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Apple May Buy Intel's 5G Modem Business, ETFs to Rally
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Apple Inc. (AAPL - Free Report) is probably on the verge of buying Intel Corp.’s (INTC - Free Report) smartphone-modem chip business for about $1 billion, per Wall Street Journal. Apple shares rose 2.3% on Jul 22 while it added 0.4% after hours. On the other hand, Intel shares inched up 2.2% on the day and advanced about 1.2% after hours. The prospective deal seems a strategic fit.
In April, Intel said it would no longer make 5G modems for smartphones, citing "no clear path to profitability and positive returns" in the smartphone modem business, per CNN. News doing rounds is that the division was losing about $1 billion a year.
On the other hand, Apple looks primed to take full control of the entire manufacturing. Per Wall Street Journal, the iPhone-maker has been working to produce in-house chips to further distinguish its devices amid global slowdown of smartphone sales. It has employed engineers, including some from Intel. Late last year, Apple agreed to a $600 million deal to acquire 300 engineers and facilities from Dialog Semiconductor plc.
Intel was reportedly in search of a buyer for its modem business. And Apple comes across as one of the best bets given its long-standing customer-supplier relationship with Intel. Prior to Apple-Qualcomm’s six-year license agreement and a multi-year chipset supply agreement, Intel was the sole third-party modem supplier for the 2018 models of the iPhone.
In the past, Apple had gone for smaller acquisitions with the latest being the buying of self-driving startup Drive.ai. But with the slowdown in its iPhone business, the main moneymaker, the company needed to be open to bigger deals, per Wall Street Journal. It has substantial $113 billion of cash after debt as of Mar 30 (per WSJ), which gives it a leeway to crack a billion-dollar deal. Its largest deal so far remains the $2.6 billion acquisition of Beats Electronics LLC in 2014.
Why the Acquisitions & Agreements?
Probably, Apple seeks to bring its 5G technology online sooner than expected, which has led to Qualcomm agreements as well as the likely Intel deal. Along with many analysts, we too believe that integration of 5G technology into iPhones will result in a meaningful increase in upgrades. Apple could bring about 5G as soon as in 2020. So, one can expect a solid uptick in iPhone sales in the coming days.
ETF Impact
Both companies — Apple and Intel — are likely to benefit if the deal materializes. So, investors can bet on Apple-heavy or Intel-heavy ETFs. ETFs that invest meaningfully in Apple are iShares Dow Jones US Technology ETF (IYW - Free Report) , Select Sector SPDR Technology ETF (XLK - Free Report) , Vanguard Information Technology ETF (VGT - Free Report) , Fidelity MSCI Information Technology Index ETF (FTEC - Free Report) and Invesco QQQ (QQQ - Free Report) (read: Microsoft's Stellar Results to Drive These ETFs Higher).
Image: Bigstock
Apple May Buy Intel's 5G Modem Business, ETFs to Rally
Apple Inc. (AAPL - Free Report) is probably on the verge of buying Intel Corp.’s (INTC - Free Report) smartphone-modem chip business for about $1 billion, per Wall Street Journal. Apple shares rose 2.3% on Jul 22 while it added 0.4% after hours. On the other hand, Intel shares inched up 2.2% on the day and advanced about 1.2% after hours. The prospective deal seems a strategic fit.
In April, Intel said it would no longer make 5G modems for smartphones, citing "no clear path to profitability and positive returns" in the smartphone modem business, per CNN. News doing rounds is that the division was losing about $1 billion a year.
On the other hand, Apple looks primed to take full control of the entire manufacturing. Per Wall Street Journal, the iPhone-maker has been working to produce in-house chips to further distinguish its devices amid global slowdown of smartphone sales. It has employed engineers, including some from Intel. Late last year, Apple agreed to a $600 million deal to acquire 300 engineers and facilities from Dialog Semiconductor plc.
Intel was reportedly in search of a buyer for its modem business. And Apple comes across as one of the best bets given its long-standing customer-supplier relationship with Intel. Prior to Apple-Qualcomm’s six-year license agreement and a multi-year chipset supply agreement, Intel was the sole third-party modem supplier for the 2018 models of the iPhone.
In the past, Apple had gone for smaller acquisitions with the latest being the buying of self-driving startup Drive.ai. But with the slowdown in its iPhone business, the main moneymaker, the company needed to be open to bigger deals, per Wall Street Journal. It has substantial $113 billion of cash after debt as of Mar 30 (per WSJ), which gives it a leeway to crack a billion-dollar deal. Its largest deal so far remains the $2.6 billion acquisition of Beats Electronics LLC in 2014.
Why the Acquisitions & Agreements?
Probably, Apple seeks to bring its 5G technology online sooner than expected, which has led to Qualcomm agreements as well as the likely Intel deal. Along with many analysts, we too believe that integration of 5G technology into iPhones will result in a meaningful increase in upgrades. Apple could bring about 5G as soon as in 2020. So, one can expect a solid uptick in iPhone sales in the coming days.
ETF Impact
Both companies — Apple and Intel — are likely to benefit if the deal materializes. So, investors can bet on Apple-heavy or Intel-heavy ETFs. ETFs that invest meaningfully in Apple are iShares Dow Jones US Technology ETF (IYW - Free Report) , Select Sector SPDR Technology ETF (XLK - Free Report) , Vanguard Information Technology ETF (VGT - Free Report) , Fidelity MSCI Information Technology Index ETF (FTEC - Free Report) and Invesco QQQ (QQQ - Free Report) (read: Microsoft's Stellar Results to Drive These ETFs Higher).
Semiconductor ETFs like VanEck Vectors Semiconductor ETF (SMH - Free Report) , iShares PHLX Semiconductor ETF (SOXX - Free Report) and Invesco Dynamic Semiconductors ETF (PSI - Free Report) are heavy on Intel (read: Semiconductor ETFs: What Investors Need to Know).
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