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Arm Holdings shares gain nearly 25% in biggest IPO since late 2021

Most consumers use at least one product that contains Arm’s chips.

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Shares of UK chip designer Arm Holdings rose almost 25% in their stock market debut, in the largest initial public offering of shares in nearly two years.

The shares opened at 56.10 dollars (£45.20) on the Nasdaq on Thursday after having been priced at 51 dollars (£41.09).

They closed at 63.59 dollars (£51.24), giving Arm a market value of 68 billion dollars (£54.8 billion).

Most consumers use at least one product that contains Arm’s chips, though many people may not be familiar with the company itself.

Arm Holdings chief executive Rene Haas, right, and Softbank CFO Yoshimitsu Goto shake hands at the Nasdaq MarketSite during the ARM Holdings IPO in New York’s Times Square
Arm Holdings chief executive Rene Haas, right, and SoftBank CFO Yoshimitsu Goto shake hands at the Nasdaq MarketSite during the Arm Holdings IPO in New York’s Times Square (Richard Drew/AP)

More recently, Arm has expanded into artificial intelligence, smart devices, cloud computing, the metaverse and autonomous driving.

Arm’s offering is an important development for the IPO market, which has seen relatively few companies go public in the past two years.

It is also a key moment for the Japanese technology investor SoftBank, which acquired Arm in 2016, as well as investment banks such as Goldman Sachs that recently have taken in far less revenue from underwriting and advisory fees.

SoftBank will retain a nearly 90% stake in Arm.

It is the biggest IPO since the electric truck maker Rivian debuted in November 2021 with a market value of more than 66 billion dollars (£53.2 billion).

Arm’s business centres on designing chips and licensing the intellectual property to customers, rather than chip manufacturing, for which it relies on partners.

The company recorded 2.68 billion dollars (£2.1 billion) of revenue in its last fiscal year, which ended in March, and had 524 million dollars (£422 million) in profit for that period.

Arm Holdings chief executive Rene Haas poses for photos outside the Nasdaq MarketSite, during his company’s IPO, in New York’s Times Square
Arm Holdings chief executive Rene Haas poses for photos outside the Nasdaq MarketSite during his company’s IPO in Times Square (Richard Drew/AP)

Helping to boost that figure was a proliferation of deals involving special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs.

Also know as blank cheque companies, SPACs exist solely to buy a private company and take it public.

Some companies prefer SPAC deals because there are fewer disclosure requirements.

Then last year the Federal Reserve rapidly raised interest rates to combat high inflation and the stock market went into reverse, with the S&P dropping nearly 20% and the Nasdaq composite falling more than 30%.

Private companies became hesitant to go public, and the number of IPOs sank to 71.

This year, with the economy showing unexpected resilience, 70 companies had gone public by early September, although very few companies are choosing to go public via a SPAC deal.

Arm was previously a public company from 1998 to 2016.

SoftBank Group chief executive Masayoshi Son announced the Arm acquisition for 32 billion dollars (£25.8 billion) in 2016 with great fanfare, stressing it highlighted his belief in the potential of IoT, or the Internet of Things technology.

Arm Holdings chief executive Rene Haas holds the Nasdaq Opening Bell Crystal at the Nasdaq MarketSite during his company’s IPO in New York’s Times Square
Arm Holdings chief executive Rene Haas holds the Nasdaq Opening Bell Crystal at the Nasdaq MarketSite (Richard Drew/AP)

At that time, Mr Son had said he expected Arm to grow “explosively” as its products got used in electric vehicles as well as mobile phones.

After the deal fell through, Mr Son installed Rene Haas as chief executive of Arm.

Mr Haas is a veteran of the semiconductor industry, who previously did a stint at Nvidia.

Mr Son, who founded SoftBank, is one of the most famous rags-to-riches successes in Japan’s business world.

He has enjoyed both victories and defeats in his array of technology investments, although he insists he has had more long-term wins than failures.

A graduate of the University of California Berkeley, he latched on to the potential of the internet decades ago.

The slump in IPOs, as well as mergers and acquisitions, has contributed to a decline in revenue at some of Wall Street’s storied institutions, including Goldman Sachs.

Goldman is one of the lead underwriters for the Arm IPO, as well as an offering from grocery delivery service Instacart, expected next week.

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