The Importance of Paying Attention to Arm’s Upcoming IPO

The Importance of Paying Attention to Arm’s Upcoming IPO

As expected, Apple’s ‌chip design⁢ partner Arm is moving ‍toward an IPO. It is interesting the extent to which the risks Arm describes‌ in its IPO prospectus echo those currently faced by ⁢Apple and​ most leading​ tech companies. That’s why ‌everyone in tech will⁤ pay attention to this offering.

Too big to grow?

As with all‍ the world’s biggest ‌tech firms, Arm’s IPO prospectus describes a company that is a victim of its own success. Think ‌about‍ it…

With about 99% of ‍the world’s ‌smartphones using ‍its⁢ reference designs to a ⁣greater or lesser ​extent, the company can’t ‌maintain growth​ in ‌the mobile market alone. That’s not dissimilar to‌ the⁣ challenge most others face, though Apple is⁣ currently scooping up mobile industry market share as ⁤the overall size ​of that ‍industry declines.

International (bad)‍ relations

Arm’s IPO also reflects on its exposure to China. The world isn’t getting‍ along like it used to do, which means increasing tensions between global superpowers is generating tricky challenges ⁢for firms built on notions of globalism, ​internationalism, and relatively free trade.

We’ve seen the impact of these worsening⁣ relations during the Covid crisis, when⁤ supply ⁢chains struggled and major product‌ launches were delayed. ​Apple suffered a ‍lot as workers​ went on strike in ‌China protesting Covid prevention lockdowns. But while ‍that plague​ may be playing​ second fiddle on the news agenda‍ today,‌ it hasn’t ⁤gone away. These challenges, related ⁤supply chain challenges, the war in Ukraine, and increasingly‌ poor economic ‍conditions are all problems​ for ⁤Arm ‌and challenges ​for everyone else in global tech.

Getting into new markets

With Vision Pro, Apple recently signalled its intentions to develop its ‌business into​ new markets. That’s not a ⁤particularly new approach⁣ — Apple Watch, AirPods, HomePods, and the company’s​ many services all show a company focused on investing today’s⁢ record iPhone revenues into equally big ⁢businesses tomorrow.

Speculating to accumulate is how companies maintain themselves in difficult business environments, so it’s no⁢ surprise Apple ‌is doing this now. But ‌some⁤ sectors remain⁣ relatively closed to Cupertino, particularly ‍the burgeoning generative AI space.

Arm has similar⁣ problems, and its IPO prospectus describes‌ these well, telling us that (perhaps like Apple?) it​ wants to⁢ build ⁤its ⁣business in AI and in automotive chips.⁤ (It is worth pointing out that Arm’s⁣ reference designs⁣ are used in chips such as Apple’s that offer their​ own built-in cores to handle machine intelligence⁤ functions, ‍such as photography ⁤or image ​recognition.)

Expanding​ into new markets, worsening international relations, market​ decline, ⁣and the challenges‍ of growth ⁢once you ⁤reach a certain size are ​common refrains‌ across every business and industry at this point⁤ in time.

So, what happens next?

In the ⁢short term,⁣ Arm’s current owner, Softbank, will put Arm on the IPO block later this ⁤year. ⁣When it does, ‍it will…

2023-08-23 23:24:03
Original from www.computerworld.com ⁣ rnrn

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