Arm IPO: Should You Buy ARM Stock?

arm-ipo:-should-you-buy-arm-stock?

The hottest initial public offering (IPO) in years has thus far lived up to its hype. With the Arm IPO oversubscribed by a factor of 10, the British chip designer’s order book closed a day earlier than expected Tuesday. 

As the biggest upcoming IPO of 2023, Arm was bound to get more than its fair share of attention. That the ARM IPO also happens to be taking place in the red-hot tech sector only adds to its allure.

Arm is targeting a market capitalization of as much as $54.5 billion when its American depositary shares begin trading September 14 under the ticker ARM on the Nasdaq Global Select Market. ARM stock is expected to price late Wednesday in a range of $47 to $51 per share, raising more than $5 billion in fresh capital in the process. 

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Parent SoftBank Group acquired Arm in 2016 for about $32 billion, so it appears to have put its initial capital to good use. Retail investors typically don’t get access to hot IPOs, which is really just as well. It’s too easy to buy high under the best of circumstances. Frenzied opening day trading only compounds the problem. 

But there’s a pretty bearish fundamental case to be made against the Arm IPO too.

Steer clear of Arm IPODavid Trainer, CEO of New Constructs, a research firm powered by artificial intelligence, is best known for being skeptical of some of the hottest IPOs of the past few years. So when Trainer puts out a bearish call on the Arm IPO, it’s bound to generate controversy. 

“After a nearly two-year drought in the IPO market, SoftBank is wasting no time by offering Arm Holdings to the public markets, and at a valuation that is completely disconnected from the company’s fundamentals,” Trainer writes in note to clients Tuesday. 

The analyst adds that Arm’s valuation “implies that the company needs to grow its revenue by over 20% compounded annually every year for the next decade, which is a highly unlikely scenario.”

Arm faces a growing brigade of formidable competitors in each of its end markets, Trainer notes. “Many of the competitors have more than enough capital and expertise to build their own custom solutions and box Arm out of many of the markets in which it needs to grow to justify its lofty IPO valuation,” he says.

The bottom line? “Investors should avoid this IPO, as we see very limited upside ahead,” Trainer says.

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