Qualcomm buys NXP for $38 billion in biggest chip industry M&A ever

REUTERS/Albert Gea/File Photo

(Reuters) – Smartphone chipmaker Qualcomm agreed to buy NXP Semiconductors for about $38 billion in the biggest-ever deal in the semiconductor industry, making it the leading supplier to the fast-growing automotive chips market.

The acquisition will also help Qualcomm, which provides chips to Android smartphone makers and Apple, reduce its dependence on a cooling smartphone market.

With the deal, Qualcomm is taking a big bet on the so-called Internet of Things (IoT), which enables everyday objects such as fridges and cars to communicate with each other.

“The pace of innovation in automobile and IoT will increase dramatically and I think we look at it as a tremendous opportunity,” Qualcomm chief executive Steven Mollenkopf said on a conference call.

By 2020, some 21 billion IoT devices will be in use worldwide, up from fewer than 5 billion last year, research firm Gartner has estimated.

Qualcomm sat out the transformative consolidation that has swept the chip industry recently.

The deal announced on Thursday tops Avago’s $37 billion acquisition of Broadcom last year.

The equity value of Qualcomm’s offer is $37.88 billion, according to Reuters calculations based on the company’s fully diluted shares as of Oct. 2. Including debt, the deal is worth roughly $47 billion.

Qualcomm’s shares were up 4.9% at $71.55 in afternoon trading.

The $110 per share cash offer represents a premium of 11.5% to NXP’s Wednesday close.

NXP’s shares, which had risen 20% since reports of a potential deal emerged on Sept. 29, were marginally higher at $99.24.

Smooth sailing, maybe

Qualcomm said it expected the deal to clear regulatory scrutiny, given the complimentary nature of the two businesses.

Needham & Co analyst Rajvindra Gill said there was not much overlap in products or end-markets between the two companies.

“There’s been a lot of semiconductor M&A activity in the last two years and I haven’t seen one deal that has been delayed because of regulatory hurdles at this point,” Gill added.

The combined entity would have annual revenue of more than $30 billion.

NXP, based in the Netherlands, became the world’s biggest maker of automotive electronics after it bought US-based Freescale Semiconductor for about $12 billion last December.

Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan have committed financing for the deal, which is expected to close by the end of 2017.

The deal is structured to use offshore cash flow in a tax-efficient manner to rapidly reduce leverage, Qualcomm said.

The company said it expected the deal to generate $500 million in cost savings annually within two years of closing.

(Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee and Narottam Medhora in Bengaluru; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta and Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)

1 Comment

  1. An interesting investment with the proposed 20B IoT devices and a now obvious glaring security problem, NXP and their Security and Authentication chops seems a great acquisition.

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