Arm Holdings is aiming to become the next big chip stock and is preparing for its public listing, while focusing on establishing itself as a leader in the artificial intelligence sector.
Arm, the chip designer owned by Softbank, has filed for an IPO on the Nasdaq, with the valuation yet to be specified, while tech stocks remain resilient despite surging bond yields, and Microsoft restructures its mega-merger with Activision Blizzard to secure approval from UK regulators.
Arm Holdings, backed by SoftBank Group, plans to choose a US IPO as it faces a 1% decline in annual revenue, indicating a slowing smartphone market, and its stock market launch is expected to revive a lacklustre IPO market.
Semiconductor chip company Arm has filed for an IPO on the Nasdaq, seeking a valuation of up to $70 billion, but faces risks and potential headwinds due to financial challenges and geopolitical tensions with China.
The executive order announced by President Biden restricts US venture capital and private equity investments in sensitive Chinese tech sectors, potentially ending foreign investment in areas such as chips and AI in China.
Chip designer Arm Holdings is planning to ask investors to pay between $47 and $51 per share for its initial public offering (IPO), valuing the company at roughly $50 billion to $54 billion and potentially making it the most valuable company to list in New York since Rivian Automotive.
Arm Ltd.'s public listing is facing lowered expectations, with the chip designer aiming to raise $5 billion to $7 billion and a valuation of $50 billion to $60 billion, down from previous targets, due to factors such as China risks and slowing smartphone market growth.
Arm, the chip design firm, has attracted interest from major technology companies such as Apple, Google, and Nvidia, as well as chip foundry operators Intel, Samsung, and TSMC, in its bid to go public on Nasdaq with a potential market capitalization of $52 billion and $5 billion in new cash.
The Biden administration's export ban is causing China's largest contract chipmaker, SMIC, to face restrictions on export sales, leading to concerns about the acceleration of the US-China tech war.
Arm, a chip-design company, is gearing up for a major IPO and analysts at Susquehanna believe it deserves a premium valuation similar to that of Nvidia.
Analysts at Susquehanna Financial Group advise against buying Arm Holdings' chip-design stock despite its successful initial public offering in the New York market.