GURU.Markets stock price, segment price, and overall market index valuation
The company's share price Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings shares are a bet on the architecture that powers most smartphones and many other devices worldwide. The company doesn't manufacture chips, but licenses its intellectual property. Its value depends on the volume of chip supplies from its partners and its penetration into new markets.
Share prices of companies in the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings dominates the licensing of mobile processor architectures. Its business consists of a single segment—royalties and license fees. We classify it as part of the Semiconductor Electronics sector, and the chart below reflects the dynamics of the entire semiconductor ecosystem.
Broad Market Index - GURU.Markets
Arm Holdings develops and licenses the processor architecture that powers virtually every smartphone in the world. Its unique business model makes it a key player in the GURU.Markets index. The chart below represents the entire market. Find out how Arm compares to the overall trend.
Change in the price of a company, segment, and market as a whole per day
ARM - Daily change in the company's share price Arm Holdings plc
For Arm Holdings, whose architecture underpins most smartphones, daily price changes are a measure of its response to trends in the mobile industry. The graph of these fluctuations is unspectacular, but it is an important component of the formulas on System.GURU.Markets.
Daily change in the price of a set of shares in a market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings plc is the developer of chip architectures that dominate mobile devices. This chart shows the average daily volatility of the semiconductor sector. Comparing this to ARM's performance helps us understand whether its unique licensing business model makes it more or less volatile than chip makers themselves.
Daily change in the price of a broad market stock, index - GURU.Markets
Arm Holdings is a British company whose architecture underpins most of the world's mobile processors. Its licensing business model makes it a unique player in the semiconductor industry. The chart below shows the overall volatility of the tech sector, where Arm plays a fundamental role.
Dynamics of market capitalization of the company, segment and the market as a whole over 12 months
Annual dynamics of the company's market capitalization Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings, whose architecture underpins most of the world's mobile processors, has been actively expanding into data centers and the automotive sector over the past year. Its stock performance reflects investor confidence that its energy-efficient chips will become the standard in new, fast-growing markets.
Annual dynamics of market capitalization of the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings plc doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which underpins nearly all smartphones and a growing number of other devices. Its royalty-based business model makes it unique in the semiconductor industry. The chart below shows how investors value this chip "architect."
Annual dynamics of market capitalization of broad market stocks, index - GURU.Markets
Arm Holdings dominates the mobile processor architecture market. Its business model is based on intellectual property licensing, which ensures high margins. The company's growth is driven by the expansion of its technologies into new areas, such as data centers and automobiles, creating the potential for market outperformance.
Dynamics of market capitalization of the company, segment and the market as a whole for the month
Monthly dynamics of the company's market capitalization Arm Holdings plc
The value of Arm Holdings, the developer of the architecture for most mobile processors, depends on the state of the smartphone market and growth in new segments such as data centers and automobiles. Monthly fluctuations on the chart reflect chip shipment volumes from its partners and news of new licensing agreements.
Monthly dynamics of market capitalization of the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
This chart shows the dynamics of the entire semiconductor sector, where Arm occupies a unique position. Its architecture is used in almost all smartphones. The chart shows overall demand for electronics, which drives licensing fees and royalties that form the basis of Arm's business model.
Monthly dynamics of market capitalization of broad market stocks, index - GURU.Markets
What you're looking at is the dynamics of the entire tech sector, where Arm occupies a unique position. Its post-IPO movements reflect the enormous interest in its licensing-based business model and its key role in the era of mobile computing and AI, allowing it to outpace the market.
Dynamics of market capitalization of the company, segment and the market as a whole for the week
Weekly dynamics of the company's market capitalization Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings, whose architecture underpins most mobile processors, receives royalties on every chip sold. Its weekly stock price is driven by smartphone sales forecasts, growth in the data center and automotive segments, and relationships with key partners such as Apple and Qualcomm.
Weekly dynamics of market capitalization of the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings, with its unique licensing business model, can operate differently from the broader semiconductor sector. Its revenue depends on global chip shipments, making it a barometer for the entire industry. The chart shows how the market values this central, yet indirect, role in the technology chain compared to direct manufacturers.
Weekly dynamics of market capitalization of stocks of the broad market, index - GURU.Markets
Arm Holdings, whose architecture underpins most mobile processors, has a unique licensing business model. Its shares, a recent addition to the market, are highly volatile. This chart shows how investors are trying to value this key tech company amid broader market fluctuations.
Market capitalization of the company, segment and market as a whole
ARM - Market capitalization of the company Arm Holdings plc
The market capitalization of Arm Holdings, which recently went public, reflects its unique business model in the semiconductor industry. The chart shows the market's high valuation of its intellectual property: Arm's architecture underlies nearly all smartphone processors. Investors are betting that its energy-efficient designs will dominate other sectors, from PCs to data centers.
ARM - Share of the company's market capitalization Arm Holdings plc within the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings dominates the mobile processor architecture market. Its share is close to 100%, as its designs are licensed by almost all smartphone chip makers, including Apple and Qualcomm. Its market capitalization reflects its fundamental role in the mobile ecosystem.
Market capitalization of the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
The chart below shows the trillion-dollar value of the semiconductor industry. Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips, but its architecture underpins nearly all smartphone processors. The growth of this market would be impossible without Arm's energy-efficient designs. Its licensing business model makes it a unique and fundamental player in the entire ecosystem.
Market capitalization of all companies included in a broad market index - GURU.Markets
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips, but its architecture underpins nearly all mobile processors worldwide. The company licenses its designs, receiving royalties on each device. Its market capitalization is a measure of the intellectual property that powers the mobile era, as illustrated by the chart.
Book value capitalization of the company, segment and market as a whole
ARM - Book value capitalization of the company Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings' book value is unique because the company owns virtually no physical assets, such as factories. Its foundation is intellectual property: processor architecture, licensed globally. The chart below shows how an asset-light company generates value and how its financial base reflects its dominant position in the mobile chip world.
ARM - Share of the company's book capitalization Arm Holdings plc within the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Boeing is a pillar of global aviation, and its power is embodied in its gigantic assembly lines. The chart shows the company's share of the aerospace industry's real assets. These are city-sized factories where the largest passenger and cargo aircraft, connecting continents, are built.
Market segment balance sheet capitalization - Semiconductor electronics
ARM Holdings is a unique "asset-light" model at the heart of the capital-intensive semiconductor industry. The sector's asset chart reflects the value of its foundries. ARM manufactures nothing. Its only asset is its intellectual property—its architecture—which is licensed by almost the entire industry.
Book value of all companies included in the broad market index - GURU.Markets
Arm Holdings plc doesn't manufacture a single chip, but its architecture underpins nearly every smartphone in the world. Its book value isn't derived from factories, but from one of the world's most valuable intellectual property portfolios. The company licenses its designs, receiving royalties on each device.
The ratio of market capitalization to book capitalization of a company, segment, and the market as a whole
Market capitalization to book capitalization ratio - Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings is pure intellect. The company has virtually no physical assets. Its entire enormous market capitalization is derived from its intellectual property, the architecture of which underlies 99% of the world's smartphones. The chart shows the near-infinite premium for this monopoly.
Market to book capitalization ratio in a market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which underpins almost every smartphone in the world. Its value lies in its intellectual property. This chart clearly demonstrates how the market values this unique business model and its central role in the mobile era, creating a colossal gap with its modest physical assets.
Market to book capitalization ratio for the market as a whole
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their energy-efficient architecture, which dominates the smartphone and embedded systems markets. Compared to average market valuations shown in the chart, Arm's colossal premium reflects its unique business model and key role in the mobile revolution and AI development.
Debts of the company, segment and market as a whole
ARM - Company debts Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings, a chip architecture developer whose business model is based on licensing, has traditionally had a low debt load. Following its IPO and spinoff from SoftBank, the company can use debt to fund R&D and expand into new segments, such as automotive and data centers. This chart shows the beginning of its new chapter as a public company.
Market segment debts - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings, the developer of the chip architecture used in nearly all smartphones, has a unique licensing business model. It requires little capital expenditure, resulting in high profitability. Typically, such companies have low debt. This chart helps us assess how conservative Arm's financial policy has been since its return to the public market.
Market debt in general
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their energy-efficient architecture, which dominates the smartphone and embedded systems markets. The licensing model ensures high profitability. This total debt chart demonstrates how unique and financially lightweight Arm's business model is, requiring no massive capital expenditures on fabs.
Debt to book value of the company, segment and market as a whole
The company's debt to book capitalization ratio Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings develops and licenses the architecture for most processors in smartphones and other devices. This chart shows the financial structure of the company, which has a unique business model. Its low debt leverage reflects the high profitability of its licensing business, which requires little capital expenditure on production.
Market segment debt to market segment book capitalization - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops their architecture and licenses it to all leading manufacturers. This business model doesn't require large capital investments in factories. This chart clearly demonstrates the uniqueness of its financial structure. It correlates its virtually nonexistent debt with the market capitalization of the semiconductor sector.
Debt to book value of all companies in the market
Arm Holdings, with its unique business model of licensing chip architectures, requires no capital expenditures on factories. This chart clearly demonstrates this "lightweight" structure. It compares its virtually nonexistent debt with the average debt level across the economy, highlighting the uniqueness and high profitability of its business.
P/E of the company, segment and market as a whole
P/E - Arm Holdings plc
This chart for Arm Holdings, whose designs power virtually all mobile processors worldwide, shows a premium for its unique business model. The company doesn't manufacture chips, but licenses its architecture. Its high P/E reflects its dominant position in the mobile ecosystem and growth potential in data centers and automobiles.
P/E of the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which underpins virtually all smartphones and many other devices. It's a unique business model. This chart shows the average valuation for the semiconductor sector, helping us understand the premium the market is willing to pay for Arm's intellectual property and dominant position.
P/E of the market as a whole
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which underpins nearly all smartphones and a growing number of other devices. Its business model is based on royalties on each chip sold. This graph of overall economic expectations is important because it predicts future electronics sales volumes, which directly impacts Arm's licensing revenue.
Future P/E of the company, segment and market as a whole
Future (projected) P/E of the company Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which underlies most smartphone processors and is increasingly used in data centers. This chart reflects expectations for the continued adoption of its technology. The company's valuation is a bet that its energy-efficient architecture will become the standard in new growth markets.
Future (projected) P/E of the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their energy-efficient architecture, which dominates the smartphone market and is making inroads into data centers. This chart shows how highly the market values its business model. Comparing its profit forecasts to the sector reflects investor confidence in its continued expansion into new markets.
Future (projected) P/E of the market as a whole
Arm Holdings dominates the mobile processor architecture market; its designs power nearly all smartphones. The company's business model is based on licensing its intellectual property. This chart of overall technology expectations is important because it reflects investor confidence in the continued growth of the smartphone, IoT, and data center markets.
Profit of the company, segment and market as a whole
Company profit Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings plc doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their energy-efficient architecture. Its revenue comes from royalties paid by almost all manufacturers of processors for smartphones and many other devices. This chart shows how a dominant position in the mobile computing ecosystem translates into a stable cash flow.
Profit of companies in the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips, but its architecture underpins virtually all smartphone processors and a growing number of devices in other segments. The company licenses its designs to giants like Apple and Qualcomm. Its licensing fees and royalties reflect the volume of mobile electronics production and the penetration of its technology into new markets.
Overall market profit
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips, but it develops and licenses their architecture, which is used in 99% of smartphones and is increasingly making its way into data centers and automobiles. Arm's business model is based on royalties on every chip sold. Thus, the company's growth directly reflects the production volume of virtually all global consumer electronics.
Future (predicted) profit of the company, segment and market as a whole
Future (projected) profit of the company Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which is used in nearly every smartphone in the world. This chart reflects expectations for increased licensing fees as Arm's technologies penetrate new markets, such as data centers, automobiles, and the Internet of Things.
Future (predicted) profit of companies in the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which underpins most mobile processors worldwide. This chart shows total revenue forecasts for the semiconductor sector. It helps understand how Arm's dominant position in the mobile segment and expansion into data centers relate to overall industry trends.
Future (predicted) profit of the market as a whole
This chart illustrates expectations for the company, whose architecture underpins most of the world's mobile processors. Arm Holdings' profit forecast depends on chip supply volumes from its partners and the transition to more complex and expensive architectures. The growth of the IoT and automotive electronics markets opens new opportunities for the company.
P/S of the company, segment and market as a whole
P/S - Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which is used in almost all smartphones. This chart demonstrates how highly the market values its unique business model. The high multiple reflects its dominant position in the mobile market and expectations of expansion into data centers and the automotive industry.
P/S market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their energy-efficient architecture, which underpins virtually all smartphones and numerous other devices. This metric reflects the average revenue estimate in the semiconductor sector. It helps understand the market premium placed on Arm's unique business model and dominance in the mobile era.
P/S of the market as a whole
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which is used in 99% of smartphones and many other devices. Its revenue comes from royalties on each chip sold. This chart, showing Arm's average revenue estimate, illustrates how highly the market values its unique business model and its central place in the tech ecosystem.
Future P/S of the company, segment and market as a whole
Future (projected) P/S of the company Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture its own chips, but rather develops and licenses their architecture, which powers virtually all processors in smartphones and many other devices. Its business model is similar to royalty payments. This chart shows how investors estimate the company's future revenue, which depends on the total number of chips based on its technology produced worldwide.
Future (projected) P/S of the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips, but its architecture powers nearly every smartphone processor in the world and is increasingly used in data centers. This chart shows how the market values its unique licensing business model. Does its high valuation reflect a belief that Arm will become the standard in the era of artificial intelligence?
Future (projected) P/S of the market as a whole
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which is used in almost all smartphones and, increasingly, in data centers. Its revenue depends on the volume of chip shipments from its partners. The growth of Arm's licensing royalties is a fundamental indicator of the health of the entire semiconductor ecosystem, influencing the forecasts shown in the chart.
Sales of the company, segment and market as a whole
Company sales Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their energy-efficient architecture. The vast majority of smartphones worldwide run on processors created using its technology. This chart shows the royalty revenue paid by companies like Apple and Qualcomm for the use of Arm's intellectual property.
Sales of companies in the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their energy-efficient architecture, which dominates the smartphone and embedded systems markets. The company's business model is based on royalties on each device sold. This chart reflects overall sales in the semiconductor industry, the growth of which directly increases Arm's licensing fees.
Overall market sales
Arm Holdings develops and licenses an architecture for energy-efficient processors, which is used in virtually every smartphone in the world and now in data centers. The company's business model is based on royalties. This graph, showing the growth of the electronics market, directly impacts Arm. The more devices using its architecture are sold, the higher its licensing fees.
Future sales volume of the company, segment and market as a whole
Future (projected) sales of the company Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which is used in 99% of smartphones and a growing number of servers and PCs. The company's revenue comes from licensing fees and royalties on each chip sold. This chart shows analyst forecasts for the overall global semiconductor market, which directly impacts Arm's revenue.
Future (projected) sales of companies in the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings develops and licenses architecture for energy-efficient processors used in the vast majority of smartphones and other devices. This chart reflects projected revenues for the entire semiconductor industry. It allows us to estimate overall demand for electronics, which directly impacts the amount of royalties Arm receives from chipmakers.
Future (projected) sales of the market as a whole
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which is used in most smartphones and many other devices. Its revenue comes from royalties on each chip sold. This chart, by forecasting consumer and business spending, provides insight into future demand for electronics. Growing sales of smartphones, laptops, and data center devices directly increases Arm's licensing revenue.
Marginality of the company, segment and market as a whole
Company marginality Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops their architecture and licenses it to companies like Apple, Samsung, and NVIDIA. This chart demonstrates the exceptionally high efficiency of its intellectual property-based business model. This growth is directly related to the growing number of devices using Arm technology, from smartphones to servers.
Market segment marginality - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which is used in 99% of smartphones and numerous other devices. This "intellectual property" business model requires significant investment in R&D but ensures high margins. This metric demonstrates how its dominant position in the mobile ecosystem shapes the company's unique profitability.
Market marginality as a whole
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which underpins virtually all smartphones and a growing number of other devices. This chart shows overall profitability. Against this backdrop, Arm demonstrates a unique business model. Its intellectual property is standardized, which ensures high, almost monopolistic profitability.
Employees in the company, segment and market as a whole
Number of employees in the company Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which is used in virtually every smartphone in the world. This chart shows the elite team of engineers creating energy-efficient processor cores. The growth of the company's staff is directly related to the expansion of Arm's architecture into new markets, such as data centers, automobiles, and PCs.
Share of the company's employees Arm Holdings plc within the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
This indicator reflects Arm Holdings' unique and central role in the semiconductor ecosystem. The company doesn't manufacture chips, but rather develops their architecture. Its workforce consists of highly skilled engineers whose designs are licensed by nearly everyone, from Apple to Qualcomm. This is an indicator of intellectual, rather than manufacturing, dominance in the world of mobile processors.
Number of employees in the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which is used in 99% of smartphones and numerous other devices. Its business model is based on a team of elite engineers and architects. This chart illustrates how intellectual labor in the semiconductor industry creates enormous value and drives demand for unique talent.
Number of employees in the market as a whole
Arm Holdings is the "Switzerland" of the semiconductor world. They don't manufacture chips, but rather create and license their architecture (design). 99% of all smartphones worldwide run on Arm designs due to their energy efficiency. This chart illustrates the scale of the mobile economy. Almost every employee on this list owns a smartphone running Arm technology, generating royalties for the company.
Market capitalization per employee (in thousands of dollars) of the company, segment, and market as a whole
Market capitalization per employee (in thousands of dollars) of the company Arm Holdings plc (ARM)
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture. Its technology underpins almost all smartphones worldwide. This graph is extremely high, reflecting pure intellectual property. A small team of engineers creates a product that scales across the industry.
Market capitalization per employee (in thousands of dollars) in the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings is a pure IP business. The company doesn't manufacture or sell chips; it develops the architecture and licenses it to everyone (Apple, Qualcomm, etc.). This is an extremely "lightweight" and high-margin model. This chart should show an astronomical market capitalization per R&D engineer, reflecting its monopoly position.
Market capitalization per employee (in thousands of dollars) for the overall market
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which is used in 99% of the world's smartphones. This chart demonstrates the phenomenal efficiency of a business model based on intellectual property. The company, with a small staff of engineers, receives royalties from each of the billions of devices sold, which creates enormous value.
Profit per employee (in thousands of dollars) for the company, segment, and market as a whole
Profit per employee (in thousands of dollars) of the company Arm Holdings plc (ARM)
Arm Holdings is a chip "architect." The company doesn't manufacture or sell chips; it licenses its architecture (design), which is used in 99% of smartphones (Apple, Qualcomm) and, increasingly, in servers. This chart shows the net profitability of R&D. Profit is generated by intellectual property, and its staff consists of elite engineers.
Profit per employee (in thousands of dollars) in the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings is a chip "architect" that licenses its designs. This chart shows the benchmark for "Semiconductor Electronics" (but in the IP niche). This is a "pure" R&D business. The average figure here must be astronomical, as the companies own almost no hardware, and their entire income comes from high-margin royalties on each chip made using their design.
Profit per employee (in thousands of dollars) for the market as a whole
Arm Holdings develops microprocessor architecture and licenses it to companies such as Apple, Qualcomm, and NVIDIA. Arm doesn't manufacture chips; its products are intellectual property. This clearly illustrates one of the most effective business models in technology, where a small team of engineers creates a standard for the entire mobile industry.
Sales to employees of the company, segment and market as a whole
Sales per company employee Arm Holdings plc (ARM)
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it develops and licenses their architecture, which underpins most smartphones and many other devices. This chart is a prime example of a business built on intellectual property. A small team of engineers creates technology used by giants around the world, resulting in phenomenal revenue per employee.
Sales per employee in the market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it designs and licenses their energy-efficient architecture, which dominates smartphones. This chart shows the average revenue per employee in this segment. This is pure R&D business. This metric reflects how productive their licensing model is per engineer compared to other chip designers.
Sales per employee for the market as a whole
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips. They create and license the architecture (instruction set) upon which almost everyone builds their processors: Apple, Qualcomm, NVIDIA. They're a pure R&D company, a business based on intellectual property. This figure is incredibly high, as their small staff of engineers creates the technology from which they earn royalties on almost every smartphone in the world.
Short shares by company, segment and market as a whole
Shares shorted by company Arm Holdings plc (ARM)
Arm Holdings is a British company that doesn't manufacture chips, but designs and licenses their architecture. Arm technologies power nearly all smartphones worldwide (Apple, Qualcomm). The bearish sentiment seen in this chart is due to the high valuation and concentration risks. The smartphone market is saturated, and expansion into data centers is meeting resistance from Intel (x86).
Shares shorted by market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips, but licenses its architecture, which powers almost all mobile processors (including those from Apple and Qualcomm). This chart reflects the overall sentiment in the sector. It reflects investor bets on a slowdown in the smartphone market or that data center growth won't meet expectations, putting pressure on the entire Arm ecosystem.
Shares shorted by the overall market
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it licenses its architecture (design), which is used in almost all smartphones. This is a high-margin business model. This chart measures overall fear. When it rises, investors begin to doubt the ability of the cyclical smartphone and PC market to support Arm's high valuation, which factors in future AI-driven growth.
RSI 14 indicator for a company, segment, and market as a whole
The company's RSI 14 indicator Arm Holdings plc (ARM)
Arm Holdings dominates the licensing of mobile chip architectures and is expanding into other segments. A reading above 70 may reflect strong demand for smartphones or advances in data centers/AI. A reading below 30 is often associated with concerns about a slowdown in the mobile market or increased competition (RISC-V).
RSI 14 Market Segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm (ARM) is a chip "architect." They don't manufacture chips, but license their designs, which power nearly all smartphones (Apple, Qualcomm) and a growing number of servers. This indicator shows the "temperature" of the entire chip sector. It helps us understand whether ARM is overheated by the AI hype (their designs are energy-efficient), or whether the overall sector is overheating.
RSI 14 for the overall market
Arm Holdings is the architect of processor cores licensed by nearly the entire industry, from Apple to NVIDIA. Arm's business model is based on royalties on each chip. This indicator shows whether the market is overheated by euphoria (especially around AI and smartphones) or chilled by fear, which is critical for assessing the company whose technology underpins everything.
Analyst consensus forecast for the company's share price, the segment, and the market as a whole
Analyst consensus stock price forecast ARM (Arm Holdings plc)
This chart shows the collective opinion on Arm. Analysts, when forming forecasts, evaluate its unique business model: Arm doesn't manufacture chips, but licenses their design (IP). Their target prices are a bet that its architecture will remain the "gold standard" for smartphones and will be able to capture a significant share in data centers (competing with Intel/AMD).
The difference between the consensus estimate and the actual stock price ARM (Arm Holdings plc)
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips; it licenses its energy-efficient architecture, which powers nearly all smartphones and is increasingly used in data centers. This chart shows the difference between the consensus forecast and the price. It reflects whether analysts believe Arm's expansion into AI and data centers will justify its high valuation, seeing enormous growth potential in this.
Analyst consensus forecast for stock prices by market segment - Semiconductor electronics
Arm doesn't manufacture chips; it creates and licenses their architecture. Arm technologies power nearly all smartphones (including Apple's) and a growing number of data centers. This chart shows analyst consensus forecasts for the entire semiconductor sector. It reflects whether experts believe Arm can win market share from Intel/AMD, or whether the sector is headed for a downturn.
Analysts' consensus forecast for the overall market share price
Arm is a chip designer. The company doesn't manufacture, but licenses its designs (IP) to Apple, Qualcomm, and others. Its revenue comes from royalties on every smartphone and PC sold. This chart shows the general consensus forecast. If experts expect a decline, that means a decline in electronics sales. For Arm, this is a direct signal of falling royalty revenue.
AKIMA index of the company, segment and market as a whole
AKiMA Company Index Arm Holdings plc
Arm Holdings is the architect of the mobile world. They don't manufacture chips, but rather design and license their energy-efficient architecture, which powers processors from Apple, Qualcomm, and others. This chart reflects the value of their intellectual property (IP). It measures their dominance in smartphones and their potential for expansion into data centers and PCs.
AKIMA Market Segment Index - Semiconductor electronics
Arm Holdings doesn't manufacture chips, but rather creates and licenses their architecture, which powers almost all smartphones (Apple, Qualcomm) and a growing number of servers. This comprehensive index evaluates companies. The chart shows the average value for the segment. It helps understand how this unique Swiss business model distinguishes Arm from the average competitor.
The AKIM Index for the overall market
Arm Holdings is a unique company; it doesn't manufacture chips, but rather creates their architecture and licenses it. Its technologies power nearly all smartphones and are increasingly making their way into data centers. This chart, which reflects the market average, provides macro context. It allows one to assess how Arm's business model, dependent on royalties from billions of devices, compares to the broader economic trends affecting the entire tech sector.