Softbank Agrees To Buy ARM for $32 Billion -- WSJ
18 Luglio 2016 - 9:03AM
Dow Jones News
By Rick Carew
HONG KONG -- Japan's SoftBank Group Corp. has reached a more
than $32 billion deal to buy U.K.-based chip-designer ARM Holdings
PLC, marking a significant push for the Japanese telecommunications
giant into the mobile internet, according to a person familiar with
the situation.
The all-cash deal, which was confirmed by ARM on Monday morning,
comes on the heels of SoftBank Chief Executive Masayoshi Son's
decision to take back the reins of the company's investment
strategy from his former deputy and designated successor, Nikesh
Arora, who resigned in June.
SoftBank, an internet and telecommunications conglomerate that
invests in online startups from India to China and owns mobile
carriers in Japan and the U.S., has been raising cash in recent
months to bolster its war chest and pay down debt. Big deals have
included the sale of around $10 billion worth of shares in Chinese
e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and the sale of its
entire stake in Finnish game maker Supercell Oy to China's Tencent
Holdings Ltd That deal valued Supercell at more than $10 billion.
That deal valued Supercell at more than $10 billion, and is
expected to bring in more than $7 billion for SoftBank.
The ARM deal also comes less than a month after the U.K.'s
decision to leave the European Union pushed down the value of the
pound, potentially making British companies much more attractive
bargains for buyers from overseas. It could face increasingly
strict scrutiny in the U.K.: New British Prime Minister Theresa May
struck a noticeably cautious tone about foreign takeovers of
leading U.K. companies in a speech last week just before taking
office.
Cambridge, U.K.-based ARM, whose microchip designs dominate the
global processor market for smartphones including Apple Inc.'s
iPhone, boasts a strong portfolio of intellectual property for
chips connecting mobile devices. While less vibrant demand for
smartphones has weighed on ARM's recent results, SoftBank is
betting that its technology will be crucial to connecting devices
ranging from smartphones to automobiles and appliances, according
to a person familiar with the matter.
Both companies' boards have agreed to the deal, according to the
person familiar with the situation.
SoftBank also controls Sprint Corp. and has been cutting
expenses to revive the No. 4 U.S. mobile carrier.
SoftBank started more than three decades ago as a software
distributor and has undergone many metamorphoses since then. At one
time, it owned a magazine publisher and operated trade shows. In
the 2000s, Mr. Son used a series of acquisitions to turn SoftBank
into one of Japan's three major telecommunications companies, and
its Japanese mobile-phone operator remains the company's cash
cow.
He added to his telecommunications holdings by taking a
controlling stake in Sprint of the U.S., then veered into internet
services with investments in Asian e-commerce companies and
ride-sharing apps.
--Peter Landers in Tokyo contributed to this article.
Write to Rick Carew at rick.carew@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 18, 2016 02:48 ET (06:48 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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