To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (6011)9/13/2023 5:22:55 PM
From: Glenn Petersen
   of 6018
 
Arm prices IPO at $51 per share, valuing company at over $54 billion

PUBLISHED WED, SEP 13 20234:14 PM EDT
UPDATED 2 MIN AGO
Leslie Picker @LESLIEPICKER
Kif Leswing @KIFLESWING
CNBC.com

KEY POINTS

-- Chip design company Arm priced its long-awaited initial public offering on Wednesday.

-- Masayoshi Son’s SoftBank will own about 90% of the company after the offering.

-- Arm customers, including Apple, Google, Nvidia and Samsung, have said they will buy shares in the IPO.

Arm, the chip design firm that supplies core technology to companies including Apple and Nvidia, priced its initial public offering at $51 a share, according to a source familiar with the matter.

Arm’s fully diluted market cap, which includes outstanding restricted stock units, is over $54 billion at the $51 offer price.

The U.K.-based company is listing at least 95.5 million American depository shares on the Nasdaq, and SoftBank, its current owner, will control about 90% of the company’s outstanding shares.

The offering is at the top of Arm’s expected price range of $47 to $51. The company will start to trade Thursday under the symbol “ARM.”

Arm said in its prospectus that revenue in its fiscal year that ended in March slipped less than 1% from the prior year to $2.68 billion. Net income in fiscal 2023 dropped 22% to $524 million.

Arm is riding the wave of excitement around artificial intelligence as it aims to crack open the tech IPO market after a nearly two-year pause. It’s set to be the biggest technology offering of the year.

Arm’s valuation for a chip company is exceedingly rich when compared to any player in the market other than Nvidia. At $54 billion, Arm would carry a price-to-earnings multiple of about 104, based on profit in the latest fiscal year.

Nvidia is valued at 108 times earnings, but that’s after forecasting revenue growth of 170% for the current quarter, driven by AI chips. The Invesco PHLX Semiconductor ETF, which is designed to measure the performance of the 30 biggest U.S. chip companies, has a price-to-earnings ratio of about 25.

Many of Arm’s most important customers, including Apple, Google, Nvidia, Samsung, AMD, Intel and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, said they would buy shares as part of the offering. Arm’s technology is used in 99% of mobile processors around the world.

Arm’s architecture outlines how a central processor works at its most basic level, such as how to do arithmetic or how to access computer memory. The company was originally founded in 1990 to build chips for devices with batteries and took off when it started to be widely used in smartphone chips. Arm’s instruction set uses less power than the x86 architecture used in PC and server chips by Intel and AMD.

While some of Arm’s customers just use the instruction set and design their own CPUs, Arm also licenses entire designs of its own to chipmakers they can use as CPU cores in their own chips. Amazon uses Arm CPU designs in some of its server chips.

In a presentation to investors, Arm officials said the company has room to grow beyond just smartphones and wants to design more chips for data centers and AI applications. It said it expects the total market for chip designs to be worth about $250 billion by 2025.

Correction: A prior version of this story had the incorrect IPO price

Arm prices IPO at $51 a share, valuing company at over $54 billion (cnbc.com)

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To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (6012)9/13/2023 8:15:04 PM
From: Elroy
   of 6018
 
Is one way to think about Arm as they license subroutines that are used by other chip makers in designing chips?

So you can use Arm's "cores" to provide some off the shelf chip functions, and then your chip designers customize your IP around the cores, and together you've got a chip with some function, and the chip designer owes Arm some license fee based on the core useage?

In other words, chip design subroutines?

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