HomeBusinessPoor forecasts results in line with expectations and shares fall

Poor forecasts results in line with expectations and shares fall

By Max A. Cherney, Deborah Mary Sophia

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -Chip designer Arm Holdings forecast on Wednesday that sales will be in line with Wall Street targets, leading to a 4.5% drop in shares, which some analysts attribute to dashed hopes for a stronger AI-powered growth.

Bets that Arm, which licenses its designs, will benefit from a wave of AI computing have more than doubled the chip designer’s stock price since its IPO last September, giving it a market value of about $144 billion. However, the prediction fell short of the expectations of companies like AMD and Nvidia that directly design AI chips.

“Arm has done a good job of associating itself with some of these AI semiconductor trends and the challenge is that because they’ve done that, they’ve raised expectations that may not yet be fully met,” said Bob O’Donnell, president . and principal analyst at TECHnalysis Research. “They are still a few steps away from the final chips,” he added.

Arm’s results on Wednesday beat second-quarter revenue and profit expectations, partly because customers like Apple are using a more profitable version of its next-generation technology.

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For the current fiscal third quarter, however, Arm expects revenue between $920 million and $970 million, with a midpoint of $945 million, compared to an average analyst estimate of $944.3 million, according to LSEG data.

The company said it expects fiscal third-quarter earnings of between 32 and 36 cents per share. Analysts had expected third-quarter earnings of 34 cents per share.

“Investors want to see the current AI explosion in the results,” said Kinngai Chan, senior research analyst at Summit Insights Group.

“This quarter is all about validating the strategies we’ve been talking about,” CEO Rene Haas told Reuters in an interview. “We have some real proof points.”

Arm generates revenue from licensing fees for its chip designs and collects a royalty for each chip sold using its technology. The company is in the midst of rolling out its v9 architecture, which is expected to bring higher royalty payments.

Arm’s designs are the basis for almost every smartphone in the world, and the company has tried to make headway in data centers and other markets. It has developed a number of pre-built designs that help customers build chips faster and has doubled the number of pre-built design licenses this fiscal year, the company said.

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Haas said the company has signed up its first smartphone chip customer for its off-the-shelf blueprints. Arm has previously sold these designs to server chip designers.

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