Stock Markets March 24, 2026

Arm launches AGI CPU to target agentic AI, expects multibillion-dollar revenue boost

First self-designed data-center processor aims to serve agentic AI workloads; Meta is lead partner and TSMC will fab the two-piece 3nm device

By Avery Klein META
Arm launches AGI CPU to target agentic AI, expects multibillion-dollar revenue boost
META

Arm Holdings unveiled a new data-center central processing unit, the AGI CPU, which the company says will generate billions in annual revenue and marks a strategic pivot from pure IP licensing toward building its own chips. The processor targets so-called agentic AI workloads, was developed with Meta Platforms as lead partner, and will be manufactured by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co on 3-nanometer process nodes. Arm plans volume production in the second half of the year and is also working with server OEMs to deliver complete systems.

Key Points

  • The AGI CPU is Arm’s first internally produced data-center chip and is aimed at agentic AI workloads.
  • Meta Platforms is the lead partner on the design; additional customers include OpenAI, Cloudflare, SAP and SK Telecom.
  • TSMC will fabricate the two-piece chip on its 3-nanometer process, and Arm is working with Lenovo and Quanta to deliver full systems.

Arm Holdings on Tuesday announced the AGI CPU, a new data-center processor the company says will add billions of dollars to its annual revenue and represents a marked change in its long-standing business approach.

The AGI CPU is intended to run the intensive data processing required by agentic artificial intelligence - a form of AI described as capable of taking actions on behalf of users with limited oversight, rather than simply answering queries in conversational form. Demand for this style of workload has driven greater need for the kinds of central processing units produced by established server CPU vendors.

Historically, Arm has generated revenue by licensing intellectual property to chipmakers such as Qualcomm and Nvidia and collecting royalties based on units sold. The company is majority-owned by Japan's SoftBank Group. Last year, Arm told investors it had begun investing in producing its own silicon - an undertaking the company acknowledged can require hundreds of millions of dollars - and brought in executives to guide that effort. The AGI CPU is the first product to emerge from that change in strategy.

"It’s a very pivotal moment for the company," CEO Rene Haas said. The chip will be overseen by Mohamed Awad, who leads Arm's cloud AI business, and Arm said it has additional processor designs planned on a 12- to 18-month cadence.

Meta Platforms will serve as the lead partner on the AGI CPU and collaborated with Arm on its design. Other announced customers for the new processor include OpenAI, Cloudflare, SAP and SK Telecom. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co is fabricating the device using its 3-nanometer process technology. The AGI CPU is built from two distinct pieces of silicon that operate together as a single chip, Arm said.

Arm reported it has received test silicon that meets expectations and plans to move the AGI CPU into volume production in the second half of this year. "It’s back, and it works, and it’s doing everything we thought it would," Haas said, referring to the new processor.

Beyond the chip itself, Arm is coordinating with server manufacturers including Lenovo and Quanta Computer to provide fully integrated systems that pair the AGI CPU with server hardware.

For the current fiscal year, analysts on Wall Street expect Arm to report a net profit of $1.75 per share and revenue of $4.91 billion, according to LSEG estimates.


Key points

  • The AGI CPU targets compute for agentic AI workloads and is positioned to generate multibillion-dollar revenue for Arm.
  • Meta Platforms is the lead development partner; other customers include OpenAI, Cloudflare, SAP and SK Telecom.
  • TSMC will manufacture the two-piece chip on its 3-nanometer node; Arm is also partnering with Lenovo and Quanta to offer complete server systems.

Risks and uncertainties

  • Execution risk in transitioning from an IP-licensing model to producing and commercializing proprietary silicon - this affects Arm and server hardware suppliers.
  • Dependence on manufacturing timelines and yields at TSMC for the 3-nanometer process, which could affect product availability and margins.
  • Market adoption risk for the AGI CPU among cloud operators and enterprise customers, which could influence revenue outcomes.

The company declined to provide further financial forecasts tied specifically to the AGI CPU beyond its statement that the chip will add billions of dollars to revenue. Arm's stated product roadmap and partner commitments establish the initial commercial plan, but timing and scale will depend on production ramp and customer deployment.

Risks

  • Execution risk shifting from licensing IP to manufacturing and selling hardware, impacting Arm and server OEMs.
  • Reliance on TSMC’s 3-nanometer production and yields, which could affect supply and timelines for cloud and data-center markets.
  • Uncertainty around customer adoption and deployment pace for agentic AI workloads, which will influence revenue realization.

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