Arm is preparing for the biggest initial public offering of the year. Its mooted valuation has attracted some skepticism but there is reason to give the chip-design company the kind of premium garnered by stock market favorite
Nvidia,
according to analysts at Susquehanna Financial Group.
Arm has been aiming for a valuation of up to $52 billion according to its filings, with American depositary shares priced in a range from $47 to $51 each. Susquehanna’s Christopher Rolland was slightly more cautious, putting Arm’s valuation at a fair range of $48 billion to $50 billion, with shares priced at $47 to $50 a share.
However, that’s still valuing Arm at a premium to other chip stocks. Susquehanna’s valuation for Arm is based on an enterprise value-to-sales multiple of 14 times its expected fiscal 2025 sales figure.
That would put Arm just below
Nvidia’s
(ticker: NVDA) EV/Sales multiple of 15 times on the same basis and well ahead of an average of around 10 times for a wider peer group including companies such as
Qualcomm
(QCOM),
Intel
(INTC) and
Advanced Micro Devices
(AMD).
Some market commentators, including Barron’s, have suggested Arm could struggle to achieve a significant premium.
However, Rolland said a premium valuation was justified by Arm’s expected compound annual revenue growth of 20% through to fiscal 2027 and improving operating margins. While its key smartphone market is sluggish, Susquehanna’s analysts are backing Arm to achieve a more diversified revenue mix including cloud computing and increased automotive market share.
“As Arm iterates … we see continued opportunity for core improvements, driving up license fees and chip ASPs [average selling prices],” wrote Rolland.
There are risks to Arm’s growth, including its exposure to China where it relies on an independent company to conduct sales, and the growth of open-source RISC-V chip architecture which is used by companies that want to avoid paying royalties to Arm. However, Rolland noted Arm’s designs come at a fraction of the cost of developing original intellectual property and it has a global community of software developers familiar with its designs.
Write to Adam Clark at [email protected]
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