
Imagination said Apple, which accounts for about half its revenue, had notified the British firm it was developing its own graphics chips and would no longer use Imagination's processing designs in 15 months to two years time.
Shares in Imagination, in which Apple holds an 8 per cent stake, plunged to 76 pence, their lowest level since 2009 and about a 10th of their record of 734 pence hit in 2012.
"The biggest risk to Imagination's business model was realized this morning," analysts at Investec said. "The loss of this revenue stream will have a material impact on the financials of the company."
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Imagination's shares were trading down 61 per cent at 105 pence by 5:15 am ET, giving the company a market value of 298 million pounds ($372 million), or 463 million pounds less than it was worth on Friday.
The technology company has licensed its processing designs to Apple from the time of the iPod and receives a small royalty on every graphics chip used in a device.
Imagination, however, said it doubted Apple could go it alone without violating Imagination's patents, intellectual property and confidential information, and analysts said legal battles could lie ahead.
"This evidence has been requested by Imagination but Apple has declined to provide it," said the British company, which was founded in 1985 and listed in 1994.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Imagination's shares rose sharply between 2009 and 2012 as sales of smartphones boomed and Apple and Intel bought stakes. The company was valued at more than 2 billion pounds ($2.5 billion) in April 2012.
It struggled, however, to reduce its reliance on Apple, and has faced increased competition from the likes of chipmaker Qualcomm and British rival ARM, which developed its own graphics to complement its core processor blueprints.
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Imagination says it has 50 per cent of the high-end smartphone market, but only 7 per cent of mid-tier devices, where it has been trying to regain market share, including in phones made by Chinese manufacturers.
It said that Apple's notification had triggered talks on alternative commercial arrangements for the current license and royalty agreement.
Analysts said there could be room for a compromise, and it could be a bargaining move by Apple to reduce royalties.
Apple paid Imagination license fees and royalties totaling 60.7 million pounds for the year to end-April 2016, half of its total revenue, and is expected to pay about 65 million pounds for this year, Imagination said.
Most of its costs are incurred designing new technology years ahead of when it appears in devices, and it said there were minimal direct costs associated with the Apple revenue.
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