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    Home > Finance > CoreWeave revenue beats estimates on AI boom but shares fall on bigger loss
    Finance

    CoreWeave revenue beats estimates on AI boom but shares fall on bigger loss

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on August 12, 2025

    3 min read

    Last updated: January 22, 2026

    CoreWeave revenue beats estimates on AI boom but shares fall on bigger loss - Finance news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
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    Tags:Artificial IntelligencetechnologyFinancial performanceinvestmentcloud services

    Quick Summary

    CoreWeave's revenue beat estimates due to AI demand, but shares fell on a larger net loss. The company forecasts higher annual revenue amid increased operating expenses.

    Table of Contents

    • CoreWeave's Financial Performance and Market Response
    • Revenue and Backlog Highlights
    • Operating Expenses and Net Loss
    • Future Outlook and Investor Sentiment

    CoreWeave Surpasses Revenue Estimates Amid AI Surge, Shares Decline

    CoreWeave's Financial Performance and Market Response

    By Juby Babu and Krystal Hu

    Revenue and Backlog Highlights

    (Reuters) -CoreWeave easily topped quarterly revenue estimates on Tuesday as the rapid adoption of artificial intelligence tools boosted demand for its cloud services, but a bigger-than-expected net loss sent its shares slumping 10% after the bell.

    Operating Expenses and Net Loss

    The company currently operates 33 AI data centers across the U.S. and Europe and offers access to backer Nvidia's chips, which are highly coveted by enterprises to train and run large AI models amid intense competition.

    Future Outlook and Investor Sentiment

    CoreWeave posted second-quarter revenue of $1.21 billion, beating estimates of $1.08 billion. It also reported a revenue backlog of $30.1 billion as of the end of June, compared with $25.9 billion on March 31. 

    "Demand is humming, but it is the cost of growth that tempered the stock down in aftermarket trading," said Michael Ashley Schulman of Running Point Capital Advisors.

    Operating expenses jumped to $1.19 billion in the second quarter, from $317.7 million a year earlier.

    The company posted a net loss of $290.5 million, compared with analysts' average estimate of $190.6 million, according to data compiled by LSEG.

    "We are scaling rapidly as we look to meet the unprecedented demand for AI," CEO Michael Intrator said. "There's a lot of different pieces that are constrained, but ultimately the piece that is the most significant challenge right now is accessing power shells that are capable of delivering the scale of infrastructure that our clients are requiring."

    The company reiterated the benefits of its $9 billion all-stock deal for crypto miner Core Scientific, which will help it secure the firm's entire 1.3 GW power under contract and future pipeline. The comment comes as Two Seas Capital, the largest shareholder of Core Scientific, said last week it would vote against the sale.

    Investors have also focused on the company's reliance on a few big customers. CoreWeave said it has also expanded contracts with hyperscalers in the past few weeks to meet their growing internal and external demand.

    "The backlog surge to $30B+ suggests demand visibility well beyond 2025, but the concentration in mega-customers like OpenAI means those relationships remain both the crown jewel and the single point of failure," said eMarketer analyst Jeremy Goldman.

    CoreWeave has seen rising demand for AI inference, especially when models use chain-of-thought reasoning to go through a problem in a logical sequence — a technique doubled down on by frontier labs such as OpenAI.

    "The actual quality of the intelligence was improved so much by the chain-of-reasoning models, but it also requires an incredible increase in the amount of computing to be able to drive that level of accuracy," Intrator said in an interview.

    The Livingston, New Jersey-based company raised its annual revenue forecast to be between $5.15 billion and $5.35 billion. It had previously projected $4.9 billion to $5.1 billion. 

    Shares of the company, which reaffirmed its annual capital expenditure projection, were trading at $133.71 after hours. The stock has gained nearly three-fold since the IPO in March.

    (Reporting by Juby Babu in Mexico City and Krystal Hu in New York; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Alan Barona)

    Key Takeaways

    • •CoreWeave's revenue exceeded estimates due to AI demand.
    • •Shares fell 10% after reporting a larger net loss.
    • •Operating expenses increased significantly year-over-year.
    • •The company forecasts higher annual revenue.
    • •CoreWeave's backlog suggests strong future demand.

    Frequently Asked Questions about CoreWeave revenue beats estimates on AI boom but shares fall on bigger loss

    1What is revenue backlog?

    Revenue backlog refers to the total amount of contracted revenue that a company expects to recognize in the future from its current contracts.

    2What is net loss?

    Net loss occurs when a company's total expenses exceed its total revenue, indicating a financial deficit during a specific period.

    3What are operating expenses?

    Operating expenses are the costs required for a company to maintain its day-to-day operations, excluding costs related to production.

    4What is artificial intelligence?

    Artificial intelligence (AI) refers to the simulation of human intelligence in machines programmed to think and learn like humans.

    5What is cloud services?

    Cloud services provide computing resources and storage over the internet, allowing users to access and manage data remotely.

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