- Nebius stock soars as revenue jumps 684% on booming data center demand
May 13, 2026
What happened: Nebius (NBIS) stock soared 15% on Wednesday.
What’s behind the move: The AI cloud computing company reported revenue of $399 million in the first quarter, representing 684% year-over-year growth and a 75% increase from the previous quarter.
“Everything we build with is sold,” Nebius CEO Arkady Volozh said during the company’s earnings call. “That is what is driving us to build more and to raise our 2026 capex guidance to between $20 billion and $25 billion, which is up from our prior range of $16 billion to $20 billion.”
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What else you need to know: Nebius is benefiting from the surge in demand for AI infrastructure, forming partnerships with major industry players, such as Nvidia (NVDA). The company’s customers include tech giant Microsoft (MSFT) and social media giant Meta (META).
The Netherlands-based company competes with peers such as CoreWeave (CRWV) that lease computing capacity. These providers have experienced booming growth over the past year.
Nebius shares have risen more than 400% over the past year and are up over 130% since the beginning of January.
Ines Ferre is a senior business reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on X at @ines_ferre.
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- Nebius Reports 684% Sales Jump on AI Data Center Growth
May 13, 2026
(Bloomberg) -- Cloud computing provider Nebius Group NV reported a 684% jump in first quarter sales on increased demand for its data centers.
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Revenues reached $399 million for the quarter, the Amsterdam-based company said in a statement on Wednesday, slightly above analyst expectations. Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization were $129.5 million, after a loss during the same period last year.
The neo-cloud provider’s shares surged as much as 17% and were up 12% to $201.17 at 10:17 a.m. in New York. The stock price has more than quadrupled in the last year.
Nebius is tapping growing demand for artificial intelligence infrastructure and has struck partnerships with AI heavyweights, including chipmaker Nvidia Corp. and Microsoft Corp. The Dutch company competes with CoreWeave Inc. and a range of neo-cloud startups that rent out computing capacity and have also seen rapid growth in recent years.
Building infrastructure for AI workloads is a costly business with rapidly growing competition, including from Silicon Valley’s largest cloud operators. During the first quarter, Nebius spent around $2.5 billion buying chips, equipment and expanding data centers. Nebius plans to spend between $16 billion and $20 billion this year, Chief Executive Officer Arkady Volozh said in March.
The company, which split from Russian internet giant Yandex in 2024, has made a number of recent acquisitions, such as California research lab Eigen AI and the engineering team of AI startup Clarifai, to support its rapid growth. In the last year, Nebius has signed deals to supply billions of dollars of computing capacity annually with Meta Platforms Inc. and Microsoft.
(Updates with shares, background starting in the third paragraph.)
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- Nebius Revenue Booms On AI Computer Infrastructure Spending
May 13, 2026
Nebius stock jumped after the AI computing specialist reported a lower-than-expected, Q1 net income loss while revenue topped expectations.
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- Nebius reports higher quarterly capex on AI cloud expansion
May 13, 2026
May 13 (Reuters) - Nebius Group on Wednesday reported higher-than-expected first-quarter capital spending, driven by investments tied to the procurement of graphics processing units and data center hardware for its core AI cloud business.
The company has grabbed a slice of the lucrative AI and cloud infrastructure market by providing Nvidia GPUs and computing platforms to developers.
However, analysts have flagged Nebius' heavy capital spending as a major concern as the company aggressively expands its global data center footprint, putting pressure on margins despite strong revenue growth.
Nebius even paused its share buyback program in late 2024 to redirect capital toward expanding its core AI infrastructure business.
The concerns mirror those at larger rival CoreWeave, which has projected between $30 billion and $35 billion in capital spending this year, warning that the ramp-up in investments could weigh on near-term margins.
Nebius Group has been expanding its AI infrastructure business through acquisitions and large computing contracts.
Earlier this month, the company agreed to buy AI startup Eigen AI for about $643 million to strengthen its inference platform and U.S. presence.
Nebius also signed a long-term deal with Meta to provide up to $27 billion worth of computing capacity over five years.
Capital expenditure jumped to about $2.5 billion in the first quarter, compared with $544 million a year ago. Analysts at Visible Alpha estimated $2.4 billion.
Revenue for the three months ended March jumped to $399 million, beating an estimate of $371.4 million, according to data compiled by LSEG.
(Reporting by Harshita Mary Varghese in Bengaluru; Editing by Pooja Desai)
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- Elizabeth Warren Targets Amazon, Google, Microsoft And Meta After Warning That AI Data Centers 'Use As Much Electricity As 100,000 Households'
May 13, 2026
On Tuesday, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) launched a renewed push to examine whether the rapid expansion of AI data centers run by major technology companies is driving up electricity costs for American households.
Warren Raises Alarm Over AI Power Consumption
In a post on X, Warren said that "a single AI data center uses as much electricity as 100,000 households."
She argued that utility companies are shifting infrastructure upgrade costs onto consumers instead of Big Tech firms.
"Utility companies are passing the upgrade costs to you, not to the trillion-dollar tech giants," she wrote, adding, "These companies need to pay their costs."
A single AI data center uses as much electricity as 100,000 households—and utility companies are passing the upgrade costs to you, not to the trillion-dollar tech giants.
I've opened an investigation. These companies need to pay their costs.
— Elizabeth Warren (@ewarren) May 12, 2026
Read Also: 3M Expands AI Data Center Push With New Optical Connectivity Partnership
Senate Probe Targets Big Tech Energy Footprint
In December 2025, Warren, along with Sens. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), opened an investigation into whether data center expansion is contributing to rising power bills.
The senators sent letters to Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN), Meta Platforms, Inc.(NASDAQ:META), Alphabet Inc.'s(NASDAQ:GOOG) (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Google, Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:MSFT), CoreWeave(NASDAQ:CRWV), Digital Realty(NYSE:DLR) and Equinix(NASDAQ:EQIX) seeking details on energy usage and cost allocation.
Lawmakers said AI development is accelerating electricity demand, with the Department of Energy projecting data centers could account for up to 12% of U.S. power consumption by 2028.
They also cited estimates that utilities may spend billions upgrading grids, including new power plants and transmission lines, costs that could be passed on to residential customers.
Utilities and Tech Companies Clash Over Costs
The debate centers on whether infrastructure costs tied to AI growth are being fairly distributed.
Critics argue households are indirectly subsidizing Big Tech expansion, while companies say they pay their own energy costs and operate under regulated utility agreements.
An Amazon spokesperson previously said, "Amazon pays for its own electricity costs," adding that independent research "failed to find evidence that residents are subsidizing our data centers."
Data centers account for about 5% of U.S. electricity use, a share expected to rise as AI grows. McKinsey & Co. projects this could more than double in five years, with data centers driving up to 40% of new electricity demand by 2030.
Story Continues
Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.
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- Up Nearly 60% This Year, Is it Too Late to Buy CoreWeave Stock?
May 12, 2026 · fool.com
CoreWeave is seeing incredible demand for its computing resources.
- Should You Buy, Hold, or Fold CoreWeave Stock After Solid Q1 Results?
May 12, 2026
CoreWeave, Inc. CRWV described the first quarter as a major inflection point in customer demand and financing strength, driven by more than $40 billion in new deals, $2.1 billion in revenue, a nearly $100 billion revenue backlog and an aggressive expansion strategy aimed at scaling beyond 8 gigawatts of power capacity by 2030.
CoreWeave reported first-quarter revenue of approximately $2.08 billion, more than doubling year over year and beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate by 6%. However, the market reaction was mixed because soaring growth came alongside widening losses, heavy capital spending and mounting debt concerns.
Over a year, its shares have climbed 81.3% against the Zacks Internet-Software Market’s fall of 16%. The stock has outperformed the Zacks Computer & Technology sector and the S&P 500 Composite, with growth rates of 50.6% and 30.7%, respectively, in the same period.Zacks Investment Research
Image Source: Zacks Investment Research
CRWV stock has outperformed tech giant Microsoft MSFT, which has plunged 8.1% over the same period, though it still trails Nebius Group N.V. NBIS, another fast-rising AI infrastructure competitor, whose shares surged 427.6%. Microsoft develops PCs, tablets, gaming systems and other smart devices, while its Azure platform offers cloud software, services and infrastructure. Similar to CRWV, Nebius specializes in GPU-driven AI cloud computing and infrastructure solutions for enterprises and developers, positioning itself as a strong player in the expanding AI infrastructure space.
CRWV currently trades at $114.7, with a 52-week high of $187. For investors, the big question is: after such explosive momentum, is CRWV stock a buy, a hold, or a sell?
Let’s delve deeper.
The Bull Case for CRWV Stock
CoreWeave identified four major trends: rising AI demand from hyperscalers and emerging enterprise clients; expanded platform capabilities across training, inference and agentic AI workloads; rapid hyperscale expansion with contracted power capacity exceeding 3.5 GW and a stronger financing position, with more than $20 billion raised this year at improved capital costs to support future growth. These figures emphasize its rapid evolution from a niche GPU cloud provider into a vital AI infrastructure platform supporting the expanding generative AI ecosystem. Management stated that the 2026 capacity is effectively sold out, demonstrating the tight supply of AI infrastructure.
AI demand is quickly growing as workloads shift from training to inference, agents and enterprise-scale AI applications, all requiring increased computing power. While hyperscalers and AI labs continue strengthening their partnerships, a growing number of enterprises are adopting CoreWeave’s platform. This momentum fueled record backlog growth in the first quarter, driven by early Vera Rubin deals and ongoing monetization of Blackwell, Hopper and Ampere capacity. Most new commitments align with the company’s 2027 targets and are expected to generate strong, margin-enhancing returns. Revenue backlog reached $99.4 billion, rising nearly 50% sequentially and almost fourfold year over year. The backlog is heavily near-term focused, with 36% expected within two years and 75% over the next four years.
Story Continues
A key reason investors remain bullish on CoreWeave is its close relationship with NVIDIA NVDA. NVIDIA GPUs remain the backbone of modern AI infrastructure, and CRWV has become one of the largest specialized buyers and deployers of those chips. During the quarter, NVDA invested $2 billion in CoreWeave, nearly doubling its stake, to expand data centers with a capacity of 5 GW by 2030, reflecting confidence in AI demand and CoreWeave’s role in meeting it. It plans to expand its power footprint through both leased infrastructure and self-built data center sites, aiming to gain greater operational control and long-term financial benefits. CRWV expects its first self-build facility to go live later this year, while its strategic partnership with NVDA continues to support faster infrastructure expansion in the increasingly competitive AI cloud market.
CoreWeave is betting heavily on inference workload. Demand for inference-ready GPU compute is accelerating across multiple chip generations — a trend the company believes will support long-term margin and earnings growth. Management emphasized that inference represents the monetization phase of AI, driving productivity gains, higher enterprise adoption and increased investment, which helped CoreWeave add more backlog in one quarter than many AI cloud platforms have accumulated in their entire history.Zacks Investment Research
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Backed by strong first-quarter performance, solid execution and sustained customer demand, the company reaffirmed its full-year outlook of $12-$13 billion in revenue and $900 million-$1.1 billion in adjusted operating income. It now expects to exit 2026 with $18-$19 billion in annualized run-rate revenue, raising the low end of its outlook by $1 billion, while still targeting more than $30 billion by the end of 2027. More than 75% of the 2027 target is already backed by contracts, and the company said it has secured enough power capacity to support those goals.
The Bear Case for CRWV Stock
While the growth story is compelling, CRWV is far from risk-free. Despite strong revenue growth, investors focused on profitability issues and aggressive spending. CoreWeave reported an adjusted net loss of roughly $589 million, significantly wider than the prior-year quarter’s loss of $150 million. It reported sharply higher expenses as aggressive infrastructure expansion weighed on profitability. Operating expenses more than doubled to $2.2 billion, driven by rising technology, infrastructure, sales and personnel costs tied to scaling capacity and expanding into new markets. Adjusted operating income fell to $21 million from $163 million a year earlier, while operating margin dropped to just 1%.
Interest expense also surged to $536 million due to heavier borrowing used to fund infrastructure growth and customer commitments. CoreWeave’s business model requires extraordinary capital spending. The company has already relied heavily on debt financing and equity raises. If capital markets tighten or AI demand slows, funding future expansion could become difficult and expensive. Rapid infrastructure expansion is continuing to pressure finances despite expectations for margin improvement later this year. Interest expense is projected to climb further in the second quarter to as much as $730 million as debt levels rise to fund deployments. The company also raised its full-year capital expenditure outlook to $31 billion-$35 billion, citing higher component costs and massive spending required to bring new capacity online.
This spending is necessary because CoreWeave is rapidly building AI data center infrastructure to satisfy demand. But investors worry that debt levels could continue rising, interest expenses may pressure earnings, margins may stay compressed longer than expected and future AI demand could normalize before returns justify the spending. As of March 31, 2026, long-term debt was $25.4 million. Moreover, AI infrastructure providers often rely heavily on a small number of large customers. If one or two major AI companies reduce spending, delay deployments, or build infrastructure internally, revenue growth could become volatile.
CRWV Faces Unfavorable Estimate Revision Trend
CRWV’s estimates revisions are deteriorating dramatically. The Zacks Consensus Estimate for its earnings for 2026 has been revised south 53% over the past 60 days.Zacks Investment Research
Image Source: Zacks Investment Research
CRWV’s Valuation Could Become Aggressive
CRWV stock is not so cheap, as its Value Style Score of D suggests a stretched valuation at this moment. In terms of Price/Book, CRWV’s shares are trading at 15.24X, higher than the Internet Software industry’s 4.73X.Zacks Investment Research
Image Source: Zacks Investment Research
In comparison, NBIS and MSFT are trading at multiples of 10.25X and 7.4X, respectively.
What to Do With CRWV Stock?
The company is scaling aggressively, securing enormous customer commitments and positioning itself as a critical layer in the global AI ecosystem. Its specialization around AI workloads and inference infrastructure gives it a differentiated position that traditional cloud providers may struggle to replicate quickly. However, this remains a high-risk, high-reward investment. CoreWeave’s future depends on sustained AI adoption, access to capital and flawless execution in an intensely competitive market.
For aggressive growth investors, CRWV may still look like one of the most exciting AI infrastructure stories available today. For cautious investors, the stock may be better treated as a speculative hold until profitability and long-term financial durability become clearer. With a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold), CRWV appears to be treading in the middle of the road, and new investors could be better off if they trade with caution. You can see the complete list of today’s Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy) stocks here.
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- Should You Buy, Hold, or Fold CoreWeave Stock After Solid Q1 Results?
May 12, 2026 · zacks.com
CRWV posted $2.1B Q1 2026 revenue and a $99.4B backlog as AI demand surged, but rising losses, debt and spending kept investors cautious.
- Nvidia Expands AI Investment Push
May 11, 2026
This article first appeared on GuruFocus.
Nvidia (NVDA, Financials) has accelerated its role as an investor in the artificial intelligence supply chain, committing more than $40 billion this year to companies tied to AI infrastructure.
Warning! GuruFocus has detected 5 Warning Signs with NVDA. Is NVDA fairly valued? Test your thesis with our free DCF calculator.
The chipmaker recently agreed to invest up to $2.1 billion in data center operator IREN and up to $3.2 billion in Corning, which is expanding optical technology production for Nvidia systems.
The strategy reflects Nvidia's effort to build out the broader AI ecosystem around its chips, including data centers, optical networking, photonics and cloud infrastructure. Nvidia has also invested in companies such as CoreWeave, Nebius, Marvell, Lumentum and Coherent.
The company's largest recent commitment was a $30 billion investment in OpenAI, deepening its relationship with one of the biggest buyers of AI computing capacity.
For investors, the deals show Nvidia is using its balance sheet to secure capacity and strengthen demand for its hardware. However, some analysts have warned the strategy could raise questions about how much AI demand is organic versus supported by Nvidia's own financing.
Investors will look for more detail on Nvidia's expanding investment portfolio when the company reports quarterly earnings.
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- CoreWeave Stock Falls as the AI Growth Story Slows Down
May 11, 2026
Artificial intelligence (AI) cloud infrastructure provider CoreWeave (CRWV) has once again found itself in the market spotlight, though this time for reasons investors did not welcome. After reporting first-quarter earnings on May 7, shares of the AI infrastructure specialist plunged 11.4% in the following trading session, as Wall Street shifted its focus from explosive growth to mounting concerns beneath the surface.
On paper, the quarter looked transformational. Revenue more than doubled year-over-year (YOY), contracted revenue backlog swelled toward an eye-popping $100 billion, and new agreements with AI powerhouses like Anthropic and Meta (META) further cemented CoreWeave’s rising importance in the AI race. The company continues to position itself as one of the key infrastructure providers powering the next wave of AI development. But investors were not entirely convinced.
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Alongside the headline-grabbing growth, CoreWeave delivered weaker-than-expected second-quarter guidance, outlined even higher capital spending plans for fiscal 2026, and posted a bottom line that continued to deteriorate. Those concerns ultimately overshadowed the company’s rapid expansion story and triggered the sharp post-earnings sell-off. Still, the bigger picture remains hard to ignore. Even after the recent decline, CoreWeave stock is still up strongly in 2026, remaining a standout AI performer.
Nevertheless, is the latest pullback simply a temporary setback and potentially an attractive buying opportunity, or an early warning sign for investors?
About CoreWeave Stock
Founded in 2017 and based in New Jersey, CoreWeave has undergone a remarkable transformation, evolving from a small cryptocurrency mining startup into one of the most important players in the rapidly expanding AI economy. Unlike traditional cloud providers that offer broad, generalized services, CoreWeave operates as a GPU-native hyperscaler, with infrastructure specifically designed to support the enormous computing requirements of advanced AI models, machine learning workloads, and complex simulations.
The company combines high-performance computing power with deep technical expertise, enabling customers to accelerate development and manage demanding AI workloads more efficiently. Its platform has earned the trust of major AI labs, fast-growing startups, and large global enterprises seeking scalable AI infrastructure.
Story Continues
A major milestone came in March 2025, when CoreWeave officially debuted on the Nasdaq under the ticker CRWV. A key part of CoreWeave’s appeal is its ability to provide businesses with access to Nvidia’s (NVDA) cutting-edge GPUs without requiring them to invest billions into building their own infrastructure. This allows customers to access enormous computing power on demand while saving both time and capital.
By 2026, CoreWeave had firmly positioned itself at the heart of the AI ecosystem, supported by close partnerships with industry leaders including Nvidia, OpenAI, and Anthropic. With a market capitalization of $50.57 billion, the company has become one of Wall Street’s standout AI success stories, delivering massive gains that continue to capture investor attention.
Even after its sharp post-earnings pullback, CoreWeave stock remains one of the market’s standout AI winners. Shares have surged an impressive 60.17% in 2026, massively outperforming the broader S&P 500 Index ($SPX), which has gained 8.29% over the same period. The longer-term rally looks even more eye-catching, with CRWV skyrocketing 123.28% over the past 52 weeks, leaving the broader market’s 30.97% return far behind and reinforcing CoreWeave’s status as one of Wall Street’s hottest AI-driven momentum plays.www.barchart.com
Digging Inside CoreWaves’s Q1 Earnings Report
CoreWeave’s first-quarter 2026 earnings report, released on May 7, painted the picture of a company growing at an extraordinary pace while simultaneously dealing with the enormous financial demands of the AI infrastructure boom. The AI cloud specialist generated quarterly revenue of $2.08 billion, marking a staggering 111.6% YOY jump from $982 million in the prior-year quarter. The explosive growth was driven by relentless demand for specialized AI cloud infrastructure and the successful rollout of additional data center capacity.
Then, revenue comfortably surpassed Wall Street expectations of $1.97 billion, reinforcing CoreWeave’s position as one of the fastest-growing companies in the AI ecosystem. Management described the quarter as the strongest bookings period in the company’s history, with revenue backlog surging to nearly $100 billion. That figure climbed almost 50% sequentially and nearly quadrupled from the same period last year, highlighting the scale of demand pouring into the business.
Further, CoreWeave strengthened its relationships with some of the biggest names in AI during the quarter. The company executed multiple new agreements with Meta, including a massive new $21 billion commitment signed in March. And, it entered into a multi-year agreement with Anthropic to support the development and deployment of the Claude family of AI models, further cementing its importance within the AI infrastructure ecosystem.
Still, beneath the eye-popping growth lies the harsh financial reality of competing in the generative AI infrastructure race. The business remains massively capital-intensive, and profitability pressures continue to mount as CoreWeave aggressively scales its operations. Net loss for the quarter widened sharply to $740 million, compared to a loss of $315 million in the same quarter of 2025. On an adjusted basis, the company posted a loss of $1.12 per share, worse than Wall Street’s expected loss of $0.91 per share.
Moreover, to fund its rapid expansion, CoreWeave continues to lean heavily on external financing as it races against much larger and more profitable cloud competitors. During the first quarter alone, the company raised $8.5 billion in new debt to support data center development. In addition, CoreWeave secured another $2 billion in equity financing tied to the expansion of its partnership with Nvidia.
Nevertheless, the company ended the quarter with a strong liquidity position, reporting more than $3.3 billion in cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash, and marketable securities as of March 31. Looking ahead, management reaffirmed its full-year revenue guidance of $12 billion to $13 billion and maintained adjusted operating income guidance of $900 million to $1.1 billion, citing strong execution and sustained customer demand.
However, investors appeared concerned about the near-term outlook. For the second quarter, CoreWeave projected revenue between $2.45 billion and $2.6 billion, falling short of Wall Street’s consensus estimate of $2.69 billion. For the full year, CoreWeave now expects CapEx to range from $31 billion to $35 billion, slightly raising the lower end of the range from its prior February forecast of $30 billion to $35 billion.
How Are Analysts Viewing CoreWeave Stock?
Despite recent volatility, Wall Street continues to see strong long-term potential in CoreWeave. The stock currently holds a consensus “Moderate Buy” rating, with analysts largely leaning bullish on the AI infrastructure leader. Among the 33 analysts covering the stock, 20 rate it a “Strong Buy,” one recommends “Moderate Buy,” 11 remain neutral with “Hold” ratings, and only one analyst stays bearish with a “Strong Sell” call.
Analysts also see meaningful upside ahead. The average price target of $128.58 implies potential gains of 12% from current levels, while the Street-high target of $180 suggests CoreWeave stock could surge as much as 56.9%, underscoring continued confidence in the company’s role at the center of the booming AI revolution.www.barchart.comwww.barchart.com
On the date of publication, Anushka Mukherji did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on Barchart.com
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