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ARM TechCon 2011- Investor Event

On Wednesday 26th October ARM hosted an investor day in Santa Clara, California. The event, which was hosted with Goldman Sachs, coincided with ARM’s annual technology conference (TechCon). Investors and analysts attended Key Note addresses from thought-leading companies in the ARM ecosystem such as Oracle, Microsoft and Avnet. They also enjoyed an ARM-guided tour of TechCon, and were treated to five investor Q&A sessions with ARM executives and key ARM Partners.

During the three days of TechCon there were a number of important announcements, both from ARM and from ARM’s partners. This included the release of ARM’s v8 architecture, which for the first time...

Interview with ARM’s Embedded Team on Microcontrollers

This post is the last in a series of five where we have discussed a number of key markets for ARM over the next five years. ARM’s opportunity to grow royalty revenue is driven by multiple markets that are growing structurally and where we may also gain share. In this blog we interview Gary Atkinson, Director of Embedded Segment Marketing, to discuss ARM’s growth opportunity in Microcontrollers.

Hi Gary, what exactly are microcontrollers and why is this market so important to ARM?
Hi Jonathan, microcontrollers or MCUs, are low cost general purpose chips that are used to provide some embedded control capability into the products that we use every day. These products range from white goods such as washing machines to industrial control systems within factories, elevators, vending machines.

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The microcontroller market is huge with nearly 6 billion chips being shipped in 2010. It is a highly fragmented market with many semiconductor companies having multiple microcontroller product lines. On the demand side there are many Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) who are buying anything from a few hundred to many million microcontrollers per year, often from multiple suppliers. Market analysts expect the MCU market to grow at about 9% per annum for the next five years, and in 2010 we estimate that ARM had about a 10% market share of the tot...

Interview with ARM’s Hard Disk Drive Team

ARM’s opportunity to grow royalty revenue over the next five years is driven by multiple markets that are growing structurally and where we may also gain share. This blog is one five where we examine each of these key markets.

Here we interview Lakshmi Mandyam, Director of Enterprise Segment Marketing at ARM to discuss the impact of Hard Disk Drive (HDD) growth for ARM. This post is one of.

Hi Lakshmi, how did ARM originally get into the HDD market?
Hi Jonathan, ARM identified hard disk drives as an opportunity for growth in the late 1990’s. At this time the controller chips in enterprise hard drives were struggling to cope with larger, denser disks and the requirement to read data ever faster from the disk. OEMs were struggling with the R&D burden of having to support multiple proprietary architectures across the full range of their product platforms. ARM addressed this problem by working closely with the leading HDD OEMs and semiconductor companies to identify how we could develop a family of processors that could address their specific needs and leverage ARM’s breadth of silicon partners and software partners.

We realised that the key to solving their challenges was in addressing their product development needs beyond just the processor to understand their technical and business challenges. We needed technology to support the software engineers writing the HDD-specific algorithms and c...

Interview with ARM’s Home Team on Digital TVs and Set-Top Boxes (STBs)

Over the next five years, ARM’s opportunity to grow royalty revenue is driven by multiple markets that are growing structurally and where we may also gain share. This post is one of five where we look at each of these markets.

In this blog we interview Kris Hong, Director of Home Segment Marketing at ARM to discuss the impact of Digital TVs and STB growth.

Hi Kris, how is ARM’s technology used in DTVs and STBs today, how big is the market, and what is ARM’s market share?
Hi Jonathan, ARM’s technology is used in many different ways within the Digital TV and STB market. ARM’s chips could be controlling the user interface or acting as a modem connecting the TV to the satellite dish or cable provider, as well as providing data connectivity to other devices, such as WiFi and Bluetooth chips. According to market analysts, in 2010 there were about 350m DTV and STB devices shipped. There can be multiple ARM-based chips per device and ARM estimates that the total available market (TAM) for ARM-based chips in 2010 was about 450m. In 2010 ARM’s partners shipped approximately 160m chips for STB and DTV applications, giving ARM a market share of about 35%. Most of the ARM processor-based chips were manufactured by companies including Mediatek, Samsung...

Interview with ARM’s Mobile Team on Smartphones

Over the next five years, ARM’s opportunity to grow royalty revenue is driven by multiple markets that are growing structurally and where we may also gain share. This post is one of five where we look at each of these drivers.

In this blog we interview Laurence Bryant, Director of Mobile Segment Marketing at ARM to discuss the impact of smartphone growth.

Hi Laurence, smartphones have really taken off over the last few years, how fast is this market growing and can that growth really be sustained?
In the mobile phone market consumers are increasingly choosing smartphones rather than voice-only or feature phones. Consumers are choosing to purchase smartphones due to the greater user experience that can be customised to the services that they are personally interested. The greater the performance and functionality the more the consumers are using their mobile phones and the more they become their primary compute platform. According to industry analysts the smartphone market grew by over 50% in 2010 and most analysts expect similar levels of growth this year. A recent report from iSuppli, suggests that by 2015 more than half of all mobile phone shipments will be smartphones, which would suggest a compound annual gro...

Interview with ARM’s Mobile Computing Team

Over the next five years, ARM’s opportunity to grow royalty revenue is driven by multiple markets that are growing structurally and where we may also gain share. This post is one of five where we look at each of these markets.

In this blog we interview Roy Chen, Director of Client Computing at ARM to discuss the impact of mobile computing growth for ARM.

Hi Roy, mobile computing can mean many things, how do you define it at ARM, how big is the market, and what is ARM’s current market share?
Hi Jonathan, at ARM, we define the mobile computing market as that category of products which lie between the smartphone and the desktop computer. Today, examples of such products are tablets, netbooks, laptops, notebooks and eReaders. Other form factors are likely to emerge as we look forward.

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In 2010, there were just over 200m mobile computing products sold and independent analysts expect this market to reach around 750m devices by 2015, a CAGR of 27%. ARM already has a high penetration in the ancillary chips found in mobile computers, such...

Post Q2 2011 Roadshow - Frequently asked questions on licensing

In our Q2 2011 results, ARM reported Q2 processor licensing revenues at $58 million, the third successive quarter with license revenue over $50 million. Investors have been questioning whether this level of license revenue is sustainable, or whether there were some temporary effects over the last few quarters.

Before I address these questions, here are few remarks for readers that are not familiar with ARM’s business model and how we recognise license revenue.

Introduction
ARM generates its processor license revenues from the sale of processor designs. These revenues are fees that semiconductor companies pay to gain access to the design of a processor. Typically these are either:

Product licenses: One-off fees paid to gain access to a specific processor product, with defined usage rights. Subscription licenses: On-going fees paid to have access to a family of product designs, which can include products that are still in development. A subscription license will be for a fixed number of years.In addition to license revenues, ARM also receives a royalty on every chip shipped containing ARM technology, and we sell software tools and services. We will discuss these other rev...

Three Frequently-asked Questions on the Road

Every investor roadshow has common themes and questions. Here are three frequently-asked questions on our recent visit to investors in Madrid and Milan.


Q. Chip prices decline every year. What impact does this have on ARM’s royalty revenue?

Generally, a chip will be launched at a particular price point but that chip price point may decline at 10-20% per year. ARM’s royalties are typically based on a percentage of the chip price, in which case our royalty revenue from that chip will also decline at the same rate.

However, after a year or two, the semiconductor company will often introduce a new version of that chip with a few extra features and functions. This will have a higher average selling price (ASP) and ARM will benefit from the increase in our royalty revenues. This chip’s ASP will also decline over the years, and the semiconductor company will continue to introduce new versions, eventually discontinuing the older versions.

Analysis of all of the chips within ARM’s total addressable market shows that the average selling price has been fairly constant over the past five years, varying by less than 10% from the mean.

Q. How much pricing power does ARM have?
ARM designs technology that once might have been developed by our ...

ARM Analyst and Investor Day – May 2011: Key Takeaways

ARM held its annual analyst and investor day on 17 May 2011.

A link to the full presentation and webcast is here, and a brief overview is below.


ARM has the Best Technology

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ARM processors are designed to be highly efficient, delivering high-performance within a limited power budget. Getting the power and performance balance right has been the key to ARM’s success in mobile phones and computers, and has become just as important in other applications from sensors to servers.

Three key takeaways:
ARM processors are being designed into applications that range from a glaucoma sensor no bigger than 1mm3 (to fit inside a human eye) to a neutrino detector over 1km3 in sizeBy December 2010, ARM had tap...

Welcome to the ARM Investor Relations Blog

Welcome to the ARM investor relations blog , part of ARM's social media, blogs and forums.

This blog is a forum for the ARM investor community and for ARM's IR team to address topics relating to ARM's business performance and strategy.

In this blog we are planning to discuss some of the common questions that investors ask as we meet them all over the world. We will also include short interviews with the executives, and some of the management team you may not normally get to meet. We will also read your comments and answer your questions.

We look forward to hearing from you.

Space and time does not allow for every topic and every angle to be covered, and this may not be the correct forum for every issue, but please do let us know if there is something you wish to be covered. There are also times, such as in our quiet period, when will be unable to post much....

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