New York, June 20, 2026, 17:03 EDT
- Cerebras Systems ended regular trading June 18 at $234.71, up 9.85%. Nasdaq was closed June 19 for Juneteenth.
- The stock is up about 9.7% for the shortened week after Thursday’s rally. Still, it trades far under its $350 opening print at debut.
- Cerebras will report its first-quarter results after the bell on June 23, and hold an earnings call at 5 p.m. ET.
Cerebras Systems Inc. goes into its first earnings as a public company with shares back over $230 after a big move higher Thursday. The stock still trades well under where it opened on Nasdaq debut.
The market is closed for the weekend following the Juneteenth holiday, giving investors a break until trading starts again next week. Nasdaq says June 19, 2026, will be a day off for Juneteenth and keeps its standard U.S. stock market hours Monday to Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Eastern.
Cerebras ended Thursday at $234.71, up 9.85%. Shares moved between $215.20 and $245.24 through the day. That wrapped up a trimmed week for trading, as the stock rose from $214.00 at the previous Friday’s close. There was no regular session on Friday.
The coming week is set to carry more weight than the last. Cerebras will post first-quarter results after the bell on Tuesday, June 23, with a conference call scheduled for 2 p.m. Pacific, 5 p.m. Eastern.
The stock sits roughly 27% higher than its $185 IPO price. An initial public offering is when a company first sells shares to public investors. But it started trading at $350 on day one, so the chart doesn’t just show this week’s rally.
Bull case is straightforward: Cerebras is going after a different AI chip market with its wafer-scale engine chips. These are much bigger processors, about the size of a dinner plate, set up to compete with GPU systems. GPUs are the go-to for AI and Nvidia is the main player. Joseph Moore and the Morgan Stanley team said the need for “fast, low-latency inference”—actually running AI models after training—is rising. Reuters
Wall Street has left space for that view. Reuters said this month that at least nine brokerages started coverage on Cerebras after the IPO quiet period. Citigroup set a 12-month target of $340, according to LSEG. Morgan Stanley analysts labeled Cerebras a “unique chance” to back an AI processor firm that can move early against Nvidia. Reuters
Cerebras has some big-name customers, according to Reuters. The company lists Amazon and OpenAI as clients. Back in January, Cerebras said it signed a multi-year deal with OpenAI to put 750 megawatts of its wafer-scale systems into use starting in 2026. CEO Andrew Feldman told Reuters at the IPO, “the amount we use them will explode” as AI models improve. Reuters
Mixed signals here. The stock trades above its IPO price but well under where it opened, showing buyers haven’t left but the first-day action ran too far for most. Next up is earnings. That’s when management gets grilled on turning deals and tech into sales, margin, and cash flow instead of just selling the story.
But the risks are clear. If order conversion slows, losses widen, or the customer base remains too concentrated, the premium can disappear fast. Nicholas Smith, senior research analyst at Renaissance Capital, told Reuters the IPO price made sense compared to 2028 sales and EBITDA, but said, “at the current price, it is quite high even out to 2028.” Reuters also noted that G42 made up more than 85% of Cerebras revenue in 2024, before Amazon and OpenAI joined as customers. Reuters
On Monday, trading in the stock could be driven more by how investors want to position ahead of Tuesday’s results than by new developments from the company. By Tuesday evening, investors will see if Cerebras still commands a premium as a rare AI chip play, or if public market pressure is catching up.