The Qualcomm Tenstorrent deal is one of the biggest stories in the global semiconductor world right now. Qualcomm is reportedly in advanced talks to buy Tenstorrent, the AI chip startup led by legendary silicon designer Jim Keller, at a price between $8 billion and $10 billion. If it closes, this could be among Qualcomm’s largest acquisitions ever and a real challenge to Nvidia’s dominance in AI hardware.
What Is the Qualcomm Tenstorrent Deal About?
The story broke on June 15, 2026, when Reuters reported that Qualcomm is in active talks to buy Tenstorrent. The deal value sits between $8 billion and $10 billion, according to a report by The Information citing a person familiar with the matter. Qualcomm shares rose more than 4% on the day of the report.
Both companies have stayed quiet. Tenstorrent declined to comment, while Qualcomm said it does not comment on rumours. The talks are still going on, and the price could change or the deal could fall apart entirely.
At Qualcomm’s Investor Day on June 24, no formal Tenstorrent announcement was made. Instead, the company confirmed a separate deal to acquire Modular, an AI inference software startup, in an all-stock transaction worth about $3.9 billion. The Tenstorrent talks, however, are reported to still be ongoing.
Who Is Tenstorrent and Why Does It Matter?
Tenstorrent was founded in 2016 and builds scalable AI accelerators for both the cloud and the edge. What makes it different from most AI chip startups is its use of RISC-V, an open instruction set that carries no licensing fees and no single corporate owner. This lets companies design their own silicon without paying royalties to Arm or following Intel’s roadmap.
The company designs two core products: Ascalon CPU cores and Tensix AI cores. These are sold both as physical chips and as licensable IP, which is a rare business model in the chip world. Its backers include Jeff Bezos, Samsung, Hyundai, LG, and Fidelity Management.
Just last year, Tenstorrent was seeking $800 million in new funding at a $3.2 billion valuation. The fact that Qualcomm is reportedly willing to pay up to $10 billion is a massive jump of about 2.5 to 3 times in under 12 months. That jump says a lot about how scarce good AI chip talent and architecture really is right now.
Jim Keller: The Man Behind the Chip
Jim Keller is CEO of Tenstorrent and one of the most respected chip architects alive. His career spans some of the biggest projects in computing history. He helped design AMD’s Zen processors, Apple’s A-series chips, Tesla’s Autopilot silicon, and Intel’s CPU roadmap. Every major project he has touched has produced results well above expectations.
Analysts warn that keeping Keller post-acquisition is the key question. Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon noted that while getting Jim Keller on the payroll would be a win for any company, Keller has historically left public companies fairly quickly after joining. He stayed just two to four years at AMD, Apple, Tesla, and Intel each.
Why Is Qualcomm Chasing the Qualcomm Tenstorrent Deal?
Qualcomm has long been the world’s top smartphone chip maker. But smartphone growth is slowing, and Qualcomm wants a bigger role in AI data centres. It has been building a RISC-V strategy step by step: winning its legal case against Arm in December 2024, buying RISC-V server chip designer Ventana Micro Systems in December 2025, and completing a $2.4 billion purchase of interconnect supplier Alphawave Semi.
A Tenstorrent acquisition would be the biggest move yet. It would hand Qualcomm an AI accelerator built on RISC-V, designed to outperform Nvidia’s GPU stacks on inference workloads, which are fast becoming the main cost in running AI systems. Intel was also reportedly eyeing the same company, which added competitive pressure to any bidding.
JPMorgan analysts expect Qualcomm to announce data centre revenue targets of over $3 billion for fiscal 2027, growing to up to $35 billion by 2031. A Tenstorrent deal would help make those numbers believable to investors.
What This Means for Nvidia and the AI Chip Market
Nvidia currently controls the AI chip market with margins above 70% and a massive software ecosystem called CUDA that keeps developers locked in. Tenstorrent’s pitch is the opposite: open hardware, open software, and no lock-in. Its Galaxy Blackhole AI compute platform reached general availability in April 2026, giving it a real shipping product with verified performance.
If the Qualcomm Tenstorrent deal goes through, RISC-V stops being an academic idea and becomes a real procurement option for enterprises. Other chip makers using Arm-based designs will feel pressure to move faster on open-architecture options. Analysts at one firm noted that Arm’s stock should be paying close attention to this development.
Why Pakistani Tech Readers Should Care
Qualcomm chips are everywhere in Pakistan. Snapdragon processors power a huge range of Android smartphones sold locally, from budget devices to premium flagships. Snapdragon chips are also found in the laptops now arriving in Pakistani markets, such as the Microsoft Surface Pro 11 and Dell XPS range.
If the Qualcomm Tenstorrent deal closes, Qualcomm becomes more than a mobile chip company. It becomes a serious player in AI infrastructure. That could affect which chips run the AI services and cloud platforms that Pakistani startups, freelancers, and businesses rely on every day. A more competitive AI chip market generally means lower costs and more choice over time, which benefits developers and IT companies in Pakistan. Pakistan’s IT sector has been growing fast, with exports crossing $4.5 billion in FY26, and any shift in global AI infrastructure pricing directly affects the tools local developers use.
For hardware buyers, nothing changes immediately. But watching how this deal plays out will tell you a lot about whether the next generation of affordable AI compute comes from Nvidia, or from a new open-architecture player that Qualcomm now controls.
Frequently Asked Questions
Has the Qualcomm Tenstorrent deal been confirmed?
No. As of July 2026, the Qualcomm Tenstorrent deal remains in talks and has not been officially confirmed by either company. Qualcomm’s June 24 Investor Day came and went without a formal announcement on Tenstorrent, though separate deals were confirmed.
What is RISC-V and why does it matter?
RISC-V (pronounced ‘risk five’) is an open-source processor instruction set. Unlike Arm or x86, it has no licensing fees and no single corporate owner. This means any company can design chips based on RISC-V without paying royalties, which makes it very attractive for startups and countries that want independence in semiconductor design.
How much is Tenstorrent worth?
In December 2024, Tenstorrent closed a funding round that valued it at around $2.6 billion. By late 2025, it was reportedly seeking fresh capital at $3.2 billion. Now, the Qualcomm Tenstorrent deal discussions value it at $8 to $10 billion, a jump of roughly three times in under 12 months.
Does this affect Pakistani smartphone users right now?
Not immediately. Qualcomm’s Snapdragon chips will continue to power the same phones and laptops available in Pakistan. But if the deal closes and Qualcomm successfully enters the AI data centre market, it could lead to more competition in AI computing, which may lower costs for AI-based services used by Pakistani businesses and developers over the long term.












