Sept 14 (Reuters) – SoftBank’s chip designer Arm Holdings (ARM.O) is set to debut on the Nasdaq on Thursday, in what could be the biggest test for initial public offerings (IPOs) in the United States after a listing drought that lasted for nearly 16 months.
The company has secured a valuation of $54.5 billion after pricing its offer at the top end of its indicated range at $51 per American Depositary Share.
It was taken private seven years ago for $32 billion by SoftBank (9984.T), which has been looking to cash out some of its stake since at least 2020, when it signed a $40 billion deal with chipmaker Nvidia (NVDA.O) for Arm.
The plans, however, were abandoned less than two years later due to regulatory roadblocks.
Since then it has pivoted towards an IPO, though that also came with its own hurdles, including run-ins with the British government that was campaigning for a London listing for the chip designer.
Arm’s return as a public company represents a climb-down from the $64 billion valuation at which the Japanese investment giant last month acquired the 25% stake it did not already own from the $100 billion Vision Fund it manages.
The IPO fetched $4.87 billion for SoftBank, which still holds a 90.6% stake in Arm, according to a regulatory filing. Cornerstone investors including Apple (AAPL.O), Intel (INTC.O) and Alphabet (GOOGL.O) also participated in the offering.
Hopes of a revival in the IPO market largely depend on the success of the high-profile listings of Arm and other marquee startups, including grocery delivery firm Instacart and marketing firm Klaviyo.
Investors have over the last year begun to pay more attention to profitability, shunning cash-burning startups that had in 2021 fetched lofty valuations on the back of a record year for deals.
“HYPED LISTING”
“The Arm IPO is the most hyped listing we’ve had in the markets for a while,” said Kyle Rodda, senior market analyst at brokerage firm Capital.com.
“It will also be a major test of risk appetite and whether these high-growth, speculative companies still attract interest in a new world of higher interest rates.”
The 10 biggest U.S. IPOs of the past four years are down an average of 47% from the closing price on their first day of trading, according to the analysis of LSEG data as of Friday.
Investors who bought at the top of an intra-day price surge that often occurs in high-profile listings would have fared even worse, with an average loss of 53%.
Arm has positioned itself as indispensable in the tech hardware ecosystem as its chip designs power nearly every smartphone in the world, from Apple’s iPhones to Samsung’s (005930.KS) Android-based devices.
“Despite some concerns about the company’s exposure to numerous risks in China, it’s not stopped a juggernaut of enthusiasm, with the IPO oversubscribed multiple times,” said Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets, Hargreaves Lansdown.
In the run-up to Arm’s debut, chip stocks including Nvidia (NVDA.O), Intel (INTC.O), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD.O), Broadcom (AVGO.O), Qualcomm (QCOM.O) and Micron Technology (MU.O) were up between 0.6% and 1.2% in premarket trading.
Arm has told potential investors that the cloud computing market, of which it has only a 10% share and therefore more room to expand, could grow at an annual rate of 17% through 2025, mainly due to advances in artificial intelligence.
Barclays (BARC.L), Goldman Sachs (GS.N), JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N) and Mizuho Financial Group (8411.T) are the lead underwriters.
NASDAQ SCORES
Arm’s hotly-anticipated debut also gives the Nasdaq (NDAQ.O), which won the listing, a potential boost to future revenue growth.
Large deals like Arm provide the Nasdaq with short-term publicity and is a long-term bet to boost recurring revenue the exchange collects from annual listing fees, analysts said.
“Anytime it (Nasdaq) gets a new listed company, it’s able to drive revenue not just through the listing, but also through the other services that it sells to these listed companies on their exchange,” said Andrew Bond, managing director and senior fintech analyst, at Rosenblatt news Securities.
The IPO is also set to put the Nasdaq ahead of rival NYSE in terms of capital raisings this year, according to a Reuters calculation.
After Arm’s stock offering, Nasdaq has 67 traditional U.S. IPOs raising a combined value of $8.6 billion, while the NYSE had eight listings raising $6.4 billion, according to Dealogic data.
The two major exchanges compete for big IPOs. However, they have different listings standards, meaning some of the Nasdaq’s IPOs may not qualify to list on the NYSE.
The Nasdaq now has nearly 157 companies waiting to go public, a 40% increase from a year ago, according to a source familiar with the matter.
Reporting by Manya Saini and Niket Nishant in Bengaluru and Laura Mathews in New York; Additional reporting by Medha Singh; Editing by Arun Koyyur
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Manya Saini reports on prominent publicly listed U.S. financial firms including Wall Street’s biggest banks, card companies, asset managers and fintechs. Also covers late-stage venture capital funding, initial public offerings on U.S. exchanges alongside news and regulatory developments in the cryptocurrency industry. Her work usually appears in the finance, markets, business and future of money sections of the website. Contact: 9958867986 Niket Nishant reports on breaking news and the quarterly earnings of Wall Street’s largest banks, card companies, financial technology upstarts and asset managers. He also covers the biggest IPOs on U.S. exchanges, and late-stage venture capital funding alongside news and regulatory developments in the cryptocurrency industry. His writing appears on the finance, business, markets and future of money sections of the website. He did his post-graduation from the Indian Institute of Journalism and New Media (IIJNM) in Bengaluru.
Thursday, September 14, 2023
SoftBank’s Arm set for Nasdaq debut after biggest US IPO since 2021
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