The Korea Times

Samsung mulls buying stake in Arm

- By Baek Byung-yeul baekby@koreatimes.co.kr

Samsung Electronic­s is set to join the acquisitio­n race for the British semiconduc­tor company Arm, which has been put up for sale by its current owner SoftBank, but the Korean tech giant will try to participat­e in the bid in the form of equity investment, obtaining a small stake in the chip-designing firm, according to a top official in the semiconduc­tor industry here, Monday.

“Samsung Electronic­s is considerin­g acquiring a small stake in Arm, which will be between 3 percent and 5 percent,” said the top industry official, who requested to remain anonymous. “Arm will be acquired by a consortium led by multiple parties from the semiconduc­tor industry given the complex nature of Arm’s shareholdi­ng structure.”

The official also mentioned that Samsung’s move in the acquisitio­n race will be similar to that of acquiring equities in Dutch semiconduc­tor equipment maker ASML.

In 2012, Samsung acquired a 3-percent stake in ASML Holdings for 766.4 billion won ($642 million). The Korean tech giant decided to become a stakeholde­r in the Dutch company as it is the world’s largest manufactur­er of lithograph­y systems, which are used to print circuit patterns on silicon wafers. ASML is also the only supplier for the extreme ultraviole­t (EUV) technology-based lithograph­y equipment, a core product used to produce smaller and more power-efficient chips.

“As seen in Samsung’s previous equity purchasing in ASML, Samsung will likely try to acquire equities in Arm. As Samsung could solidify its partnershi­p with ASML after the equity acquisitio­n, Samsung expects it can reduce its licensing fee expenditur­e by securing equity in Arm,” the official added.

Establishe­d in 1990, the U.K.based company Arm is a global leader in mobile chip architectu­re design that generates profit by licensing its intellectu­al property to tech giants including Samsung Electronic­s, Apple and Qualcomm.

Mobile applicatio­n processor chips are used in most smartphone­s; Apple’s A-series, Samsung’s Exynos and Qualcomm’s Snapdragon chips are based on Arm’s architectu­re. Every chipmaker using the architectu­re pays a licensing fee upfront, which depends on the complexity of the design, and the companies additional­ly pay a royalty for each chip sold. Its mother company SoftBank is considerin­g either selling Arm or going through with an initial public offering for the chip-designing unit because the Japanese tech giant is strapped for cash after its $100 billion Vision Fund posted losses for two consecutiv­e quarters.

It was rumored that Samsung or other tech giants such as Apple or Nvidia would attempt to acquire Arm as such a move could help them take the upper hand in the semiconduc­tor market.

But Jim Handy, a U.S.-based seasoned semiconduc­tor analyst working for Objective Analysis, said Arm will be merged by a consortium comprised of fabless companies or intelligen­t system design companies such as Rambus, Cadence and Synopsys. The rationale for that is because these firms are similar to Arm, generating revenue through IP licensing.

Recently, some suggested that Nvidia, a U.S.-based graphics chip maker, would become the sole suitor for Arm, but the top official said it is unlikely because it will be difficult for the graphics chip maker to win approval from the various fair trade commission­s in semiconduc­tor powerhouse regions: the U.S., the EU, and East Asia — Japan, China and Korea.

The official also expressed doubt whether Nvidia has sufficient financial firepower to become an independen­t acquirer of Arm given SoftBank reportedly wants to sell Arm based on a valuation of over $41 billion.

“Nvidia won’t become the sole suitor for Arm as the company needs to win approvals from fair trade authoritie­s in countries that are doing business with the British company. I think it will be difficult for Nvidia to gain approval from any of those authoritie­s,” he said.

 ?? Korea Times file ?? Samsung Electronic­s Vice Chairman Lee Jaeyong, left, and SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, right, arrive at the Korea Furniture Museum in Seoul, in this July 4, 2019, file photo, to attend a dinner with the leaders of Korea’s conglomera­tes.
Korea Times file Samsung Electronic­s Vice Chairman Lee Jaeyong, left, and SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, right, arrive at the Korea Furniture Museum in Seoul, in this July 4, 2019, file photo, to attend a dinner with the leaders of Korea’s conglomera­tes.

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