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CoreWeave joins the Nasdaq-100 just 15 months after its IPO, capping a wild ride from crypto mining to AI darling

CoreWeave will join the Nasdaq-100 Index on June 22, 2026, just 15 months after its IPO, marking a rapid ascent from a crypto mining startup to an AI cloud infrastructure leader. The company reported $2.1 billion in Q1 2026 revenue but carries nearly $25 billion in debt, while its founders have sold $2.3 billion in stock since the lockup expired.

read3 min publishedJun 13, 2026

TL;DR

CoreWeave will join the Nasdaq-100 on 22 June 2026, just 15 months after its IPO. The GPU cloud provider, which started as a crypto mining operation, reported $2.1 billion in Q1 revenue but carries nearly $25 billion in debt. Its founders have sold $2.3 billion in stock since the lockup expired.

CoreWeave, the AI cloud infrastructure company that began life as a New Jersey cryptocurrency mining operation called Atlantic Crypto, has been selected for inclusion in the Nasdaq-100 Index. The addition takes effect before market open on 22 June, just 15 months after CoreWeave priced its IPO at $40 per share in March 2025.

CoreWeave will join the index alongside Astera Labs, Nebius Group, Rocket Lab, and Teradyne as part of the June quarterly rebalance. Charter Communications, Cognizant, Insmed, Verisk Analytics, and Zscaler are being dropped.

From Ethereum rigs to the Nasdaq-100

CoreWeave’s trajectory is one of the stranger origin stories in enterprise tech. Michael Intrator, Brian Venturo, and Brannin McBee founded Atlantic Crypto in 2017 as a GPU-based Ethereum mining business, operating out of a single data centre in New Jersey.

When crypto mining margins collapsed, the founders realised the same Nvidia GPUs could serve machine learning, visual effects, and scientific simulation workloads. The company rebranded to CoreWeave in 2021 and rebuilt itself as a GPU cloud provider, eventually becoming Nvidia’s elite cloud partner with preferential access to new chip generations.

The numbers behind the hype

CoreWeave reported $2.1 billion in Q1 2026 revenue, up 112% year on year. It reaffirmed full-year guidance of $12 billion to $13 billion, which would make it the fastest cloud company in history to reach that scale.

The revenue backlog is even more striking. It ended Q1 at $99.4 billion, nearly quadruple the year-ago figure, driven by multibillion-dollar commitments from Meta, Jane Street, Anthropic, and OpenAI.

But the growth comes at a steep cost. CoreWeave posted a net loss of $740 million in Q1, weighed down by $536 million in interest expense alone.

Total debt stood at nearly $25 billion at quarter’s end, the result of aggressive borrowing to fund data-centre construction.

Concentration risk cuts both ways

Microsoft accounted for roughly 67% of CoreWeave’s 2025 revenue, a figure that dropped to 45% in Q1 2026 as the customer base broadened. The company now counts nine of the ten largest AI model providers as clients, but losing a single anchor tenant would still hit hard.

On the supply side, CoreWeave depends exclusively on Nvidia for its GPU hardware. That relationship is a competitive advantage when chips are scarce, and a single point of failure if Nvidia prioritises other customers or supply chains buckle.

The founders have been selling

CoreWeave’s three co-founders have sold $2.3 billion in stock since the company’s lockup period expired in August 2025, according to Bloomberg. Venturo, the chief strategy officer, accounts for more than $1.1 billion of those sales.

The sales were executed under pre-arranged 10b5-1 trading plans, and the founders retain sizable stakes, with Intrator still the largest individual shareholder at 10.4% of outstanding shares. CoreWeave’s stock has roughly doubled from its $40 IPO price, giving the company a market capitalisation of about $54 billion.

What Nasdaq-100 inclusion means

Index inclusion forces passive funds that track the Nasdaq-100 to buy CoreWeave shares, creating a mechanical demand boost. The stock rose roughly 5% in premarket trading after the announcement.

The broader signal is that Wall Street now treats GPU cloud infrastructure as a core sector of the technology economy, not a speculative bet. Three of the five companies joining the index this quarter, CoreWeave, Nebius, and Astera Labs, are AI infrastructure plays.

Whether the $99 billion backlog converts to sustained profit is another question. CoreWeave is burning cash, carrying $25 billion in debt, and operating at a 1% adjusted operating margin.

The Nasdaq-100 badge validates the growth story. The balance sheet still has to deliver on it.

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