Investors question Nebius, CoreWeave amid Meta’s cloud compute plans Meta Platforms launched 'Meta Compute' to monetize surplus AI infrastructure, sending shares of Nebius Group and CoreWeave down 15% on July 1. The move threatens the neocloud providers, which rely on Meta for $48 billion in combined contracts, as Meta could become a competitor rather than a customer. Investors question Nebius, CoreWeave amid Meta’s cloud compute plans Meta's new 'Meta Compute' division could turn the company from biggest customer to biggest competitor for specialized AI cloud providers Meta Platforms is launching an internal division called “Meta Compute” aimed at monetizing its surplus AI infrastructure by offering raw compute power and hosted AI models to external developers. The news, first reported by Bloomberg, sent shares of both Nebius Group NBIS and CoreWeave CRWV tumbling roughly 15% in early trading on July 1. The reason for the panic is straightforward. Meta isn’t just any customer for these two companies. It’s the customer. Nebius signed a long-term AI infrastructure deal with Meta worth $27 billion back in March 2026. CoreWeave expanded its own Meta partnership in April to approximately $21 billion, bringing its total Meta contract value to $35.2 billion. When your largest revenue source starts building a business that looks a lot like yours, investors tend to get nervous. In this case, “nervous” translates to wiping out billions in market cap before lunch. The neocloud model under pressure Both Nebius and CoreWeave operate in what the industry calls the “neocloud” space, essentially GPU-as-a-service providers that specialize in renting out high-performance computing resources tailored for AI workloads. Meta’s combined contracts with Nebius and CoreWeave total $48 billion. The fear now is that Meta Compute could gradually absorb workloads that would otherwise flow to these specialized providers, turning a revenue pipeline into a competitive moat pointed in the wrong direction. Why some analysts aren’t panicking Despite the dramatic stock moves, several market observers pointed out that Meta’s decision to commercialize its surplus compute actually validates the thesis that demand for AI infrastructure continues to outstrip supply. If Meta is building so much GPU capacity that it has meaningful surplus to sell, that signals the overall market is growing, not shrinking. For Nebius and CoreWeave, diversification becomes the obvious strategic imperative. CoreWeave’s total Meta contracts of $35.2 billion represent a substantial portion of its business. Reducing that concentration by winning contracts from other hyperscalers, enterprises, and AI startups would meaningfully de-risk the business, even if Meta Compute becomes a formidable competitor in the medium term. What this means for investors Projects like Render, Akash, and io.net have positioned themselves as decentralized alternatives to exactly the kind of centralized GPU cloud that Meta is now entering. For investors in Nebius and CoreWeave specifically, the 15% drop looks like a classic overreaction to headline risk. The contracts are signed. The demand is real. But the competitive landscape just got meaningfully more complicated, and the long-term margin profiles of neocloud providers may need to be revised downward if they’re competing with a company that treats compute as a byproduct rather than a primary business. The key metric to watch going forward is customer concentration. If Nebius and CoreWeave can demonstrate meaningful revenue diversification away from Meta over the next few quarters, the sell-off will look like a buying opportunity. If Meta remains their dominant counterparty while simultaneously selling compute to Meta’s competitors, the structural tension in that relationship could become untenable. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .