SoftBank makes $32 billion chip deal

Under the offer backed by ARM's board, Softbank will pay £17 for every ARM share a premium of more than 40 per cent to Friday's close.

Update: 2016-07-18 19:40 GMT
Masayoshi Son

London/Toyko: SoftBank Group Corp  has agreed to buy UK chip designer ARM Holdings PLC in a £24.3 billion ($32.2 billion) cash deal, the two sides said on Monday, a bold bet on internet-connected machines that will transform the Japanese group.

ARM, the largest London-listed tech company by market value, is a major presence in mobile processing, with its processor and graphics technology used by Samsung, Huawei and Apple in their in-house microchips.

Components based on technology licensed by ARM are found in the vast majority of the world’s smartphones, and the Cambridge-based group has branched into other connected devices as smartphone growth slows. ARM stands to be central to the tech industry’s shift to the ‘internet of things’ - a network of devices, vehicles and building sensors that collect and exchange data - a stated focus for SoftBank founder Masayoshi Son.

The Monday’s deal, Softbank’s largest to date, marks a departure for the Japanese group, whose tech and telecom portfolio ranges from US carrier Sprint to a stake in e-commerce giant Alibaba and humanoid robot ‘Pepper’ - but does not yet include a major presence in the semiconductor industry.

Under the offer backed by ARM’s board, Softbank will pay £17 for every ARM share — a premium of more than 40 per cent to Friday's close. ARM shares surged nearly 43 per cent to 16.99 pounds by 0820 GMT.

“This is one of the most important acquisitions we have ever made, and I expect ARM to be a key pillar of SoftBank’s growth strategy going forward,” Mr Son said in the statement. The acquisition is the first for Son, 58, since he last month rescinded plans to retire - effectively pushing out his heir apparent, former Google executive Nikesh Arora.

Similar News