Nvidia-Arm $40 Billion Deal Will Upend Entire Chip Industry

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(Bloomberg Opinion) -- Nvidia Corp. wants it all. And if the Silicon Valley-based semiconductor giant is able to pull off its blockbuster acquisition of premier chip designer Arm Ltd., the deal may be the final piece it needs to dominate the industry for a generation.

Late Sunday, Nvidia and Arm’s parent SoftBank Group Corp. announced they reached an agreement under which the U.S.-based company will acquire Arm for about $40 billion in stock and cash. The components of the transaction include $21.5 billion in Nvidia shares, $12 billion in cash, an up to $5 billion “earn-out” payment for SoftBank subject to financial performance targets and $1.5 billion in equity for Arm employees. The news follows a number of media reports over the weekend that said the two parties were near a deal, and it comes after Bloomberg News reported back in July that Nvidia and SoftBank were in exclusive discussions over Arm. The companies said the board of directors of all three companies have approved the deal and expect it to close in about 18 months.

Why would Nvidia want to pay tens of billions for Arm in the biggest chip deal in history and why now? First, Nvidia has attained substantially more financial firepower, which gives it the resources to do so. It has thrived this year as demand for its products that serve the data-center and video-gaming markets have soared amid the pandemic. As a result, the company’s share price has more than doubled, making it 2020’s second-best performing stock in the entire S&P 500 Index after Carrier Global Corp. With Nvidia’s market value now at about $300 billion — roughly 50% more than the previous semiconductor king Intel Corp. — the stock part of any transaction is more palatable.

Nvidia also may be trying to take advantage of SoftBank’s string of turmoil and strategy changes, which has included a large-scale disposal of assets amid pressure from investors as well as controversy over its recent aggressive derivative bets in the public markets. And now, the Japan-based conglomerate’s very structure may be in a state of flux as well. This weekend, the Financial Times reported SoftBank’s executives have revived discussions about taking the company private, following frustration over the discount in its market value versus the aggregate value of its holdings.

As to the rationale of the deal, an Nvidia-Arm combination has the potential to remake the entire semiconductor industry over the next decade. Nvidia has always pitched itself as a chip company built for the big ideas of the future, a provider of the key components required for all the large high-growth opportunities such as cloud-computing, artificial intelligence, robotic automation, mobile computing and internet of things — a vast array of millions of internet-connected sensors and devices.