A failed $900M deal reveals Arm's bold new ambitions--and the secret tech war shaping the future of AI chips.
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Scooped by
Richard Platt
onto Internet of Things - Company and Research Focus April 3, 7:26 PM
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Arm Holdings just made a quiet but telling move in the AI chip war by pursuing a potential acquisition of UK-based Alphawave to lock in next-gen tech, then backing out. The tech in question, a high-speed data transfer solution called serializer-deserializer (SerDes), is the unsung hero behind how ICs talk to other essential ICs for training and running AI models at scale. Alphawave shares popped nearly 45% on the news, their best day in +3 years. While the deal fizzled out, the message was clear: Arm is thinking bigger than just licensing IP.
Why does it matter? Because SerDes isn't just another piece of silicon, it's the plumbing for tomorrow's AI infrastructure, and right now, Broadcom, Marvell, and even Nvidia are way ahead. Arm, backed by SoftBank and traditionally a behind-the-scenes IP powerhouse, doesn't currently offer SerDes at the bleeding edge. There's more at play here, as Alphawave has ties to a blacklisted Chinese firm, that may have thrown a wrench into the talks. The strategic takeaway is that Arm wants in on the $60 Billion custom AI IC market projected by 2028. And SerDes is the toll gate. If they can't buy it, they'll have to build it and fast. Because as demand for HPC (High-Performance Compute) AI chips surges, whoever controls the chip-to-chip highway will end up owning the map. Building it from scratch? Insiders say it takes a specialized team and at least 2 years. Which explains why Arm has quietly started hiring chip designers and floating internal memos about launching its own processors.