
Nvidia has finally shut the door on a story that once looked like a defining strategic bet.
The company that tried to buy Arm in a roughly $40 billion deal, before regulators forced it to abandon the plan, has now sold its remaining Arm stake entirely.
That exit has sparked a fresh round of questions on Wall Street: why walk away from an investment tied to the CPU architecture that underpins much of modern computing?
Analysts largely see the move as a clean, disciplined reset, more about capital allocation and market optics than any cooling toward Arm’s technology.
Nvidia offloads Arm’s stake: Strategic reset, not a rejection
Nvidia’s latest regulatory filing shows it no longer holds Arm shares, confirming a full exit from the position.
Nvidia sold about 1.1 million Arm shares, worth roughly $140 million based on Arm’s prior close, with the sale occurring sometime in the fourth quarter of last year.
That detail matters because Nvidia had been part of Arm’s IPO “strategic investor” group, as Arm’s CFO told CNBC in 2023, so the stake carried symbolic weight beyond the dollar amount.
Analysts argue that symbolism can cut both ways.
Dennis Dick of Triple D Trading told Reuters last year that “there is no greater vote of confidence than Nvidia taking a stake” in a company, underscoring how Nvidia’s disclosed holdings can sway investor perception when they appear.
In that light, an exit can be read as simplifying the message: Nvidia wants to be valued primarily on its AI platform execution, not on a grab-bag of smaller equity positions.
Crucially, selling Arm stock does not mean Nvidia is walking away from Arm-based technology.
Arm supplies “crucial intellectual property” that companies such as Apple and Nvidia license to build chips, so Nvidia can keep benefiting from Arm designs without owning Arm equity.
Shiraz Ahmed, a senior portfolio manager and founder of Sartorial Wealth at Raymond James, explicitly framed the earlier trimming of Nvidia’s Arm position as consistent with this logic, saying the move into other AI-related bets “aligns with its long-term AI strategy.”
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Valuations, optics, and why now
The timing also lands in a market that has become hypersensitive to positioning in high-flying AI names.
The development came as Tiger Global and Adage Capital were among firms that trimmed stakes in AI heavyweights including Nvidia during the fourth quarter of 2025.
The investors have expressed major worries around valuations in mega-cap AI stocks that seem stretched, and questions are raised over whether the surge in AI spending will deliver adequate returns.
That backdrop doesn’t negate Nvidia’s fundamentals, but it does raise the penalty for anything that muddies the story.
From an “optics” standpoint, exiting a non-core stake can look like prudent housekeeping at elevated valuations.
Nvidia’s Arm divestment looks like closure, not retreat.
The company can still license Arm technology, but it no longer needs ownership optics attached to a relationship it can access contractually.
At a moment when investors are scrutinizing capital allocation across AI leaders, Nvidia is signaling discipline: keep the narrative tight, and keep resources focused on AI compute, software, and infrastructure scale.
https://invezz.com/news/2026/02/18/why-did-nvidia-sell-its-arm-stake-after-trying-to-buy-it/

