Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Markets

Nvidia Is the Chip-Stock Favorite. Arm Should Be in the Same Tier, Says Analyst.

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]

Read the full article here

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Videos

Watch full video on YouTube

News

This article was written by Follow The Value Portfolio specializes in building retirement portfolios and utilizes a fact-based research strategy to identify investments. This...

News

Dear International Growth Fund Shareholder: Baron International Growth Fund® (BINIX, the Fund) gained 8.07% (Institutional Shares) during the third quarter of 2024, while its...

Videos

Watch full video on YouTube