Arm Holdings shares soared in premarket trading on Monday after investors cheered the information that Nvidia’s new artificial intelligence-focused personal computer chip relies on Arm-based technology.
The British semiconductor intellectual property company rose more than 11% before the opening bell, extending a remarkable rally that has already seen its shares more than triple in value this year.
The latest catalyst came from Nvidia’s announcement of RTX Spark, a new PC processor designed to bring advanced AI capabilities directly to laptops and desktop computers.
Although Arm received only a brief mention in Nvidia’s product announcement, investors quickly identified the company as one of the major beneficiaries of the initiative.
Nvidia unveils AI-focused PC processor; Jim Cramer says positive for ARM
The RTX Spark chip was introduced alongside Nvidia’s GTC Taipei event and is aimed at making Windows-based personal computers better equipped for AI workloads.
Nvidia said the processor was developed in collaboration with MediaTek, a leading designer of Arm-based system-on-chip products.
“MediaTek, a market leader in Arm-based system-on-a-chip designs, collaborated with Nvidia on the custom CPU design, contributing to its best-in-class power efficiency, performance and connectivity,” Nvidia said in its announcement.
MediaTek shares also gained more than 5% in Taiwan trading following the news.
Investors interpreted the partnership as another validation of Arm’s architecture, which has increasingly become the preferred foundation for energy-efficient computing across smartphones, cloud infrastructure and now AI-enabled PCs.
CNBC host and former hedge fund manager Jim Cramer described the development as a major positive for Arm shareholders.
“The Nvidia superchip is obviously additive. It’s amazing for club holding ARM!” Cramer wrote on the social media platform X.
In a later post, he added: “Nvidia keynote takes aim at Intel and AMD with much faster, better CPU for agents made with ARM. Breakthrough.”
Shares of Advanced Micro Devices and Qualcomm were falling in premarket trading as Nvidia’s entry into the personal-computing market threatens to bring down their market shares.
AI PCs become the next battleground
During his keynote presentation, Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang outlined a vision in which AI agents perform increasingly sophisticated tasks directly on personal computers.
According to Huang, future AI-powered laptops will be capable of searching files, conducting research, and responding to complex user queries without relying entirely on cloud infrastructure.
Running those workloads locally requires more powerful and efficient processors, creating a potentially significant opportunity for Arm-based designs.
“One hundred percent of the world’s PC industry has joined us to reinvent the PC,” Huang said during the presentation.
The comments further strengthened investor expectations that AI computing will expand beyond data centers and smartphones into personal devices, opening another avenue for Arm’s technology.
While the concept of AI PCs has existed for several years, the involvement of Nvidia and major PC manufacturers has increased expectations that adoption could accelerate.
Arm’s AI ambitions gain momentum
Arm executives have repeatedly argued that the company’s architecture is well-positioned to benefit from the proliferation of AI across connected devices.
Speaking during the company’s earnings call in May, Chief Executive Rene Haas said AI adoption was expanding beyond cloud infrastructure into a wide range of end markets.
“AI is moving to every device and every physical system,” Haas said.
“Phones, PCs, vehicles, factories, robots, cameras, sensors, and connected devices all need efficient, secure compute with software that scales. These AI workloads will all run on Arm.”
Haas is expected to deliver his own keynote address at Computex on Tuesday, where investors will be looking for further details on the company’s AI strategy.
Mizuho raises PT on Arm
Meanwhile, Mizuho raised its price target on Arm shares to $425 from $360 while maintaining an Outperform rating.
The brokerage said premium smartphone demand remained resilient and highlighted growth opportunities from processor deployments at major customers across cloud computing and AI infrastructure.
Mizuho also pointed to future upside from Arm’s in-house artificial general intelligence-focused CPU initiatives and potential custom chip developments, which it expects could begin contributing to growth from 2027 onward.
For investors, Nvidia’s latest product launch has reinforced a broader thesis that Arm’s technology could become an increasingly important foundation for the next wave of AI-powered computing devices.
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