Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co has sold its remaining stake in Arm Holdings for about $231 million, completing its exit from the British chip designer after gradually cutting the position over the past year, according to a company filing.
The sale was carried out by TSMC Partners, a TSMC subsidiary, which disposed of 1.11 million Arm shares between April 28 and April 29 at $207.65 each.
Following the transaction, TSMC no longer holds any Arm shares.
The disposal resulted in a $174 million impact on retained earnings, the filing showed.
TSMC described the move as the disposal of an equity investment, bringing to an end a holding that had linked two of the most strategically important companies in the global semiconductor supply chain.
TSMC is the world’s largest contract chipmaker, while Arm’s processor designs underpin a broad swathe of devices from smartphones to data-centre hardware.
Final sale completes a gradual exit
The latest transaction closes out a position that TSMC had already been reducing.
Before the sale, the company held roughly 2.2 million Arm shares, according to reporting that cited the filing.
TSMC had earlier sold 850,000 Arm shares in 2024 at $119.47 each, raising about $102 million as part of the same multi-step disposal process.
TSMC originally agreed to invest up to $100 million in Arm during the chip designer’s 2023 initial public offering.
That investment made TSMC one of several strategic backers brought into the IPO as Arm returned to the public market under SoftBank ownership.
The gradual unwind suggests TSMC treated the holding primarily as a financial investment rather than a long-term strategic stake.
Arm volatility adds context to the timing
The exit comes after a sharp bout of selling in Arm shares.
Arm fell about 8% on Monday, its largest one-day decline since October, according to Dow Jones Market Data cited by MarketWatch.
The weakness was linked to investor concern over a Wall Street Journal report indicating OpenAI had missed some internal targets, which fed into a broader sell-off in AI-linked names including Arm and other semiconductor stocks.
Arm shares had recently come under pressure as enthusiasm around parts of the AI trade cooled.
Portfolio move, not strategic rupture
The filing did not indicate that the sale reflects a deterioration in the business relationship between TSMC and Arm.
Both remain central to the semiconductor ecosystem, with Arm licensing chip architectures used across the industry and TSMC manufacturing advanced semiconductors for a wide range of customers.
Instead, the transaction appears to reflect portfolio management and balance-sheet discipline rather than any shift in operating strategy.
Even so, the exit is notable because it closes a high-profile investment made at a pivotal moment for the chip sector.
With Arm at the centre of the artificial intelligence and mobile computing story, and TSMC critical to advanced chip production, the unwinding of the stake is likely to be watched as a signal of how strategic investors are reassessing financial holdings in an increasingly volatile semiconductor market.
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