CoreWeaveβs stock jumped 15% on Monday after Nvidia announced it was pumping $2 billion into the company.
Nvidia bought Class A CoreWeave shares at $87.20 each, cheaper than the $92.98 close on Friday. The move gives CoreWeave fuel to speed up its plan to build 5 gigawatts worth of AI data centers by 2030.
CoreWeave CEO Mike Intrator told CNBC this deal helps them βaccelerate our buildβ and reduce the companyβs reliance on any single client. βThis will lead to continued diversification,β he said during a live interview on Squawk on the Street.
CoreWeave pushes ahead with more massive AI projects
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang made it clear that while $2 billion is a big number, itβs just a fraction of whatβs needed.
βThe amount of funding that needs to be raised yet to support that five gigawatts is really quite significant,β Jensen said. βWeβre investing a small percentage of the amount that ultimately has to go and be provided.β
The five-gigawatt goal isnβt just some marketing number. It equals the annual power use of around 4 million U.S. homes, based on government energy data. CoreWeave wants to hit that target in under four years.
CoreWeave builds and runs data centers stacked with Nvidia GPUs, the chips used to train AI models and run heavy workloads. Itβs how the company makes its money; renting out GPU-packed compute capacity. That makes CoreWeave part of a new breed some call βneocloudβ providers. These arenβt general cloud giants. They exist for one job: power AI.
Nvidia was already heavily tied to CoreWeave before Mondayβs deal. In September, CoreWeave filed an SEC document showing Nvidia placed an order worth at least $6.3 billion. That agreement also commits Nvidia to buy any leftover compute capacity through April 2032.
CoreWeave went public back in March on the Nasdaq. Since then, itβs pulled in billions in equity and debt, including earlier funding from Nvidia. But the company hasnβt had a smooth ride. The stock has been all over the place as investors watch CoreWeave load up on massive multi-billion-dollar deals, many of them debt-financed.
Even with those concerns, CoreWeave keeps stacking up wins. The same month it landed the $6.3 billion order from Nvidia, it also agreed to supply Meta with $14.2 billion in AI infrastructure. That deal came just days after CoreWeave expanded its contract with OpenAI, taking the total value of that one to $22.4 billion.
CoreWeaveβs CEO isnβt worried about the pressure. Intrator told CNBC that AI is going to get baked into βabsolutely everything we do,β and the infrastructure theyβre building now will pay off for a century.
βWhat youβre seeing is the base-load infrastructure being built right now at what has historically been a pace that wasnβt even considered,β he said. βCompanies like CoreWeave, and there are others, are out there building the infrastructure to be able to deliver that for these clients.β
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