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CoreWeave Cuts Revenue Forecast After Data Center Delay, Shares Drop

CoreWeave (CRWV.O), a cloud infrastructure company backed by Nvidia, trimmed its annual revenue forecast on Monday after delays at a third-party data center partner disrupted operations, overshadowing strong quarterly results driven by soaring demand for AI computing services.

Shares fell more than 6% in extended trading, after Chief Financial Officer Nitin Agrawal forecast 2025 revenue between $5.05 billion and $5.15 billion, down from a previous estimate of $5.15 billion to $5.35 billion. Analysts had expected around $5.29 billion, according to data from LSEG.

CoreWeave said the customer impacted by the delay agreed to extend the contract’s expiration date, ensuring the total deal value remains intact, though the company did not name the client.

Despite the setback, the company posted a strong September quarter, with revenue more than doubling to $1.36 billion, beating Wall Street expectations of $1.29 billion.

CoreWeave has emerged as a major infrastructure provider for AI-driven workloads, securing high-profile contracts such as a $14 billion deal with Meta Platforms and a $6.5 billion partnership with OpenAI, both of which rely on its vast GPU-powered cloud network.

Once focused on Ethereum mining, CoreWeave has successfully repurposed its powerful GPU infrastructure to fuel the global AI cloud boom. However, its rapid growth has also exposed challenges — including rising chip prices, competition for computing capacity, and high expansion costs.

The company now expects to more than double capital spending next year, investing between $12 billion and $14 billion to meet surging demand.

CoreWeave shares have more than doubled since going public earlier this year at $40 per share, giving the firm a market capitalization above $50 billion, though its operating margin slipped to 16% in Q3 from 21% a year earlier.

ISS Urges Investors to Reject CoreWeave’s $9 Billion Acquisition of Core Scientific

Proxy advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) has advised investors to vote against the proposed $9 billion all-stock merger between artificial intelligence infrastructure company CoreWeave (CRWV.O) and data computing firm Core Scientific (CORZ.O). The shareholder vote is scheduled for October 30.

In its recommendation, ISS said that Core Scientific has shown strong independent performance and can continue to grow without being acquired. The firm noted that the company’s current trajectory suggests it could thrive as a standalone entity.

CoreWeave, which provides cloud infrastructure tailored for AI workloads, first proposed the acquisition in July, offering an implied value of $20.40 per share. However, investor Two Seas Capital quickly announced its opposition to the deal, citing concerns about the sale process, valuation, and the fixed exchange ratio, which leaves Core Scientific shareholders exposed to fluctuations in CoreWeave’s stock price.

Since the announcement, CoreWeave’s shares have declined, reducing the total deal value. Meanwhile, Core Scientific’s stock rose more than 5% in post-market trading on Monday, closing at $18.81, as investors appeared to favor keeping the company independent rather than moving forward with the merger.

Core Scientific urges shareholders to approve $9 billion CoreWeave merger

Core Scientific’s board has called on shareholders to vote in favor of its proposed $9 billion all-stock sale to CoreWeave, saying the merger would deliver long-term growth and risk reduction benefits for the crypto miner.

In an investor presentation released Wednesday, the board said it had “unanimously determined” that the deal represented the best outcome for all shareholders. The merger, announced in July, values Core Scientific at $20.40 per share and would combine its energy-intensive mining infrastructure with CoreWeave’s AI-focused data center network.

The deal promises significant cost savings, operational synergies, and improved access to capital, according to the company. CoreWeave, a fast-growing cloud provider powered by Nvidia AI chips, would integrate Core Scientific’s facilities to support large-scale AI model training — an increasingly valuable use case as demand for compute power surges.

However, the proposal faces pushback from Two Seas Capital, Core Scientific’s largest shareholder with a 6.3% stake, which said it plans to vote against the deal, arguing it “materially undervalues” the company and poses “substantial economic risk” to investors.

Core Scientific said the transaction would help it diversify beyond cryptocurrency mining and strengthen its position in the fast-growing AI infrastructure market.