NASDAQ:ARM ARM Q3 2024 Earnings Report $123.26 +7.86 (+6.81%) As of 02:12 PM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast ARM EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.29Consensus EPS $0.25Beat/MissBeat by +$0.04One Year Ago EPSN/AARM Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$824.00 millionExpected Revenue$762.50 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$61.50 millionYoY Revenue Growth+13.80%ARM Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2024Date2/7/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateWednesday, February 7, 2024Conference Call Time5:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsARM's Q4 2025 earnings is scheduled for Wednesday, May 7, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 2:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q4 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by ARM Q3 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 7, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Thank you for standing by, and welcome to ARM's 3rd Quarter Fiscal Year End 2024 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. I would now like to hand the call over to Head of Investor Relations, Ian Thornton. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:31Thank you, Latif. Thank you, everybody. My name is Ian Thornton and I'm the Head of Investor Relations at ARM. I would like to welcome you to our earnings conference call for the Q3 of the fiscal year ending March 31, 2024. I'm joined today by Rene Haas, the Chief Executive Officer of ARM and Jason Child, ARM's Chief Financial Officer. Speaker 100:00:54Hopefully, you will all have downloaded and read the shareholder letter. If not, it is available on the ARM Investor Relations website at investors. Arm.com. The shareholder letter provides a rich update on our strategic progress in the quarter. Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that during the course of this conference call, Arm will discuss forecasts, targets and other forward looking information regarding the company and its financial results. Speaker 100:01:19While these statements represent our best current judgment about the results and performance as of today, our actual results are subject to many risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from what we expect. In addition to any risks that we highlight during this call, important risk factors that may affect our future results and performance are described in our registration statement on Form 1 filed with the SEC on September 14, 2023. ARM assumes no obligation to update any forward looking statements, We speak only as of the date they are made. In addition, we refer to non GAAP financial measures during the discussion. Reconciliations of certain of these non GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures And a discussion of certain projected non GAAP financial measures that we were not able to reconcile with our unreasonable efforts and supplementary financial information can be found in the shareholder letter that we released earlier today. Speaker 100:02:15The shareholder letter and other earnings related materials are available on our website at investors. Arm.com. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Rene, who has some prepared remarks. Speaker 200:02:26Thank you, Ian, and good afternoon, Good evening, everyone. So I'd like to just make a few different comments about the quarter and then I'll turn it over to Jason for some specifics and We'll open it up to Q and A. We had an outstanding Q3 inside the company. We could not be more pleased. Record revenues, We exceeded the high end of the range for the guidance and extremely pleased about results overall. Speaker 200:02:54For Q4, We're expecting another record quarter. And to that end, we've also raised guidance of which Jason is going to give more color on. But a little bit regarding the why and how we got here. ARM is the most fundamental foundational pervasive compute platform Really in the history of digital design. Over 280,000,000,000 units in the 30 plus years that ARM has been a company had been built. Speaker 200:03:23And that has underpinned a software ecosystem and hardware ecosystem like no other. And given the fact that a CPU design is really driven by the hardware and the software, it creates a flywheel for continuous development. That is the more hardware that exists on ARM, the more software that's written for ARM, the more software that's written for ARM, the more popular the hardware. So we're building off a fantastic base that when we look at what happened in the last quarter, not only did we see growth driven by a number of factors, but growth that we think is long term and sustainable. For royalties specifically around of the products that shipped in the quarter, we've seen a significant transition now continuing from our V8 product to our V9 product. Speaker 200:04:11Our V9 product Garners roughly 2x the royalty rate of the equivalent V eight product and whereas in the previous quarter That was about 10% of our revenue for royalties, it's now moved to 15%. And that has seen growth in not only the smartphone sector but also in infrastructure and other markets which drives growth. We are also seeing Strong momentum and tailwinds from all things AI. From the most complex devices on the planet For training and inference, the NVIDIA Grace Hopper 200 to edge devices such as the Gemini Nano Pixel 6 from Google or the Samsung Galaxy S24, More and more AI is running on more edge devices and end devices and that's all running on ARM. And what that has done is driven a very strong set of tailwinds for our licensing growth. Speaker 200:05:06When we look at Demand for new products from a licensing standpoint, what we are finding from the end market is that we've reached nowhere near good enough relative to the capability of the technology and end customers for new designs are needing more and more ARM technology to keep up, particularly with the AI demands. So with that, our licensing growth has been very, very strong. We've also seen proof points around one of our strategies that we call compute subsystems. These are complete finished blocks of designs that we Put together for our end customers that will save them significant time around validation of their engineering work and also around time to market relative to cycling products through the fab. 1 of the very first designs that was made public that uses this is the Microsoft Cobalt, which uses our Neoverse cores, a 128 CPUs to be specific. Speaker 200:06:00We work very closely with Microsoft around these designs using compute subsystems. And we see this trend only going to continue. So between strong growth and royalties that are driven between V8 to V9, All things AI needing energy efficient compute and compute subsystems, we feel very, very strongly positioned for growth. And again this is completely underpinned by ecosystem of devices that are in the installed base and a very, very large software community that develops on ARM. So with that, I will turn it over to Jason and then we'll open it up for Q and A. Speaker 300:06:36Thank you, Renee. I'm going to briefly touch on guidance for the Q4 and full year. Starting with revenues. For fiscal Q4, we are guiding to a range of $850,000,000 to $900,000,000 with a midpoint of $875,000,000 This represents a raise of over $95,000,000 compared to our prior implied guidance for the Q4. When combined with our strong Q3 performance, The full year revenue guidance rises to $3,155,000,000 to $3,205,000,000 an increase of $160,000,000 at the midpoint versus prior. Speaker 300:07:10Within Q4 total revenue, we expect royalty revenues to grow mid single digits sequentially and to be up over 30% year over year as we compare against the bottom of the industry wide inventory correction that occurred in prior year Q4. Royalty revenue sequential growth is mainly coming from increasing penetration of RMV9, where royalty rates are on average at least double the rates on equivalent RMV8 products. Additionally, we are seeing an increasing amount of ARM technology and chips being deployed. And as the amount of ARM technology in chips increases, so does the royalty rate. With around 35% of ARM's total sorry, ARM's royalty revenues coming from smartphones, we have benefited from recovery in the smartphone market. Speaker 300:07:59But with 65% coming from markets beyond mobile, We are seeing more revenue growth from share gains and market share growth outside of mobile. Additionally, we are expecting another strong quarter for licensing with revenue up sequentially to near record levels. As with recent quarters, we expect to sign multiple new ATA deals in Q4 And demand for our latest technology remains high as customers need access to AI capable CPUs and related technology such as our compute subsystems. Turning to expenses, we expect non GAAP OpEx of approximately $490,000,000 in Q4 $1,700,000,000 for the full year. On a like for like basis, our full year guidance has increased by $10,000,000 driven by slightly higher spend in R and D. Speaker 300:08:48As detailed in the guidance section of our shareholder letter, to increase transparency and improve the comparability of our results, Beginning in Q4, the presentation of our non GAAP measures will be modified to exclude employer taxes related to equity classified awards. These taxes are dependent on our stock price at the time of vesting and as a result fluctuate independently of the operating performance of our business. The impact of this change has been factored into today's non GAAP Q4 and full year guidance for operating expenses and fully diluted EPS. On an EPS basis, revenue strength will flow through to profit, driving Q4 non GAAP fully diluted EPS up to between $0.28 $0.32 And full year non GAAP fully diluted EPS to up between $1.20 1.24 In summary, we had an outstanding Q3 and expect our momentum to accelerate through Q4 and beyond. With that, I will now turn it back over to the operator to kick off the Q and A portion of the call. Operator00:09:53Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Harlan Sur of JPMorgan. Your question please, Harlan. Speaker 200:10:25Yes. Speaker 400:10:26Thank you. Good afternoon and congratulations on the strong results, guidance and of course execution. December quarter, as you guys mentioned, right, 2nd consecutive quarter of strong licensing, 2nd consecutive quarter of book to bill greater than 1, strong ACV. Sounds like many of your customers across all of your end markets are focusing on accelerated compute and AI and the requirements for more compute capability and that's obviously being reflected in the strong licensing performance. How much of the expansion on recent licensing deals has been more about adding your AI specific IP, right, like your Ethos NPU or taking advantage of some of your Helium and Neon Vector Extensions for AI workloads or Compute subsystems adoption versus just buying up the stack on more powerful cores? Speaker 400:11:14And then more importantly, like Speaker 500:11:15do you guys see the Speaker 400:11:16licensing momentum continuing into fiscal 2025? Speaker 200:11:21Yes. Hi, Harlan, and thank you for the kind words. I'll take the first part of your question and then let Jason comment on the second half. 1 of the new products That we released relative from a licensing standpoint is something we call ARM Total Access, what Jason referred to as ATA. That gives customers access to a broad set of ARM technology including our most advanced CPUs and NPUs. Speaker 200:11:49And one of the things that we are seeing is exactly what you described. We're seeing demands for incorporating CPUs with Anything that helps with AI acceleration such as vector extensions. Additionally, the ATH give customers access to the NPUs, which they can also use for a current offload. What we are seeing anecdotally relative to when we engage customers is that The need for more compute, the need to be able to handle what I would call a bit of the unknown relative to these large language models that either run on an edge device or in the hybrid way is fundamentally driving a need for more compute than they had before. So They are looking to upgrade to give themselves flexibility on the design and also to maximize their ability to deliver The most efficient product whether that's lots of different cores or a smaller set of devices that may or may not include an NPU. Speaker 200:12:46So in summary, yes, your question, I think is accurate relative to the conclusion of AI demand is driving a need for a lot of different products. And I'll let Jason kind of comment to the longer term trend that we see. Speaker 300:13:00Yes. Harlan, I would say on the looking forward to obviously I only gave guidance for But going beyond that, when you unpack licensing versus royalty, because of the fact that we're largely Almost entirely under contract for next year on royalties, we feel good about those trends. It's the license piece that's a little harder to forecast. If I look at last quarter and this in Q4 that's coming up, we've definitely had some upside from AI and selling additional licenses That were just not in our plan and not anticipated. So I think we're going to need to work through this quarter to find out How much of that upside continues to and that trend flows into next year, because we've seen this demand has been coming, I think a little shorter sales cycles than we had seen typically before. Speaker 300:13:59So I'd say stay tuned. Very helpful. In 90 days, we'll give you a better view. Speaker 400:14:03Helpful. Thank you very much. Operator00:14:07Thank you. Our next question Comes from the line of Gary Mobley of Wells Fargo. Your question please, Gary. Speaker 600:14:20Hi, guys. Thanks very much for taking my question. And let me extend my congratulations to the entire ARM team for the strong results. Can't help but notice the strength in business from Arm China. Maybe if you can speak to what drove that strong results out of ARM China? Speaker 600:14:39And besides ARM China, were there any other greater than 10% customers in the quarter? Speaker 200:14:45Yes, I would say broadly speaking, we are seeing increased market share gains For our products across the board, particularly around automotive and infrastructuredata center. Inside China, those are very good growth markets. One of the things we've continued to comment on relative to the China market is that the China ecosystem tends to follow the global ecosystem. So as we see the share gains across different aspects of the market, We're seeing that consistent and holding true relative to China. Jason, you want to take the other part of that? Speaker 300:15:24Yes. Just on the numbers, To make sure it's clear, so when we announced related parties, I think we're about 30% of growth. ARM China is the largest portion of it. However, there are others. So ARM China was about 25% of total revenue, just slightly up from the 20% from a quarter ago. Speaker 600:15:45That's helpful. The gains in the royalty rate per unit, if I can add a follow on, Certainly are accelerating. Is that all driven by ARM version 9? And should we continue to expect that upward inflection in the royalty rate per unit? Speaker 200:16:04Yes. I think that's the right way to think about it. So as mentioned, ARM V9 With 10% of our royalty revenue last quarter now 15%, we see that accelerating. The other thing we are Seeing is that the mixes of devices that might have a mix of V8 and V9 cores are increasingly moving to more V9 cores. And the reason for that is back to the AI comment, the compute needs, the end applications only continues to increase. Speaker 200:16:37And what we're seeing is customers looking to put more and more technology into their devices, perhaps even more than they originally planned for when they had licensed the technology. So it's a compounding effect of growth. We see growth from royalty happening from V8 to V9 transition and more ARM technology being used in the same devices. So it's a bit of a compounding effect that helps us with growth. Thank you. Operator00:17:04Thank you. Our next question Speaker 700:17:18Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question and congrats on the nice results. I just wanted to add a question to the V9 pile here. You guys are talking about traction in AI, smartphones, infrastructure. You're saying that that percentage as a percentage of total revenue grows into the next fiscal year. Speaker 700:17:36Where are you seeing the most of that traction? You called out AI a couple of times here early in the call. But is that coming more from the smartphone side or the AI side? And Just maybe talk about the cadence of where you see that penetration rate growing as you get into Speaker 500:17:50the next fiscal year? Thank you. Speaker 200:17:52Yes. So thanks for the question. So a couple of ways to think about it. There's definitely growth coming from the data center side. So proof points such as NVIDIA's Grace Hopper, the Microsoft Cobalt design, the work that AWS has been doing with Graviton. Speaker 200:18:11What we are seeing is more and more AI demands in the data center, whether that's around training or inference. And Because the ARM solution in the data center in particular is extremely good in terms of performance per watt and the constraints that are on today's data centers relative to running these AI workloads puts a huge demand on power. That's a great tailwind for ARM. If we move to the edge devices such as a smartphone, We've seen and I think the recent launches as I mentioned with Gemini Nano and the Galaxy S24 Increased AI workloads being pushed to the phone and what we're seeing from the design standpoint is more and more Compute technology being pushed into those phones such that they are AI capable and AI ready, because This field is moving very, very fast. A year from now, who knows what the type of AI applications that might be able to run on a smartphone. Speaker 200:19:14So what we're seeing is a shift to more and more high performance capable technology to capture a wave to ensure that they can run these AI workloads. Nobody wants to be caught behind with not enough performance when the new application comes out. So that has accelerated the V9 adoption both from standpoint of more devices using it and more devices using more of it. And to your question, where is it coming from? It's coming from everywhere. Speaker 200:19:45It's coming from certainly the data center, certainly from the edge devices and we think over time even AI PCs. So it's a huge growth vector. Speaker 700:19:57Super helpful. And then if I could just ask a follow-up as well. If you look at kind of the seasonality of the close year, you obviously saw Really strong results in both the December and the March quarter. Obviously, you're not perfect with units, but if you look at June in the smartphone ecosystem, you're kind of seeing a little bit of a pause in the Android ecosystem and kind of some cautious data points from the supply chain in general. Could you talk about what you expect in terms of seasonality to start your fiscal year? Speaker 700:20:24Any tidbits there would be helpful. I know you're not guiding June, but any way to help think about how we begin the next year Speaker 200:20:29would be helpful. Thank you. Yes. I'm not going to comment in terms of too far forward on the seasonality component to what we're doing. But what I would emphasize is that, we're a bit of a different company to think about relative to how you think about other companies in terms of their specific exposure to a market. Speaker 200:20:49We are involved in just about every single end market and every single end market is moving V8 to V9 which have as I said doubled the royalty rates and just about every single one of these markets is putting more compute Into their devices. So sometimes when we've had questions from folks saying, well, wait a minute, I'm trying to figure out how units match up to numbers. We're operating on a little bit of a different plane because of our broad, broad adoption. And as I mentioned at the start of the call, the pervasiveness of the architecture. Operator00:21:30Thank you. Our next question comes from the line Vivek Arya of Bank of America Securities. Your line is open, Vivek. Speaker 800:21:46I just wanted to clarify, Renee, is this on the V9, is the 10% to 15% Related to number of customers, number of chips or revenue related to those chips? Because I think in the shareholder letter, it's Qualified as V9 of 15% of royalty revenue rather than I guess a bigger question is, Just so that we have an apples to apples, sense of how many of your smartphone units are actually using V9 right now versus The ones that use V9 in the last quarter, is that a better way to track V9 adoption? And David, go from Speaker 200:22:28here, I guess. Yes. So let me try to answer your question and maybe Jason, Ian, if I'm missing some facts, you guys can fill in. First off, the number when we say 10% 15%, that's percentage of our overall royalty revenue. So that's the way to think about that. Speaker 200:22:45When you think about the number of units that are moving from V8 to V9, I don't think we have anything specific that I can give you on this call, but what I can tell you is just as an example or an anecdote is that V9 is being used extensively and almost exclusively now in all the premium smartphones. And the premium smartphones as the Galaxy S24, those are actually part of the segments that are seeing a little bit better growth than their compatriots. So given the fact that virtually all the premium smartphones have now moved to V9 And as I mentioned before, people trying to put as much B9 technology in that smartphone to capture the AI wave. I think that's maybe one way to think about proportionally Where some of the growth comes versus units. What we tend to see with the smartphone market for example is Typically a waterfall over time where what was in the premium unit finds its way into the high end then into the mid range. Speaker 200:23:47But that's the way I maybe a good way to think about it in terms of where the percentages are. There certainly is a lot of E9 in the premium smartphone and we're seeing a lot of premium smartphones being sold. Speaker 600:24:00Thank you. Operator00:24:03Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mehdi Hosseini of SIG. Your question please, Mitra. Speaker 900:24:15Yes, sir. Thanks for taking my question. Just actually as a follow-up, is there any way You could elaborate on the mix of V9 by end market like a smartphone versus cloud compute? And I have a follow-up. Speaker 200:24:31I'll attempt to answer that and again maybe Ian and Jason. As I said, premium smartphone is almost exclusively now V9 and virtually every high end data center chip is V9. When you look at Grace Hopper, When you look at Graviton, when you look at Microsoft Cobalt, these are all V9 based designs. Speaker 300:24:53Yes. The only thing I would add, On a in terms of royalty revenue and then ships that have actually been deployed in the market, We are overweighted towards smartphones on V9 primarily because it's an annual refresh cycle. And so I would think of that being a bit ahead. Over time, I think the other lines of businesses will catch up, but it's predominantly or definitely weighted more towards smartphone for the reasons that Renee just pointed out on premium mix. Speaker 900:25:23Got it. Thank you. And my follow-up has to do with the market share. I think End of FY 2020 I'm sorry, end of FY 2020 3, cloud was about 10%, market share for you and networking was 26%. Is there any way you can give us some color as how as you close FY 2024, how those market shares are changing? Speaker 200:25:50Yes, not today. We're not prepared to give that. When we give the updates for next year, the next quarter, we can do that. But I can say we're very pleased about the direction of travel and AI has only helped that grow faster. Speaker 900:26:05Got it. Thank you. Operator00:26:07Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Vijay Rakesh Amazuro, your question please, Vijay. Speaker 500:26:18Yes. Hi, congratulations again on a great quarter. Just A quick question on the cloud compute side, if you could give us some way of how to look at what you think of the growth in 2024 given you have some Pretty market customers with GS200 and Graviton and Cobalt 100 now. And I have a follow-up. Speaker 200:26:38Sorry, you didn't catch it quite. You're asking about projected growth for next year in cloud? Speaker 500:26:43Yes, yes. Just for calendar 2024, how do you see the growth with those On the cloud compute side, you have some big to market customers there now. How do you see that growth? Speaker 300:26:53Yes. As Renee just mentioned on the For the last question, we'll provide our market share update on specifically on compute, which is for us almost all cloud in infrastructure and we'll provide some views and we'll expect that to go next year. So give us 90 days. Speaker 500:27:10Got it. And then on the mobile side, obviously, you mentioned good traction with V9. Just wondering what Penetration rate on VLAN is now when you look at the premium phones, I guess all of it. But how what What the trajectory on that is to the year, I guess. I will save it for later. Speaker 200:27:33Is your question, what percentage of smartphones are benign? Speaker 1000:27:37Yes. Speaker 200:27:39Yes. As I mentioned earlier, the numbers are somewhat skewed relative to the premium segment versus the broader segment. If you look at overall units, most of the premium if not all smartphones have moved to V9 And the rest of the segments have been slower to adopt. But the premium segment draws a very, very large Mixture of lots of cores and lots of royalty rich cores. So it tends to weigh out the numbers relative to overall units. Speaker 200:28:13We expect V9 and Ian keep me kind of comfortable on this, usually next 3, 4 years to kind of find its way throughout the entire smartphone category. Speaker 100:28:21Yes. If you go back to how V8 sort of took out from V7, it took about About 3 years to get from where we are here to about 80%, 90% penetrated. Speaker 500:28:37Got it. Thanks. Operator00:28:40Thank you. Our next question Comes from the line of Ross Seymore of Deutsche Bank. Your question please, Ross. Speaker 1000:28:52Hi, guys. Thanks for asking question. Congrats on I wanted to go back to the ARM China conversation. So a clarification on the main question. The clarification was that 25% that I think, Jason, you mentioned, was that of total revenues or just of royalties? Speaker 1000:29:06And then the main question is, could you just help us Break down a little bit how that's so strong, whether it's total revenues or just royalties, that was a Significant driver of growth and depending upon the answer to the clarification, it could have been more than all of the sequential growth. So I just wanted to get my arms around What was really driving the growth and how much of it came from our China? Speaker 300:29:30Yes. China was 25% of total revenues In Q3 and that's up from 20% in Q2. Speaker 1000:29:42And then what was driving that? Because again, by that math, it seems like the China side was up, I don't know, 30% and everything else kind of went down a little bit Sequentially, was that just the China handset market coming back to life? Was it more goodness beyond that? Just any color you could give on what drove that China growth that was so impressive? Speaker 200:30:01Yes, we don't break down the individual customers. But as I said, The China ecosystem tends to follow the rest of the world relative to the growth. So when we talk about growth in data centers and we Operator00:30:26Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Charles Hsie of Needham and Company. Please go ahead, Charles. Speaker 1100:30:37Hey, thanks. My congratulations to our management team on the very strong results, very impressive. I do want to dig into a little bit more on the China and the related party side of the revenue because While I look at your historical numbers, your ARM China contribution tracks almost identical the related party transactions, there seems to be a little bit of the gap seems to be expanding a little bit over the last quarter. And maybe related to that, You had very strong bookings in the last quarter and this quarter the booking actually comes down a little bit, but Licensing revenue actually was stronger than you expected. Was that the result of some of the earlier commencement of the licensing contracts That you probably signed a little bit earlier in the year, maybe in the prior quarter. Speaker 1100:31:31And is that more of a timing that kind of surprised you to the upside? Thanks. Speaker 300:31:37Yes. So first on the related parties. So yes, typically China has been most all of it. We did have An additional license deal that was roughly 5% I guess the total revenue, the difference between Armitage and the rest. That deal did come through this quarter. Speaker 300:31:57And so you're right, that's not something that's been continuous, but It was a deal that came in this last quarter. In terms of the makeup of license revenue in general, we typically run somewhere around 40% to 50% of our license revenue was from backlog, the deals previously signed, but relate to technology milestones that are delivered within the quarter. Then the remainder are new deals that are signed within the quarter. Clearly, we have good visibility into backlog and what our delivery is going to be. We have a pretty good insight into renewals or deals that have relatively long lead times. Speaker 300:32:36I think the one thing that we saw a little bit unique both last quarter and this quarter is with the increased kind of focus in AI And there just is a lot of focus on investing and building designs in AI. And so there's been some shorter cycle deals that have come up, kind of, I would say, a little bit unique versus what we've seen in the past. And that's the primary reason why we do need to spend a little more time this quarter to get our arms around how much of that momentum will we continue to see next year. Does that answer your question? Speaker 1100:33:17Yes, thanks. If I may Speaker 500:33:19add that the China piece, your IT peers Seems to be Speaker 1100:33:22a little bit more cautious about what's going to happen, I mean, in this year and actually the kind of cautious you started that late last year, but that your China revenue is still going very strong. How do we reconcile the differences here? I mean, that's my last question. Thank you so much. Speaker 300:33:40Well, I wouldn't say that we're less cautious. I think our numbers have been strong. But from a forecast perspective, we've been forecasting That China likely goes down into the teens as a percentage of total revenue. This last quarter and the quarter before, We've just seen stronger recovery than we had previously expected. And that's been Certainly, a nice positive surprise. Speaker 300:34:08In terms of going forward, we feel good about the progress we expect to deliver this quarter. And in 90 days, we'll let you know if we think that progress is going to continue into next year. Speaker 1100:34:19Appreciate the color. Thanks. Thank you. Operator00:34:24Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Matt Ramsay of TD Cohen. Please go ahead, Matt. Speaker 1200:34:35Thank you very much, guys. Good afternoon. I wanted to go back to the ARM B9 conversation on a couple of points. I noticed that This is the first time and maybe I'm just dumb and didn't see it, but I think this is the first time you had explicitly put in the shareholder letter and in writing that You were at least double royalty rates from VA to V9. And I guess I wanted to ask you about that in a broader sense. Speaker 1200:35:04Is that Sort of across the board, across end markets and also across customers that are Traditionally processor licensees and also ones that are traditionally architectural licensees and do the systems themselves. So I guess that's the first part of the question. Is that a blanket statement across the board? And the reason I ask it, if you go back to lots of conversations around the IPO timeframe, there were Some aggressive ramps of royalty rates across your mobile business. And I think we were all trying to figure out Whether the VA penetration to V9 would drive those kind of expansion and results or if you would need some significant contributions from sort of system license and the like to get those results. Speaker 1200:35:51And so any context there about The applicability and breadth of that comment on doubling royalty rates on V9 would be really helpful. Thanks guys. Speaker 200:36:01Yes. Thanks, Matt. So I'll attempt to answer it and let Jason and Jason wants to chime in. Yes, you're right. This is the first time we've done it, although we only have done 2 of these letters, so we don't have a huge installed base to refer to. Speaker 200:36:16We wanted to provide some specific clarity because we had been receiving some level of questions around the thing you just asked about relative to how to think about V8 versus V9? The double the V9 rate for the equivalent double V9 for the equivalent V8 is sort of a rough guidepost, But in some cases it's quite a bit more. The Neoverse royalty rates have their own unique tables. The automotive royalty rates have their own unique tables And some of the most high performance CPUs that we ship into the client section have very, very Significant lifted rates over version 8. So double is a good rule of thumb for like for like, But in some cases it's even better than that. Speaker 200:37:02So that's but we did want to sort of provide just some clarity because we thought When folks look at the numbers in the absence of that context, there would just be a question of just help me work out how you got here. So Jason, if there's anything you want to add on to that? Speaker 300:37:16No, I think to Renee's earlier point, we're I understand we're a little bit hard to model because we don't really track to other companies. And because of we're getting paid royalties on roughly 8,000,000,000 chips a quarter and just the slightest bit of mix Either to more premium handsets or to more B9 versus B8, that turns out to be a pretty sensitive variable. And when you look at the growth from last quarter to this quarter and what we're expecting from this quarter to next quarter, unit growth is very, very small. It's really almost all coming from Rate growth increases. And as we said back at IPO, we're almost 100% on a contract for next year. Speaker 300:38:03So really we're just seeing the manifestation of the work that was done in the last 2 years. We wanted to provide this B8 to B9 ratio As one way to help you guys be able to kind of see the progress and be able to model it. So hope it's helpful. Speaker 1200:38:19No, it's super helpful. Yes. Speaker 1000:38:19I can say that one thing that had Speaker 200:38:22high confidence in when we started looking at the transition was VHB9. We knew we had increased rates And we knew that the royalty picture would be better than what we were accustomed in the past. I think one of the benefits we're getting and I would use AI as sort of A driver for all this is that the amount of V9 cores or the mix of V9 cores has been stronger than anticipated Because people are putting more CPUs down, where they were not planning on putting as many or they may be putting a higher mix of V9 and V8. So that's all driven, I think, good forward momentum for us. Speaker 1200:39:02That's super helpful guys. Just a quick clarification. Any comment on mean the base rates may be different and obviously different customers have different contracts, but all of that commentary at least directionally applicable to your Architectural licensees as well. Thanks. Speaker 900:39:18Yes. Speaker 200:39:20Yes, it is. Thank Operator00:39:27you. Our next question Comes from the line of Andrew Gardiner of Citi. Your question please, Andrew. Speaker 600:39:37Thanks very much for taking the question. I had one on the licensing side. You guys have You've spoken about how strong it was in the quarter and the sort of being surprised at the quicker sales cycle time on some of these licenses. A point that you haven't brought up on the call yet, but that was in the shareholder letter was that you also saw 3 of the 5 ATA Licensees in the quarter, the upgrades from the ARM flexible access program. And you said that was the first time that had happened. Speaker 600:40:12Did that take you by price or were these customers that were getting to be particularly large for an AFA and so it was natural for them to upgrade? Yes. It wasn't a surprise. And is this something that might actually continue to surprise positively? Is there a portion of That cohort that is sort of natural to be upgrading from AFA to ATA and therefore contribute more in terms of license dollars? Speaker 200:40:41Yes. Thank you for the question. We didn't bring it up in our comments. We've got a lot of good stuff to talk about this quarter. I was trying to keep it as concise. Speaker 200:40:49But the AFA Transition to ATA, thank you for calling that out. That's a great trend for us. When we designed the program a number of years ago, That was absolutely the intent is that customers that launched into an AFA would ultimately go on to a total access license. What largely drives that quite frankly is Speaker 800:41:11the company that took the Speaker 200:41:12AFA start to get commercial traction in their business. Some of the AFA customers are early stage companies. They may have an early exit or get acquired. But as they get larger and mature, We expect them to embrace ARM technology in a broader way. So I wouldn't call it a surprise. Speaker 200:41:28I would actually call it an expected outcome that we have and we're really happy to see it. Great. Speaker 600:41:37Thanks very much. Operator00:41:41Thank you. I would now like to turn the conference back to Rene Haas for closing remarks. Sir? Speaker 200:41:48Thank you and thank you everyone for the kind words on the quarter and Good set of questions that we had. We're thrilled about Q3 and we're very, very excited about Q4. I think what you're seeing coming to life are all the strategies that we've been working hard on over the last number of years. Investment in the V9 technology, the diversification of our business into data center into automotive and of course IoT. And then now the What I think is probably the most profound opportunity in our lifetimes which is around AI. Speaker 200:42:28I think regarding AI particularly when you think about artificial general intelligence that's going to drive the need for more compute in a way that we've never seen before. So as good as the last couple of quarters were, we're just at the beginning. I could not be more excited about the growth that we have going forward. And thank you for all your time and questions.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallARM Q3 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K) ARM Earnings Headlines‘Had him by the arm’: Man recalls harrowing moment he saved boy from New Hampshire dog attackMay 2 at 11:34 AM | msn.comARM (NASDAQ:ARM) Price Target Cut to $165.00 by Analysts at UBS GroupMay 2 at 2:29 AM | americanbankingnews.comTrump Orders 'National Digital Asset Stockpile'Billionaires Rush Into Digital Banking Token Three massive forces are converging right now, creating what could be the biggest wealth opportunity since Bitcoin's early days.May 2, 2025 | Crypto 101 Media (Ad)‘Thunderbolts*’ Is Finally the Shot in the Arm Marvel NeedsMay 1 at 1:21 PM | msn.comComparing Skyworks Solutions (NASDAQ:SWKS) & ARM (NASDAQ:ARM)April 30 at 2:43 AM | americanbankingnews.comWells Fargo & Company Issues Pessimistic Forecast for ARM (NASDAQ:ARM) Stock PriceApril 30 at 1:47 AM | americanbankingnews.comSee More ARM Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like ARM? 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There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Thank you for standing by, and welcome to ARM's 3rd Quarter Fiscal Year End 2024 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. I would now like to hand the call over to Head of Investor Relations, Ian Thornton. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:31Thank you, Latif. Thank you, everybody. My name is Ian Thornton and I'm the Head of Investor Relations at ARM. I would like to welcome you to our earnings conference call for the Q3 of the fiscal year ending March 31, 2024. I'm joined today by Rene Haas, the Chief Executive Officer of ARM and Jason Child, ARM's Chief Financial Officer. Speaker 100:00:54Hopefully, you will all have downloaded and read the shareholder letter. If not, it is available on the ARM Investor Relations website at investors. Arm.com. The shareholder letter provides a rich update on our strategic progress in the quarter. Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that during the course of this conference call, Arm will discuss forecasts, targets and other forward looking information regarding the company and its financial results. Speaker 100:01:19While these statements represent our best current judgment about the results and performance as of today, our actual results are subject to many risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from what we expect. In addition to any risks that we highlight during this call, important risk factors that may affect our future results and performance are described in our registration statement on Form 1 filed with the SEC on September 14, 2023. ARM assumes no obligation to update any forward looking statements, We speak only as of the date they are made. In addition, we refer to non GAAP financial measures during the discussion. Reconciliations of certain of these non GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures And a discussion of certain projected non GAAP financial measures that we were not able to reconcile with our unreasonable efforts and supplementary financial information can be found in the shareholder letter that we released earlier today. Speaker 100:02:15The shareholder letter and other earnings related materials are available on our website at investors. Arm.com. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Rene, who has some prepared remarks. Speaker 200:02:26Thank you, Ian, and good afternoon, Good evening, everyone. So I'd like to just make a few different comments about the quarter and then I'll turn it over to Jason for some specifics and We'll open it up to Q and A. We had an outstanding Q3 inside the company. We could not be more pleased. Record revenues, We exceeded the high end of the range for the guidance and extremely pleased about results overall. Speaker 200:02:54For Q4, We're expecting another record quarter. And to that end, we've also raised guidance of which Jason is going to give more color on. But a little bit regarding the why and how we got here. ARM is the most fundamental foundational pervasive compute platform Really in the history of digital design. Over 280,000,000,000 units in the 30 plus years that ARM has been a company had been built. Speaker 200:03:23And that has underpinned a software ecosystem and hardware ecosystem like no other. And given the fact that a CPU design is really driven by the hardware and the software, it creates a flywheel for continuous development. That is the more hardware that exists on ARM, the more software that's written for ARM, the more software that's written for ARM, the more popular the hardware. So we're building off a fantastic base that when we look at what happened in the last quarter, not only did we see growth driven by a number of factors, but growth that we think is long term and sustainable. For royalties specifically around of the products that shipped in the quarter, we've seen a significant transition now continuing from our V8 product to our V9 product. Speaker 200:04:11Our V9 product Garners roughly 2x the royalty rate of the equivalent V eight product and whereas in the previous quarter That was about 10% of our revenue for royalties, it's now moved to 15%. And that has seen growth in not only the smartphone sector but also in infrastructure and other markets which drives growth. We are also seeing Strong momentum and tailwinds from all things AI. From the most complex devices on the planet For training and inference, the NVIDIA Grace Hopper 200 to edge devices such as the Gemini Nano Pixel 6 from Google or the Samsung Galaxy S24, More and more AI is running on more edge devices and end devices and that's all running on ARM. And what that has done is driven a very strong set of tailwinds for our licensing growth. Speaker 200:05:06When we look at Demand for new products from a licensing standpoint, what we are finding from the end market is that we've reached nowhere near good enough relative to the capability of the technology and end customers for new designs are needing more and more ARM technology to keep up, particularly with the AI demands. So with that, our licensing growth has been very, very strong. We've also seen proof points around one of our strategies that we call compute subsystems. These are complete finished blocks of designs that we Put together for our end customers that will save them significant time around validation of their engineering work and also around time to market relative to cycling products through the fab. 1 of the very first designs that was made public that uses this is the Microsoft Cobalt, which uses our Neoverse cores, a 128 CPUs to be specific. Speaker 200:06:00We work very closely with Microsoft around these designs using compute subsystems. And we see this trend only going to continue. So between strong growth and royalties that are driven between V8 to V9, All things AI needing energy efficient compute and compute subsystems, we feel very, very strongly positioned for growth. And again this is completely underpinned by ecosystem of devices that are in the installed base and a very, very large software community that develops on ARM. So with that, I will turn it over to Jason and then we'll open it up for Q and A. Speaker 300:06:36Thank you, Renee. I'm going to briefly touch on guidance for the Q4 and full year. Starting with revenues. For fiscal Q4, we are guiding to a range of $850,000,000 to $900,000,000 with a midpoint of $875,000,000 This represents a raise of over $95,000,000 compared to our prior implied guidance for the Q4. When combined with our strong Q3 performance, The full year revenue guidance rises to $3,155,000,000 to $3,205,000,000 an increase of $160,000,000 at the midpoint versus prior. Speaker 300:07:10Within Q4 total revenue, we expect royalty revenues to grow mid single digits sequentially and to be up over 30% year over year as we compare against the bottom of the industry wide inventory correction that occurred in prior year Q4. Royalty revenue sequential growth is mainly coming from increasing penetration of RMV9, where royalty rates are on average at least double the rates on equivalent RMV8 products. Additionally, we are seeing an increasing amount of ARM technology and chips being deployed. And as the amount of ARM technology in chips increases, so does the royalty rate. With around 35% of ARM's total sorry, ARM's royalty revenues coming from smartphones, we have benefited from recovery in the smartphone market. Speaker 300:07:59But with 65% coming from markets beyond mobile, We are seeing more revenue growth from share gains and market share growth outside of mobile. Additionally, we are expecting another strong quarter for licensing with revenue up sequentially to near record levels. As with recent quarters, we expect to sign multiple new ATA deals in Q4 And demand for our latest technology remains high as customers need access to AI capable CPUs and related technology such as our compute subsystems. Turning to expenses, we expect non GAAP OpEx of approximately $490,000,000 in Q4 $1,700,000,000 for the full year. On a like for like basis, our full year guidance has increased by $10,000,000 driven by slightly higher spend in R and D. Speaker 300:08:48As detailed in the guidance section of our shareholder letter, to increase transparency and improve the comparability of our results, Beginning in Q4, the presentation of our non GAAP measures will be modified to exclude employer taxes related to equity classified awards. These taxes are dependent on our stock price at the time of vesting and as a result fluctuate independently of the operating performance of our business. The impact of this change has been factored into today's non GAAP Q4 and full year guidance for operating expenses and fully diluted EPS. On an EPS basis, revenue strength will flow through to profit, driving Q4 non GAAP fully diluted EPS up to between $0.28 $0.32 And full year non GAAP fully diluted EPS to up between $1.20 1.24 In summary, we had an outstanding Q3 and expect our momentum to accelerate through Q4 and beyond. With that, I will now turn it back over to the operator to kick off the Q and A portion of the call. Operator00:09:53Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Harlan Sur of JPMorgan. Your question please, Harlan. Speaker 200:10:25Yes. Speaker 400:10:26Thank you. Good afternoon and congratulations on the strong results, guidance and of course execution. December quarter, as you guys mentioned, right, 2nd consecutive quarter of strong licensing, 2nd consecutive quarter of book to bill greater than 1, strong ACV. Sounds like many of your customers across all of your end markets are focusing on accelerated compute and AI and the requirements for more compute capability and that's obviously being reflected in the strong licensing performance. How much of the expansion on recent licensing deals has been more about adding your AI specific IP, right, like your Ethos NPU or taking advantage of some of your Helium and Neon Vector Extensions for AI workloads or Compute subsystems adoption versus just buying up the stack on more powerful cores? Speaker 400:11:14And then more importantly, like Speaker 500:11:15do you guys see the Speaker 400:11:16licensing momentum continuing into fiscal 2025? Speaker 200:11:21Yes. Hi, Harlan, and thank you for the kind words. I'll take the first part of your question and then let Jason comment on the second half. 1 of the new products That we released relative from a licensing standpoint is something we call ARM Total Access, what Jason referred to as ATA. That gives customers access to a broad set of ARM technology including our most advanced CPUs and NPUs. Speaker 200:11:49And one of the things that we are seeing is exactly what you described. We're seeing demands for incorporating CPUs with Anything that helps with AI acceleration such as vector extensions. Additionally, the ATH give customers access to the NPUs, which they can also use for a current offload. What we are seeing anecdotally relative to when we engage customers is that The need for more compute, the need to be able to handle what I would call a bit of the unknown relative to these large language models that either run on an edge device or in the hybrid way is fundamentally driving a need for more compute than they had before. So They are looking to upgrade to give themselves flexibility on the design and also to maximize their ability to deliver The most efficient product whether that's lots of different cores or a smaller set of devices that may or may not include an NPU. Speaker 200:12:46So in summary, yes, your question, I think is accurate relative to the conclusion of AI demand is driving a need for a lot of different products. And I'll let Jason kind of comment to the longer term trend that we see. Speaker 300:13:00Yes. Harlan, I would say on the looking forward to obviously I only gave guidance for But going beyond that, when you unpack licensing versus royalty, because of the fact that we're largely Almost entirely under contract for next year on royalties, we feel good about those trends. It's the license piece that's a little harder to forecast. If I look at last quarter and this in Q4 that's coming up, we've definitely had some upside from AI and selling additional licenses That were just not in our plan and not anticipated. So I think we're going to need to work through this quarter to find out How much of that upside continues to and that trend flows into next year, because we've seen this demand has been coming, I think a little shorter sales cycles than we had seen typically before. Speaker 300:13:59So I'd say stay tuned. Very helpful. In 90 days, we'll give you a better view. Speaker 400:14:03Helpful. Thank you very much. Operator00:14:07Thank you. Our next question Comes from the line of Gary Mobley of Wells Fargo. Your question please, Gary. Speaker 600:14:20Hi, guys. Thanks very much for taking my question. And let me extend my congratulations to the entire ARM team for the strong results. Can't help but notice the strength in business from Arm China. Maybe if you can speak to what drove that strong results out of ARM China? Speaker 600:14:39And besides ARM China, were there any other greater than 10% customers in the quarter? Speaker 200:14:45Yes, I would say broadly speaking, we are seeing increased market share gains For our products across the board, particularly around automotive and infrastructuredata center. Inside China, those are very good growth markets. One of the things we've continued to comment on relative to the China market is that the China ecosystem tends to follow the global ecosystem. So as we see the share gains across different aspects of the market, We're seeing that consistent and holding true relative to China. Jason, you want to take the other part of that? Speaker 300:15:24Yes. Just on the numbers, To make sure it's clear, so when we announced related parties, I think we're about 30% of growth. ARM China is the largest portion of it. However, there are others. So ARM China was about 25% of total revenue, just slightly up from the 20% from a quarter ago. Speaker 600:15:45That's helpful. The gains in the royalty rate per unit, if I can add a follow on, Certainly are accelerating. Is that all driven by ARM version 9? And should we continue to expect that upward inflection in the royalty rate per unit? Speaker 200:16:04Yes. I think that's the right way to think about it. So as mentioned, ARM V9 With 10% of our royalty revenue last quarter now 15%, we see that accelerating. The other thing we are Seeing is that the mixes of devices that might have a mix of V8 and V9 cores are increasingly moving to more V9 cores. And the reason for that is back to the AI comment, the compute needs, the end applications only continues to increase. Speaker 200:16:37And what we're seeing is customers looking to put more and more technology into their devices, perhaps even more than they originally planned for when they had licensed the technology. So it's a compounding effect of growth. We see growth from royalty happening from V8 to V9 transition and more ARM technology being used in the same devices. So it's a bit of a compounding effect that helps us with growth. Thank you. Operator00:17:04Thank you. Our next question Speaker 700:17:18Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question and congrats on the nice results. I just wanted to add a question to the V9 pile here. You guys are talking about traction in AI, smartphones, infrastructure. You're saying that that percentage as a percentage of total revenue grows into the next fiscal year. Speaker 700:17:36Where are you seeing the most of that traction? You called out AI a couple of times here early in the call. But is that coming more from the smartphone side or the AI side? And Just maybe talk about the cadence of where you see that penetration rate growing as you get into Speaker 500:17:50the next fiscal year? Thank you. Speaker 200:17:52Yes. So thanks for the question. So a couple of ways to think about it. There's definitely growth coming from the data center side. So proof points such as NVIDIA's Grace Hopper, the Microsoft Cobalt design, the work that AWS has been doing with Graviton. Speaker 200:18:11What we are seeing is more and more AI demands in the data center, whether that's around training or inference. And Because the ARM solution in the data center in particular is extremely good in terms of performance per watt and the constraints that are on today's data centers relative to running these AI workloads puts a huge demand on power. That's a great tailwind for ARM. If we move to the edge devices such as a smartphone, We've seen and I think the recent launches as I mentioned with Gemini Nano and the Galaxy S24 Increased AI workloads being pushed to the phone and what we're seeing from the design standpoint is more and more Compute technology being pushed into those phones such that they are AI capable and AI ready, because This field is moving very, very fast. A year from now, who knows what the type of AI applications that might be able to run on a smartphone. Speaker 200:19:14So what we're seeing is a shift to more and more high performance capable technology to capture a wave to ensure that they can run these AI workloads. Nobody wants to be caught behind with not enough performance when the new application comes out. So that has accelerated the V9 adoption both from standpoint of more devices using it and more devices using more of it. And to your question, where is it coming from? It's coming from everywhere. Speaker 200:19:45It's coming from certainly the data center, certainly from the edge devices and we think over time even AI PCs. So it's a huge growth vector. Speaker 700:19:57Super helpful. And then if I could just ask a follow-up as well. If you look at kind of the seasonality of the close year, you obviously saw Really strong results in both the December and the March quarter. Obviously, you're not perfect with units, but if you look at June in the smartphone ecosystem, you're kind of seeing a little bit of a pause in the Android ecosystem and kind of some cautious data points from the supply chain in general. Could you talk about what you expect in terms of seasonality to start your fiscal year? Speaker 700:20:24Any tidbits there would be helpful. I know you're not guiding June, but any way to help think about how we begin the next year Speaker 200:20:29would be helpful. Thank you. Yes. I'm not going to comment in terms of too far forward on the seasonality component to what we're doing. But what I would emphasize is that, we're a bit of a different company to think about relative to how you think about other companies in terms of their specific exposure to a market. Speaker 200:20:49We are involved in just about every single end market and every single end market is moving V8 to V9 which have as I said doubled the royalty rates and just about every single one of these markets is putting more compute Into their devices. So sometimes when we've had questions from folks saying, well, wait a minute, I'm trying to figure out how units match up to numbers. We're operating on a little bit of a different plane because of our broad, broad adoption. And as I mentioned at the start of the call, the pervasiveness of the architecture. Operator00:21:30Thank you. Our next question comes from the line Vivek Arya of Bank of America Securities. Your line is open, Vivek. Speaker 800:21:46I just wanted to clarify, Renee, is this on the V9, is the 10% to 15% Related to number of customers, number of chips or revenue related to those chips? Because I think in the shareholder letter, it's Qualified as V9 of 15% of royalty revenue rather than I guess a bigger question is, Just so that we have an apples to apples, sense of how many of your smartphone units are actually using V9 right now versus The ones that use V9 in the last quarter, is that a better way to track V9 adoption? And David, go from Speaker 200:22:28here, I guess. Yes. So let me try to answer your question and maybe Jason, Ian, if I'm missing some facts, you guys can fill in. First off, the number when we say 10% 15%, that's percentage of our overall royalty revenue. So that's the way to think about that. Speaker 200:22:45When you think about the number of units that are moving from V8 to V9, I don't think we have anything specific that I can give you on this call, but what I can tell you is just as an example or an anecdote is that V9 is being used extensively and almost exclusively now in all the premium smartphones. And the premium smartphones as the Galaxy S24, those are actually part of the segments that are seeing a little bit better growth than their compatriots. So given the fact that virtually all the premium smartphones have now moved to V9 And as I mentioned before, people trying to put as much B9 technology in that smartphone to capture the AI wave. I think that's maybe one way to think about proportionally Where some of the growth comes versus units. What we tend to see with the smartphone market for example is Typically a waterfall over time where what was in the premium unit finds its way into the high end then into the mid range. Speaker 200:23:47But that's the way I maybe a good way to think about it in terms of where the percentages are. There certainly is a lot of E9 in the premium smartphone and we're seeing a lot of premium smartphones being sold. Speaker 600:24:00Thank you. Operator00:24:03Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mehdi Hosseini of SIG. Your question please, Mitra. Speaker 900:24:15Yes, sir. Thanks for taking my question. Just actually as a follow-up, is there any way You could elaborate on the mix of V9 by end market like a smartphone versus cloud compute? And I have a follow-up. Speaker 200:24:31I'll attempt to answer that and again maybe Ian and Jason. As I said, premium smartphone is almost exclusively now V9 and virtually every high end data center chip is V9. When you look at Grace Hopper, When you look at Graviton, when you look at Microsoft Cobalt, these are all V9 based designs. Speaker 300:24:53Yes. The only thing I would add, On a in terms of royalty revenue and then ships that have actually been deployed in the market, We are overweighted towards smartphones on V9 primarily because it's an annual refresh cycle. And so I would think of that being a bit ahead. Over time, I think the other lines of businesses will catch up, but it's predominantly or definitely weighted more towards smartphone for the reasons that Renee just pointed out on premium mix. Speaker 900:25:23Got it. Thank you. And my follow-up has to do with the market share. I think End of FY 2020 I'm sorry, end of FY 2020 3, cloud was about 10%, market share for you and networking was 26%. Is there any way you can give us some color as how as you close FY 2024, how those market shares are changing? Speaker 200:25:50Yes, not today. We're not prepared to give that. When we give the updates for next year, the next quarter, we can do that. But I can say we're very pleased about the direction of travel and AI has only helped that grow faster. Speaker 900:26:05Got it. Thank you. Operator00:26:07Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Vijay Rakesh Amazuro, your question please, Vijay. Speaker 500:26:18Yes. Hi, congratulations again on a great quarter. Just A quick question on the cloud compute side, if you could give us some way of how to look at what you think of the growth in 2024 given you have some Pretty market customers with GS200 and Graviton and Cobalt 100 now. And I have a follow-up. Speaker 200:26:38Sorry, you didn't catch it quite. You're asking about projected growth for next year in cloud? Speaker 500:26:43Yes, yes. Just for calendar 2024, how do you see the growth with those On the cloud compute side, you have some big to market customers there now. How do you see that growth? Speaker 300:26:53Yes. As Renee just mentioned on the For the last question, we'll provide our market share update on specifically on compute, which is for us almost all cloud in infrastructure and we'll provide some views and we'll expect that to go next year. So give us 90 days. Speaker 500:27:10Got it. And then on the mobile side, obviously, you mentioned good traction with V9. Just wondering what Penetration rate on VLAN is now when you look at the premium phones, I guess all of it. But how what What the trajectory on that is to the year, I guess. I will save it for later. Speaker 200:27:33Is your question, what percentage of smartphones are benign? Speaker 1000:27:37Yes. Speaker 200:27:39Yes. As I mentioned earlier, the numbers are somewhat skewed relative to the premium segment versus the broader segment. If you look at overall units, most of the premium if not all smartphones have moved to V9 And the rest of the segments have been slower to adopt. But the premium segment draws a very, very large Mixture of lots of cores and lots of royalty rich cores. So it tends to weigh out the numbers relative to overall units. Speaker 200:28:13We expect V9 and Ian keep me kind of comfortable on this, usually next 3, 4 years to kind of find its way throughout the entire smartphone category. Speaker 100:28:21Yes. If you go back to how V8 sort of took out from V7, it took about About 3 years to get from where we are here to about 80%, 90% penetrated. Speaker 500:28:37Got it. Thanks. Operator00:28:40Thank you. Our next question Comes from the line of Ross Seymore of Deutsche Bank. Your question please, Ross. Speaker 1000:28:52Hi, guys. Thanks for asking question. Congrats on I wanted to go back to the ARM China conversation. So a clarification on the main question. The clarification was that 25% that I think, Jason, you mentioned, was that of total revenues or just of royalties? Speaker 1000:29:06And then the main question is, could you just help us Break down a little bit how that's so strong, whether it's total revenues or just royalties, that was a Significant driver of growth and depending upon the answer to the clarification, it could have been more than all of the sequential growth. So I just wanted to get my arms around What was really driving the growth and how much of it came from our China? Speaker 300:29:30Yes. China was 25% of total revenues In Q3 and that's up from 20% in Q2. Speaker 1000:29:42And then what was driving that? Because again, by that math, it seems like the China side was up, I don't know, 30% and everything else kind of went down a little bit Sequentially, was that just the China handset market coming back to life? Was it more goodness beyond that? Just any color you could give on what drove that China growth that was so impressive? Speaker 200:30:01Yes, we don't break down the individual customers. But as I said, The China ecosystem tends to follow the rest of the world relative to the growth. So when we talk about growth in data centers and we Operator00:30:26Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Charles Hsie of Needham and Company. Please go ahead, Charles. Speaker 1100:30:37Hey, thanks. My congratulations to our management team on the very strong results, very impressive. I do want to dig into a little bit more on the China and the related party side of the revenue because While I look at your historical numbers, your ARM China contribution tracks almost identical the related party transactions, there seems to be a little bit of the gap seems to be expanding a little bit over the last quarter. And maybe related to that, You had very strong bookings in the last quarter and this quarter the booking actually comes down a little bit, but Licensing revenue actually was stronger than you expected. Was that the result of some of the earlier commencement of the licensing contracts That you probably signed a little bit earlier in the year, maybe in the prior quarter. Speaker 1100:31:31And is that more of a timing that kind of surprised you to the upside? Thanks. Speaker 300:31:37Yes. So first on the related parties. So yes, typically China has been most all of it. We did have An additional license deal that was roughly 5% I guess the total revenue, the difference between Armitage and the rest. That deal did come through this quarter. Speaker 300:31:57And so you're right, that's not something that's been continuous, but It was a deal that came in this last quarter. In terms of the makeup of license revenue in general, we typically run somewhere around 40% to 50% of our license revenue was from backlog, the deals previously signed, but relate to technology milestones that are delivered within the quarter. Then the remainder are new deals that are signed within the quarter. Clearly, we have good visibility into backlog and what our delivery is going to be. We have a pretty good insight into renewals or deals that have relatively long lead times. Speaker 300:32:36I think the one thing that we saw a little bit unique both last quarter and this quarter is with the increased kind of focus in AI And there just is a lot of focus on investing and building designs in AI. And so there's been some shorter cycle deals that have come up, kind of, I would say, a little bit unique versus what we've seen in the past. And that's the primary reason why we do need to spend a little more time this quarter to get our arms around how much of that momentum will we continue to see next year. Does that answer your question? Speaker 1100:33:17Yes, thanks. If I may Speaker 500:33:19add that the China piece, your IT peers Seems to be Speaker 1100:33:22a little bit more cautious about what's going to happen, I mean, in this year and actually the kind of cautious you started that late last year, but that your China revenue is still going very strong. How do we reconcile the differences here? I mean, that's my last question. Thank you so much. Speaker 300:33:40Well, I wouldn't say that we're less cautious. I think our numbers have been strong. But from a forecast perspective, we've been forecasting That China likely goes down into the teens as a percentage of total revenue. This last quarter and the quarter before, We've just seen stronger recovery than we had previously expected. And that's been Certainly, a nice positive surprise. Speaker 300:34:08In terms of going forward, we feel good about the progress we expect to deliver this quarter. And in 90 days, we'll let you know if we think that progress is going to continue into next year. Speaker 1100:34:19Appreciate the color. Thanks. Thank you. Operator00:34:24Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Matt Ramsay of TD Cohen. Please go ahead, Matt. Speaker 1200:34:35Thank you very much, guys. Good afternoon. I wanted to go back to the ARM B9 conversation on a couple of points. I noticed that This is the first time and maybe I'm just dumb and didn't see it, but I think this is the first time you had explicitly put in the shareholder letter and in writing that You were at least double royalty rates from VA to V9. And I guess I wanted to ask you about that in a broader sense. Speaker 1200:35:04Is that Sort of across the board, across end markets and also across customers that are Traditionally processor licensees and also ones that are traditionally architectural licensees and do the systems themselves. So I guess that's the first part of the question. Is that a blanket statement across the board? And the reason I ask it, if you go back to lots of conversations around the IPO timeframe, there were Some aggressive ramps of royalty rates across your mobile business. And I think we were all trying to figure out Whether the VA penetration to V9 would drive those kind of expansion and results or if you would need some significant contributions from sort of system license and the like to get those results. Speaker 1200:35:51And so any context there about The applicability and breadth of that comment on doubling royalty rates on V9 would be really helpful. Thanks guys. Speaker 200:36:01Yes. Thanks, Matt. So I'll attempt to answer it and let Jason and Jason wants to chime in. Yes, you're right. This is the first time we've done it, although we only have done 2 of these letters, so we don't have a huge installed base to refer to. Speaker 200:36:16We wanted to provide some specific clarity because we had been receiving some level of questions around the thing you just asked about relative to how to think about V8 versus V9? The double the V9 rate for the equivalent double V9 for the equivalent V8 is sort of a rough guidepost, But in some cases it's quite a bit more. The Neoverse royalty rates have their own unique tables. The automotive royalty rates have their own unique tables And some of the most high performance CPUs that we ship into the client section have very, very Significant lifted rates over version 8. So double is a good rule of thumb for like for like, But in some cases it's even better than that. Speaker 200:37:02So that's but we did want to sort of provide just some clarity because we thought When folks look at the numbers in the absence of that context, there would just be a question of just help me work out how you got here. So Jason, if there's anything you want to add on to that? Speaker 300:37:16No, I think to Renee's earlier point, we're I understand we're a little bit hard to model because we don't really track to other companies. And because of we're getting paid royalties on roughly 8,000,000,000 chips a quarter and just the slightest bit of mix Either to more premium handsets or to more B9 versus B8, that turns out to be a pretty sensitive variable. And when you look at the growth from last quarter to this quarter and what we're expecting from this quarter to next quarter, unit growth is very, very small. It's really almost all coming from Rate growth increases. And as we said back at IPO, we're almost 100% on a contract for next year. Speaker 300:38:03So really we're just seeing the manifestation of the work that was done in the last 2 years. We wanted to provide this B8 to B9 ratio As one way to help you guys be able to kind of see the progress and be able to model it. So hope it's helpful. Speaker 1200:38:19No, it's super helpful. Yes. Speaker 1000:38:19I can say that one thing that had Speaker 200:38:22high confidence in when we started looking at the transition was VHB9. We knew we had increased rates And we knew that the royalty picture would be better than what we were accustomed in the past. I think one of the benefits we're getting and I would use AI as sort of A driver for all this is that the amount of V9 cores or the mix of V9 cores has been stronger than anticipated Because people are putting more CPUs down, where they were not planning on putting as many or they may be putting a higher mix of V9 and V8. So that's all driven, I think, good forward momentum for us. Speaker 1200:39:02That's super helpful guys. Just a quick clarification. Any comment on mean the base rates may be different and obviously different customers have different contracts, but all of that commentary at least directionally applicable to your Architectural licensees as well. Thanks. Speaker 900:39:18Yes. Speaker 200:39:20Yes, it is. Thank Operator00:39:27you. Our next question Comes from the line of Andrew Gardiner of Citi. Your question please, Andrew. Speaker 600:39:37Thanks very much for taking the question. I had one on the licensing side. You guys have You've spoken about how strong it was in the quarter and the sort of being surprised at the quicker sales cycle time on some of these licenses. A point that you haven't brought up on the call yet, but that was in the shareholder letter was that you also saw 3 of the 5 ATA Licensees in the quarter, the upgrades from the ARM flexible access program. And you said that was the first time that had happened. Speaker 600:40:12Did that take you by price or were these customers that were getting to be particularly large for an AFA and so it was natural for them to upgrade? Yes. It wasn't a surprise. And is this something that might actually continue to surprise positively? Is there a portion of That cohort that is sort of natural to be upgrading from AFA to ATA and therefore contribute more in terms of license dollars? Speaker 200:40:41Yes. Thank you for the question. We didn't bring it up in our comments. We've got a lot of good stuff to talk about this quarter. I was trying to keep it as concise. Speaker 200:40:49But the AFA Transition to ATA, thank you for calling that out. That's a great trend for us. When we designed the program a number of years ago, That was absolutely the intent is that customers that launched into an AFA would ultimately go on to a total access license. What largely drives that quite frankly is Speaker 800:41:11the company that took the Speaker 200:41:12AFA start to get commercial traction in their business. Some of the AFA customers are early stage companies. They may have an early exit or get acquired. But as they get larger and mature, We expect them to embrace ARM technology in a broader way. So I wouldn't call it a surprise. Speaker 200:41:28I would actually call it an expected outcome that we have and we're really happy to see it. Great. Speaker 600:41:37Thanks very much. Operator00:41:41Thank you. I would now like to turn the conference back to Rene Haas for closing remarks. Sir? Speaker 200:41:48Thank you and thank you everyone for the kind words on the quarter and Good set of questions that we had. We're thrilled about Q3 and we're very, very excited about Q4. I think what you're seeing coming to life are all the strategies that we've been working hard on over the last number of years. Investment in the V9 technology, the diversification of our business into data center into automotive and of course IoT. And then now the What I think is probably the most profound opportunity in our lifetimes which is around AI. Speaker 200:42:28I think regarding AI particularly when you think about artificial general intelligence that's going to drive the need for more compute in a way that we've never seen before. So as good as the last couple of quarters were, we're just at the beginning. I could not be more excited about the growth that we have going forward. And thank you for all your time and questions.Read morePowered by