AMSTERDAM, May 11, 2026, 17:17 CEST
Nebius Group surged in U.S. trading Monday, as shares jumped to $190.98—up $13.93 on the session. The Amsterdam-based AI cloud firm even hit $196.39 earlier in the day, flirting with new highs just ahead of its quarterly report. That update, due in two days, will show if Nebius’s ambitious data-center push is enough for investors. Nasdaq: NBIS has now extended a rally that Yahoo Finance recently pegged as a 14.6% gain, driven by Nvidia’s support and big cloud contract wins.
Timing is key here. Nebius plans to release its first-quarter results Wednesday, May 13, ahead of the U.S. market open. The company has set its call for 8:00 a.m. ET—that’s 2:00 p.m. Central European Time.
Revenue isn’t the only issue. The bigger focus is capex — that’s capital expenditure, money going into data centers, chips, and other long-term bets. Nebius has now detailed one of the more aggressive AI infrastructure buildouts seen in the public market.
On Monday, Seeking Alpha contributor Uttam Dey called the upcoming Q1 report “critical,” saying investors want to see how management handles the $18 billion capex goal and whether Q1 spending lands between $3.5 billion and $5 billion. He also flagged ARR—annualized recurring revenue—targets of $7 billion to $9 billion for Nebius as a key watch point. ARR tracks ongoing, repeat revenue. Seeking Alpha
Wall Street’s shifting too. B of A Securities bumped its Nebius price target up to $205 from $175 on Monday, sticking with a buy call. Benzinga’s numbers show analysts leaning bullish overall, but the consensus price target for Nebius from 13 analysts lands at $166.18.
Nebius stands out as a public face of the “neocloud” trend—these are specialist cloud outfits focused on leasing out Nvidia-powered compute muscle to AI startups and big tech, skipping the all-purpose cloud model. Reuters has pointed to Nebius and CoreWeave as neocloud players gaining real traction via splashy supply agreements. In March, Nvidia committed $2 billion for an 8.3% slice of Nebius, with CEO Jensen Huang pitching Nebius as building the kind of AI cloud needed for the “agentic era.” Reuters
The rally hinges on the contract news. Back in March, Reuters reported Meta struck a deal to buy $12 billion in AI computing capacity from Nebius through 2027, with an option to tack on another $15 billion over five years if that capacity isn’t snapped up elsewhere—raising the total to $27 billion. Prior to Meta, Nebius inked a $17.4 billion agreement with Microsoft. CEO Arkady Volozh called the Meta pact a way to “accelerate the build-out” of Nebius’s core AI cloud business. Reuters
On the funding front, Nebius wrapped up a $4.34 billion convertible debt raise back in March. Chief Communications Officer Tom Blackwell told Reuters the company’s cash position was strong enough to cover its planned $16 billion to $20 billion in capital spending for 2026. Roughly 60% of that growth, he said, should come from customer prepayments—primarily Microsoft and Meta—with the balance filled out by equity and debt.
Wednesday’s results matter, given the prior numbers. Nebius notched $227.7 million in fourth-quarter revenue—over six times what it reported a year ago—but still fell short of LSEG forecasts. Net loss swelled to $249.6 million, and capital expenditures jumped: $2.1 billion, up sharply from $416 million. “Demand from enterprises and AI native customers continues to outpace supply,” Volozh said. Reuters
Nebius isn’t stopping at hardware—they’ve moved into software, too. On May 1, the company announced it would buy Eigen AI for roughly $643 million in a mix of cash and Class A shares. Nebius argued the acquisition bolsters its Token Factory platform, aimed squarely at inference—the live running of trained AI models. “AI builders are in a ‘capacity-scarcity world,’” co-founder and chief business officer Roman Chernin said. Eigen AI CEO Ryan Hanrui Wang described the deal as a chance to cut down friction when deploying models. Nebius
Bullish sentiment isn’t just a recent thing. On Friday, The Motley Fool’s Micah Zimmerman noted Nebius had climbed over 35% since the start of May as of May 6. Zimmerman flagged over $20 billion in signed contracts, a target to lift ARR to the $7 billion–$9 billion range, and heavy reliance on demand from Microsoft and Meta.
But there’s not much slack in the timeline. In a securities filing related to the Eigen deal, Nebius flagged a handful of risks: integrating acquisitions, macro and geopolitical headwinds, tech shifts, its grip on clients, plus the challenge of raising more capital to fuel expansion. Miss a buildout deadline, see slower customer prepayments, or dial back on capex—any one of those could knock the legs out from under the case that’s currently priced into the stock.
At this point, the market’s writing checks for velocity—bigger power, extra GPUs, locked-in capacity. The question for Wednesday’s report: can Nebius translate all that speed into numbers investors are willing to back?