Arm Holdings Plc may achieve its target of $15 billion in sales of its own chips earlier than anticipated, its chief executive officer said, reflecting stronger-than-projected demand from the AI boom. CEO Rene Haas told Bloomberg Television he’s “very confident” of attaining that goal by the previously stated end of the decade. On Tuesday, he said there are indications the SoftBank Group Corp. com...
Arm Holdings Plc may achieve its target of $15 billion in sales of its own chips earlier than anticipated, its chief executive officer said, reflecting stronger-than-projected demand from the AI boom. CEO Rene Haas told Bloomberg Television he’s “very confident” of attaining that goal by the previously stated end of the decade. On Tuesday, he said there are indications the SoftBank Group Corp. company may reach that milestone sooner, in part because of overwhelming demand from an industry racing to build data centers and artificial intelligence services. “I’m hoping to hit that sooner. Demand has been stronger than we anticipated,” Haas said in a brief interview on the sidelines of Computex, Asia’s biggest tech industry convention. “Demand has been fantastic.” Arm announced plans in March to sell its own chips for the first time — a major strategic shift for a company that made its name licensing technology to semiconductor makers. As part of the move, the SoftBank-controlled firm laid out aggressive targets for the coming years, including that $15 billion projection. It expects revenue from the new chip business to eclipse sales from current operations, which focus on selling intellectual property. Read More: Arm Rallies After Predicting Booming Sales From New Chip Line Meta Platforms Inc. will be the first major customer for the company’s chip, called an AGI CPU. The product will have as many as 136 cores — a measure of processing power — and draw 300 watts of electricity, according to the UK-based company. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. will produce the chip. Arm decided to make the new component because customers asked for it, Haas reiterated on Tuesday. The central processing unit, often described as the brains of a computer, is designed to work alongside the accelerators offered by companies such as Nvidia Corp . It helps coordinate work between computers, prepares data and runs elements that provide a response to users making AI queries.
(Bloomberg) -- Arm Holdings Plc may achieve its target of $15 billion in sales of its own chips earlier than anticipated, its chief executive officer said, reflecting stronger-than-projected demand from the AI boom.Most Read from BloombergRussia Finance Officials Tell Putin War Spending Is UnaffordableCanada Dips Into Technical Recession for First Time Since 2020Alphabet to Raise $80 Billion in Eq...
(Bloomberg) -- Arm Holdings Plc may achieve its target of $15 billion in sales of its own chips earlier than anticipated, its chief executive officer said, reflecting stronger-than-projected demand from the AI boom.Most Read from BloombergRussia Finance Officials Tell Putin War Spending Is UnaffordableCanada Dips Into Technical Recession for First Time Since 2020Alphabet to Raise $80 Billion in Equity for AI SpendingUS Says Deals With Iran for Safe Hormuz Transit Are ProhibitedAndrew Left Found
A vehicle fire in the undersea tunnel of the Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macau Bridge caused major traffic disruption on Tuesday afternoon, prompting a partial closure of the key link between the three cities. The Transport Department said at 1.55pm that the incident occurred in the tunnel bound for Zhuhai and Macau, with the middle and slow lanes closed. Footage circulating online shows the tunnel filled wi...
A vehicle fire in the undersea tunnel of the Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macau Bridge caused major traffic disruption on Tuesday afternoon, prompting a partial closure of the key link between the three cities. The Transport Department said at 1.55pm that the incident occurred in the tunnel bound for Zhuhai and Macau, with the middle and slow lanes closed. Footage circulating online shows the tunnel filled with thick smoke. “Only the fast lane is available to motorists,” the department said. “Traffic is...
BW LPG press release ( BWLP ): Q1 GAAP EPS of $1.08. Shipping Q1 2026 concluded at US$55,500 per available day and US$51,300 per calendar day, above our guidance of US$54,000 per day. The earnings also reflect the company’s time charter coverage of 53% of available days at US$48,200 per day. Fixed 85% of available fleet days at an average rate of ~US$81,000 per day. The company declared a Q1 2026 ...
BW LPG press release ( BWLP ): Q1 GAAP EPS of $1.08. Shipping Q1 2026 concluded at US$55,500 per available day and US$51,300 per calendar day, above our guidance of US$54,000 per day. The earnings also reflect the company’s time charter coverage of 53% of available days at US$48,200 per day. Fixed 85% of available fleet days at an average rate of ~US$81,000 per day. The company declared a Q1 2026 cash dividend of US$0.67 per share, which consists of 100% of Shipping NPAT Q1 2026, in addition to US$0.11 per share from BW Product Services' capital return from 2025. For Q2 2026, the company has fixed ~85% of available days at an average rate of ~US$81,000 per day. For FY 2026, the company has secured 39% of the fleet capacity on fixed-rate time charters at US$44,800 per day, and an additional 3% through FFA hedges at an average rate of US$48,100 per day. More on BW LPG BW LPG: Times Might Be Shaky Now, But Long-Term Looks Solid BW LPG orders eight new VLGCs in $940M deal Historical earnings data for BW LPG Dividend scorecard for BW LPG Financial information for BW LPG
The head of the World Health Organization on Monday concluded his visit to Democratic Republic of Congo by briefing the president on the response to the Ebola outbreak, which an aid agency warned was likely much larger than official figures show. The outbreak, already the third-largest on record, persisted for weeks undetected, say health officials, who are now behind the curve and struggling to ...
The head of the World Health Organization on Monday concluded his visit to Democratic Republic of Congo by briefing the president on the response to the Ebola outbreak, which an aid agency warned was likely much larger than official figures show. The outbreak, already the third-largest on record, persisted for weeks undetected, say health officials, who are now behind the curve and struggling to bring it under control. Arriving in DR Congo last week, WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom...