- Nvidia Corp.'s planned takeover of chipmaker Arm Ltd.Arm Ltd. should get a longer antitrust investigation, British regulators warn after rejecting potential concessions.
In the first reaction to the deal from a major antitrust watchdog, the Competition and Markets Authority said in a statement that it was concerned the deal would give Nvidia too much control over semiconductors used in data center services, smart devices and gaming consoles.
The move of Nvidia to buy Arm from Japan's SoftBank Group Corp. raised antitrust concerns from rival companies and customers such as Qualcomm Inc. and Alphabet Inc. s Google over how Nvidia might control Arm's licenses for essential chip technology.
U.K. Digital Secretary Oliver Dowden must still decide whether the CMA should open an in-depth probe?
The Nvidia looks forward to the opportunity to resolve the CMA's initial views and address any concerns the government may have, the company said in an emailed statement.
'We remain confident that this transaction will be beneficial to Arm, its licensees, competition, and U.K. it said.
While a longer probe raises the risk of a veto to a deal, it can also give more time for companies to negotiate more complicated concessions. The CMA said it rejected Nvidia's offer of still maintaining arm open licensing, nor did it see a partial sale of Arm Intellectual property as allaying its concerns at this stage.
The antitrust warning comes as the U.K. was separately leaning towards blocking the deal over potential risks to national security, according to a person familiar with the matter earlier this month. The deal could still be approved if the companies make concessions to the transaction.
Arm owns the most widely used set of standards and designs in the $400 billion chip industry. Its technology is at the heart of most of the world's smartphones and is finding an increasing role in computing, including in server machinery that runs corporate and government systems.
The Cambridge, England-based company has acted as a neutral party that licenses chip blueprints and sells its standards to a wide range of major technology companies, many of them fierce competitors. Ownership by Japan's SoftBank, which acquired it in 2016 and doesn’t overlap with arm customer, has preserved that neutrality.