Arm Holdings has introduced the AGI CPU, its inaugural proprietary chip designed specifically for agentic artificial intelligence applications in data center environments. The reveal drove ARM shares up 1.43% during Tuesday’s trading session.
Throughout its 35-plus year history, Arm has maintained a neutral position in the semiconductor ecosystem — providing architectural blueprints to industry giants including Apple, Nvidia, Qualcomm, and Amazon while earning royalties on shipped units. The AGI CPU represents a fundamental departure from this established business framework.
Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares, ARM
The processor specifically targets agentic AI applications, an emerging segment where artificial intelligence systems execute tasks autonomously with limited human oversight. Unlike conversational AI models, agentic workflows require substantial general-purpose computing power — a domain where CPUs outperform GPUs.
Arm has positioned the AGI CPU competitively on pricing. While the company hasn’t disclosed specific numbers, Patrick Moorhead from Moor Insights forecasts pricing in the thousands per unit. Awad confirmed to CNBC the chip would be “competitively priced.”
Meta Platforms has committed as the inaugural customer, providing significant validation for the new product. Meta’s 2025 capital expenditure budget reaches up to $135 billion as the company expands AI data center infrastructure measured in gigawatts.
Paul Saab, a Meta software engineer involved since the project’s 2023 inception, explained the processor provides “a lot more flexibility in our software stack and in our supply chain.” He emphasized the strategy always centered on broad market availability rather than Meta-exclusive deployment.
Alongside Meta, seven additional organizations have signed on, including OpenAI, Cloudflare, SAP, and SK Telecom. Approximately 50 partner organizations expressed support before the official announcement.
Arm invested $71 million over approximately 18 months establishing three specialized laboratory facilities at its Austin, Texas headquarters for chip development. The engineering team has expanded beyond 1,000 personnel.
Manufacturing leverages TSMC’s cutting-edge 3-nanometer fabrication process in Taiwan. The design incorporates two silicon dies functioning as an integrated unit. A single air-cooled rack accommodates up to 64 AGI CPUs — delivering approximately 8,700 total cores.
Mass production launches during the second half of 2025. Arm reports test silicon has returned from fabrication and performs according to specifications. The development roadmap includes additional chip releases on 12- to 18-month cycles.
Analyst consensus from LSEG projects Arm will deliver $4.91 billion in revenue for the current fiscal year, with earnings of $1.75 per share.
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