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ARM Holdings plc Reports Results for the First Quarter Ended 31 March 2009
A conference call discussing these results will be audiocast today at 08:30 BST at www.arm.com/ir
CAMBRIDGE, UK, 29 April 2009—ARM Holdings plc [(LSE: ARM); (NASDAQ: ARMH)], the world's leading semiconductor intellectual property supplier, announces its unaudited financial results for the first quarter ended 31 March 2009 Q1 Financial Highlights (IFRS unless otherwise stated)
Outlook We reiterate our previous guidance for 2009; that we expect group dollar revenues for the full-year to be at least in line with market expectations, unless industry conditions deteriorate to a greater extent than is generally anticipated. Overall semiconductor industry activity continued to slow in Q1 2009, and whilst there are early signs of improving visibility in some sectors, the near term remains uncertain. However, with demand for ARM’s portfolio of products remaining robust, we believe that the Company is positioned to continue to perform resiliently in this difficult trading environment. Warren East, Chief Executive Officer, said: “ARM has made an encouraging start to 2009. Leading semiconductor and OEM companies are continuing to utilise ARM technology, creating healthy demand for our latest processors and physical IP products. ARM has outperformed the semiconductor industry in the first quarter. ARM’s Q1 dollar revenues are 10% lower than a year ago whilst overall industry revenues have declined by about 30% over the same period . This outperformance, combined with careful management of costs and the strengthening of the dollar against sterling, has given rise to year-on-year earnings growth of 18% and further robust net cash generation in the first quarter.” Q1 Operational Highlights
Financial review (IFRS unless otherwise stated) Total revenues Total dollar revenues in Q1 2009 were $120.9 million, down 10% on Q1 2008. Overall semiconductor industry revenues declined about 30% in the same period. Sterling revenues of £79.9 million were up 18% year-on-year, due to the strengthening of the dollar against sterling (ARM’s effective rate for translation of revenues was $1.51 in Q1 2009 compared to $1.98 in Q1 2008). The effective translation rate for Group revenues in Q1 of $1.51 is higher than the weighted average exchange rate in the quarter as that element of Q1 license and service revenues which came from order backlog relates to licenses which were typically signed before sterling began to weaken against the US dollar in August 2008. The effective translation rate for royalty revenues and development systems revenues in the quarter was $1.44, whilst the effective rate for license and service revenues was $1.63, giving the blended effective rate for the Group as a whole of $1.51. License revenues Total dollar license revenues in Q1 2009 declined by 15% year-on-year to $40.7m, representing 34% of group revenues. License revenues comprised $31.9 million from PD and $8.8 million from PIPD. Royalty revenues Total dollar royalty revenues in Q1 2009 declined by 9% to $58.3 million, representing 48% of group revenues. Royalty revenues comprised $50.3 million from PD and $8.0 million from PIPD. Royalties are recognised one quarter in arrears with royalties in Q1 generated from semiconductor unit shipments in Q4. PD royalty revenues in Q1 2009 declined 8% year-on-year. This compares with industry revenues declining by about 20% in the shipment period (ie Q4 2008 compared to Q4 2007), demonstrating ARM’s market share gains over the last 12 months. Total PIPD royalties of $8.0 million included $1.6 million of catch-up royalties. Underlying royalties declined 22% year-on-year, compared to a decline in overall foundry revenues of approximately 30% in the corresponding period. Development Systems and Service revenues Sales of development systems in Q1 2009 were $14.6 million, representing 12% of group revenues, compared to $14.2 million in Q1 2008 and $12.9 million in Q4 2008. The sequential increase was partly due to a large software tools licensing deal, with a tier 1 OEM company adopting ARM tools across multiple sites. Given that large licensing deals of this type are infrequent in this division, the Q4 2008 revenue of $12.9 million is a more appropriate upper indicator when considering development systems revenues in Q2 2009. Service revenues in Q1 2009 were $7.3 million, representing 6% of group revenues, compared to $8.1 million in Q1 2008. Gross margins Gross margins in Q1 2009, excluding the share-based compensation charge of £0.3 million (see below), were 90.2% compared to 89.5% in Q4 2008 and 88.8% in Q1 2008. The higher gross margin in Q1 2009 is due primarily to a higher proportion of PIPD engineering time being classified as operating expenses rather than cost of sales, reflecting development of leading-edge physical IP technology. Compared to Q4 2008, this has had the effect of increasing gross profit by approximately £0.6 million and increasing operating expenses by the same amount. Operating expenses and operating margin Normalised operating expenses (excluding acquisition-related, share-based compensation and restructuring charges) in Q1 2009 were £48.5 million compared to £51.8 million in Q4 2008 and £39.5 million in Q1 2008. The sequential decrease in operating expenses from Q4 2008 to Q1 2009 is due primarily to the net impact of accounting for derivative instruments in Q1 2009 being more favourable than last quarter. The sequential decrease in operating expenses would have been greater, were it not for the impact of the stronger dollar against sterling on the translation of the Group’s US dollar denominated costs. In Q1 2009, the effective exchange rate for the translation of US dollar costs was $1.41/£1 compared to $1.52/£1 in Q4 2008. This change added some £2 million to operating expenses in Q1 2009. Underlying costs continue to be carefully managed with group headcount at the end of the first quarter being 11 lower than at the start of the year. The pay freeze that was implemented with effect from 1 January 2009 remains in place. Normalised operating expenses in Q2 2009 (assuming effective exchange rates similar to current levels) are expected to be in the range £46-48 million. Normalised research and development expenses were £21.8 million in Q1 2009, representing 27% of revenues, compared to £18.6 million in Q4 2008 and £16.3 million in Q1 2008. Normalised sales and marketing costs in Q1 2009 were £12.4 million, being 15% of revenues, compared to £14.1 million in Q4 2008 and £11.0 million in Q1 2008. Normalised general and administrative expenses in Q1 2009 were £14.3 million, representing 18% of revenues, compared to £19.2 million in Q4 2008 and £12.2 million in Q1 2008. Normalised operating margin in Q1 2009 was 29.5% (4.1) compared to 34.6% (4.2) in Q4 2008 and 30.6% (4.3) in Q1 2008. Total operating expenses in Q1 2009 were £59.0 million (Q1 2008: £48.6 million) including amortisation of intangible assets and other acquisition-related charges of £4.5 million (Q1 2008: £4.7 million), £4.4 million (Q1 2008: £3.6 million) in relation to share-based compensation and related payroll taxes and restructuring charges of £1.3 million (Q1 2008: £0.7 million). Total share-based compensation and related payroll tax charges of £4.7 million in Q1 2009 were included within cost of revenues (£0.3 million), research and development (£2.8 million), sales and marketing (£0.9 million) and general and administrative (£0.7 million). Normalised income statements for Q1 2009 and Q1 2008 are included in notes 4.19 and 4.20 below which reconcile IFRS to the normalised non-IFRS measures referred to in this earnings release. Earnings and taxation Profit before tax in Q1 2009 was £13.1 million compared to £12.0 million in Q1 2008. After adjusting for acquisition-related, share-based compensation and restructuring charges, normalised profit before tax in Q1 2009 was £23.9 million (4.5) compared to £21.3 million (4.7) in Q1 2008. The Group’s effective normalised tax rate in Q1 2009 was 26.5% (IFRS 25.1%) compared to 28.7% in Q1 2008 (IFRS 46.3%). In Q1 2009, fully diluted earnings per share prepared under IFRS were 0.77 pence (3.29 cents per ADS****) compared to earnings per share of 0.50 pence (2.96 cents per ADS****) in Q1 2008. Normalised fully diluted earnings per share in Q1 2009 were 1.38 pence (4.15) per share (5.92 cents per ADS****) compared to 1.17 pence (4.17) (6.99 cents per ADS****) in Q1 2008. Balance sheet Intangible assets at 31 March 2009 were £620.4 million, comprising goodwill of £580.0 million and other intangible assets of £40.4 million, compared to £567.8 million and £45.1 million respectively at 31 December 2008. Total accounts receivable were £65.7 million at 31 March 2009, comprising £50.7 million of trade receivables and £15.0 million of amounts recoverable on contracts, compared to £76.9 million at 31 December 2008, comprising £59.0 million of trade receivables and £17.9 million of amounts recoverable on contracts. Days sales outstanding (DSOs) were 47 at 31 March 2009 compared to 49 at 31 December 2008. Cash flow Net cash at 31 March 2009 was £91.3 million (4.9) compared to £78.8 million (4.10) at 31 December 2008. Normalised free cash flow in Q1 2009 was £13.5 million (4.11). International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) ARM previously reported results quarterly in accordance with US GAAP. Following the ruling issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission in November 2007, allowing foreign private issuers to file financial statements using IFRS as published by the International Accounting Standards Board, ARM will report quarterly, half-yearly and annual results in accordance with IFRS with effect from this quarter. ARM will no longer report results under US GAAP. Operating review Backlog Group order backlog at the end of Q1 2009 is down by just under 10% sequentially. The size and composition of the opportunity pipeline for licensing in Q2 indicates that the backlog is unlikely to fall further in the second quarter. PD licensing Seventeen processor licenses were signed in Q1. The quarter was characterised by licensing of ARM technologies across the portfolio, with licenses being signed for the ARM7™, ARM9™, ARM11™ and Cortex processor families, as well as for the Mali™ graphics processor. Four companies licensed Cortex-M processors demonstrating the growing demand for ARM in microcontrollers. This included a third company licensing the recently introduced Cortex-M0 processor - ARM's smallest and lowest power processor. Non-mobile applications continue to be the driver for a high proportion of processor licenses, including graphics processors. Approximately 70% of licenses signed in Q1 are expected to be used initially in applications such as high-definition TV, microcontrollers, networking and storage. During the quarter LG Electronics licensed ARM11 MPCore and Mali graphics processors for use in digital consumer electronics. In addition, a leading microcontroller company licensed a selection of ARM’s advanced processors including the product codenamed “Sparrow”. In mobile, ARM processors and graphics processors are being designed into a widening range of mobile technology such as chips for baseband, gaming, mobile computing and mobile TV. Q1 2009 and Cumulative PD Licensing Analysis
PD royalties Royalties are recognised one quarter in arrears with royalties in Q1 generated from semiconductor unit shipments in Q4. PD royalty revenues in Q1 2009 declined 8% year-on-year. This compares with industry revenues declining by about 20% in the shipment period (ie Q4 2008 compared to Q4 2007), demonstrating ARM’s market share gains over the last 12 months. This revenue came from the sales of 834 million ARM based chips, 6% lower year-on-year. Overall the average royalty rate increased to 6.0c in Q1 2009 compared with 5.4c in Q4 2008 as the proportion of ARM11-based shipments increased. The ARM11 family now represents more than 5% of total unit shipments, with the ARM7 family and ARM9 families now representing 55% and 40% of total shipments respectively. Not only does this demonstrate the longevity of ARM technology but it also underscores the material additional value yet to be derived from the significant license sales of ARM11 and Cortex processors that have already been made. The number of ARM-based MCUs shipped over the year grew by about 20% despite the overall number of MCU units across the industry falling by 5%. Shipments of ARM-based chips into mobile devices were down about 16% in Q1 compared with a year ago, whilst the overall number of chips being shipped into mobiles in the corresponding period was down about 25%. The proportion of units shipped into non-mobile rose to 37%, up from 30% a year ago as more ARM-based chips were shipped into hard-disk drives, networking products, digital TVs and microcontrollers. Q2 2009 royalty revenues will be based on units shipped in Q1 2009. In most years there is a seasonal decline in royalty revenues in the second quarter based on lower shipments in the first quarter. Current analysis of Q1 2009 semiconductor industry activity levels suggests a sequential decline of approximately 20% in overall industry revenues. PIPD licensing ARM signed twelve physical IP licenses in Q1 for technologies at process nodes from 90nm to 32nm; and for a wide range of ARM products including platforms of physical IP technology components and also additional standard cells libraries, memories and PHYs. The base of platform licenses for physical IP drives ARM’s future royalty potential. Demand for new platforms at the leading-edge continues as ARM signed an agreement to develop a platform of 32nm SOI physical IP. Platforms at more mature nodes are also in demand and ARM signed an agreement to develop a new platform at 130nm and update an existing platform at 90nm. There were five more deals for ARM’s advanced technology with two PHYs at 65nm and cell libraries and memories at 65nm and 45nm. In addition, the first ARM processor to be manufactured using ARM’s 32nm physical IP has been delivered to ARM for testing. Q1 2009 and Cumulative PIPD Licensing Analysis
PIPD royalties PIPD royalties in Q1 2009 were $8.0 million down from $10.5 million in Q4 2008, reflecting the significant slowdown in foundry activity levels in the fourth quarter Underlying royalties in Q1 were $6.4 million, down 22% year-on-year, compared to the decline in overall foundry revenues during the corresponding period of some 30%. Current analysis of Q1 2009 foundry revenue suggests a further sequential decline of approximately 40%. People At 31 March 2009, ARM had 1,729 full-time employees, a net reduction of 11 since the year end. At the end of Q1, the group had 637 employees based in the UK, 504 in the US, 213 in Continental Europe, 294 in India and 81 in the Asia Pacific region. Download the full ARM Holdings plc First Quarter Results Tables 2009 in PDF (332Kb .pdf) About ARM ARM designs the technology that lies at the heart of advanced digital products, from mobile, home and enterprise solutions to embedded and emerging applications. ARM’s comprehensive product offering includes 16/32-bit RISC microprocessors, data engines, graphics processors, digital libraries, embedded memories, peripherals, software and development tools, as well as analog functions and high-speed connectivity products. Combined with the company’s broad Partner community, they provide a total system solution that offers a fast, reliable path to market for leading electronics companies. More information on ARM is available at http://www.arm.com.
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