Nvidia Says It Will Invest In Armâs IPO After Failed Acquisition
The GPU giant confirms to CRN that it plans to invest in Armâs initial public offering after the company was named as a potential âcornerstone investorâ by the British chip designer. âArm architecture is important to Nvidiaâs products and our ecosystem. We are supporting Arm by investing in its IPO,â a spokesperson says.
Nvidia has confirmed that it plans to invest in Armâs initial public offering after the GPU giant was named as a potential âcornerstone investorâ by the British chip designer.
âArm architecture is important to Nvidiaâs products and our ecosystem. We are supporting Arm by investing in its IPO,â an Nvidia spokesperson said in a late Wednesday statement to CRN.
[Related: Arm IPOâs 10 Confirmed And Potential Investors: Why Apple, Intel And Nvidia Are Among Them]
In an updated IPO filing on Tuesday, the chip designer named Nvidia among nine other cornerstone investors that have âindicated an interest in purchasing up to an aggregate of $735 millionâ of Armâs shares in the upcoming offering, which could reportedly happen next week. However, Arm cautioned that âthese indications of interest are not binding agreements or commitments.â
Only one other investor, Intel, has publicly confirmed so far that it will participate in Armâs IPO.
âThis morning, we announced that we are an investor in Arm,â said Stuart Pann, senior vice president and general manager of Intelâs contract chip manufacturing business, at a Tuesday event.
Armâs Potential Investors A Whoâs Who In The Tech World
The other cornerstone investors named by Arm are AMD, Apple, Google, Samsung Electronics, TSMC, Cadence Design Systems, MediaTek and Synopsys. While AMD declined to comment, the other companies did not respond to requests for comment.
Bob OâDonnell, president and chief analyst at TECHnalysis Research, said the investment interest by several major tech and semiconductor companies reflects the âabsolutely critical importance of Arm and its continued strong existence and development.â
âArm has played this absolutely foundational role in the tech business but in a pretty much invisible way to most of the outside world for a very long time,â OâDonnell told CRN recently.
For the IPO, Arm said it will seek a valuation of up to $52 billion when it lists under the âARMâ ticket on Nasdaq. The company plans to offer 95.5 million American depository shares in the range of $47 to $51 apiece. Its current owner, Japanese investment giant SoftBank Group, plans to own roughly 90 percent of Armâs shares following the IPO, according to the filing.
Nvidiaâs IPO Investment Plan Comes After Failed Arm Deal
Nvidia previously tried to acquire Arm for $40 billion in a deal announced back in 2020, but the companyâs plan fell through in early 2022 after facing significant regulatory opposition over concerns that it would unfairly use its ownership of Armâs technology to harm competitors.
âThe reason why people were concerned with Nvidiaâs potential purchase is they didnât want that control to go to one place. [Arm] really is sort of the Switzerland of tech, and everybody wanted it to continue to be the Switzerland of tech, because they wanted it to be a neutral place where everybody could go,â said OâDonnell.
Despite the significant setback, Nvidia has remained resolute in supporting the Arm architecture and building products around it. Even before the acquisition attempt, Nvidia had spent several years building system-on-chips with Arm processor cores for embedded devices, and it has since expanded those efforts to supporting and building Arm-based CPUs for high-performance computing systems.
Nvidiaâs highest-profile Arm product to date is Grace, a 72-core CPU that will go inside the upcoming Grace and Grace Hopper Superchips. The former product brings together two Grace CPUs while the latter combines a Grace CPU with an Hopper H100 data center GPU.