ARM

Arm Holdings Price

ARM
$173,84
-$3,84(-%2,16)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-21 17:25 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-21 17:25, Arm Holdings (ARM) is priced at $173,84, with a total market cap of $185,95B, a P/E ratio of 141,57, and a dividend yield of %0,00. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $173,39 and $180,16. The current price is %0,25 above the day's low and %3,50 below the day's high, with a trading volume of 8,40M. Over the past 52 weeks, ARM has traded between $100,02 to $183,16, and the current price is -%5,08 away from the 52-week high.

ARM Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$166,73
Market Cap$185,95B
Volume8,40M
P/E Ratio141,57
Dividend Yield (TTM)%0,00
Diluted EPS (TTM)0,75
Net Income (FY)$792,00M
Revenue (FY)$4,00B
Earnings Date2026-05-06
EPS Estimate0,58
Revenue Estimate$1,47B
Shares Outstanding1,11B
Beta (1Y)3.338

About ARM

Arm Holdings plc architects, develops, and licenses central processing unit products and related technologies for semiconductor companies and original equipment manufacturers rely on to develop products. It offers microprocessors, systems intellectual property (IPs), graphics processing units, physical IP and associated systems IPs, software, tools, and other related services. Its products are used in various markets, such as automotive, computing infrastructure, consumer technologies, and Internet of things. The company operates in the United States, the People's Republic of China, Taiwan, South Korea, and internationally. The company was founded in 1990 and is headquartered in Cambridge, the United Kingdom. Arm Holdings plc operates as a subsidiary of Kronos II LLC.
SectorTechnology
IndustrySemiconductors
CEORene Anthony Andrada Haas
HeadquartersCambridge,None,GB
Official Websitehttps://www.arm.com
Employees (FY)8,33K
Average Revenue (1Y)$481,03K
Net Income per Employee$95,07K

Learn More about Arm Holdings (ARM)

Arm Holdings (ARM) FAQ

What's the stock price of Arm Holdings (ARM) today?

x
Arm Holdings (ARM) is currently trading at $173,84, with a 24h change of -%2,16. The 52-week trading range is $100,02–$183,16.

What are the 52-week high and low prices for Arm Holdings (ARM)?

x

What is the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of Arm Holdings (ARM)? What does it indicate?

x

What is the market cap of Arm Holdings (ARM)?

x

What is the most recent quarterly earnings per share (EPS) for Arm Holdings (ARM)?

x

Should you buy or sell Arm Holdings (ARM) now?

x

What factors can affect the stock price of Arm Holdings (ARM)?

x

How to buy Arm Holdings (ARM) stock?

x

Risk Warning

The stock market involves a high level of risk and price volatility. The value of your investment may increase or decrease, and you may not recover the full amount invested. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Before making any investment decisions, you should carefully assess your investment experience, financial situation, investment objectives, and risk tolerance, and conduct your own research. Where appropriate, consult an independent financial adviser.

Disclaimer

The content on this page is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, financial advice, or trading recommendations. Gate shall not be held liable for any loss or damage resulting from such financial decisions. Further, take note that Gate may not be able to provide full service in certain markets and jurisdictions, including but not limited to the United States of America, Canada, Iran, and Cuba. For more information on Restricted Locations, please refer to the User Agreement.

Other Trading Markets

Arm Holdings (ARM) Latest News

2026-04-15 13:16

Tokenization Startup Brix Raises $5.5M, Backed by Circle Ventures and ConsenSys

Gate News message, April 15 — Brix, a tokenization startup focused on emerging market assets, has completed a $5.5 million funding round backed by Yapi Kredi's venture arm, FRWRD, Is Asset Management, Circle Ventures, ConsenSys, and Borderless Capital. The startup plans to launch on the MegaETH network and aims to bring traditional trading strategies—such as Turkish lira arbitrage (exploiting price differences in currency pairs across markets)—onto the blockchain, democratizing strategies previously dominated by large financial institutions.

2026-04-15 06:36

NVIDIA's Arm-Based PC Chip N1 Development Board Surfaces, Market Entry Imminent

Gate News message, April 15 — NVIDIA's N1 development board, an Arm-based system-on-chip (SoC) for Windows PCs co-developed with MediaTek since late 2024, has surfaced on a Chinese second-hand trading platform. The board features SK Hynix LPDDR5X memory modules and is priced at 9,999 yuan (approximately $1,370). The N1/N1X chips are believed to be derivatives of the GB10 used in NVIDIA's DGX Spark AI workstation, with clock speeds, memory bandwidth, and core counts adjusted for laptop environments. N1X integrates 10 high-performance Arm Cortex-X925 CPU cores, 10 power-efficient Cortex-A725 cores, and Blackwell GPU cores, aiming to enhance gaming and content creation capabilities on Arm-based Windows laptops. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang first mentioned the N1 chip in September last year during an announcement with Intel, stating it would be used in DGX Spark and similar products. The chip is expected to be officially unveiled during GTC 2026, held alongside Computex Taipei from June 1-4. Lenovo and Dell are reportedly preparing related product launches.

2026-04-10 06:31

SK Telecom teams up with Arm and Rebellions to develop an AI data center inference solution

Gate News message: On April 10, SK Telecom announced that it has signed a trilateral memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Arm, a UK chip design company, and South Korean AI chip startup Rebellions, to jointly develop AI data center inference server solutions. Under the agreement, the three parties will combine Arm’s newly released AGI CPU and Rebellions’ AI acceleration chip RebelCard, expected to be launched in the third quarter of this year, to jointly develop AI inference servers and to test and validate them at SK Telecom’s AI data center. Among them, the Arm AGI CPU is optimized for high-density inference environments and large-scale AI deployments, while RebelCard is designed specifically for large-scale AI inference.

2026-03-25 08:05

The Safest Middleman in the Chip Industry Takes the Most Dangerous Path

Between 4 billion dollars and 15 billion dollars, what lies between is not a growth curve but a self-revolution in business models. On March 24, Arm announced its first self-developed data center CPU in its 35-year history. Named AGI CPU, this chip features 136 Neoverse V3 cores, TSMC’s 3nm process, 300W TDP, with Meta as the first customer, planning large-scale deployment within the year. Also announced were collaborations with OpenAI, Cerebras, Cloudflare, SAP, and SK Telecom. Arm CEO Rene Haas provided a set of target figures at the launch, stating that the chip business aims to reach $15 billion in annual revenue by 2031, with the entire company’s total revenue at $25 billion and earnings per share of $9. What does this mean? Arm’s total revenue for FY2025 (ending March 2025) is $4.007 billion, according to Arm’s annual report, with licensing income of $1.839 billion and royalty income of $2.168 billion, and a gross margin of 97%. In other words, a company with $4 billion in annual revenue is expected to grow nearly to the scale of Intel’s entire data center division within five years based on a new business. According to Intel’s Q4 2024 financial report, Intel’s Data Center and AI (DCAI) division will generate $12.8 billion in revenue for 2024. ![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-b28ad97cef-f349f58fa5-8b7abd-ceda62) From $4 billion to $15 billion, a 3.7x leap, behind which is Arm’s attempt to transform from a pure IP licensing company into a hybrid that sells both design blueprints and finished products. This has no precedent in the chip industry. Why is Arm taking this risk? The answer lies in its customer list. Over the past three years, Arm’s largest data center clients have been doing the same thing. According to publicly available data from AWS, Amazon has migrated over 50% of its EC2 compute capacity to its self-developed Graviton chips, with the latest Graviton5 reaching 192 cores. Google Cloud disclosed that its Axion chips have migrated over 30,000 internal applications, improving efficiency by 80%. Microsoft’s Cobalt 200, based on Arm Neoverse architecture, uses TSMC’s 3nm process and has 132 cores. ![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-c5de4f78e1-d55712aa2b-8b7abd-ceda62) These cloud providers are using Arm architecture licenses, but the chips are designed, fabricated, and deployed by themselves. Arm earns licensing fees and royalties, not chip profits. As more computing power is absorbed by these self-developed chips, Arm’s revenue ceiling in data centers becomes increasingly clear. Looking at Arm’s revenue structure over the past four years, the outline of this ceiling becomes more concrete. According to Arm’s financial reports, from FY2022 to FY2025, the company’s total revenue grew from $2.7 billion to $4 billion, with an average annual growth of about 14%. Royalties increased from $1.562 billion to $2.168 billion, and licensing income from $1.141 billion to $1.839 billion. The growth rate of royalties has slowed to around 20%, largely driven by upgrades to the mobile Armv9 architecture, not data center developments. ![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-bc18c9e7b5-cd622fbbbf-8b7abd-ceda62) Extrapolating this growth rate, even if licensing and royalty income grow about 20% annually, the total would reach only around $10 billion by 2031. The remaining $15 billion must come from a new business that doesn’t yet exist today. This is the arithmetic behind Arm’s decision to build its own chips. Choosing to develop chips in-house essentially means competing with its own customers. A company that sells blueprints starts building its own buildings, while its blueprint buyers have been constructing for years. This is the real background of the 136-core AGI CPU. According to The Register, this chip has a base frequency of 3.2 GHz, up to 3.7 GHz, 12 DDR5 memory channels, 6 GB/s bandwidth per core, 96 PCIe 6.0 lanes, and supports CXL 3.0. Arm positions it as “the computing foundation for the agentic AI cloud era,” focusing on CPU-side task scheduling and data flow management in AI inference, not directly competing with GPUs. The pace of market share change also tells the story. According to Omdia, by 2025, Arm-based servers will account for about 21% of global shipments, with a 70% growth rate. But within hyperscale data centers, this share is already close to 50%. The 40-year monopoly of x86 isn’t collapsing but being replaced chip by chip. The risk of Arm’s self-developed chips isn’t technological but relational. Meta’s willingness to be the first customer is partly because Meta itself lacks a mature in-house chip project like Amazon or Google. But how will Amazon, Google, and Microsoft view this? If a supplier starts competing for your business, will you still entrust it with your most core architecture licensing? Arm’s gamble is that the overall growth of the data center market outpaces the deterioration of customer relationships. Rene Haas clearly believes that the incremental demand for CPUs in the AI era is large enough for self-developed chips and architecture licensing to coexist. The $15 billion target is a pricing of this judgment. Selling blueprints for 35 years, now building its own buildings for the first time. The blueprints are still being sold, and the buildings are being constructed—only whether they can fit on the same land remains to be seen. Click to learn more about Rhythm BlockBeats job openings. **Join the Rhythm BlockBeats official community:** Telegram Subscription Group: https://t.me/theblockbeats Telegram Group Chat: https://t.me/BlockBeats_App Twitter Official Account: https://twitter.com/BlockBeatsAsia

Hot Posts About Arm Holdings (ARM)

Decrypt

Decrypt

3 minutes ago
#### In brief * MoonPay, the Dogecoin Foundation, and House of Doge collectively donated 1 million DOGE to the AKC Humane Fund. * The funds support rescue operations, assistance for domestic violence victims with pets, and veterinary care for financially struggling families. * MoonPay Commerce now processes Dogecoin donations to the charity, allowing ongoing crypto contributions. MoonPay, the Dogecoin Foundation, and its corporate arm House of Doge collectively donated 1 million DOGE—roughly $95,000 worth—to the AKC Humane Fund on Monday, enabling ongoing crypto donations to the dog welfare charity through MoonPay's payment infrastructure. The contribution will fund shelter assistance for pet owners affected by domestic violence, stray dog rescues, and veterinary support for families facing financial hardship across the United States. (Disclosure: MoonPay Ventures is an investor in Dastan, the parent company of an editorially independent _Decrypt_.) "This campaign brings Dogecoin's purpose to life," said House of Doge CEO Marco Margiotta, in a statement. "By enabling Dogecoin-powered donations for a cause that directly supports dogs, we're creating a meaningful connection between our community and making a real-world impact." The partnership extends beyond the initial donation, with MoonPay Commerce processing future crypto contributions—in Dogecoin or other assets—to the AKC Humane Fund. MoonPay President Keith Grossman positioned the initiative as a milestone for crypto adoption. <span data-mce-type="bookmark" style="display:inline-block;width:0px;overflow:hidden;line-height:0" class="mce_SELRES_start"></span> "Dogs have always brought out the best in us. Now, with a little help from the Doge community, they are bringing out the best in crypto too," Grossman said in a statement. "We are proud to partner with the AKC and the Dogecoin Foundation to turn DOGE into real-world impact, powered by MoonPay Commerce." Dogecoin is the original and still most valuable meme coin, recently trading at a price of $0.095 and ranking as the 10th largest cryptocurrency by market cap. While created as a joke, Dogecoin has persisted largely on the back of good vibes, with some community members trumpeting the acronymic ethos, “Do only good every day.” "Dogecoin has always been about community and doing good," said Dogecoin Foundation Director Tim Stebbing, in a statement. "Supporting dogs through the AKC Humane Fund is a natural extension of that ethos, and we're excited to see the community rally behind this initiative."
0
0
0
0
GigaBrainAnon

GigaBrainAnon

7 minutes ago
Your driveway gate stops working and you're not sure where to start. The thing is, most issues come down to a handful of common culprits - worn hinges, stuck rollers, debris in the track, opener trouble, weak batteries, or faulty sensors. Before you panic or call a repair person, understanding what's actually broken makes all the difference. The first thing to figure out is what type of gate you're dealing with. Swing gates open inward or outward on hinges and tend to develop sagging or alignment problems. Sliding gates move along a track and usually have issues with rollers, wheels, guides, or debris blocking the path. This distinction matters because the repair approach is completely different. If you've got an automated system, safety has to come first. Vehicular gate operators fall under UL 325 safety standards, which means photo eyes, loops, and reversing functions aren't just nice-to-have features. They're actual safety requirements. Before you touch anything on an automatic gate, disconnect power, keep people clear of the gate path, and don't try to force anything that's jammed. After any repair, test the reversal and obstruction response to make sure everything's working right. Let's talk about sagging swing gates because they're incredibly common. When a swing gate drops out of alignment, it drags on the ground, won't close fully, strains the operator arm, or leaves gaps at the latch. Usually it starts with worn hinges, loose bolts, or an unbalanced frame. Check for hinge wear, loose mounting hardware, bent frames, or post movement. A minor sag might just need tightening and realignment, but if the hinges are actually worn out or the post has shifted, you're looking at replacement or structural work. Sliding gates that won't move smoothly usually have something blocking or resisting the path. Inspect the track for debris, check the rollers and wheels for wear, look for bent track sections or misaligned guides, and verify chain tension. Here's a practical tip: if the gate is physically hard to slide by hand when you disconnect it from the operator, it's a mechanical problem first, not electrical. Fix the movement before you start troubleshooting the motor. When the opener itself isn't responding, the issue often traces back to blown fuses, disconnected components, low battery voltage, or wiring faults. If your remote clicks but nothing happens, or the keypad works inconsistently, start with the basics. Check the battery condition and voltage - most systems need at least 12Vdc to operate. Verify fuse integrity and test basic connections before assuming the motor has failed. Battery voltage deserves its own mention because a weak battery can make a perfectly good gate look completely broken. Driveway gate openers with backup or solar-charged batteries can weaken gradually, so the gate might work part of the time before it fails completely. If your gate moves slowly or stops unexpectedly, battery condition is one of the first things to check. Gates that open fine but won't close, or start closing then reverse, usually have a safety device issue. Dirty or blocked photo eyes are the most common culprit. Check if the sensors are aligned, if the gate path is clear, or if there's wiring damage to the safety devices. In most cases, cleaning and realigning the sensors fixes it. If not, the fault might be in the wiring or the sensor itself. Limit settings can also cause weird behavior - gates stopping too early, opening too far, reversing unexpectedly, or failing to latch. If your gate suddenly overshoots or won't close completely, the problem might not be the motor. It might just be an incorrect travel adjustment. Here's something people often miss: if the gate is binding, sagging, rubbing, or dragging, the operator has to work harder every single cycle. That extra strain wears out arms, chains, gears, and brackets much faster. The gate needs to move freely in both directions for the system to work safely. So fix the gate movement first, then the operator. Preventing problems beats fixing them every time. Clear dirt and debris from the gate path regularly, inspect hinges and rollers for wear, tighten loose hardware, lubricate moving parts with approved products, check battery condition, test sensors and reversing devices, and listen for unusual noise or signs of sagging. Regular driveway gate repair maintenance is almost always cheaper than waiting for a complete breakdown. Catch small issues early and you'll save yourself a lot of headaches down the road.
0
0
0
0
OleosCapital

OleosCapital

2 hours ago
$ARM Pre-market +3%, activating quickly
0
0
0
0