Although Wall Street jeers greeted CoreWeave Inc.’s first public offering, several analysts argue that this is not a critique of the artificial-intelligence trend generally.
Although investors are now increasingly concerned about the sustainability of AI expenditure, this is not the main reason CoreWeave (CRWV) ended up pricing its IPO below its initial range, or why the stock failed to gain any momentum once it started trading Friday afternoon.
Wall Street seems rather to be concerned with elements of CoreWeave’s business model and structure.
D.A. Davidson analyst Gil Luria told MarketWatch “CoreWeave should not be taken as indication of the strength of the market for AI.” “It’s just a highly leveraged off-balance-sheet arrangement for Nvidia.”
Operating several specialized AI data centers, CoreWeave’s shares saw their first trade for $39 at 1:14 p.m. Eastern time – an opening more of a splat than the usual pop usually linked with IT IPOs. Friday closing prices for shares were $40, even with the IPO price.
The sale was valued at $40 a share for 37.5 million shares on Thursday night, a far departure from the initial intention to sell 49 million shares for between $47 and $55 a share.
“It’s a tough company to value,” said Matthew Kennedy, a senior IPO strategist at Renaissance Capital, which also features two ETFs focused on IPOs. Kennedy noted the big concern of artificial intelligence spending in general, as well as questions about how long CoreWeave would have its competitive moat, high debt level, client concentration, dual-class share structure, and insider selling last year.
“All of these issues kind of mounted up and many investors just said, ‘I will hold off and sit on the sidelines and see how it trades on the open market,'” Kennedy remarked. “I believe the tale would have been quite different if this had priced a month ago.”
Executives of CoreWeave seemed to be upbeat and euphoric before their stock went live for trading, ringing the Nasdaq COMP opening bell and assembling in Times Square for pictures.
“Our bankers told us it [had] the most investor interest and the highest volume of meetings than they have ever scheduled for an IPO before,” said Brannin McBee, one of CoreWeave’s three co-founders and also its chief development officer, in an interview with MarketWatch before the stock started trading.
The company’s high debt levels startled some IPO investors and analysts when the S-1 was originally registered.
But during the roadshow, McBee told MarketWatch CoreWeave “did not really get any concerns about debt”.
“Software investors don’t see debt on a balance sheet, but this is a new business paradigm,” he remarked. “They understand once you can clearly show that the debt directly relates to income.”
Furthermore, he said, 96% of the company’s income comes from contracts rather than from businesses paying as they go for computer needs. Since right before the AI explosion commenced, the corporation has also been expanding its data centers. McBee said it allows CoreWeave to have many of the sophisticated needs, such liquid cooling, which consumers would need using Nvidia’s Blackwell chip platform.
“You cannot retrofit an old data center,” McBee declared. “The 2010s’ data centers were made to keep water out of them. This industry is changing thus quickly, so our product has grown to be very crucial.
Customers of CoreWeave are top AI businesses including OpenAI and Microsoft Corp. (MSFT). However, Wall Street analysts also mentioned its high income concentration from Microsoft as another issue of worry.
CoreWeave’s debut fell on a day the S&P 500 index SPX dropped 2% and the Renaissance IPO ETF lost 2.5%. This wasn not ideal timing for the company.
The IPO also took place at a period when investors have started to doubt the high values for the largest businesses connected with the artificial intelligence surge, like Nvidia Corp. (NVDA).
Jeffrey Emanuel, a bitcoin executive and blogger, cautioned Wall Street back in January about a Chinese lab developing its own artificial intelligence model called DeepSeek, which led him to conclude that there are less expensive ways to run AI platforms than using tons of the most premium Nvidia graphics processing units. Following his blog entries on his ideas, Nvidia observed a $600 billion drop of market capitalization in one day.
Concerned about CoreWeave as well, Emanuel compared the business to WeWork and cautioned that should large corporations cut back on their AI expenditure, it would put others at risk. That does not mean, however, he is negative on artificial intelligence generally.
Emanuel told MarketWatch, “AI is real and is truly having a massive impact on everything.” He still thinks, though, that the cost of artificial intelligence is declining and that American businesses like Nvidia and others are up against increased competition from Chinese companies including open-source models like DeepSeek.
To boost the IPO, CoreWeave partner and investor Nvidia was purchasing extra $250 million worth of stock in the offering, according Thursday CNBC reports. The business was an investor already before the deal.
McBee said, “Nvidia remains a strong partner of ours.” She refrained to comment on any IPO attendees.
CoreWeave was valued about at $18.5 billion at the opening price.