CoreWeave stock jumps 9% as Nvidia invests $2 billion to expand AI data center capacity

CoreWeave stock jumps 9% as Nvidia invests  billion to expand AI data center capacity


Michael Intrator, CEO of Coreweave, speaking on CNBC’s Squawk Box at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 20th, 2026.

Oscar Molina | CNBC

Shares of CoreWeave popped 9% in premarket trading on Monday after Nvidia announced it has invested $2 billion in the artificial intelligence infrastructure provider.

Nvidia purchased CoreWeave Class A common stock at $87.20 per share, according to a release. The share price is a discount from Friday’s closing price of $92.98.

“CoreWeave’s deep AI factory expertise, platform software, and unmatched execution velocity are recognized across the industry,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said in a statement. “Together, we’re racing to meet extraordinary demand for NVIDIA AI factories—the foundation of the AI industrial revolution.”

Tune in at 9:35 a.m. ET as Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and CoreWeave CEO Mike Intrator join CNBC TV to discuss the investment. Watch in real time on CNBC+ or the CNBC Pro stream.

Nvidia’s investment will help CoreWeave accelerate its buildout of “5 gigawatts of AI factories by 2030,” the companies said.

A gigawatt is a measure of power that’s becoming an increasingly common metric for describing AI data center capacity. Five gigawatts is roughly equivalent to the annual power consumption of 4 million U.S. households, according to a CNBC analysis of data from the Energy Information Administration.

CoreWeave primarily generates revenue by building and renting out data centers that are full of Nvidia’s graphics processing units, which are key for training models and running large AI workloads. The company, which some investors have classified as a “neocloud,” has become a crucial player in an increasingly interconnected web of AI infrastructure partners.

Nvidia is already a major CoreWeave backer.

In September, CoreWeave disclosed an order worth at least $6.3 billion from Nvidia in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Nvidia has an obligation to buy the “residual unsold capacity through April 2032, according to the agreement.

CoreWeave went public on the Nasdaq in March, and the company raised billions of dollars in debt and equity, including from Nvidia.

As AI startups race to build out their computing infrastructure, CoreWeave has been on a deal-making blitz. The company announced in September that it agreed to provide Meta with $14.2 billion of AI cloud infrastructure, just days after expanding its contract with OpenAI to $22.4 billion.

But CoreWeave’s stock has been shaky in recent months as some investors worry that the company is taking on high levels of debt to finance those multibillion-dollar deals.

CoreWeave CEO Mike Intrator told CNBC earlier this month that AI will eventually be embedded into “absolutely everything we do,” and that the technology will “continue to pay dividends over the next 100 years.”

“What you’re seeing is the base-load infrastructure being built right now at what has historically been a pace that wasn’t even considered,” he said. “Companies like CoreWeave, and there are others, are out there building the infrastructure to be able to deliver that for these clients.”

WATCH: CoreWeave CEO Mike Intrator: AI will continue to pay dividends for the next 100 years

CoreWeave CEO Mike Intrator: AI will continue to pay dividends for the next 100 years



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