On March 25, 2026, the "King of Architecture" in the global semiconductor industry—Arm Holdings (Ticker: ARM)—dropped a bombshell on the U.S. stock market. Driven by a massive business transformationOn March 25, 2026, the "King of Architecture" in the global semiconductor industry—Arm Holdings (Ticker: ARM)—dropped a bombshell on the U.S. stock market. Driven by a massive business transformation
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Arm Shares Surge 10% : Self-Developed AGI Chips Ignite a New $25B Revenue Era

Mar 25, 2026
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On March 25, 2026, the "King of Architecture" in the global semiconductor industry—Arm Holdings (Ticker: ARM)—dropped a bombshell on the U.S. stock market. Driven by a massive business transformation announcement, Arm’s stock price soared by over 10% in pre-market trading, hitting $148.6.

This surge represents more than just a fluctuation in numbers; it marks a "genetic mutation" in Arm's decades-old business model. Arm has announced that it will break its tradition of "only selling designs" to officially enter the field of self-developed chip sales. This move signals Arm’s evolution from a behind-the-scenes IP licensor to a front-line chip giant competing directly with the likes of NVIDIA and Intel. This article provides a deep dive into the launch of the Arm AGI CPU, the landmark endorsement from Meta, and the profound impact this shift will have on Arm’s ambitious $25 billion revenue goal.

I. A Historic Strategic Pivot: From "Asset-Light Licensing" to "Chip Powerhouse"

For years, Arm has played the role of the "Neutral Architect" in the global semiconductor ecosystem. It didn't manufacture chips; instead, it designed processor architectures (IP) and licensed them to giants like Apple, Qualcomm, and Samsung. While this "asset-light" model allowed Arm to maintain high gross margins, it capped its revenue potential—for every chip worth hundreds of dollars, Arm typically only earned a few cents in royalties.
With the dawn of the Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) era, the demand for computing power has grown exponentially. Arm realized that providing general-purpose architecture was no longer sufficient to unlock the full potential of hardware. To achieve the ultimate power-to-performance ratio, a deep vertical integration of architecture and hardware became a necessity.
At an event in San Francisco, Arm confirmed that Meta Platforms has become the first major customer for its inaugural self-developed AGI CPU chip. The specifications are staggering: boasting up to 136 cores while maintaining a power consumption of just 300 watts. Crucially, these chips will be manufactured by the world’s leading foundry, TSMC. For Meta, these chips significantly reduce data center operational costs; for Arm, this endorsement proves its capability to design and deliver top-tier, data-center-grade silicon.

II. The Aggressive "Five-Year Plan": Can Revenue Really Grow Fivefold?

Arm has outlined an incredibly ambitious financial blueprint, which is the core engine driving the stock’s current "gap-up" performance.
The company expects its new chip business to generate approximately $15 billion in annual sales within five years. This is a monumental figure, suggesting that the new business segment alone will eventually surpass the scale of all of Arm’s current licensing operations combined. Arm stated that through this dual-engine strategy of "Licensing + Self-developed Chips," the company aims to achieve $25 billion in total annual sales within five years.
Compared to current levels, this represents a 5x increase in revenue. Wall Street is reacting so violently because this model fundamentally changes Arm’s valuation logic. It is no longer a slow-growing technology company collecting stable royalties; it is now an AI hardware giant with explosive growth potential. This shift from "selling blueprints" to "selling finished products" unlocks massive profit potential and places Arm in a superior defensive position in the AI computing race.

III. Industry Shockwaves: Is Arm Becoming its Customers' Biggest Competitor?

Arm’s entry into chip manufacturing will inevitably have a profound impact on the existing semiconductor ecosystem, sparking debates about its role as both the "referee" and a "player."
The first concern is the potential conflict with existing customers. Qualcomm and Apple have long been Arm’s core partners. Now that Arm is entering the fray, it may prompt these giants to accelerate their search for alternatives (such as the RISC-V open architecture) to reduce their reliance on Arm. However, Arm holds absolute control over the underlying instruction set, allowing its self-developed chips to achieve higher efficiency in running AI workloads than any third-party licensed chip could ever dream of.
Secondly, this poses a direct challenge to NVIDIA. While NVIDIA remains unshakable in the GPU space, Arm’s self-developed chips—combined with its native architectural advantages—will become a formidable competitor in the data center CPU space. Arm is leveraging its historical dominance in mobile power efficiency to disrupt the traditional server processor market. This level of vertical integration is an advantage that no pure licensing firm can match.

IV. Technical Analysis: The Battle for $150 and Trading Opportunities

From a technical perspective, ARM is currently at a highly dramatic juncture. $150 serves as a critical psychological and technical barrier. If the stock can hold above $150 this week, it will form a powerful "gap-up" bullish signal, with the next price targets potentially reaching $180 or higher.
The surge in pre-market volume indicates that institutional capital is aggressively reallocating. A high-volume surge at these price levels usually signifies a fundamental shift in market sentiment regarding a company's outlook. While the news is overwhelmingly positive, short-term RSI indicators are approaching overbought territory, so investors should be wary of a technical consolidation or a "retest" of support.
Faced with a single-day move of over 10%, professional traders often turn to derivative tools for flexible positioning. Currently, the globally renowned trading platform MEXC has listed ARM Stock-Tracked Perpetuals. Compared to traditional channels, MEXC offers 24/7 trading, flexible leverage options, and a streamlined process.
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V. Conclusion: Entering the New Era of "Arm Verticalization"

Arm’s pivot to selling its own chips is a response to the structural changes in computing demand. In the AGI era, general-purpose licensing is no longer enough to satisfy the hunger for extreme efficiency. By taking control of the entire stack, Arm is evolving from a UK-based tech firm into a global hegemon of AI computing.
For long-term investors, the focus should remain on the actual delivery of Meta’s orders and the quarterly progress toward the $25 billion goal. For short-term traders, the current volatility provides excellent profit margins. We recommend utilizing MEXC’s contract tools to find high-leverage opportunities within the $145–$160 range, while strictly setting stop-losses to manage potential market pullbacks. Arm’s future is no longer just as the "King of Mobile"; it is redefining the very foundation of global AI infrastructure.

Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. The semiconductor industry is highly volatile; please trade within your risk tolerance.



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