|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
ARM Holdings plc Reports Results For The Fourth Quarter and Full Year 31 December 2007A presentation of the results will be webcast today at 09:00 at www.arm.com/ir. CAMBRIDGE, UK, 5 February 2008—ARM Holdings plc [(LSE: ARM); (Nasdaq: ARMHY)] announces its unaudited financial results for the fourth quarter and full year ended 31 December 2007
Divisional Highlights
Physical IP Division (PIPD)
Development Systems
Commenting on the results, Warren East, Chief Executive Officer, said: We enter 2008 with the group order backlog at its highest ever level, the physical IP business better positioned to capitalise on the long-term growth opportunity and good royalty revenue momentum based on the ongoing proliferation of ARM technology into an ever-broader range of digital devices. Although we remain cautious about the short term industry outlook, we expect ARM to deliver significant constant currency earnings growth in 2008 and believe the long-term growth opportunities for ARM are substantial.” Q4 2007 – Revenue Analysis
1 Includes catch-up royalties in Q4 2007 of $0.3m (£0.2m) and in Q4 2006 of $0.7m (£0.4m). FY 2007 – Revenue Analysis
1 Includes catch-up royalties in FY 2007 of $2.7m (£1.4m) and in FY 2006 of $3.1m (£1.7m). Q4 2007 – Financial Summary
¹ Equivalent to £68.0m at Q4 2006 effective $/£ rate YTD 2007 – Financial Summary
¹ Equivalent to £279.9m at FY 2006 effective $/£ rate Current trading and prospects In the current uncertain macroeconomic environment, and at this early stage in the year, we remain cautious on the outlook for the semiconductor industry for 2008. Within ARM, we have continued to build on our market-leading position and consequently we enter 2008 with the group order backlog at its highest ever level, the physical IP business better positioned to capitalise on the long-term growth opportunity and good royalty revenue momentum based on the continuing proliferation of ARM technology into an ever-broader range of digital devices. Given this combination of a well-positioned business operating within uncertain industry conditions, we expect dollar revenues in Q1 2008 to be broadly similar to Q4 2007 levels. Assuming no marked deterioration in the trading environment, we expect to increase dollar revenues in FY 2008 by at least the growth rate achieved in 2007. With the operating leverage inherent in ARM’s business model, driven primarily by growth in high-margin royalty revenues, we expect constant currency earnings growth in FY 2008 to be significantly higher than revenue growth.
Total revenues Full-year dollar revenues in 2007 were $514.3 million, up 6% on 2006. Full-year sterling revenues were £259.2 million, down 2% on 2006 again due to the weakening of the dollar against the sterling for the full year ($1.98 in 2007 compared to $1.84 in 2006). At the FY 2006 effective rate, FY 2007 sterling revenues would have been £279.9 million or 8% higher than actual reported revenue. License revenues PD license revenues were up 3% versus Q4 2006 but down sequentially 11%. This was primarily due to the signing of three subscription deals in Q4 where revenue is recognised rateably over the life of the license. These licenses represent a major strategic commitment to ARM’s existing and future technology portfolio by three of the world’s leading semiconductor companies. PIPD license revenues were down 15% sequentially, being impacted by internal restructuring and productivity improvement activities to position this business for growth in 2008. See the PIPD section in the Operational Review below. Full-year dollar license revenues were $217.9 million, up 8% on 2006. Royalty revenues Full-year dollar royalty revenues were $208.8 million, up 5% on 2006. Development Systems and Service revenues Service revenues in Q4 2007 were down 2% year-on-year at $8.1 million, representing 6% of group revenues, compared to $8.3 million in Q4 2006. Full-year development systems revenues were $55.6 million, up 5% on 2006. Service revenues were up by 10% to $32.0 million. Gross margins Full-year gross margins, excluding stock-based compensation charges of £1.0 million, were 89.6% compared to 88.7% in 2006. Operating expenses and operating margin Operating expenses (excluding stock-based compensation, amortisation of intangible assets and other charges) in Q4 2007 were £37.2 million compared to £36.5 million in Q3 2007 and £40.8 million in Q4 2006, a 9% reduction versus the previous year. Q4 operating expenses benefited from the regional re-balancing of the group’s resources (see People section below) and general rigorous management of costs. Normalised operating margin in Q4 2007 was 31.5% (7.1) compared to 31.8% (7.2) in Q3 2007 and 29.0% (7.3) in Q4 2006. At constant currencies, using the Q4 2006 effective rate of $1.92/£1, the operating margin for Q4 2007 would have been approximately 33%. Full-year operating expenses for 2007 were £188.4 million, including stock-based compensation charges of £15.4 million and amortisation of intangible assets and other charges of £22.2 million. Excluding these charges, operating expenses for the full year were £150.8 million, compared to £150.1 million in 2006, an increase of 0.5%. Normalised operating margin in the full year 2007 was 31.4% (7.4) compared to 31.7% (7.5) in 2006. At constant currencies, using the 2006 effective rate of $1.84/£1, the normalised operating margin for 2007 would have been approximately 34%. In Q4 2007, fully diluted earnings per share prepared under US GAAP were 0.74 pence (4.41 cents per ADS****) compared to earnings per share of 0.87 pence (5.13 cents per ADS****) in Q4 2006. Normalised fully diluted earnings per share in Q4 2007 were 1.25 pence (7.19) per share (7.48 cents per ADS****) compared to 1.49 pence (7.21) (8.73 cents per ADS****) in Q4 2006. The decline in earnings per share for the comparable period was due primarily to a non-recurring tax credit in Q4 2006 arising from a tax-deductible foreign exchange loss. Full-year 2007 fully diluted earnings per share prepared under US GAAP were 2.70 pence (16.10 cents per ADS****) compared to earnings per share of 3.22 pence (18.88 cents per ADS****) in 2006. Normalised fully diluted earnings per share for 2007 were 4.67 pence (7.22) per share (27.89 cents per ADS****) compared to 5.08 pence (7.23) (29.85 cents per ADS****) in 2006. Total accounts receivable were £68.2 million at 31 December 2007, comprising £43.7 million of trade receivables and £24.5 million of amounts recoverable on contracts, compared to £65.0 million at 30 September 2007, comprising £37.6 million of trade receivables and £27.4 million of amounts recoverable on contracts. Days sales outstanding (DSOs) were 49 at 31 December 2007 compared to 39 at 30 September 2007 and 43 at 31 December 2006. Cash flow, share buyback programme and 2007 final dividend During the quarter, £60.1 million of cash was returned to shareholders via the purchase of 38 million ARM shares at a cost of £49.6 million and the payment of the interim dividend of £10.5 million. The directors recommend payment of a final dividend in respect of 2007 of 1.20 pence per share, which taken together with the interim dividend of 0.80 pence per share paid in October 2007, gives a total dividend in respect of 2007 of 2.0 pence per share, an increase of 100% on the total dividend of 1.0 pence per share in 2006. Subject to shareholder approval, the final dividend will be paid on 21 May 2008 to shareholders on the register on 2 May 2008. At the start of 2007, ARM announced its intention to reduce its cash balance to approximately £50 million by the year end. In achieving this level of net cash, we have returned a total of £147 million to shareholders via both an accelerated share buyback programme and a dividend at twice the level of 2006. Given ARM’s market leadership position and increasingly strong cash flows as the benefits of the licensing and royalty model bear fruit, we remain focused on balance sheet efficiency. Operating review Backlog PD Licensing – Equipping the Leading Semiconductor Companies with ARM Processor IP The long-term commitment of our partners to ARM technology is further evidenced by the signing of 4 subscription licenses in 2007, 3 of which were signed in Q4. Of the original subscription licensees (NXP, ST and Samsung) all have renewed their long-term commitment to ARM technology. Further, in Q4 we signed a new subscription license with a top five Japanese semiconductor company, significantly expanding the penetration of ARM technology into that region. Q4 2007 and Cumulative PD Licensing Analysis
U: Upgrade D: Derivative N: New PD Royalties – Broadening the Usage of ARM Processor IP In the quarter, ARM9™ family shipments comprised 41% of total units, including 20% relating to ARM926EJ-S™ processor shipments. ARM11™ family shipments now comprise 2% of total shipments. In the quarter we received our first royalties from our Mali 3D graphics product and from the initial shipments of Cortex products. ARM unit shipments showed significant resilience in a year that was affected by the industry-wide inventory correction which started in the second half of 2006. The proportion of shipments into the mobile and non-mobile segments during 2007 remained broadly consistent with the proportion of mobile shipments edging up slightly in Q4 to 68%. The ARM content per phone continued to increase, reaching approximately 1.7 cores per phone by year end. We continue to see strength in the embedded segment, rising to 13% of shipments in the quarter, in part due to the continued significant growth in MCU shipments with growth of 2.4x over 2006. MCUs are now the highest volume individual application after wireless handsets. PIPD Licensing – Extending the IP Outsourcing Model to ARM Physical IP Although 2007 has been a challenging year for revenue, we made progress in positioning the business for growth in 2008 and beyond. In 2007, we continued to focus on the acceleration of the physical IP roadmap to include leadership-standard, leading-edge physical IP. In 2007, we signed an additional three 45nm licenses, of which one was for our SOI technology, and ten 65nm licenses. Of the 202 licenses signed since the acquisition of Artisan, 42 licenses have been signed for technology that ARM has developed since the acquisition. As the business transitions from technology catch-up to a more business-as-usual state for development of leading-edge technology, there is increased focus on improvement in internal processes to drive increased productivity, better resource management and improved product delivery to customers. In order to enable our partners to create the best physical implementations of their designs and for ARM to continue to be the industry leader in physical IP, we are striving to ensure that PIPD is a leader in technology development, on-time delivery, customer satisfaction and engineering efficiency. Simon Segars became the General Manager of PIPD in September 2007 to accelerate these activities. Simon joined ARM in 1991 and has been a member of the Board since 2004. He has previously held a number of positions fundamental to ARM’s development, including VP of Engineering, EVP of Sales and EVP of Business Development. Enhanced engineering efficiency is being realised through the reorganisation of the business into dedicated design centres to align better the skill sets of each centre with the challenges of developing leading-edge technology as well as to define better the accountabilities and tasks of each engineering team. This reorganisation has resulted in the elimination in Q1 2008 of approximately 30 positions within our Sunnyvale, CA facility as we align its skill base with the needs of the organisation going forward. In order to capture the specific growth opportunities we see as we enter 2008, we are further focusing the business to concentrate on the high volume, mass-market opportunity represented by the traditional Artisan free library business model and on the high-value business of licensing physical IP to IDMs and large fabless customers, both for earlier generation and leading-edge technology. We have already achieved considerable success, having licensed the leading foundries through to the 45nm process node and having signed a further 7 IDM licenses in 2007. In 2008, we expect growth to be generated from further penetration of the foundries with ARM technology; expanding the number of licenses to IDMs and large fabless customers for earlier generation technology and securing the initial licenses for leading-edge physical IP technology with IDM and large fabless customers. Additionally, the research and development teams in PD and PIPD will continue to focus on enabling our partners to create highly optimised physical implementations of their ARM processors, utilising processor-specific physical IP. Q4 2007 and Cumulative PIPD Licensing Analysis
PIPD Royalties – Broadening the Usage of ARM Physical IP People Legal matters About ARM
|
Home | Feedback | Register | Site Map |
All material on this site Copyright © 2017 Design And Reuse S.A. All rights reserved. |