- by theverge
- 02 Nov 2024
Nvidia is becoming increasingly resigned to giving up on its $40bn takeover of Cambridge-based chip designer Arm, as regulatory hurdles and industry opposition mounts, making it almost certain that the two-year time frame the companies aimed to complete the deal in will expire.
The contentious deal, the largest ever in the semiconductor industry, has become mired in seemingly insurmountable regulatory red tape on both sides of the Atlantic as well as in China since being announced in September 2020.
Executives at US-based Nvidia have reportedly expressed serious doubts that the deal will be closed, while SoftBank, the Japanese owner of Arm, has rekindled plans to float Arm as an alternative to a sale, according to Bloomberg.
Nvidia, and Arm, continue to pursue regulatory clearance while the initial deal terms are set to expire on 13 September, a date by which the parties now cannot hope to gain clearance.
Arm, which employs 6,500 staff including 3,000 in the UK, declined to comment.
In 2018, US company Qualcomm abandoned its $44bn, two-year pursuit of Dutch chip maker NXP after failing to secure approval in China, a victim of a trade dispute between Beijing and Washington.
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