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Arm IPO could be more important than people realize: Strategist

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Arm Holdings (ARM) is going public again. The stock will be making its trading debut on the Nasdaq later Thursday. Miller Tabak Managing Director and Equity Strategist Matt Maley says the chip designer's IPO "could be a lot more important than a lot of people realize." Maley fears that if the IPO "falls flat" it could be a negative for tech stocks, which jumped earlier thanks to the AI hype.

Video Transcript

JULIE HYMAN: Our next guest says Arm's IPO is coming at an interesting time. Here with more, Matt Maley, Miller Tabak Managing Director and Equity Strategist. Good morning, Matt. It's good to see you. So tell us, how are you looking at this Arm IPO and what it tells us about the market right now?

MATT MALEY: Well, I do think it's going to be interesting, like you said. The issue with what does it mean for the IPO market? If it does well, that's certainly going to help open up things more for, as you mentioned, a market that's been dormant for over a year now. And geez, almost two years now.

But I also think it's going to tell us something about this whole thing with AI. I mean, the hoopla or-- we had huge euphoria around AI in the spring. You saw any time any company mentioned AI, their stock skyrocketed. Well, this time around, we went through the earnings season, and it didn't have anywhere near as much of the impact.

In fact, Nvidia, which of course, is the most important one out there, it's trading lower than its pre-announcement level. Only slightly lower, but it has come down a little bit. So again, there's still plenty of hype surrounding it, but not the big euphoria. So if this IPO kind of falls flat a little bit, that could present some problems for the tech sector overall.

And of course, the tech sector has been very important for the overall stock market. Now, on the flip side, of course, if it does very, very well, maybe that can help the tech sector that's been kind of trading in a sideways range for a couple of months now. So this could be a lot more important than a lot of people realize.

BRAD SMITH: Matt, how significant is it that Arm is seemingly changing its revenue model, or at least how it's going to generate the large amounts of money that they've been able to kind of base their business off of coming to this point. They're changing that in at least where they're targeting licensing some of their chip designs and ultimately shifting it from the average selling price of a chip to the average selling price of the end product that it's used in instead. How atypical is that for an IPO, for a company to essentially be changing that model this close?