A rogue Arm CEO and a centuries-old law are causing a headache for Nvidia's big deal

Seal stamper and coins
(Image credit: Getty Images, Blue Jean Images)

If you thought a national security intervention was the top reason why Nvidia's purchase of Arm from Softbank may not go to plan, just wait until you hear this: Arm China's sitting CEO, Allen Wu, isn't meant to still hold the position he claims to hold. Wu was ousted from his position by Arm China's board back in June last year for conflict of interest, but has refused to hand over control ever since.

In fact, he's apparently said to still be holed up in his office to this day, nearly one year on from his dismissal.

So you've got a rogue ex-employee sitting in an office someplace but holding no real power, right? Nope. Wu has custody of Arm China's official seal stamp, and that's way more important than it may seem if you're not familiar with a centuries-old Chinese business practice. 

A stamp, also referred to as a company chop, can be required in China to give the final nod of approval in all matters of business. It can be legally binding, too. In this case, it's required to formally remove Wu from his position as legal representative of Arm China. The man with the stamp is not in the least bit interested in using it, at least for that purpose, and that's a big problem for Arm, and by extension Nvidia.

Nvidia hopes to ratify its purchase of Arm, a deal worth $40B, within 18 months of its announcement. That would see it close by March, 2022. If someone can wrest control of the seal away from Wu, that is.

As of January 2021, Nvidia had not formally filed for review of the deal in China, according to sources speaking with the Financial Times. That could see the deal delayed. Nvidia, Arm, and Softbank claim the deal will still be completed in the given timeframe, however.

There are a few other important details to note in this curious case: Arm China is a joint venture, co-owned by Chinese investment firms. Arm Ltd, headquartered in the United Kingdom, only holds a 49 percent stake.

Wu is reportedly using cash from Arm China's bank account to fund his legal battles with Arm and majority shareholder, Hopu Investments. Wu also fired three executives intended to replace him, who have since been reinstated by the board. Now Wu is suing the three men, and demanding they return company property, reports Bloomberg.

Perfect peripherals

(Image credit: Colorwave)

Best gaming mouse: the top rodents for gaming
Best gaming keyboard: your PC's best friend...
Best gaming headset: don't ignore in-game audio

Arm China retains that Wu's position and use of company funds was within the laws of the Shenzhen, the area where Arm China is registered. And if that wasn't enough drama already, Wu has reportedly made $179 million from a personal investment in one of Arm's Chinese clients.

In an interview with Bloomberg Television, Arm's CEO reaffirmed an 18-month timeline for the sale to Nvidia to be ratified, but also admitted that the "leadership change in China" was "taking time to resolve."

The best bet for removing Wu is through a lawsuit in China, although that would likely take years to conclude.

TOPICS
Jacob Ridley
Managing Editor, Hardware

Jacob earned his first byline writing for his own tech blog. From there, he graduated to professionally breaking things as hardware writer at PCGamesN, and would go on to run the team as hardware editor. He joined PC Gamer's top staff as senior hardware editor before becoming managing editor of the hardware team, and you'll now find him reporting on the latest developments in the technology and gaming industries and testing the newest PC components.

Read more
Promotional image of a generic Snapdragon X Plus chip in a stylized circuit board
Arm won't keep chasing after Qualcomm on the grounds of licensing shenanigans—but the legal jostling isn't over
Nvidia headquarters
Nvidia denounces Biden administration's 'rigged' and 'misguided' new AI chip export restrictions
Promotional image of a generic Snapdragon X Plus chip in a stylized circuit board
Arm pushes back against Qualcomm in court, claiming it's not out to be a chip competitor and the current licence situation is losing them $50 million in revenue
 photo shows a factory tool that places lids on data center system-on-chips at an Intel fab in Chandler, Arizona, in December 2023. In February 2024, Intel Corporation launched Intel Foundry as the world’s first systems foundry for the AI era, delivering leadership in technology, resiliency and sustainability.
So, wait, now TSMC is supposedly pitching a joint venture with Nvidia, AMD and Broadcom to run Intel's ailing chip fabs?
ARM logo exhibited at ARM stand during the Mobile World Congress (MWC).
'There are lots of tombstones of great tech companies that didn’t reinvent themselves,' says Arm CEO Rene Haas of Intel's recent woes
Jensen Huang, co-founder and chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., speaks while holding the company's new GeForce RTX 50 series graphics cards and a Thor Blackwell robotics processor during the 2025 CES event in Las Vegas, Nevada, US, on Monday, Jan. 6, 2025. Huang announced a raft of new chips, software and services, aiming to stay at the forefront of artificial intelligence computing. Photographer: Bridget Bennett/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Group allegedly trying to smuggle Nvidia Blackwell chips stare down bail set at over $1 million
Latest in Graphics Cards
A side by side comparison of two Asus Q-Release systems, with the original design on the top and the bottom showing the apparently new design.
Asus appears to have quietly changed the design of its Q-Release PCIe slot after claims of potential GPU pin damage
A Colorful RTX 5080 and its box
Three lucky folks in India can win the dubious honour of buying an RTX 5080 GPU at Nvidia MSRP
Jensen Huang, co-founder and chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., speaks while holding the company's new GeForce RTX 50 series graphics cards and a Thor Blackwell robotics processor during the 2025 CES event in Las Vegas, Nevada, US, on Monday, Jan. 6, 2025. Huang announced a raft of new chips, software and services, aiming to stay at the forefront of artificial intelligence computing. Photographer: Bridget Bennett/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Group allegedly trying to smuggle Nvidia Blackwell chips stare down bail set at over $1 million
Nvidia RTX 5090 Founders Edition graphics card on different backgrounds
AI will be crammed in more of the graphics pipeline as Nvidia and Microsoft are bringing AI shading to a DirectX preview next month
Nvidia RTX 50-series graphics cards alongside an RTX 4090
Nvidia says it's sold twice as many RTX 50-series cards as RTX 40-series in the first 5 weeks. I'd bloody well hope so given there was essentially just the RTX 4090 for competition
AMD Radeon RX 9070/9070 XT graphics cards with artistic renders of reference design cards circled
Looks like a reference design AMD RX 9070 XT card has shown up in China, but let's not get carried away with thoughts of MBA cards just yet
Latest in News
Man facing camera
The Day Before studio reportedly sues Russian website for calling infamous disaster-game a 'scam'
Will Poulter holding a CD ROM
'What are most games about? Killing': Black Mirror Season 7 includes a follow-up to 2018 interactive film Bandersnatch
Casper Van Dien in Starship Troopers
Sony, which is making a Helldivers 2 movie, is also making a new Starship Troopers movie, but it's not based on the Starship Troopers movie we already have
Assassin's Creed meets PUBG
Ubisoft is reportedly talking to Tencent about creating a new business entity to manage Assassin's Creed and other big games
Resident Evil Village - Lady Dimitrescu
'It really truly changed my life in every possible way': Lady Dimitrescu actor says her Resident Evil Village role was just as transformative for her as it was for roughly half the internet in 2021
Storm trooper hero
Another live service shooter is getting shut down, this time before it even launched on Steam