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CoreWeave stock drops 8% as Rule 144 sale notice lands; traders brace for Thursday open
5 February 2026
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CoreWeave stock drops 8% as Rule 144 sale notice lands; traders brace for Thursday open

New York, Feb 4, 2026, 20:04 EST — Market closed.

CoreWeave shares dropped Wednesday, and the selling momentum carried through to the close. Traders flagged new signs of offloading, alongside a fresh wave of lawsuit notices.

The Nasdaq-listed AI infrastructure company dropped 8.44% to close at $82.46, continuing a steep slide from last week. This puts the stock beneath the $87.20 per share Nvidia paid for its recent stake last month.

Timing is everything. CoreWeave now trades as a high-beta stand-in for the AI boom, and investors have shown little appetite for anything that hints at insider selling or legal complications.

Tech stocks showed signs of unease on Wednesday, with the Nasdaq Composite dropping 1.51% amid ongoing questions about the depth of the recent software and AI selloff. James St. Aubin, CIO at Ocean Park Asset Management, described the decline as “a manifestation of an awakening to the disruptive power of AI.” Reuters

CoreWeave kicked off trading at $89.52, climbed to a peak of $91.95, then slipped to an intraday low of $81.07 before clawing back some ground.

After the bell, a Rule 144 filing dated Wednesday revealed plans to sell 281,250 common shares via Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, with a total market value near $25.3 million. Rule 144 permits certain holders to offload restricted or control shares once conditions are met; this filing signals intent, not completed sales.

On Tuesday, plaintiff law firm Bleichmar Fonti & Auld announced a securities fraud class action lawsuit against CoreWeave and several top executives. Investors have until March 13 to seek lead plaintiff status. The suit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey.

Since Nvidia pumped $2 billion into CoreWeave to boost U.S. data center capacity, the stock has swung sharply. The deal initially pushed shares higher. “Nvidia is the leading and most requested computing platform at every phase of AI,” said CoreWeave CEO Michael Intrator when the investment was announced. Reuters

Investors betting on AI infrastructure know the downside all too well: operational hiccups and heavy capital demands clashing with a market suddenly wary of execution risks. CoreWeave’s shares dropped in November after the company slashed its annual revenue forecast, blaming delays from a crucial data center partner. Barclays analysts flagged the quarter as exposing “operational risk.” Reuters

The immediate question now: will Wednesday’s drop extend into another sharp fall at Thursday’s open, or can the stock find a footing after the selling tied to filings and legal news eases? Heavy volume adds to the uncertainty.

Traders are now focused on potential new SEC selling notices and updates on the March 13 lead-plaintiff deadline, which plaintiff firms have been highlighting. They’ll also be tuning in for fresh clues on capacity delivery and spending as the market gears up for mid-February earnings.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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