Daily Mail

£60bn Arm bid set to collapse

Ministers push for London listing

- By Mark Shapland

BRITaIn should roll out the red carpet for arm should the company’s takeover by nvidia collapse, Whitehall sources have told the Mail.

The deal looks increasing­ly likely to fall through after the Us Federal Trade Commission (FTC) moved to block the merger on competitio­n grounds.

It is also being investigat­ed by the UK’s Competitio­n and Markets authority, while the European Commission has opened up its own probe.

The interventi­ons mean the acquisitio­n is now behind schedule and will not close by the target date of March 2022.

should the deal fail a return to the london stock Exchange is increasing­ly on the cards.

It is understood that ministers including Business secretary Kwasi Kwarteng (pictured) would welcome the listing of arm in london.

a source in Whitehall said: ‘There is no way this is going ahead. The competitio­n concerns surroundin­g a sale to nvidia mean this is exceptiona­lly difficult.

‘It is not like the softbank deal [when the Japanese conglomera­te bought arm, then listed on the stock market, in 2016].

‘The london stock Exchange should be preparing to roll out the red carpet for arm.’

The lsE is trying to become a world class tech hub and securing the return of arm would give the market much needed credibilit­y.

It refused to be drawn on specifics, saying: ‘london is an attractive capital centre with more than 100 IPOs taking place this year. We have people talking to companies, educating them on their options and how they might do it.’

But those close to the situation said softbank was unlikely to roll over as the value of the deal has nearly doubled since being announced last september.

Initially arm was valued at £30bn, which included 44m nvidia shares, at the time worth £16.2bn.

But that stock portion of the transactio­n is worth £43bn as a result of the rise in nvidia shares.

That has taken the overall value of the takeover to £57bn. arm supplies chip designs to semiconduc­tor companies and smartphone makers, including apple.

The company’s role in the chip industry has historical­ly been as a neutral supplier, raising concerns nvidia could cut off competitor­s from essential arm technology.

Holly Vedova, director at the FTC, said the watchdog was ‘suing to block the largest semiconduc­tor chip merger in history to prevent a chip conglomera­te from stifling the innovation pipeline for nextgenera­tion technologi­es’.

she added: ‘Tomorrow’s technologi­es depend on preserving today’s competitiv­e, cutting-edge chip markets. This proposed deal would distort arm’s incentives in chip markets and allow the combined firm to unfairly undermine nvidia’s rivals.’

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