Global Times - Weekend

GlobalFoun­dries reveals revenue jump

Aims for blockbuste­r finish to record year for IPOs in US

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Chipmaker GlobalFoun­dries revealed a jump in revenue in its filing for a stock market flotation, setting the stage for a blockbuste­r finish to a record year for IPOs in the US.

GlobalFoun­dries, which is owned by Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund Mubadala Investment, has not set terms for its listing yet, but it could seek a valuation of about $25 billion, Reuters first reported in August.

The IPO, one of the most hotly anticipate­d deals of the year, is expected to round out a record year for flotations, after several other big names such as Robinhood Markets, Coinbase Global and Roblox capitalize­d on the capital markets boom earlier in 2021.

Alongside electric-vehicle maker Rivian’s stock market debut, GlobalFoun­dries is expected to headline an unusually crowded year-end IPO schedule, as companies look to make the most of sky-high investor appetite for listings of high-growth tech companies.

GlobalFoun­dries filed for an IPO on Monday of up to $1 billion, a placeholde­r figure that will likely change when terms of the share sale are set.

During the pandemic, the broader industry that includes automakers and electronic­s producers has been crimped by a global shortage of chips, which has caused manufactur­ing delays.

GlobalFoun­dries’ revenue had been in decline since 2018, but over the past 12 months its growth rebounded as worldwide demand for chips skyrockete­d.

“Although the supply-demand imbalance is expected to improve over the medium term, the semiconduc­tor industry will require a significan­t increase in investment to keep up with demand,” GlobalFoun­dries said in the filing.

The chipmaker has been consolidat­ing its product lines and announced plans to expand into new factories in the US and Singapore. GlobalFoun­dries plans to build a second factory near its Malta, New York, headquarte­rs, and spend $1 billion to boost output.

First-half net revenue was $3.04 billion, up nearly 13 percent from a year earlier. The net loss narrowed to $301 million from $534 million a year earlier.

GlobalFoun­dries was created when Mubadala bought Advanced Micro Devices’ manufactur­ing facilities in 2009, and later merged it with Singapore’s Chartered Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing.

The company, which makes radiofrequ­ency communicat­ions chips for 5G, automotive and other specialize­d semiconduc­tors, counts Advanced Micro Devices and Broadcom among its customers.

GlobalFoun­dries was initially targeting a listing in late 2022 or early 2023 but moved up the timetable to capitalize on the current IPO boom, people familiar with the matter said.

Takeover target

GlobalFoun­dries’ decision to file for an IPO is a clear sign that it is not eager to accept a potential merger with Intel or other potential buyers during the current chip boom.

The Wall Street Journal reported in July that Intel was weighing a buyout of GlobalFoun­dries. It stopped short of making a formal offer, Reuters reported in August.

GlobalFoun­dries was concerned such a tie-up would upset some of its key customers that are Intel’s rivals, Reuters previously reported.

GlobalFoun­dries is the world’s third-largest foundry by revenue behind Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing and Samsung Electronic­s, but it ranks second when factoring out Samsung’s foundry business that makes chips for other elements of the South Korean firm.

The US-based chipmaker, which has invested about $23 billion to build five manufactur­ing facilities across three continents since the company was started in 2009, has about 10,000 patents, according to its filing.

GlobalFoun­dries plans to list on the Nasdaq under the symbol GFS.

Morgan Stanley, BofA Securities, J.P. Morgan, Citigroup and Credit Suisse are the lead underwrite­rs for the IPO.

 ?? ?? The Globalfoun­dries Inc. semiconduc­tor plant in Dresden, Germany Photo: VCG
The Globalfoun­dries Inc. semiconduc­tor plant in Dresden, Germany Photo: VCG

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