New York, February 5, 2026, 11:23 EST — Regular session
- CoreWeave shares dropped 4.8% in late morning Nasdaq trading, following an 8.4% decline the previous day
- Company launches “CoreWeave ARENA,” enabling customers to trial AI workloads and expenses at production scale
- After a steep two-day slide, traders are hunting for the next major catalyst
CoreWeave shares dropped another 4.8% Thursday, hitting $78.47 by 11:13 a.m. EST. The stock oscillated between $76.35 and $84.20 amid rising trading volume.
This move is significant since CoreWeave occupies a central spot in the AI infrastructure sector—characterized by rapid growth, hefty expenditures, and a stock sensitive to minor sentiment changes. While product announcements provide a boost, investors remain eager for evidence that these new offerings generate steady revenue without overburdening the balance sheet.
On Thursday, the company unveiled CoreWeave ARENA, a new testing lab designed to help customers benchmark AI workloads on production-grade systems before scaling up. “CoreWeave ARENA closes that gap,” said Chen Goldberg, senior vice president of engineering. IDC research VP Dave McCarthy highlighted the “inference” phase—when a trained model processes live data—as a critical point where performance and design decisions can cause problems down the line. (CoreWeave)
CoreWeave said ARENA blends standardized evaluation with its software and cluster tools, like Mission Control and Slurm-based scheduling options for managing large compute jobs. Customers can also test newer Nvidia systems through this setup. Early trials reportedly delivered improved performance and reduced total cost of ownership (TCO), which covers both operating expenses and infrastructure overhead. (CoreWeave)
The stock was already falling before Thursday. CoreWeave closed Wednesday at $82.46, dropping 8.4% that day after finishing Tuesday at $90.06 — putting the shares about 13% lower over those two sessions, including Thursday’s decline. (CoreWeave)
CoreWeave held its IPO in March 2025, but only after trimming the offering size and setting the price under the initially indicated range, Reuters reported. Investors raised concerns over the hefty capital needed for expanding data-center capacity and the company’s reliance on a few major clients, notably Microsoft. (Reuters)
The company has doubled down on its relationship with Nvidia, the leading AI chip supplier. In late January, they announced an expanded partnership aimed at speeding up the development of “AI factories” and rolling out more Nvidia platforms. (CoreWeave)
The downside story here is nothing new: heavy capex, tight deadlines, and investors ready to punish any sign costs are outpacing demand. CoreWeave shares plunged after an August loss that came in worse than expected, Reuters reported. It’s a stark reminder of how fast sentiment can shift once margins and cash requirements take center stage. (Reuters)
Traders are keeping an eye on whether Thursday’s rebound from the lows sticks, and if the company can stay focused on execution over financing. A fresh update on the upcoming quarterly report schedule or any forward-looking comments on capacity and customer demand might shift the mood.
CoreWeave plans to join Nvidia’s GTC conference as an Elite Sponsor, even though the event falls outside its usual calendar. Nvidia has the conference scheduled for March 16–19 in San Jose—an event known for shaping expectations around chip launches and AI computing costs. (CoreWeave)