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ARM Holdings PLC Reports Results For The First Quarter 2014CAMBRIDGE, UK, 23 April 2014 — ARM Holdings plc [(LSE: ARM); (NASDAQ: ARMH)] announces its unaudited financial results for the first quarter ended 31 March 2014 * Normalised figures are based on IFRS, adjusted for acquisition-related charges, share-based payment costs, share of results in joint venture and intangible amortisation. For reconciliation of IFRS measures to normalised non-IFRS measures detailed in this document, see notes 5.11 to 5.12. ** Net cash generation is defined as movement on cash, cash equivalents, short-term and long-term deposits, adding back dividend payments, investment and acquisition consideration, other acquisition-related payments, share-based payroll taxes, investment in joint venture, payments to Linaro, cash outflow from IP indemnity and similar charges and deducting inflows from share option exercises – see notes 5.7 to 5.10. Q1 Financial Highlights
Progress on key growth drivers in Q1
Outlook ARM has made an encouraging start to 2014 with continued strong licensing performance. ARM’s pipeline of licensing opportunities remains healthy for Q2 and the rest of the year. The semiconductor industry normally declines sequentially in the first quarter of the year. Market commentators generally regard the decline this year to have been similar to prior years, which will provide the context for ARM’s Q2 royalty revenues. Recent indications from the semiconductor industry and ARM's customers suggest that ARM will benefit from an improving environment in the second half. Assuming the outlook for the semiconductor industry in the second half of the year improves, as generally anticipated, we expect Group dollar revenues for the full year 2014 to be in line with market expectations. Simon Segars, Chief Executive Officer, said: "Q1 was a good start to the year for ARM, with more customers choosing to license ARM technology for their future products, which helped drive ARM’s revenues. Licences are a precursor to future royalty revenues. Our customers are signing licences with a view to designing ARM technology into an increasingly wide range of markets from servers and supercomputers to embedded sensors and enterprise networking applications and thereby underpinning ARM's future royalty opportunity.” *** Dollar revenues are based on the Group’s actual dollar invoicing, where applicable, and using the rate of exchange applicable on the date of the transaction for invoicing in currencies other than dollars. Over 95% of invoicing is in dollars. Financial review (IFRS unless otherwise stated) Total revenues Total dollar revenues in Q1 2014 were $305.2 million, up 16% versus Q1 2013. Q1 sterling revenues of £186.7 million were up 10% year-on-year. License revenues Total dollar license revenues in Q1 2014 increased by 37% year-on-year to $129.9 million, representing 43% of Group revenues. License revenues comprised $111.6 million from processor licenses and $18.3 million from physical IP licenses. Group order backlog at the end of Q1 2014 was down about 5% sequentially. Based on the licensing opportunity pipeline it is expected that order backlog at the end of 2014 will be at a broadly similar level to that at the end of Q1 2014. Royalty revenues Total dollar royalty revenues in Q1 2014 increased year-on-year by 3% to $144.5 million, representing 47% of Group revenues. Royalty revenues comprised $128.1 million from processors and $16.4 million from physical IP. Processor dollar royalty revenues in Q1 2014 are net of a deduction of $5 million representing prior years’ royalties over-reported to ARM by a customer. Underlying processor royalty revenues increased 8% year-on-year. Industry revenues were up 6% over the relevant shipment period (i.e. Q4 2013 compared to Q4 2012). ARM’s royalty revenues in Q1 2014 were impacted by an inventory correction which particularly affected mobile and consumer electronics. As a result, both the year-on-year growth in ARM’s royalty revenues and the outperformance compared to overall industry growth are lower this quarter than seen in most recent periods. Inventory corrections of this type occur in the industry from time to time, the last one occurring in H1 2012. Other revenues Sales of software and tools in Q1 2014 were $16.1 million, a decrease of 3% year-on-year. Service revenues were $14.7 million in Q1 2014, up 19% year-on-year. Together revenues from software and tools and services represented 10% of Group revenues. Gross margins Normalised gross margins in Q1 2014 were 95.6% compared to 95.4% in Q4 2013 and 94.3% in Q1 2013. Operating expenses and operating margin Normalised income statements for Q1 2014 and Q1 2013 are included in notes 5.11 and 5.12 below which reconcile IFRS to the normalised non-IFRS measures referred to in this earnings release. Normalised operating expenses were £84.3 million in Q1 2014 compared to £88.1 million in Q4 2013 and £74.6 million in Q1 2013. Normalised operating expenses in Q2 2014 (assuming effective exchange rates similar to current levels) are expected to be in the range £86-88 million as we continue to invest in our research and development teams and in our business infrastructure. Normalised operating margin was 50.4% in Q1 2014, compared to 48.8% in Q4 2013 and 50.5% in Q1 2013. Normalised research and development expenses were £39.8 million in Q1 2014, representing 21% of revenues, compared to £38.9 million in Q4 2013 and £36.6 million in Q1 2013. Normalised sales and marketing expenses were £20.4 million in Q1 2014, being 11% of revenues, compared to £21.3 million in Q4 2013 and £18.3 million in Q1 2013. Normalised general and administrative expenses were £24.1 million in Q1 2014, representing 13% of revenues, compared to £27.9 million in Q4 2013 and £19.7 million in Q1 2013. Total IFRS operating expenses in Q1 2014 were £101.6 million (Q1 2013: £95.2 million) including share-based payment costs and related payroll taxes of £14.6 million (Q1 2013: £17.9 million), and amortisation of intangible assets, other acquisition-related charges and profits on disposal of investments of £2.7 million (Q1 2013: £2.7 million). Total share-based payment costs and related payroll tax charges of £15.1 million in Q1 2014 were included within cost of revenues (£0.5 million), research and development (£9.8 million), sales and marketing (£2.6 million) and general and administrative (£2.2 million). Earnings and taxation Normalised profit before tax in Q1 2014 was £97.1 million compared to £89.4 million in Q1 2013. After including acquisition-related and share-based payment costs, intangible amortisation and share of results of joint ventures, profit before tax was £78.0 million in Q1 2014 compared to £67.1 million in Q1 2013. The Group's effective normalised tax rate was 18.3% in Q1 2014 (IFRS: 20.1%). ARM’s full-year normalised effective tax rate in 2014 is expected to be around 18%. In Q1 2014, normalised fully diluted earnings per share were 5.60 pence (28.0 cents per ADS[1]) compared to 5.31 pence (24.2 cents per ADS) in Q1 2013. Fully diluted earnings per share in Q1 2014 were 4.39 pence (22.0 cents per ADS) compared to earnings per share of 3.69 pence (16.8 cents per ADS) in Q1 2013. Balance sheet Intangible assets at 31 March 2014 were £605.0 million, comprising goodwill of £522.7 million and other intangible assets of £82.3 million, compared to £525.9 million and £82.9 million respectively at 31 December 2013. Total accounts receivable were £150.3 million at 31 March 2014, compared to £136.2 million at 31 December 2013. Cash flow Net cash generation in Q1 2014 was £40.1 million. Net cash at 31 March 2014 was £735.6 million compared to £706.3 million at 31 December 2013. Technology Licensing Processor licensing 26 processor licences were signed in Q1 2014. Six of the licences signed were for ARM’s Cortex-A series processors, mainly for use in smartphones, tablets and enterprise infrastructure applications. Five of the licences were for ARM’s latest processors based on the ARMv8-A architecture, which include the Cortex-A53 and Cortex-A57 processors. To date, ARM has signed a total of 43 ARMv8-A processor and architecture licences which typically command a higher royalty compared to previous generations of ARM technology. ARM also signed four licences for its Mali graphics processors, for use in digital TV, and mobile and embedded computing applications. Eleven of the licences signed in Q1 were for Cortex-M class processors for use in microcontrollers, smart sensors, and the Internet of Things and wearable technology. Q1 2014 and Cumulative Processor Licensing Analysis
* Includes ARM7, ARM9, ARM10 and ARM11 **Adjusted for licences that are no longer expected to generate royalties *** Includes 3 existing ARM customers taking their first Mali licence Physical IP licensing ARM’s physical IP is used by fabless semiconductor companies to implement their chip designs. Platform licences are royalty bearing licences that enable foundries to manufacture chips using ARM’s physical IP. Each foundry requires a platform licence for each process node. ARM has signed a full range of platform licences with leading foundries, from 250nm to 14nm. During the quarter ARM signed four new platform licences at 180nm, 90nm, 40nm and 28nm taking the total platform licences signed to 105. ARM continues to see strong demand for physical IP optimised for use with processors (POP IP). POP IP enables a licensee to more readily achieve high-performance, low-power processor implementations through specially optimised physical IP technology. For every chip implemented using POP IP, ARM receives a royalty both for the processor in the chip and for the physical IP. This quarter ARM signed five further POP licences, including three for a Cortex-A class processor, one for a Cortex-M class processor and one for a Mali graphics processor. POP IP is being made available earlier than ever to support the first adopters of new ARM-based Cortex and Mali processors. Number Physical IP Licences
Technology Design Wins and Ecosystem Development Many leading technology companies have announced details of their ARM processor-based product developments in recent months. These included:
Many more partner announcements can be found on the ARM website at www.arm.com/news. Processor royalties Q1 royalty revenue was generated from the shipment of some 2.9 billion ARM processor-based chips, up 11% year-on-year. ARM saw particularly strong growth in enterprise networking and microcontrollers which grew 150% and 40% respectively. Throughout 2014 ARM is expected to continue to benefit from the growth of smartphones and tablets. These devices are more likely to contain ARM’s more advanced Cortex-A series processors, and can include ARM’s Mali graphics technology. In Q1 2014, shipments of Cortex-A series processors were up more than 30% year-on-year including the first high-volume shipments of ARMv8-A processor based chips. ARM’s average royalty per chip in Q1 was 4.7 cents down slightly from a year ago as the growth in higher value, lower volume application processors was balanced by the strong growth in shipments of higher volume, lower cost chips, such as microcontrollers, smartcards, touchscreen controllers and wireless connectivity chips. Q1 2014 Processor Unit Shipment Analysis
Physical IP royalties Royalties are recognised one quarter in arrears with royalties in Q1 2014 generated from semiconductor wafer shipments in Q4 2013. Physical IP royalties in Q1 2014 were $16.4 million, down 1% year-on-year. People At 31 March 2014, ARM had 2,953 full-time employees, a net increase of 120 since the start of the year, being mainly engineers joining ARM’s processor R&D teams. At the end of Q1, the Group had 1,240 employees based in the UK, 698 in the US, 370 in Continental Europe, 406 in India and 239 in the Asia Pacific region. Principal risks and uncertainties The principal risks and uncertainties faced by the Group are included within the “Risks and risk management” section of the 2013 Annual Report and Accounts filed with Companies House in the UK. Details of other risks and uncertainties faced by the Group are noted within the Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended 31 December 2013 which is on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) and is available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. These risks include but are not limited to: ARM's quarterly results may fluctuate significantly and be unpredictable which could adversely affect the market price of ARM ordinary shares; general economic conditions may reduce ARM's revenues and harm its business; we depend largely on a small number of customers and products; failure by ARM to achieve the performance under a licence or failure of a customer to make an obligated milestone payment could materially impact our revenues; we operate in an intensely competitive industry and our customers may choose to use their own or competing technology; ARM has grown its operations significantly over recent years and ARM’s business could be adversely impacted if these changes are not managed successfully; ARM's technology is used in a wide range of electronic products, any bug or fault in our technology could lead to significant damage to our brand and reputation; ARM may have to protect its intellectual property or defend the technology against claims that we have infringed others’ proprietary rights; and an infringement claim against ARM’s technology may result in a significant damages award which would adversely impact ARM’s operating results. Full Earnings Table [860KB PDF] About ARM ARM designs the technology that lies at the heart of advanced digital products, from wireless, networking and consumer entertainment solutions to imaging, automotive, security and storage devices. ARM’s comprehensive product offering includes 32-bit RISC microprocessors, graphics processors, video engines, enabling software, cell libraries, embedded memories, high-speed connectivity products, peripherals and development tools. Combined with comprehensive design services, training, support and maintenance, and 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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