TLDR
- Arm Holdings shares climbed more than 16% Wednesday following the debut of its AGI CPU, the company’s first internally developed AI chip
- The processor targets AI data center operations and agentic AI applications
- Meta served as co-development partner; initial customer base includes OpenAI, Cloudflare, and SAP
- Company projects the chip will deliver $15 billion in yearly revenue by 2031, compared to $4 billion total revenue in fiscal 2025
- Barclays and Evercore analysts upgraded price targets to $200 and $227 respectively, maintaining Buy recommendations
Arm stock reached $157.07 during reporting hours, climbing from an intraday low of $148.25 and touching a peak of $166.69.
Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares, ARM
Arm Holdings (ARM) delivered a significant announcement Wednesday, with shares surging more than 16% following the introduction of its AGI CPU — the company’s first internally designed AI chip.
The launch represents a strategic pivot for the Cambridge-headquartered firm. Historically, Arm generated revenue by licensing chip architectures to manufacturers. This release signals direct entry into silicon production.
The AGI CPU addresses AI data center requirements and handles agentic AI workloads as its primary function. Production ramp-up is scheduled for the latter half of 2026, according to company statements.
Meta Platforms participated in the chip’s development process and will deploy it as a foundational customer. OpenAI, Cloudflare, and SAP comprise the initial customer roster. Arm intends to expand these relationships to encompass Amazon, Microsoft, and Alphabet via their respective cloud infrastructure offerings.
CEO Rene Haas characterized the launch as “the next phase of the Arm compute platform and a defining moment for our company.”
$15 Billion Revenue Projection Through 2031
Arm established an aggressive financial objective — achieving $15 billion in yearly revenue from the processor by fiscal 2031. The company reported total revenue of $4 billion throughout fiscal 2025.
The gap remains substantial. However, with a customer portfolio featuring prominent technology leaders, the projection carries credibility.
Arm disclosed that profit margins on the chip will fall below those generated by its licensing operations. The magnitude of potential revenue, however, has captured investor interest.
Energy efficiency characteristics have generated positive industry response. With power consumption challenges escalating across AI data center operations for hyperscale providers, Arm’s low-power architecture approach appears strategically timed.
Wall Street Upgrades Price Outlook
Analyst coverage responded swiftly. Barclays analyst Tom O’Malley elevated his price target from $165 to $200 — representing a 21% adjustment — while maintaining his Buy rating. He noted the chip “plays into Arm’s strength in energy efficiency” and anticipates additional product and customer revelations.
Evercore ISI analyst Mark Lipacis increased his target more aggressively, moving from $170 to $227, a 34% elevation. He identified Arm as “a key beneficiary of agentic AI” and views the chip as a viable pathway to reaching that $15 billion revenue milestone by 2031.
ARM carries a Strong Buy consensus rating derived from 20 Buy recommendations, 4 Hold ratings, and 1 Sell rating across 25 analysts surveyed during the past three months. The average price target stands at $170.86, suggesting approximately 9% upside potential from present levels.
Lipacis’s $227 projection, if achieved, would deliver roughly 45% upside from the current trading price.

