Shares of CoreWeave, the first artificial intelligence startup to be published, opened its first day of trading at $39 on Friday. This was a slight drop from the initial public offering price set by CoreWeave a day ago, after reducing the size and value of the IPO.
The company’s stock price, trading under the ticker symbol CRWV, shows concerns among Wall Street investors about the economy and CoreWeave’s business model.
The decline came amidst a sluggish stock market and uncertainty over inflation and President Trump’s tariffs. List lower prices – CoreWeave previously estimated the range between $47 and $55 Submit – Already reflects investors’ skepticism compared to a month ago. Our share price rose approximately 1% in early trading.
CoreWeave, a data center supporting Power Giant AI Systems, also raised just $1.5 billion in offerings that analysts had expected, less than $4 billion.
In an interview Friday, CoreWeave CEO Michael Intrator said concerns about the stock market and AI industry have cut the list to the company, but the timing of its offering will benefit the company in the long run.
“It’s just a day. I’ll get through this day and keep moving,” Intrator said. “It’s important for us to enter the open market.”
It is unclear whether the stock’s performance will mark the start of the IPO parade that some investors have been hoping for. Among the companies watching Coreweave’s public debut on Friday were online lending service Klarna and ticketing company StubHub, which is predicting the public list this year.
“This is not an easy IPO market,” said Samuel Kerr, head equity capital market analyst at financial insights firm Mergermarket. “The USIPO market shows that CoreWeave is probably not as strong as we thought it would be early this year.”
A more ideal time would have been at the end of last year for CoreWeave’s public list after Trump was elected, before the release of a new chatbot by Chinese AI company Deepseek, Kerr added.
Nvidia, a supplier of CoreWeave’s computer chips and one of its major investors, has not helped its share price fell 9% since Wednesday last week.
Some analysts are skeptical of CoreWeave’s substantial debt, and have been taken over to build more data centers, a large facility that houses AI chips. The company’s revenue rose from $1.9 billion from $229 million a year last year, but lost $863 million after spending nearly $1 billion to fund its debt.
“The very high debt profile is something IPO investors disliked for quite some time,” Kerr said.
CoreWeave was founded in 2017 as a cryptocurrency mining startup, but after Openai released its ChatGPT chatbot in 2022, it shifted to using powerful NVIDIA chips for AI development.
Some of CoreWeave’s customers include Microsoft, which accounted for a large portion of last year’s revenue, and Openai, which announced nearly $12 billion in deals with CoreWeave in the weeks leading up to its IPO.
Source: www.nytimes.com