> As Arm’s CEO, Simon Segars, explained: “We contemplated an IPO but determined
> that the pressure to deliver short-term revenue growth and profitability would
> suffocate our ability to invest, expand, move fast and innovate.”
It sounds like Arm needs a change in leadership to me. Find the capital for long-term investment somewhere and follow a path to improvement like AMD did. Yes, there is pressure to deliver short term profit as there always is today. However, that's not a strategy that works for a company like Arm. Everyone around the world can see the value in what Arm produces. Find someone to invest who isn't a hedge fund manager and still sees that value.
>Find the capital for long-term investment somewhere and follow a path to improvement like AMD did.
They did, it was called SoftBank and now SoftBank needs its money back. The comparison to AMD isn’t comparable; AMD already had a high margin business in a proven market; it’s unclear what ARM is going to be pressured to do; either they will have to put the screws on their licensors or start making their own chips (which would be no different from the concern under nvidia)
We have to distinguish between value created in the Arm ecosystem (a lot) and how much Arm retains (much less).
Nonetheless Arm seemed to do OK as a public company for 25 years but Son thought he saw an opportunity and paid a big premium for it.
I do think there is an issue around Arm as a relatively small player competing for talent with Apple, Intel etc which feels suboptimal for the industry as a whole. Perhaps eg the cloud hyperscalers could jointly and directly fund development of server chips in the same way that firms prepay TSMC for capacity.
> Nonetheless Arm seemed to do OK as a public company for 25 years but Son thought he saw an opportunity and paid a big premium for it.
Softbank tends to have a habit of overpaying. Maybe they just have more access to capital than available opportunities they can intelligently spend money on.
That argument made negative sense to me. 'Don't IPO because public companies are inherently limited to short term growth, therefore we have to be bought by an already public company?'
It is very different to be a subsidiary of a public company than to be public yourself. Take Waymo vs Alphabet. If you are the public company, you need to have your unit economics working such that you generate short term profits.
You can lose money in a subsidiary so long as it is small by comparison to your overall P&L (Waymo losses of a few billion over several years vs Google annual revenue is over $160B and profit over $34B).
If on the other hand, Waymo were its own public company (and not a subsidiary), then it would need to show results on its own.
Don't get me wrong: being a subsidiary of a public company is still worse than say being a private company with a massive warchest or being the subsidiary of a private company with strong cashflow / cash reserves.
I'm not sure that's the case. The markets aren't very keen on missing profit goals, but are very understanding of intentionally not being profitable while you use revenue to invest hard in the business. For instance Amazon has famously not had a focus on yearly profits and regularly has negative profit. The markets are more than accepting of this because they continue to grow and it's information that the market had ahead of time rather than being an excuse for missed goals.
The markets more want you to be honest in your 10-k and S-1 than strictly require short term profits.
Is this about market fundamentals? One way to think about ARM is as a vehicle for R&D, shared amongs competitors such as Apple, Qualcomm, Samsung, and Huawei.
* Do they each benefit from the R&D done by ARM?
* Is that benefit enough to be worth the cost, even shared amongst the recipients?
* Can they "agree" on an arrangement, and can ARM function well enough to stay healthy?
are we pretending that they didn't say that exclusively in hopes the deal would go through?
They will turn around that statement on a dime and not a single investor will blink with "...but you said to the regulators...". No risk in making such a silly statement.
They probably will get a change of leadership though. Often they chose the best-man-for-the-merger, and when it doesn't work out, they then actually search for the best-person-for-the-job.
> As Arm’s CEO, Simon Segars, explained: “We contemplated an IPO but determined
> that the pressure to deliver short-term revenue growth and profitability would
> suffocate our ability to invest, expand, move fast and innovate.”
It sounds like Arm needs a change in leadership to me. Find the capital for long-term investment somewhere and follow a path to improvement like AMD did. Yes, there is pressure to deliver short term profit as there always is today. However, that's not a strategy that works for a company like Arm. Everyone around the world can see the value in what Arm produces. Find someone to invest who isn't a hedge fund manager and still sees that value.