Arm shares rise on report that Meta will buy its first chip

Arm shares rise on report that Meta will buy its first chip


Outside view of the newly completed Meta’s Facebook data center in Eagle Mountain, Utah on July 18, 2024. 

George Frey | Afp | Getty Images

Arm shares rose 5% after a Thursday report that it was developing its own chip and that it had secured Meta as one of its first customers.

The Financial Times report indicates that Arm is developing a new product that will compete with many of its customers. The semiconductor company currently licenses its technology, called an instruction set, as well as more complicated core designs, to its customers so they can build their own chips.

Arm has historically been known as the “Switzerland” of chip technology firms, a reputation it received by dealing neutrally with competing chipmakers. It counts Apple, Google, Nvidia, Amazon, Microsoft, Qualcomm and Intel as customers.

Meta is spending as much as $65 billion this year on capital expenditures for artificial intelligence development. While much of its spending is on Nvidia-based systems, Meta has also purchased other chips, including AMD’s competitor, and said it is developing its own chip internally.

Arm’s chip will be a central processor for servers, according to the report, not the kind of graphics processor typically used for the heaviest AI workloads.

Nvidia tried to purchase Arm in 2020 from Softbank for $40 billion before the deal was blocked by regulators over Arm’s key role in the chip market. Arm went public in 2023 and now has a market cap above $173 billion.

Arm shares have risen nearly 29% so far in 2025 as it is seen as a core enabler of AI systems. Company leadership has told investors that it is looking to sell more advanced technology to its existing customers to grow revenue.

Rene Haas, Arm’s CEO, cited billions of dollars in planned data center spending from Google for $75 billion, Microsoft for $80 billion and Meta for $60 billion as an opportunity for Arm earlier this month. “No one is pulling back,” Haas said.

“No one is pulling back,” Hass said earlier this month on an earnings call.

Arm is also a technology partner of the Stargate initiative, which plans to spend as much as $500 billion building AI infrastructure for OpenAI.

Arm declined to comment, and Meta did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

WATCH: Arm CEO: Stargate is an amazing opportunity for technology and innovation

Arm CEO: Stargate is an amazing opportunity for technology and innovation



Source

The challenges facing Elon Musk and NASA in sending humans to Mars
Technology

The challenges facing Elon Musk and NASA in sending humans to Mars

President Donald Trump and Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, want to make living on Mars a reality.  Musk has said that his company, SpaceX, can get humans to Mars as early as 2029. Meanwhile, NASA officials have said that sending humans to Mars even by 2040 would be an “audacious” goal. China also has […]

Read More
Tesla limits investors’ ability to sue over breach of fiduciary duties
Technology

Tesla limits investors’ ability to sue over breach of fiduciary duties

Tesla CEO Elon Musk speaks at an opening ceremony for Tesla China-made Model Y program in Shanghai on Jan. 7. Aly Song | Reuters In a regulatory filing out Friday, Elon Musk-led automaker Tesla announced a change to its corporate bylaws that will limit shareholders ability to sue the company if investors believe the company’s […]

Read More
Nvidia and Tesla ripped higher this week, boosted by Trump’s Middle East tour
Technology

Nvidia and Tesla ripped higher this week, boosted by Trump’s Middle East tour

(COMBO) This combination of pictures created on January 31, 2025 shows (L) Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang in Las Vegas, Nevada on January 6, 2025, and US President Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC on January 31, 2025. Jensen Huang, CEO of AI chip giant Nvidia, met January 31, […]

Read More