Patent and Trademark Dominance in the Nonfinancial Intangible Assets Market
Among all asset types within the Nonfinancial Intangible Assets Market, patents and trademarks collectively constitute the largest revenue-generating segment, commanding an estimated combined share exceeding 55% of total market value in 2025. Patents alone account for the plurality of this share, driven by their dual function as both defensive moats and offensive monetization instruments.
Patents derive their dominant status from several structural characteristics. They carry legally enforceable exclusivity periods — typically 20 years from filing date — that translate directly into pricing power, licensing revenue streams, and competitive barriers. In sectors such as semiconductors, biotechnology, and telecommunications, patent portfolios function as strategic currencies. Qualcomm's licensing division, for instance, generates billions in annual royalty income by enforcing its CDMA and 5G-related patents against handset manufacturers globally. Similarly, Ericsson's intellectual property licensing program spans thousands of standard-essential patents in mobile communications, contributing a disproportionate share of the company's operating profitability relative to its hardware revenues.
Nokia has pursued an analogous strategy, transforming its business model toward patent licensing following the divestiture of its devices unit. Its patent portfolio, spanning over 20,000 patent families, generates revenue across consumer electronics, automotive connectivity, and industrial IoT — illustrating the cross-sector relevance of a well-curated patent asset base.
Trademarks occupy a structurally distinct but equally powerful position within the segment. Unlike patents, trademarks carry indefinite renewable protection, making them perpetual value stores subject to brand investment and consumer perception. Apple's trademark portfolio — encompassing device designs, software interfaces, and the iconic logo — contributes to a brand valuation consistently ranked among the highest globally. Alibaba and Tencent have similarly built trademark ecosystems that underpin their super-app platforms, enabling cross-product monetization and consumer loyalty at scale.
Brand names, classified as a distinct sub-segment closely related to trademarks, are increasingly subject to formal valuation under purchase price allocation exercises. When Aramco conducts joint ventures or strategic partnerships, its brand name — associated with operational reliability and sovereign assurance — carries measurable premium value that must be accounted for in transaction structuring.
The Patent Licensing Market and the Trademark Registration Market are directly embedded within this dominant segment, serving as the transactional mechanisms through which patent and trademark owners extract recurring revenue from third-party licensees and registrants respectively. Both are experiencing strong institutional demand as corporations prioritize IP monetization over passive ownership.
The segment's share is consolidating rather than fragmenting. Large technology and pharmaceutical conglomerates are increasing patent filing rates and aggressively defending trademark rights, while simultaneously acquiring smaller entities primarily for their intangible asset portfolios rather than their physical infrastructure. This consolidation dynamic reinforces the segment's dominance and compresses the ability of mid-tier players to build competing portfolios organically.
Franchise agreements represent the third major sub-component within the type segment. While smaller by absolute revenue contribution, franchise-related intangibles are particularly relevant in fast-food, hospitality, and retail sectors, where brand standards, territorial exclusivity, and operational knowledge are codified into legally binding intangible instruments that carry measurable fair value.