Arm China finally boots rogue CEO that's held it hostage with a 'chop' for years

ARM logo exhibited at ARM stand during the Mobile World Congress (MWC).
(Image credit: Photo by Joan Cros/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Arm China has finally replaced renegade CEO Allen Wu nearly two years following Wu's dismissal by the company's board. How did he stick around so long, you ask? He had possession of the company's seal stamp, called a 'chop'—a centuries-old business practice likened to a more formal signature in the West—handing him the ability to effectively ignore what he was told by the board and continue doing what he liked.

Arm China is actually a joint venture between Arm, the UK-based chip designer owned by Japanese firm Softbank, and a Chinese investment firm called Hopu. Arm Ltd only owns a minority stake, but its involvement is key as one of the world's largest chip designers.

Arm China's board wanted to boot Wu following concerns over conflict of interest, which Wu still denies. The board technically did boot Wu over these claims in June 2020, in fact, but Wu denied he was fired, too.

Wu even attempted to fire his board-appointed replacements and reportedly installed his own security team in the company's Shanghai offices to keep out Arm and Hopu representatives from getting in. At one point, it was reported that Arm China had announced its independence from Arm entirely, and had even set up its own R&D department.

In the eyes of the powers that be in China's Shenzhen region—a sprawling tech hub—Wu was the legal representative for Arm, and there wasn't much that could be done while the company chop was in his possession and he retained the ability to sign off on legal documents as Arm China.

However, this two-year facade may well have come to an end. Arm China, with help from the local authorities, has now successfully replaced Wu with co-CEOs Liu Renchen and Eric Chen, it says in a statement. Clearly two CEOs are safer than one, in case one should get ideas above their station.

The local Shenzhen government has also accepted Liu as the company's legal representative. That means, unlike the first time Wu was dismissed, a new company chop should be created and Wu will no longer be able to circumvent the board's wishes legally.

"Arm China is in the process of resolving its long-standing corporate governance issue, and its Board of Directors has voted unanimously to appoint Liu Renchen and Eric Chen as Arm China's co-CEOs," the company said in a statement (via Nikkei Asia). "Mr. Liu has also been duly registered and accepted by local Shenzhen government authorities as the company's legal representative and general manager."

The interior of Arm's UK headquarters

Arm hasn't had an easy ride these past few years, despite its designs powering most of today's mobile phones and more. (Image credit: Hundven-Clements Photography)

The local area watchdog, the Shenzhen Administration of Market Regulation, has also updated the registration to reflect Liu as Arm China's new legal representative (via Bloomberg), so Wu's ousting appears complete.

During this joint venture's tumultuous two years, Nvidia tried, and failed, to purchase Arm from its owners Softbank. Now Softbank is looking to take the company public, with an IPO likely to be launched in the US in the near future. Arm China was a thorn in the side of any IPO the company could have launched, as it likely was in Nvidia's during its buyout attempt, and I'm sure the Japanese parent company will be happy to finally have wrestled back control.

Your next upgrade

(Image credit: Future)

Best CPU for gaming: The top chips from Intel and AMD
Best gaming motherboard: The right boards
Best graphics card: Your perfect pixel-pusher awaits
Best SSD for gaming: Get into the game ahead of the rest

Wu isn't too happy about the dismissal and reregistering of the company in somebody else's name, as you might expect. There will likely be legal challenges, and Wu has released a statement threatening something to that effect.

"This company has good reasons to believe there are serious legal flaws with the company registry change that the Shenzhen Administration of Market Regulation has handled," Wu's statement says. "This company will defend its legal rights through legal means."

Wu still refers to the 'company' as something he has control over, but it might not be long before he'll have to stop all that and try to score another job. Anyone looking for a new CEO?

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
Pat Gelsinger
Ex-Intel CEO Craig Barrett suggests the company should 'fire the board and rehire Pat Gelsinger to finish the job he has aptly handled over the past few years'
ARM logo exhibited at ARM stand during the Mobile World Congress (MWC).
Arm reportedly plans to make its own CPUs from this summer with future chips said to be powering a revolutionary Jony Ive-designed AI device
Recently appointed Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan.
Here comes Intel's new CEO: a semiconductor veteran that won the same prestigious award as Jensen Huang and Lisa Su
 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?
Intel's Raja Koduri holding an A770
Ex-Intel exec, Raja Koduri, blames the bureaucratic 'PowerPoint snakes' within the company for its current issues: 'These processes multiply and coil around engineers'
Latest in Processors
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang delivering pancakes and sausages to pre-GTC show hosts and guests, wearing an apron
'There might be a party. I wasn't invited,' says Jensen Huang of the rumoured TSMC proposal to join forces and run Intel's chip fabs
Nvidia Feynman GPU
While we despair of RTX 50-series supplies and wait on next-gen Rubin, Nvidia reveals its next-next GPU architecture will be known as Feynman and is due in 2028
Nvidia Vera CPU
Nvidia reveals Vera, a new CPU with 'custom' cores which could be very exciting for its upcoming premium PC processor
Machinery tools and equipment,Rolls of galvanized steel for production metal pipes and tubes for industrial ventilation systems in factory.
New super-thin '2D' metal sheets could enable ultra-low power chips and can you guess how they're made? Yup, by squishing stuff really hard
Aooster's G-Flip 370 mini PC
This palm-sized PC has removable memory, a flip up screen, and a Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 processor
Texas Instruments MSPM0C1104 tiny chip
World's smallest microcontroller looks like I could easily accidentally inhale it but packs a genuine 32-bit Arm CPU
Latest in News
Grand Theft Auto 6 trailer still - woman in the front seat of a car, looking out the back window while holding a wad of cash
The specter of a GTA 6 delay haunts the games industry: 'Some companies are going to tank' if they guess wrong, says analyst
Image for
Warhammer 40,000: Darktide’s getting a new roguelite wave defense mode that sounds a whole lot like a souped-up take on Killing Floor
Battle Brothers
Nearly 2 years after its last update, the excellent Battle Brothers gets 'a bucket load of fixes' and free new content
Western outlaws with masks and guns
'Players don't explore': former Grand Theft Auto 6 and Red Dead Online designer lays out the perils of 'open world fatigue'
Person battling bizarre four-eyed monster with stylish UI elements surrounding them
Persona and Metaphor: ReFantazio's UI designer is open to accessibility options for players who find the stylish menus overstimulating: 'That is something we understand we'll need to work on and provide in the future'
Split Fiction screenshot
Split Fiction is reportedly at the center of a bidding war for its movie rights