Arm Holdings (ARM) jumped more than 4% in premarket trading on Friday after HSBC issued a sharp upgrade, flipping its rating from Reduce all the way to Buy.
Arm Holdings plc American Depositary Shares, ARM
The bank’s analyst Frank Lee raised his price target to $205 from $90 — more than doubling it — on the basis that Arm’s pivot to AI server processors is being underpriced by the market.
The upgrade centers on the expanding role of agentic AI in driving demand for server chips. HSBC says this is opening up a much larger addressable market for Arm than its traditional smartphone licensing business.
HSBC forecasts industry CPU shipments will grow 20% in 2026 and 21% in 2027. That’s a dramatic step up from an average annual growth rate of just 2% between 2021 and 2025.
All major hyperscalers are now using Arm-based server CPUs. They’re also migrating to Arm’s newer v9 architecture and its Neoverse Compute Subsystems, which effectively doubles the royalty revenue Arm earns per chip.
There’s also a core count tailwind at play. As server CPU designs grow more complex, more cores per chip means more royalties flowing to Arm.
HSBC estimates that Arm’s server CPU royalty revenue could grow at a compound annual rate of 76% from fiscal 2026 to 2031. By fiscal 2031, that segment alone could generate around $4 billion — close to the company’s projected total revenue of $4.9 billion in fiscal 2026.
That’s a striking number. It implies server CPUs could essentially replicate the entire current business, just from one product category.
HSBC raised its fiscal 2027 and 2028 earnings estimates by 2% and 9%, respectively, to reflect these assumptions.
Perhaps the most closely watched element of HSBC’s note is the suggestion that Arm may be developing its own merchant server CPU — moving from licensing to direct chip sales.
The bank points to a sharp rise in R&D spending as a signal that internal chip development may be underway. If Arm does bring a merchant CPU to market, the economics shift dramatically.
Revenue per chip could go from a royalty of $36–$132 to a chip selling price of roughly $1,000 per unit. That would be a fundamentally different business model.
HSBC said further details may emerge at Arm’s “Arm Everywhere” event, scheduled for March 24.
ARM stock was up roughly 5.5% as of Friday morning trading.
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