It is possible that Arm Holdings PLC is about to undergo a significant change in its business strategy, which would place it directly in rivalry with its clients, such as Qualcomm Inc. and Nvidia Corp.
The Financial Times reported on Thursday that Arm (ARM) intends to introduce a new processor as early as this summer, with Meta Platforms Inc. (META) serving as its initial client. Because the U.K.-based company licenses out its chip designs rather than selling actual chips, Arm is notable in the semiconductor sector. The core processors for smartphones, such as the iPhone from Apple Inc. (AAPL), are their mobile processor designs.
As investors started evaluating the ramifications of Arm’s move to compete with its largest clients and what it might entail for its licensing business, Arm’s American depository receipts increased 6% on Thursday.
The FT stated that the new Arm processor, which is one of Arm’s primary technological advantages, will serve as a central processing unit for big data centers to run AI applications, most likely with less power usage.
A U.S. Arm spokesman declined to comment on the report. Citing the company’s quiet period leading up to earnings later this month, Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) likewise declined to comment. Requests for comment from Qualcomm Inc. (QCOM) were not immediately answered.
SoftBank Group Corp. of Japan (JP:9984) owns the majority of Arm, which went public in 2023. According to the Financial Times, the company’s approach to designing its own chips is a component of SoftBank founder and chairman Masayoshi Son’s strategy to enter the AI chip manufacturing market.
During its most recent earnings call, Arm officials gave no indication of an impending strategic change. It announced last month that it would be a part of the enormous Stargate joint venture, a data-center infrastructure endeavor that OpenAI is planning in collaboration with Oracle Corp. (ORCL), Nvidia, and Arm.
“Arm will be the CPU of choice for the initial configurations when combined with the Blackwell CPU with Grace,” Arm CEO Rene Haas said analysts during the company’s earnings call. “And going forward, there’ll be a huge potential for technology innovation around that space.”
Arm consented to a $40 billion acquisition by Nvidia in 2020, but the deal fell through when it was not approved by regulators. In its action to block the deal, the FTC argued that it “would allow the combined firm to to unfairly undermine Nvidia’s rivals.”