British silicon powerhouse behind Apple and Samsung devices enjoys boost from demand for new designs
ARM, the British microchip designer responsible for the architecture of the processor in almost every smartphone, benefitted from a boost in licensing revenues in the second quarter as manufacturers bought into its latest technology.
The company's designs are used by Apple, Samsung and virtually every other smartphone maker.
Revenues and pre-tax profits were both up 9pc on the same period last year at £187.1m and £94.2m respectively.
Almost all the boost came from sales of new licences, the up-front fees ARM receives when it sells intellectual property to microchip manufacturers. The company licensed its latest ARMv8-A design seven times during the second quarter. The technology was first used in the iPhone 5S and is expected to receive further upgrades and spread through the smartphone industry.
Overall licensing revenues increased 36pc to £89.6m.
Total royalty revenues, the other half of ARM’s business, which is built on a small cut of the price of each device sold containing its designs, were down 9pc in the second quarter at £80.3m. The drop was accounted for by the strong pound.
In dollars, royalties were flat at $135.5m. ARM said the weak performance relative to licensing was a result of seasonal fluctuations and some parts of the electronics supply chain managing their inventory. ARM said it expected royalty trends to improve in the second half, however.
Chief executive Simon Segars said: “As expected, our royalty revenue in Q2 2014 has been impacted by seasonal trends and inventory management in parts of the electronics supply chain.
“An improving market environment in the second half gives us confidence in strengthening royalty revenue in H2 2014."
ARM’s second quarter results were roughly in line with analysts expectations. Shares were up more than 1.5pc in early trading.