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DATE

Feb. 4, 2026 at 5 p.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Rene Haas
  • Chief Financial Officer — Jason Child
  • Head of Investor Relations — Jessica Vall

TAKEAWAYS

  • Total Revenue -- $1.24 billion, representing 26% growth year over year, and marking the fourth consecutive quarter above $1 billion.
  • Royalty Revenue -- $737 million, up 27% year over year, with growth driven by smartphones, data center, and double-digit expansion in automotive.
  • License and Other Revenue -- $505 million, increasing 25% year over year, including $200 million from a Technology Licensing and Design Services agreement with SoftBank (OTC: SFTBY).
  • Non-GAAP EPS -- $0.43, at the high end of guidance, reflecting higher revenue and slightly lower operating expense.
  • Non-GAAP Operating Income -- $505 million, up 14% year over year, resulting in a 41% non-GAAP operating margin.
  • Non-GAAP Operating Expenses -- $716 million, up 37% year over year, reflecting continued increases in R&D investment and headcount expansion.
  • Annualized Contract Value (ACV) -- Grew 28% year over year, sustaining momentum from prior quarters, and outperforming long-term growth expectations for license revenue.
  • Guidance for Next Quarter -- Revenue projected at $1.47 billion plus or minus $50 million; royalty revenue expected to grow low teens percent, and licensing revenue high teens percent year over year.
  • Cloud AI Data Center Royalty Revenue -- Grew by more than 100% year over year; share among top hyperscalers is expected to reach 50%.
  • Compute Subsystem (CSS) Licenses -- Two new CSS licenses were signed with leading smartphone OEMs, totaling 21 CSS licenses across 12 companies, with five customers shipping CSS-based chips.
  • Major Product Launches -- Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) Web Services launched Graviton5 with 192 cores; NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) introduced Vera CPU with 88 cores; Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) launched Cobalt 200 with 132 cores; Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) previewed Axion-powered m4a server instances, exceeding x86 price/performance and efficiency.
  • Physical AI (Automotive and Robotics) -- Rivian (NASDAQ: RIVN) announced the first production vehicle using a custom Arm-based autonomy processor and v9 architecture; Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) Optimus robot uses an Arm-based AI processor; NVIDIA and Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM) are scaling Arm-based platforms in robotics and autonomous systems.

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RISKS

  • Chief Financial Officer Jason Child stated, "if you were to say, what if there's a 20% reduction in volumes next year? For us, that would translate to probably somewhere around a 2% or 4% at worst. Impact on smartphone royalties. If you then project that across the whole business, it'd be a 1%, maybe 2% negative impact on total royalties."
  • Guidance acknowledges lower growth in royalties next quarter partially due to "seasonality, our Q4 or calendar Q1 is always one of the slower quarters," and tougher year-over-year comps after prior overperformance.
  • Unit volume reductions in low-end smartphones due to memory supply chain constraints could affect lower-generation (v8 and below) royalties, though these are described as "dramatically smaller royalties."

SUMMARY

Arm Holdings (ARM +0.34%) set new quarterly records in total revenue and royalties, with growth attributed to broad-based demand in AI, smartphones, and data center markets. Management gave explicit strategic clarity on segment priorities, forming three business units—Edge AI, Physical AI, and Cloud AI—to harness AI-driven opportunities across diverse end markets. Management highlighted growing adoption of Compute Subsystem (CSS) licenses and substantial investments in next-generation architectures, signaling increased customer commitment and potentially higher future royalty streams as AI workloads proliferate. Guidance for the next quarter reflects sustained above-market growth, despite expectations for royalty growth deceleration tied mainly to seasonality and elevated prior-year comparables.

  • Chief Executive Officer Rene Haas stated, "Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares' share amongst the top hyperscalers is expected to reach 50%," referencing data center market momentum.
  • "Amazon Web Services launched its fifth-generation Graviton processor with 192 cores, doubling the core count from Graviton four," underscoring continual advances in Arm-based hyperscaler deployments.
  • CSS royalty contribution advanced from just under double digits last year to "well into double digit," with Chief Financial Officer Jason Child suggesting, "over the next couple of years, I expect it to probably it could be upwards of 50%. But, you."
  • Long-duration contracts and higher royalty rates are increasing management’s confidence in future revenue stability, and justify ongoing R&D investment.
  • SoftBank contributed $200 million in the quarter for Technology Licensing and Design Services; this run-rate is expected to continue under current agreements.
  • Segment reporting clarified that Cloud AI (data center) could match or exceed the company’s largest segment, currently 40%-45% of total business, within two to three years.
  • Chief Executive Officer Rene Haas declared Masayoshi Son "is not interested in selling one share of Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares stock" after direct discussions on potential ownership changes.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • Compute Subsystem (CSS): An integrated hardware and software platform from Arm Holdings that accelerates chip design, reduces integration complexity, and drives higher royalties per chip shipped.
  • Annualized Contract Value (ACV): The running annualized value of contracted license and service agreements, used by management as a key indicator of licensing trend momentum.
  • Data Processing Unit (DPU): A specialized processor optimized for data movement, networking, and storage tasks, with significant Arm Holdings market share in data center and AI deployments.
  • Smart NIC: Network Interface Card with advanced offload and processing capabilities, often leveraging Arm Holdings' IP for performance in data centers.
  • Arm Holdings plc v9: The latest Arm Holdings processor architecture, enabling higher performance, advanced AI, and enhanced security, now widely deployed in smartphones, data center, and automotive applications.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Jessica Vall: Thank you very much, and welcome to our third quarter fiscal 2026 earnings call. On the call are Rene Haas, Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares' Chief Executive, and Jason Child, Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares' Chief Financial Officer. During the call, Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares will discuss forecasts, targets, and other forward-looking information about the company and its financial results. While these statements represent our best current judgment about future results, our business is subject to many risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially.

In addition to any risks that we highlight during this call, important risk factors that may affect our future results and performance are described in a registration statement on Form 20-F filed with the SEC. Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements. We will refer to non-GAAP financial measures during this discussion. Reconciliations of certain of these non-GAAP financial measures to their most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in our shareholder letter, as can a discussion of certain projected non-GAAP financial measures that we are not able to reconcile without unreasonable effort and supplemental financial information.

Our earnings materials are available at investors.on.com, and with that, I'll turn the call over to Rene.

Rene Haas: Thank you, Jessica, and welcome, everyone. Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares delivered a record third quarter. Revenue grew 26% year on year to $1.24 billion, our fourth consecutive billion-dollar quarter. Royalties increased 27% to a record $737 million, driven by record units with strength across AI and general-purpose data center. Our data center royalty revenue has grown more than 100% year on year, and we expect in a few years our data center business to be our largest business, larger than mobile. License revenue was $505 million, up 25% year on year, as more leading companies signed high-value licenses for next-generation technologies. That performance lifted our non-GAAP EPS to 43¢, even as we continue to increase R&D investment.

Our performance this quarter reinforces the strength of the Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares platform and our continued commitment to investing in innovation across a broad spectrum of compute technologies. The fundamentals of the Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares business have never been stronger. AI is changing how compute is built and where it runs across cloud infrastructure, edge devices, and physical systems. The industry requires platforms to deliver high performance, energy efficiency, and flexibility across a broad range of power envelopes and use cases. Only Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares' compute platform can address these demands, supporting AI workloads ranging from milliwatts to gigawatts.

To align with how our customers deploy AI, we've organized ourselves around three business units: Edge AI, Physical AI, and Cloud AI. Edge AI comprises the smartphone and IoT businesses. Physical AI includes automotive and robotics, and Cloud AI encompasses data center and networking. A key driver of our royalty momentum is the compute subsystem or CSS. We launched CSS nearly two and a half years ago, and demand continues to exceed expectations. This quarter, we signed two additional CSS licenses for Edge AI tablets and smartphones, bringing us to 21 CSS licenses across 12 companies. Five customers are now shipping CSS-based chips, including two shipping a second-generation platform. And the top four Android smartphone vendors are shipping CSS-powered devices.

CSS helps customers get to market faster by lowering integration risk and complexity. As demand scales, it increases the value that Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares delivers per chip, creating a significant tailwind to royalties. In Cloud AI, the shift towards inference is reshaping data center design, and increasingly, that inference is agent-based. These workloads are persistent, always on, and power constrained. This is a fundamental change in how AI systems operate. This is because agent-based AI requires coordination across many agents running continuously, and that the CPU can only do coordination. As this model scales, customers need CPU chips with higher core counts and better power efficiency to operate continuously within tight power and cost constraints.

This trend directly benefits 1 billion cores deployed, and Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares' share amongst the top hyperscalers is expected to reach 50%. Leading hyperscalers are launching new products with increased core counts to address this opportunity. AWS launched its fifth-generation Graviton processor with 192 cores, doubling the core count from Graviton four and delivering 25% higher performance and up to 33% lower latency versus Graviton four. NVIDIA's next-generation Vera CPU features 88 Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares-based cores, up from 72 cores in the gray CPU generation.

Microsoft introduced Cobalt 200, built on the higher performance Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares Neoverse CSS v3 with 132 cores, up from 128 cores in Cobalt 100, which was based on the prior Neoverse n2 platform. And Google previewed its second Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares-based server processor with Axion-powered m4a instances delivering up to 2x better price performance and 80% better performance per watt in the comparable x86 offerings. Google has now migrated over 30,000 applications to the Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares instruction set. We are also seeing more integrated platform designs to improve system efficiency, often translating to more AI output or more tokens per watt within the same power envelope.

AWS integrates Graviton with Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares-based Nitro DPUs and training accelerators, and NVIDIA pairs GPUs with Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares-based gray CPUs and Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares-based blue field GPUs, which has transitioned to Vera, delivering a 6x increase in GPU compute capability over the prior generation. Together, these trends make clear that as AI inference becomes more agent-based, the importance of CPUs is only increasing. And as a result, Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares' role at the center of the modern data center architecture continues to grow rapidly. Outside the data center, AI is now moving to everyday devices.

The edge and physical AI markets are opening up new growth opportunities. These systems operate in real-time under strict power and safety, and reliability constraints. Where efficient and predictable general-purpose compute is essential. Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares' strengths, power efficiency, perceivable latency, and always-on operation are best suited to on-device agents that continually monitor inputs, prioritize tests, and invoice models when needed to preserve battery life. Our common software foundation across devices, vehicles, and robotics customers scale deployments without rebuilding software stacks. We now see that momentum in customer innovation. Rivian announced its third-generation autonomy computer based on the Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares-based Rivian autonomy processor.

The first production vehicle based on a custom Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares chip and the first to deploy Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares v9 in a production car. Tesla's upcoming Optimus humanoid robot is also powered by a custom Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares-based AI processor and platform from leading silicon providers like NVIDIA's Jets and Thor, and Qualcomm's Dragon Wing platforms are scaling Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares-based solutions across robotics and autonomous systems. To close, AI is moving to every environment and every power envelope. Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares provides the foundation for that shift.

A platform that spans milliwatts to gigawatts, a developer ecosystem over 22 million developers, more than 80% of the global total. We are now seeing the results of strategies we put in place years ago, focusing on the data center, power efficiency, and compute subsystems. As a result, as more and more applications move to AgenTic AI, Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares will be the compute platform connecting cloud, edge, and physical AI use cases. And with that, I'll now hand it over to Jason.

Jason Child: Thank you, Rene. We have delivered another strong quarter. Total revenue grew 26% year on year to a record $1.24 billion, marking our fourth consecutive quarter above $1 billion. Royalty revenue exceeded our expectations, growing 27% year on year to a record $737 million. The biggest growth contributors were smartphones with higher royalty rates per chip, and in the data center where our revenues continue to grow triple digits year on year as we see ongoing share gains from custom hyperscaler chips. Royalty revenue from edge AI devices such as smartphones continues to grow much faster than the market.

All the major Android OEMs are now ramping smartphones with chips based on both Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares v9 and CSS. In Cloud AI, data center royalty revenue continues to double year on year, with the ramp of Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares-based chips by all major hyperscaler companies. We are getting a further benefit as the build-out of these new AI data centers is driving increased deployment of networking chips, particularly DPUs and smart NICs, where Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares has a very high market share. In physical AI, the automotive market grew double digits year on year and contributed to our strong royalty performance.

Overall, royalty revenue growth continues to reflect Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares' royalty per chip and rising market share. Turning now to licensing. License and other revenue was $505 million, up 25% year on year. Growth was driven by strong demand for next-generation architectures and deeper strategic engagements with key customers. We signed two new Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares ATA or Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares Total Access Agreements during the quarter and two new CSS licenses, both with leading smartphone handset OEMs. These agreements reflect the continued investment by our customers in our next-generation Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares technology.

Of the $505 million of license revenue, our agreement with SoftBank for Technology Licensing and Design Services contributed $200 million. SoftBank has become an increasingly important customer as they build out their AI compute strategy, including their recent acquisitions such as Ampere and Graphcore. We believe that the revenues we are receiving from SoftBank are durable as they relate to current generations that will continue as SoftBank executes on its roadmap. As always, licensing revenue varies quarter to quarter due to the timing and size of high-value deals. So we will continue to focus on annualized contract value, or ACV, as a key indicator of the underlying licensing trend.

ACV grew 28% year on year, maintaining strong momentum following the 28% year on year growth we reported in Q2 and Q1. This continues to be above our long-term expectation of mid to high single-digit growth for license revenue. Turning to operating expenses and profits. Non-GAAP operating expenses were $716 million, up 37% year on year due to strong R&D investment. These investments in R&D reflect ongoing engineering headcount expansion to support customer demand for more Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares technology, including innovation in next-generation architectures, compute subsystems, and into our exploration into chiplets and complete SoCs. Non-GAAP operating income was $505 million, up 14% year on year. This resulted in a non-GAAP operating margin of about 41%.

Non-GAAP EPS was $0.43, close to the high end of our guidance range, driven by both higher revenue and slightly lower OpEx than expected. Turning now to guidance. Our guidance reflects our current view of our end markets and our licensing pipeline. For Q4, we expect revenue of $1.47 billion, plus or minus $50 million. At the midpoint, this represents revenue growth of about 18% year on year. We expect royalties to be up low teens year on year and licensing to be up high teens year on year. We expect our non-GAAP operating expense to be approximately $745 million and our non-GAAP EPS to be $0.58, plus or minus $0.04.

The strength of customer demand we are seeing today, combined with a growing base of long-duration contracts at structurally higher royalty rates, provides increasing confidence in our future revenue profile. This confidence allows us today to invest in next-generation architectures, compute subsystems, and silicon that are needed to enable higher performance, greater efficiency, and more AI use cases. We believe this virtuous cycle of customer demand and ambitious investment positions Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares for sustained growth over the long term.

Just before we get into the Q&A portion of the call, as you will have seen, Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares is hosting an event on March 24, and I'm sure there will be interest about what we are planning to announce. There'll be a million ways of asking what we may or may not be announcing. Please be patient as we won't be providing any details ahead of the event. With that, I'll turn the call back to the operator for the Q&A portion of the call.

Operator: Thank you. And one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press 1 and 1 again. We will now take the first question. One moment, please. And your first question today comes from the line of Joe Quatrochi from Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.

Joe Quatrochi: Rene, you touched upon in the prepared remarks, so I was kind of curious if you could just maybe give us a little more detail on just how you view Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares' role and the role of the CPU in AI and cloud data centers and just how does that change as we start to see more proliferation of AI agents?

Rene Haas: Yeah. Thank you for the question. There are a number of shifts taking place in the data center, as I mentioned in opening remarks. You know, first off, as the shift moves away from exclusively training to predominantly inference, that is a workload that launches a number of different solution paths. One of them that we're seeing is around AgenTeq AI. And the agents that are actually talking to other agents or having to control workflows such as service tickets or other work streams, those are very, very well suited for CPUs. Because CPUs are very, very power efficient, always on, very, very fast latency.

And what we are seeing is already an increased deployment of CPUs to address that problem. Now it's just not CPUs that are good for that problem. It's the number of CPUs you have and, obviously, given the power constraints inside the data center, the efficiency of those CPUs. So for all those reasons, that's a very positive tailwind for Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares. And in particular, we're seeing those proof points now, as I mentioned, where the latest generation of CPU chips from the hyperscaler providers and also NVIDIA have increased the number of cores. And we think that only continues.

Joe Quatrochi: Thanks for that. And just as a follow-up, one for Jason. I know you're not giving fiscal '27 commentary today, but just how do we think about the puts and takes of this royalty revenue growth and the risks that are associated with the potential like demand destruction that we're seeing, you know, in consumer electronics potentially from memory?

Jason Child: Yeah. Yeah. That's a it's a great question and something we spend a lot of time looking at. So in particular, you know, I think MediaTek last night talked about something like around a 15% reduction in unit volume for next year. And that's pretty consistent with what we've heard from other smart and handset providers around what they think the memory supply chain constraints could provide. So we've done our own kind of analysis of it. What's interesting is we're hearing from our various partners that they're really trying to make sure that they protect the high end of the market, so the premium and flagship portion of the market.

Which is great for us because that's where all of our CSS and v9 royalties are. So the highest, by a significant margin. And then on the very bottom end of the segment, that's where most of the supply chain constraints will probably be felt. For us, that's V8 and even older generations that are dramatically smaller royalties. So I think, if you were to say, what if there's a 20% reduction in volumes next year? For us, that would translate to probably somewhere around a 2% or 4% at worst. Impact on smartphone royalties. If you then project that across the whole business, it'd be a 1%, maybe 2% negative impact on total royalties.

The good news is because, as Rene mentioned, the cloud AI or infrastructure business has been continuing to grow ahead of our expectations. It's actually growing at a level that's more than compensating for those kind of risks on the memory and mobile side. So I think we have a very good setup for next year and not too concerned about at least the royalty revenue impacts that we might see from these unit volume and supply chain constraints.

Joe Quatrochi: Helpful. Thank you.

Operator: Your next question today comes from the line of Simon Leopold from Raymond James. Please go ahead.

Simon Leopold: Great. Thank you. Appreciate you taking the question. First one is, I'm hoping you're able to shed some light on this. But wondering what your thoughts on are whether or not SoftBank will potentially need to sell some of the Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares stock that it holds to finance some of the investment you've talked about making and how we should think about the implications for your shares? Then I've got a quick follow-up.

Rene Haas: Sure. Yeah. Thanks for the question. You know, that's one that we read a lot about, and there's a lot of speculation on chat boards and whatnot about that. I can tell you from talking to Masa about this, and I would quote him directly, he is not interested in selling one share of Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares stock. And that doesn't mean two shares or three shares. That means any shares. He's very long on the company. He's very, very bullish. As am I, about our long-term prospects. And he has no interest in selling. There's been a lot of writing about it.

But I can tell you from a direct conversation and direct conversations plural, that I've had with them. That's just not the case.

Simon Leopold: Okay. And then just as a follow-up, you've provided a forecast for some deceleration in the royalty revenue growth. I'm just wondering if you could elaborate on the trend. Is it more difficult comps? Or is there something else shifting that we should be considering?

Jason Child: Yeah. This is Jason. I'll take that. I would say the royalty trends for next year are pretty consistent now. Absolute dollars, maybe a little bit lighter just because of what you're now seeing on the memory shortage side. Like maybe one or 2% impact largely due to that. The growth percentage is down a bit because of the overperformance that we saw last quarter and expected to see again this quarter. So we are coming off of a stronger comp. Now the obvious question then is because you've had stronger growth both in Q3, you know, we thought we'd grow about 20%. We grew 27%. So, you know, $30 million beat or more.

And now seeing some of that flow through into Q4, will that flow into next year as well? Right now, too I'd say too hard to say. You know, there's a lot of talk about memory and even away shortages. And so, you know, that stuff doesn't affect us as much as many of the full fab of semiconductor companies. But I'd say right now, we'll give you updates as we learn more. But overall, the absolute magnitude of royalties for next year, expect to be pretty close to what we were thinking what we said earlier this year.

But, you know, we'll see if this recent strength continues and allows us to take things up as we proceed into next year.

Simon Leopold: Very helpful. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. In the interest of time, please limit yourself to one question only, and rejoin the queue for any follow-up questions. You'll now go to the next question. And your next question today comes from the line of Vivek Arya from Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Vivek Arya: Thanks for taking my question. I actually just had two clarifications. One is I was hoping you could quantify the exact amount of data center revenue. I know you said that it doubled, but how much is it so we can get a sense for, like, what the magnitude is versus the overall company sales. And then the clarification the other clarification I had was, I think you mentioned software contributed $200 million. I somehow recall the original expectation was about $178, $180 million. And if you could clarify that and what are you embedding for March and onwards, from that contribution? Thank you.

Jason Child: Yeah. The well, the $178 last quarter, it was it was so no new deals were signed. It's just the deals from last quarter. It was $178 for the quarter. The full quarter has the impact now is about $200. So nothing new. It's just a full quarter impact. I would expect that $200 going forward is the right run rate going forward.

Vivek Arya: And the data center revenue?

Jason Child: Yeah. Data center revenue we provide the details on that once a year. I think at the beginning of this year, we said it had hit double digit. And because it's growing so much faster than the rest, assume it's gonna be, you know, somewhere in kind of the teens to probably getting closer to 20%. As Rene said, over the next, yeah, two to three years, you should expect to see it get similar or maybe even larger than smartphone business, which is in the, you know, kind of 40 to 45% of total business.

Vivek Arya: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Mehdi Husseini from Susquehanna Financials. Please go ahead.

Mehdi Husseini: Yes. Just thank you. Thank you for taking the question. Just as a follow-up to the smartphone topic, to how should I think about the migration to the v9 higher royalty? Is going to help offset lower smartphone units.

Rene Haas: Yeah. So I'll let Jason provide the detail, but again, as a reminder, with the way that we handle v9 for smartphones, particularly v9 CSSs, every smartphone cycle, we deliver a brand new CSS. Each time we deliver the brand new CSS, the royalty rates are generally increased year on year. So when we think about v9 in smartphones, the appropriate way to think about it is it's all CSS it's all moving to CSS now. And as a result of that, we get priced every year with the royalty increase year on year.

Jason Child: Yeah. And in terms of the guidance that I just gave in terms of if there's a minus 20 degree unit impact, there's at most a kind of four to 6% revenue impact just specifically within smartphones. That would that would be incorporating the higher royalty rate per unit that's already been contractually agreed to and that we assume will be shipping later in the year.

Mehdi Husseini: Okay. Thank you. Bye.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Vijay Rakesh from Mizuho. Please go ahead.

Vijay Rakesh: Yeah. Hi, Rene and Jason. Just a quick question on the on your partnerships. As your partner SoftBank executes on its AI roadmap, will we be expecting, like, an Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares custom ASIC down the road given the substantial partnership that you have with them? With the $200 million a quarter NRE that you're getting? How should we look at that, the timing, and how that'll impact the fiscal 2027, let's say.

Jason Child: Yeah. Not nothing yeah. Hi, Vijay. Nothing we can say specific about any products that you're you're asking about. So, unfortunately, not much more we can say there.

Vijay Rakesh: Got it. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question today comes from the line of Krish Sankar from TD Cowen. Please go ahead.

Krish Sankar: Hi, thanks for taking the question. Rene, I just wanted to find a little bit about how to think about Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares' IP penetration rates or percentage rate in AI data center semis today, and where do you think that evolves over the next three to five years?

Rene Haas: Hey. It's a it's a wonderful question. I think what we're gonna see over the next three years is an evolving of how these data center chips are built out. And what do I mean by that? You know, today, you've got a classic architecture where you've got a CPU which connects into an accelerator. The CPU does some work. The GPU does some work. I think we're gonna start to see over time is a morphing of the workloads that the CPU takes that the GPU used to do. And as I mentioned, you go to a GenTeC inference, that's gonna mean more CPUs, which could be more different custom chips that are CPU based.

In addition, the inference workloads, which are dominated by two pieces of area of work, specifically prefill and decode, you could see some specific solutions around that, that continue to extend. Things like what a Grok has done, for example, you could still see more kind of innovation across that area. I also think, you know, you asked about the data center, but I think we're gonna start to see a lot of that migrate to the smaller form factors. Where different combinations of IP and solutions are gonna be needed. To address areas where power is much more constrained, particularly around physical AI. And then the lower edge devices.

So I think there's a lot of innovation to come in solving the AI problems because one thing that's clear is that these AI workloads are going to be running on every single piece of hardware. That has compute. And because the vast majority of the compute platforms out there today are already Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares-based, gives us a gigantic opportunity to mold where that goes.

Krish Sankar: Got it. Thanks, Rene.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Harlan Sur from JPMorgan. Please go ahead.

Harlan Sur: Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. On compute subsystems, obviously, you continue to drive solid momentum with two more licenses added in the quarter. The value out of CSS that we hear from your customers is resonating extremely well. Right? It improves their productivity. It improves their overall system performance. They're willing to pay a higher licensing fee and higher royalty fee for that value added you mentioned. I'm curious to know what percentage of the royalty mix is CSS today, and what proportion of the royalty revenue could it become over the next two to three years?

Rene Haas: Yeah. Thank you, Harlan. I'll let Jason take that.

Jason Child: Yeah. So, Harlan, yeah, a lot of progress on CSS with the, you know, the five CSSs that have actually already been turned into silicon and actually something we're receiving royalties on. It's it's had a material impact. Think of CSS last year. I think it was just kind of approaching double digit. And this year, it well into double digit. Think of it as being into the teens. And then I would say, you know, over the next couple of years, I expect it to probably it could be upwards of 50%. But, you know, we'll have to see.

I think, you know, the primary drivers for acceleration of CSS has really been mostly around our customers needing to shorten the cycle time and CSS, you know, tip that's that cycle time about in a half. And so, you know, stay tuned, but I would expect to continue to see that acceleration occur and to continue to see I think right now, every CSS customer that's had a chance to, you know, sign up for the next version or kind of renew for the next generation, has all done that. So that's certainly a really key indicator of the value that, as you said, customers are seeing from it.

Harlan Sur: Yeah. Absolutely. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Charles Shi from Needham and Company. Please go ahead.

Charles Shi: Yes. Thanks for taking my question. I think going back, maybe it was one year, you guys kind of soft and guided, FYE '26 and FYE '27 growth, should be around 20%. You are definitely delivering that the FY '26. We definitely will see how you think about FY '27, you know, about the quarter. But any early view you guys can provide on FY '28? I know I'm asking and plus two year here, but you guys did do that. Going back about a year. And I was hoping if you can provide any early view into the outer year. Thank you.

Jason Child: Yeah. I would say for '26, as you said, we said at least 20%, and I think now we're guiding to '22 at the midpoint. So as you said, exceeding that target. For '27, not guiding on full year, in terms of kind of at a high level, the 20% growth rate I think, certainly is very reasonable. And not anything that we back away from. In terms of '28, we haven't thrown anything out there yet. I'd say maybe stay tuned. You know, there are opportunities as we contemplate, you know, other possible offerings and what that could do to our numbers is still something we're working through.

So we'll give you an update on '28 sometime down the road.

Charles Shi: Thank you. Appreciate that.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question today comes from the line of Srini Pajjuri from RBC. Please go ahead.

Srini Pajjuri: A couple of clarifications, guys. On the memory impact, I guess, talked about you quantified that impact. But, Jason, the outlook for the next quarter on the royalties, being up low teens, do you think memory is already having an impact on the smartphone volumes? Is that why it's on the upload teams? And then to add to that, you talked about CSS accelerating. I'm just curious, given the pressure on the bill of materials do you anticipate or are you seeing any impact in terms of the adoption of CSS and V9 I guess, look into the next few quarters given the bill of materials challenges? Thank you.

Rene Haas: Yes. Thanks for the question. I'll take the second part first, and then Jason will take the first part on memory. Question was regarding CSS pricing impacting bill of materials. No. We're not seeing any of that at all. What we are seeing is that the value gained by accelerating time to market outweighs anything that customers are considering. Given the complexity of building these chips. The increased cycle times, through the fabs going from five nanometer three nanometer to two nanometer means that the design windows are really short and missing the first few months of shipment or having any kind of delay would be critical to profits.

So based on that, we've really not had many discussions with anyone regarding the bomb impact, the value that we create relative to profits gained by the customer is what really drives the decision point. And then regarding the memory, impact on the next quarter, I'll let Jason address that.

Jason Child: Yeah. The memory impact, very minimal, I would say. And that's not really the driver of the guidance on the growth. Absolute growth in royalties has much more to do with typically seasonality, our Q4 or calendar Q1 is always one of the slower quarters. And the one thing that happened a year ago is we did have Mediatek chip come out in Q4 of a year ago or Q yeah. Our Q4 calendar Q1 of a year ago. Which was unusual timing. So we are lapping that. So it's much more about kind of what we're comping and to some extent seasonality.

But overall, you know, full year royalties, I would expect to be in that north of you know, 20% range, which is kind of what we were expecting early in the year. And still expect Q4 or calendar Q1 to be stronger than what we previously expected. So it's really the year on year growth piece is really more of a seasonality slash seasonality comping kind of an unusual one-time release from a year ago.

Srini Pajjuri: Thank you.

Operator: We will now go to the next question. And your next question comes from the line of Andrew Gardiner from Citi. Please go ahead.

Andrew Gardiner: Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question as well. Jason, perhaps one for you on the OpEx side. We've clearly seen significant investments in the business particularly in R&D, given everything that you guys are doing. You've given us a bit of a steer on fiscal '27 revenue growth. Utility R&D has been growing at a faster rate than revenue in the current period. Is that something we can expect to continue into fiscal '27 given everything that you guys have got in front of you, or will we actually start to see R&D growth slow relative to the revenue? Thank you.

Jason Child: Sure. So a little early to talk full year. I can tell you right now, our expectation is that the Q4 to Q1 step up will be similar to last year. Think last year, it was you know, low double-digit sequential growth, and you should see the same kind of sequential growth as a year ago. I right now, I would say the growth after Q1 is probably gonna to moderate more so than it did this year. We did see pretty significant step-ups throughout the year. I don't expect there to be quite significant step-ups for next year.

But as we progress more into next year, we'll give you a little more color, but that's the high-level I'd say, modeling approach I would take right now.

Andrew Gardiner: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. We will now take the next question. And the question comes from the line of John DiFucci from Guggenheim Securities. Please go ahead.

John DiFucci: Thank you. Rene, you've seen a lot in technologies in technology over the years. So I'm gonna ask a question that's kind of a little bit self-serving here. I'm curious how you'd characterize what's happening in the stock market recently as it pertains to the software sector. And if you might, since you're at least partially a software company, how does AI affect your business other than driving demand? In other words, how should we think of how you'll leverage AI? In the design of chips and systems?

Rene Haas: Yeah. Well, regarding the stock market's reaction to software company, I had a great answer to that. I'd probably be in a difficult position than the one that I have. I'm not sure I can I'm in a great position to discuss what the near-term impacts are to the stock market, but what I can say after, you know, watching and being in technology my entire career, we do see these kinds of things time to time where investors or the market gets jittery around what the broad impacts are when in the midst of fairly significant technology disruptions.

I can say for our business, you know, given the fact that we are an intellectual property provider that goes into physical things chips, AI is not gonna replace a physical chip anytime soon. They're kind of linked at the hip, if you will, relative to you need the hardware to run the software. I think there's just enormous opportunity, however, still for growth in the overall sector. Because when I think about where AI actually is operating truly inside the enterprise, it's very When I think about our own company and things like our payroll systems or purchase order systems or our SAP systems. There's some AI going on there, but not nearly enough to be massively transformative yet.

And I think part of that is just the complexity of integrating these large systems and changing software workloads. So I think we're in super early days, to be quite frank, and having, you know, been in technology again my entire career and have seen lots of technology disruptions this one feels a little bit like the final frontier in terms of the amount of productivity and change that AI can benefit. We're still all trying to get our arms around it. If you just even look at the numbers of spend, I heard earlier today, Google or Alphabet announcing a $180 billion CapEx spend. That used to be what semiconductor companies just spent a year on fabs.

Times a few. So we're in uncharted waters. And maybe that's why you're seeing some jittery numbers relative to how the market reacts. But where we sit there's just huge demand for compute. And that's what Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares does. And, so I think in the long game, I'm super excited about the opportunity for us.

John DiFucci: Really appreciate your thoughts, Rene. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. We will now take our final question for today. And the final question comes from the line of Timm Schulze-Melander from Rothschild and Co. Please go ahead.

Timm Schulze-Melander: Yes. Hi, there. Thanks for taking my question. It's a two-parter for Rene, please. You've talked a lot about inference in the AI future. You just referenced the Grok architecture. And I really wanted to ask you, what are your thoughts or how should we think about SRAM at the edge, some of these different memory and what they could mean for your business. And then the second part is just the cadence of power efficiency for Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares. Is there something that we should think about in terms of the average annual or per v8 to v9 energy for compute efficiency, that you see going forward? Thank you so much.

Rene Haas: Yeah. So I'll take the latter part first because it kind of bridges into the first. We look at how to address power efficiency twenty-four seven. And the reason for that is increasingly as you get into these smaller form factors, the one thing that you don't get much liberty on is battery life and space. So as a result, we have to always think about operating a constrained environment where you're adding more and more demand of compute. When you add AI onto something that already has to drive a display or open an app or recognize the voice, it's a constant thing that we think about and worry about.

I think we're very well positioned to address it because we are the incumbent in many of these platforms. So it is something we spend a lot of time and energy on. To your first part of the question on SRAM, and different memory technologies, absolutely, that's something we're highly involved in. To oversimplify a computer, a CPU needs memory, and memory needs a CPU. Period, and stop. So when you're designing a piece of hardware, the two go very much hand in hand. And there is a lot of work and research being done about not just SRAM, but alternative memory technologies and solutions that can address these increasing demands on AI.

So again, it's a just question prior to yours in terms of the overall broad opportunity. You know, what people in our space tend to worry about is that there isn't hard problems to go think and work on and develop new technologies for. We don't have that problem. Every single end application is gonna be impacted by AI. We believe every end application will run AI through Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares. So we're spending a lot of time and energy, and you can see by our investments, come up with innovative ways to address that.

Timm Schulze-Melander: Great. Thank you so much.

Operator: Thank you. I will now hand the call back to Rene for closing remarks.

Rene Haas: Yeah. Thank you, and thanks for all the thoughtful questions and we could tell by the range of the questions we were talking about memory prices inside the quarter. And then, what alternative memory technologies could look like years from now. I think that's a very good way to sort of describe the current quarter, but how we're very, very bullish about Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares long term. We delivered the best quarter in our history. We delivered the best quarter in our history on royalties, which is really an indicator for the strategies we have going forward.

And we have a huge amount of customers shifting to Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares in a big way with more CPU counts. That being said, the quarters that we're most excited about are the ones ahead of us. We think we have huge opportunity, as I mentioned, in the new areas of physical AI, cloud AI, and edge AI. And we intend to do everything we can to make Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares the compute platform of choice. For all AI workloads.

Operator: Thank you. This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.