Investors are cheering Arm Holdings (ARM) on Wednesday after a senior Bernstein analyst, David Dai, issued a bullish note in favour of the British chip designer.

Dai initiated coverage on Arm this morning with an “outperform” rating and an aggressive $300 price target, indicating potential upside of roughly 18% from current levels.

Bernstein’s bullish call is particularly significant given Arm stock is already up a remarkable 140% versus its year-to-date low.

Bernstein’s bull view on Arm stock

A core pillar of Bernstein’s enthusiastic thesis on Arm stock rests on the rapid structural transition from traditional large language models to fully autonomous AI agents.

According to David Dai, this evolution requires sharply higher localized computing intelligence –  playing directly into Arm’s architectural strengths.

As corporate infrastructure aggressively scales out to support artificial general intelligence (AGI), demand for Arm’s high-efficiency, advanced AGI CPUs is skyrocketing.

Bernstein highlights that committed, legally binding customer demand for these specialized next-generation silicon designs has already crossed the $2 billion threshold spanning fiscal years 2027 and 2028.

This multi-billion-dollar backlog de-risks near-term revenue projections and underscores how indispensable Arm’s intellectual property has become to the broader hyperscaler ecosystem.

Do Arm shares justify their valuation?

While critics often argue that Arm shares’ nosebleed valuation – forward price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple of about 191x currently – leaves zero margin of safety, Dai challenges this static view.

Bernstein emphasizes that Arm is successfully replicating its absolute smartphone architectural monopoly within the immensely lucrative data center and cloud computing end-markets.

Major cloud giants are consistently bypassing traditional x86 architecture in favor of custom, Arm-based silicon to optimize thermal efficiency and computing density.

This secular shift dramatically alters the company’s royalty financial model, as data center chips command significantly higher royalty rates per unit than legacy mobile processors.

As these premium enterprise deployments hit scale, Arm Holdings’ operating leverage is poised to expand exponentially, the investment firm told clients.

How to play Arm Holdings at current levels

Ultimately, the Bernstein analyst reminded investors that evaluating a compounding generational technology titan solely on P/E metrics is a classic investment trap.

The massive multi-year secular tailwinds in physical AI, custom-built silicon, and edge-computing workloads provide Arm with a visible, long-term runway for highly profitable, recurring growth.

As Wall Street estimates continuously lag behind the firm’s actual commercial momentum, price target resets from major institutions are becoming a routine occurrence for Arm shares.

With a massive $2 billion custom silicon backlog secured and an aggressive monetization roadmap unfolding across the enterprise cloud landscape, Bernstein suggests the premium paid today is a justified entry price for a company anchoring the future of global computing infrastructure.

Note that other analysts from Jefferies and Rosenblatt have recently raised price targets on Arm stock.

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