Nebius (NBIS), which provides artificial intelligence (AI) services and infrastructure to data centers, recently announced that it has been chosen by Israel to launch and manage the country’s supercomputer system. Given this deal and other agreements that Nebius has made, it’s clear that the company has top-notch technology, and the firm is well-positioned to benefit tremendously from the continued rapid growth of AI.
Nonetheless, its valuation is rather high. And at a time when investors’ enthusiasm for AI-infrastructure stocks appears to be stalling, one of Nebius’ competitors seems to be a safer alternative. Therefore, I would not advise buying NBIS stock now, but the shares could very well become a buy down the road.
The company’s graphics processing unit (GPU) chips and other hardware, based in data centers, are used by major hyperscalers, including Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta Platforms (META) to develop AI. Nebius also has other customers in several different sectors, including robotics, healthcare, finance, and government. Founder Arkady Volozh serves as the CEO of the company, which has also moved into launching and servicing supercomputers. Volozh holds Israeli citizenship and has called himself “an Israeli businessman.”
In the third quarter, Nebius’ revenue climbed 39% versus the same period a year earlier to $146.1 million, while its EBITDA loss, excluding certain items, narrowed sharply to $5.2 million from -$45.9 million in Q3 of 2024.
NBIS has a trailing price-to-sales (P/S) ratio of 66x. But based on analysts’ average 2026 sales estimate for the firm of $3.45 billion, its forward P/S ratio is about 8x.
In addition to Israel, Microsoft and Meta have also signed major deals with the startup. Specifically, Nebius in November disclosed a multi-year agreement with Microsoft valued between $17.4 billion and $19.4 billion. In November, NBIS announced that it had obtained a five-year deal with Meta worth about $3 billion.
On the growth front, in the 12 months that ended in September, the startup’s total revenue came in at $363.3 million, versus $117.5 million in 2024. Its deals with Microsoft and Meta will supercharge its growth going forward.
