On September 14, the year’s largest stock market listing (IPO based on the English Initial Public Offering) took place in the United States, which was also one of the most significant stock market events in the technology industry for a long time: Arm went public, whose shares at the time of the launch They were worth $51, valuing the company at about $54.5 billion.
The heightened anticipation and investor interest in the introduction is clearly demonstrated by the fact that the share price of the company, which is indispensable in the system processor segment, increased by 24.7% by the end of Thursday’s trading day, according to data provided by Reuters, thus immediately adding about ten billion dollars to the company’s value. However, those who only waited a day have already missed out on one of the most promising stock market deals of the year.
IT job interview: don’t be afraid, it will be fineIt’s hard to avoid this topic when talking about IT careers. In the recent Kraftie broadcast, we didn’t want to avoid it either, we discussed the entire process. |
IT job interview: don’t be afraid, it will be fine
It’s hard to avoid this topic when talking about IT careers. In the recent Kraftie broadcast, we didn’t want to avoid it either, we discussed the entire process.
As of Friday morning, ARM had already corrected back 0.7%, and some analysts and investors were already skeptical about the IPO on the day of the launch, calling the newly listed company already overvalued and therefore a dangerous investment.
Majority owner SoftBank has been considering taking Arm to the stock market since the $40 billion takeover deal announced in 2020, in which Nvidia would have been the partner, finally failed last February. Since then, several market companies have indicated that they would acquire a stake in the British company that licenses processor architectures, either in a consortium or through the purchase of shares.
Arm’s processor designs are used by the world’s largest chip manufacturers and chip designers for their own solutions, including AMD, Nvidia, Qualcomm or Apple, but dozens of manufacturers of system processors developed primarily for consumer electronics and telecommunications equipment also use Arm’s designs in a wide variety of ways. for your equipment. As a result, the British company has now become an indispensable player in the processor market.