Qualcomm, Arm Climb After Earnings Signal Smartphone Rebound

Qualcomm, Arm Climb After Earnings Signal Smartphone Rebound · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- Shares of Qualcomm Inc. and Arm Holdings Plc, two chip companies heavily dependent on the smartphone market, gained on Thursday after delivering earnings reports that signaled a tentative comeback in demand.

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Both companies pointed in their earnings released Wednesday to a resurgence in demand for high-end model devices, though they stopped short of signaling that the broader industry was on solid ground. Their shares were up about 2% in New York trading on Thursday.

The return of consumer spending on expensive handsets, particularly in China, helped both companies’ revenue and profit top analysts’ estimates last quarter. Expansion into new areas also shored up results. Qualcomm and Arm are pushing deeper into computing, bringing a boost from artificial intelligence spending. And Qualcomm has made a successful foray into automotive chips.

The two companies — longtime partners that have increasingly become adversaries — are seen as bellwethers for the smartphone industry. Qualcomm is the biggest seller of the processors that power the devices, and Arm developed much of the underlying technology used by the industry.

Both companies have benefited from a shift to more upscale phones. At Arm, phone revenue jumped 40% despite overall unit shipments only gaining 4%. Qualcomm also is getting a bigger share of the Chinese market. Revenue from the sales of Android phones increased 40% in that country this year.

For the coming year, the company is predicting that overall phone units will grow roughly 5% or less — a sign it’s not anticipating a wide recovery. Many consumers aren’t upgrading their devices as often, a problem that has plagued much of the industry.

For Arm, the use of higher-end components in smartphones is resulting in a “huge benefit” for royalty income, Chief Executive Officer Rene Haas said in a Bloomberg Television interview. That shift is being driven by the need for more computing in phones to run artificial intelligence software, he said.

“I do think we’re in a market where we can’t get enough compute capacity,” he said.

Qualcomm and Arm released their quarterly results within minutes of each other Wednesday and held overlapping conference calls. It was notable timing for two companies engaged in an escalating legal fight.

Arm took steps last month to cancel a license that allowed Qualcomm to use its intellectual property to design chips. The move followed an Arm lawsuit against Qualcomm for breach of contract and trademark infringement in 2022.