Arm Holdings has reorganized its operations to establish a dedicated Physical AI unit, marking a structural shift as robotics gains momentum across technology and automotive sectors. Company executives disclosed the move during the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, where robotics emerged as a dominant theme across product demonstrations and industry discussions.
The reorganization introduces Physical AI as one of three primary business lines at Arm, alongside Cloud and AI, and Edge. The Edge segment continues to cover mobile devices and personal computing products, while Physical AI consolidates robotics and automotive technologies under a single operating group. Reuters reported the creation of the unit and the internal restructuring for the first time during the event.
The announcement coincided with a surge of robotics activity at CES, where companies showcased machines designed for industrial, commercial, and service-oriented tasks. Demonstrations ranged from factory automation systems to sanitation robots and experimental humanoids performing repetitive functions. While many of the systems remain in early stages of deployment, the scale of participation underscored growing investment across the sector.
Robotics and vehicles converge under Physical AI
Arm executives positioned robotics and automotive technologies as closely linked domains. Both rely on similar combinations of sensors, compute architectures, and safety-critical hardware. Power efficiency, reliability, and deterministic performance remain shared technical requirements, according to company leadership.
Arm does not manufacture semiconductors. Instead, it licenses processor architectures and intellectual property that underpin most of the world’s smartphones, along with an expanding share of laptops, servers, and data center chips. The company generates revenue through licensing fees and royalties when customers integrate Arm designs into commercial products.
Robotics represents an extension of that licensing model into physical systems that interact directly with the environment. Automakers are also accelerating development in this area. Several manufacturers, including Tesla, are developing robots to automate warehouse operations and factory workflows, reflecting broader efforts to address labor constraints and efficiency targets.
Leadership outlines long-term growth expectations
Arm executives framed the Physical AI unit as part of a broader effort to expand the company’s addressable markets. Since Chief Executive Rene Haas assumed leadership nearly four years ago, Arm has adjusted pricing strategies for its newest technologies and explored options that include designing complete chips rather than licensing components alone.
Drew Henry, who leads the newly formed Physical AI unit, described robotics as a long-horizon growth opportunity. As reported by Reuters, Henry said physical AI solutions could “fundamentally enhance labor, free up extra time” and may influence gross domestic product through productivity gains.
The company plans to increase staffing dedicated to robotics within the unit. Arm Chief Marketing Officer Ami Badani told Reuters the combined structure reflects overlapping customer needs across automotive and robotics markets. She cited power constraints, safety standards, and system reliability as common design priorities.
Broad customer base spans automakers and robotics firms
When asked about customer engagement, Henry said, “We work with everyone.” Arm-based chips already support dozens of automakers globally, alongside established robotics developers. Among them is Boston Dynamics, known for its advanced mobility platforms and humanoid systems.
Boston Dynamics is owned by Hyundai, which has integrated robotics into its long-term manufacturing strategy. At CES, the companies unveiled a production-ready version of the Atlas humanoid robot. Hyundai said it plans to deploy the system in U.S. factories by 2028, signaling a timeline for commercial-scale adoption.
CES highlights industry-wide shift toward physical systems
The establishment of Arm’s Physical AI unit reflects broader industry alignment around robotics as a strategic growth area. At CES, both established manufacturers and startups emphasized physical automation as a complement to cloud-based artificial intelligence. Many demonstrations focused on integrating perception, decision-making, and motion into cohesive platforms.
For Arm, the move positions its architecture deeper within systems that bridge software intelligence and real-world action. By consolidating automotive and robotics under Physical AI, the company aligns its licensing model with markets that continue to scale as automation advances.
The restructuring underscores how chip designers, automakers, and robotics firms are converging around shared technical foundations. As robotics transitions from experimental deployments to production environments, industry participants are adjusting organizational structures to match that shift.
