Arm jumps as new AI chip to drive billions in annual revenue


An Arm Holdings AGI CPU chip is displayed at Fort Mason in San Francisco, U.S., March 24, 2026. REUTERS/Max A. Cherney

March 25 - U.S.-listed ⁠shares of Arm Holdings jumped nearly 12% in premarket trading on ⁠Wednesday after the chip firm projected billions of dollars in ‌annual revenue from its own new artificial intelligence data-center chip.

The new chip marks a pivot for Arm, which has traditionally relied on licensing its designs to companies such as ​Nvidia and Qualcomm and then collecting a royalty ⁠payment based on the number ⁠of units sold.

Unlike current chips that are designed to respond to queries as ⁠part ‌of a chatbot, Arm's AGI CPU will be able to handle data-crunching needs of "agentic AI", a system that acts on ⁠behalf of users with minimal oversight.

Arm expects the data-center ​chip to generate ‌roughly $15 billion in annual revenue in about five years, CEO Rene ⁠Haas said ​in an interview with Reuters.

Overall, the company expects to generate revenue of $25 billion in that period, and annual earnings of $9 per share, he said.

"Arm has not ⁠taken a baby step, say the production ​of a die or a chiplet for its customers; it has jumped in with both feet, developing the highly performing and energy efficient Arm AGI ⁠CPU," Citigroup analysts said.

"The industry move to inference and, in particular, agentic AI is showing the need for more CPUs."

The rise of "agentic AI" has already fueled stronger demand for similar chips, which are manufactured by companies ​like Intel and Advanced Micro Devices.

Shares of Intel ⁠were up 3.4%, while AMD rose more than 1%.

Arm is trading at ​63.08 times analysts' estimates for the company's earnings ‌for the next 12 months, compared ​with AMD's 26.64 and Intel's 71.27, according to data compiled by LSEG.

(Reporting by Kanishka Ajmera in Bengaluru; Editing by Leroy Leo)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

UPS opens $100 million Taiwan logistics hub to meet tech boom demand
Meta’s new display glasses withheld from EU over battery rules, supply shortages
The price users pay for WhatsApp's handy new link previews
AI�can sway your opinion, even when you know it's biased, study shows
Perfect homework, blank stares: Why colleges are turning to oral exams to combat AI
WhatsApp and Pok�mon Sleep arrive on Garmin sports watches
New Mexico jury says Meta harms children's mental health and safety, violating state law
Poland faced a surge in cyberattacks in 2025, including a major assault on the energy sector
Roblox to introduce new controls in Indonesia to comply with child social media block
More than 50% surveyed in Germany believe AI will change social life

Others Also Read