I liked Marvell (NASDAQ:MRVL) back in September of 2018, as I thought the Street was too focused on the near-term challenges of integrating Cavium and not enough credit to the transformation underway in the business. While the shares dropped another 20% from that point in time with the SOX, the shares have since rebounded more strongly, and the shares now sit about 20% higher than they were at the time of the last article (while the SOX is down about 4%).
I continue to like the direction Marvell is going. Significant wins in 5G (primarily with Samsung) could translate into more than $700 million of incremental revenue, and the company has been building up its ASIC capabilities such that I believe the company has a chance of emerging as a viable second-source rival to Broadcom (AVGO) in time and shifting more of the business’s center of gravity towards growth markets and away from storage.
What I don’t like so much is the current valuation. Marvell has attractive end-market exposure for the next 12-18 months and looks better-positioned for the near-term growth that Wall Street loves so much, but I think the valuation is a tougher sell now.
Getting Top Dollar For An Unwanted Business
Last week, basically in conjunction with earnings, Marvell announced that it had reached an agreement with NXP Semiconductors (NXPI) to sell its Connectivity portfolio to NXP for $1.76 billion in cash. This portfolio includes WiFi and Bluetooth assets, and not only are the current margins below the company averages, management had previously flagged the business as non-strategic and a potential sale candidate.
Reflecting the hot market for connectivity assets (you can cross-reference this with the Infineon (OTCQX:IFNNY) – Cypress (CY) and ON (ON) – Quantenna (