CoreWeave Shares Lag Rival Nebius in Wild Year Since IPO

(Bloomberg) — One year after CoreWeave Inc.’s tumultuous initial public offering the stock is being trounced by rival neocloud provider Nebius Group NV. The reason has nothing to do with the companies’ products or competitive outlooks. Instead, the divergence is being driven by the very 2026 concern weighing on so many technology stocks: heavy spending…


CoreWeave Shares Lag Rival Nebius in Wild Year Since IPO

(Bloomberg) — One year after CoreWeave Inc.’s tumultuous initial public offering the stock is being trounced by rival neocloud provider Nebius Group NV.

The reason has nothing to do with the companies’ products or competitive outlooks. Instead, the divergence is being driven by the very 2026 concern weighing on so many technology stocks: heavy spending on artificial intelligence.

“CoreWeave for some time has underperformed Nebius, not because of the differentiation that its business model is risky compared to Nebius, it’s just that Nebius has a pretty clean balance sheet,” said Paul Meeks, head of technology research at Freedom Capital Markets, who covers Coreweave and Nebius and has buy ratings on both. “It hasn’t gone as far as CoreWeave on the building of the infrastructure.”

Both companies are neocloud providers, meaning they offer specialized high-performance computing infrastructure for AI hyperscalers such as Alphabet Inc. and Microsoft Corp. But the divergence between the stocks’ performance has been stark.

“They’re wholly reliant on a few hyperscaler contracts to get investors excited,” said Felix Wang, tech sector head at Hedgeye Risk Management, who has a short rating on Coreweave.

Since going public on March 27, CoreWeave shares are up more than 100%, rising from its $40 in its first day of trading to more than $80 today, although the ride has been far from smooth, with the stock down about 55% from a high of nearly $184 in June. Meanwhile, Nebius shares have risen about 350% since Coreweave’s IPO and are just 16% away from their October record. The disparity is particularly acute this month, with Nebius leaping 26% in March, while CoreWeave has gained just over 4%.

For CoreWeave, it’s been a rocky first year in the market, starting with its IPO. The company had expected to raise $2.7 billion in the offering but was forced to downsize to $1.5 billion. Nvidia Corp., which was an early investor, had to anchor the sale with an order of roughly $250 million. CoreWeave Chief Executive Officer Michael Intrator said the chipmaker’s involvement was integral to getting the deal done.

Within months, the shares were soaring as investors bought into companies that were primed to benefit from increased spending on AI. CoreWeave also had an agreement worth as much as $4 billion to rent out computing power to OpenAI, which Wall Street applauded.

But the enthusiasm quickly gave way to concern due to its heavy spending on AI, supply constraints and delays in building at least one data center. By the end of 2025, CoreWeave shares were trading for $71.61 — and they have held in a range below $115 ever since.

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