Chip Observer – May 2026
Arm's AGI CPU, HBM4E Memory, and the Supply Chain Risks Reshaping Semiconductors
7 Min Read June 15, 2026

In this edition of the Chip Observer the semiconductor industry's biggest stories centered on a single challenge: scaling AI infrastructure. Arm's launch of the 136-core AGI CPU signals a deeper push into datacenter silicon, while Rambus, JEDEC, and Kioxia advanced memory and storage technologies designed to support increasingly data-intensive AI workloads. At the same time, billions of dollars flowed into companies such as OpenAI, SiFive, Rebellions, and NUVACORE, reinforcing investor confidence in next-generation compute platforms.
Yet alongside this growth, developments ranging from the Strait of Hormuz disruption to new FCC restrictions on foreign-made networking products highlighted how supply chain resilience and geopolitical risk remain critical factors in semiconductor strategy.
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Arm's AGI CPU, NVIDIA's China Challenges, and OpenAI's Funding Momentum
AI infrastructure remained the dominant story of the month. Arm introduced its 136-core AGI CPU, marking the company's transition from IP licensor to processor supplier, while IBM expanded its support for Arm-based enterprise computing. Meanwhile, NVIDIA's H200 deployment in China remains stalled despite earlier expectations, and SoftBank is reportedly pursuing an additional $10 billion loan backed by OpenAI shares, underscoring the scale of capital still flowing into the AI ecosystem.
HBM4E, LPDDR6, and Next-Generation Memory Performance
Memory innovation continues to accelerate alongside AI demand. Rambus unveiled an HBM4E controller capable of delivering 4.1 TB/s per memory device, while JEDEC previewed LPDDR6 features aimed at higher densities and broader deployment opportunities. Kioxia also introduced its PCIe 5.0 BG8 SSD platform, highlighting ongoing efforts to remove storage and memory bottlenecks across high-performance systems.
SiFive, NUVACORE, Rebellions, and Marvell Attract New Investment
Investment activity remained concentrated around future compute platforms. Former Nuvia executives launched NUVACORE, SiFive raised $400 million to advance its RISC-V datacenter roadmap, Rebellions secured approximately $166 million through South Korea's AI semiconductor initiative, and Marvell expanded its silicon photonics portfolio through the acquisition of Polariton Technologies.





