<p>SoftBank Group Corp's chip technology firm Arm Ltd's China joint venture laid off 90-95 employees last week to cope with a challenging business outlook this year, according to two sources familiar with the situation.</p>.<p>The layoffs come as SoftBank tries to set up a public listing for Arm this year. The China market has been a major source of growth, although a two-year management dispute at the joint venture that resulted in the ousting of the former CEO created some challenges.</p>.<p>The sources said those who lost their jobs were mostly engineers in research and development. Before the layoffs, Arm China had about 700 employees; there were no layoffs last year when parent Arm Ltd had global layoffs affecting up to 15 per cent of its workforce, according to one of the sources.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/softbank-group-reports-surprise-59-bn-third-quarter-loss-1188804.html" target="_blank">SoftBank Group reports surprise $5.9 bn third-quarter loss</a></strong></p>.<p>Arm China declined to comment.</p>.<p>Arm Ltd said in a statement that “Arm China is a separate company from Arm Ltd, and while we cannot comment on its personnel decisions, we do not expect any disruption to our business in China which continues to remain strong.”</p>.<p>Last year's layoffs came after Nvidia Corp failed to take over Arm because of regulatory hurdles. The collapse of the sale marked a major setback for SoftBank's efforts to generate funds when valuations across its portfolio are under pressure.</p>.<p>Arm China is the exclusive distributor of Arm licenses in China. It collects payments, and sends them to Arm Ltd, which delivers the technology directly to customers.</p>.<p>One of the sources said some customers are concerned about Arm potentially changing how it charges royalties, as well as U.S.-China geopolitical tensions that could cut off access to Arm technology.</p>.<p>Chinese companies, including Huawei Group and Alibaba, have been restricted from using some of Arm's technology in recent years.</p>
<p>SoftBank Group Corp's chip technology firm Arm Ltd's China joint venture laid off 90-95 employees last week to cope with a challenging business outlook this year, according to two sources familiar with the situation.</p>.<p>The layoffs come as SoftBank tries to set up a public listing for Arm this year. The China market has been a major source of growth, although a two-year management dispute at the joint venture that resulted in the ousting of the former CEO created some challenges.</p>.<p>The sources said those who lost their jobs were mostly engineers in research and development. Before the layoffs, Arm China had about 700 employees; there were no layoffs last year when parent Arm Ltd had global layoffs affecting up to 15 per cent of its workforce, according to one of the sources.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/softbank-group-reports-surprise-59-bn-third-quarter-loss-1188804.html" target="_blank">SoftBank Group reports surprise $5.9 bn third-quarter loss</a></strong></p>.<p>Arm China declined to comment.</p>.<p>Arm Ltd said in a statement that “Arm China is a separate company from Arm Ltd, and while we cannot comment on its personnel decisions, we do not expect any disruption to our business in China which continues to remain strong.”</p>.<p>Last year's layoffs came after Nvidia Corp failed to take over Arm because of regulatory hurdles. The collapse of the sale marked a major setback for SoftBank's efforts to generate funds when valuations across its portfolio are under pressure.</p>.<p>Arm China is the exclusive distributor of Arm licenses in China. It collects payments, and sends them to Arm Ltd, which delivers the technology directly to customers.</p>.<p>One of the sources said some customers are concerned about Arm potentially changing how it charges royalties, as well as U.S.-China geopolitical tensions that could cut off access to Arm technology.</p>.<p>Chinese companies, including Huawei Group and Alibaba, have been restricted from using some of Arm's technology in recent years.</p>