Nvidia calls Arm ‘most important CPU architecture of the next decade’ as it officially ends buyout bid

Nvidia is no longer trying to acquire Arm for $40B.

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Nvidia is no longer buying Arm from SoftBank, following stiff regulation from across the globe. The GPU giant released a statementofficially terminatingits acquisition attempt, which would have made records in tech at even the conservative $40B outlay. Nvidia will, however, remain a 20-year licensee of what it’s CEO has described as the “most important CPU architecture of the next decade.”

“Arm has a bright future, and we’ll continue to support them as a proud licensee for decades to come,” Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, says. “Arm is at the center of the important dynamics in computing. Though we won’t be one company, we will partner closely with Arm. The significant investments that Masa has made have positioned Arm to expand the reach of the Arm CPU beyond client computing to supercomputing, cloud, AI and robotics."

Arm will instead be listed as a publicly traded company, the company has confirmed. That’s back to Plan A, then, as an IPO was reportedly the first option considered by Arm’s owners, Softbank. This IPO may be in the US, whichmay not be to everyone’s tastes.

Arm has alsoappointed a new CEO, who will take over from Simon Segars. Rene Haas (assumedly no relation to Gene Haas, the Nascar and F1 team owner) will take over following a half decade at the helm of the Arm IP Products Group. Before joining Arm in 2013, Haas also spent seven years as VP and GM of computing products at, you guessed it, Nvidia.

Small world, at least for top tech talent.

Haas says Arm is “uniquely positioned” to focus on AI, cloud, IoT, automotive, and—oh no another token mention of—the metaverse.

Arm’s owner Softbank also gets to walk away from the deal with $1.25B in Nvidia’s cash, which was prepaid as the two companies acquisition deal was worked on.

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So, Softbank is walking away with Nvidia’s cash, and Arm is reverting back to its original plan of an IPO. But what is Nvidia going to do?

Well, it might be down some cash, but Nvidia is still a licensee of Arm. No doubt we’ll see plenty of Arm chips in Nvidia’s product stack whether it’s the owner of Arm or not. Nvidia still needs CPUs, and while it’s often turned to AMD to provide them as of late, it’s also looking to use more Arm-based chips which it can design more to its own specifications.

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Nvidia recently opened a newengineering group in Israel, Intel’s backyard, focusing on CPU design.

No doubt it’s been a rocky road for Nvidia in its attempt to buy Arm. The US FTC actually moved toblock the company’s purchaseback in December, and the UK authorities wereinvestigating the dealon national security grounds. The EU and Chinese regulatory authoritiesweren’t looking rosy either, and so it seemed perhaps a futile effort towards the end of late last year.

Though I doubt anyone wanted to tell Nvidia’s Jensen Huang that his hopes of building “the world’s premier computing company”, or owning a major CPU company, were dashed.

Jacob earned his first byline writing for his own tech blog. From there, he graduated to professionally breaking things as hardware writer at PCGamesN, and would go on to run the team as hardware editor. He joined PC Gamer’s top staff as senior hardware editor before becoming managing editor of the hardware team, and you’ll now find him reporting on the latest developments in the technology and gaming industries and testing the newest PC components.

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