NEW YORK, June 9, 2026, 06:02 EDT
Cerebras Systems was set to open higher on Tuesday, building on Monday’s rally. The move came after Wall Street banks started coverage on the fresh AI-chip IPO with upbeat calls. Shares traded at $246.53 premarket, up 3.66%. Cerebras closed Monday at $237.83, up 18.32%.
Cerebras is in focus as investors check demand for AI hardware names outside of Nvidia. The timing follows the end of the IPO quiet period, when banks involved in the offering were restricted from releasing research.
At least nine brokerages started coverage on Cerebras Monday, Reuters said, naming Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, Barclays and UBS among them. Morgan Stanley’s Joseph Moore and team pointed to strong demand for “fast, low-latency inference.” That’s when an AI model gives answers after it’s been trained. Reuters
Cerebras started trading on Nasdaq on May 14 with the ticker CBRS, wrapping its IPO the next day. The company moved 34.5 million Class A shares at $185 apiece after underwriters took up their whole option, for a total of around $6.38 billion before fees and expenses.
Cerebras isn’t positioning itself as just another GPU vendor. The GPU, or graphics processing unit, is the chip that has driven most of the AI surge. Cerebras takes a different tack, making a wafer-scale engine—bigger than standard processors—to reduce delays from networking lots of smaller chips.
Nvidia is the usual yardstick here. Cerebras claims its WSE-3 chip is 58 times bigger than a top GPU, and says it can do inference as much as 15 times faster than leading GPU-based systems. The company cautions the numbers depend on workload, setup and model.
OpenAI is part of the bullish argument. Cerebras disclosed in January a multi-year agreement with OpenAI to start deploying 750 megawatts of its wafer-scale hardware from 2026. Sachin Katti, who runs compute infrastructure at OpenAI, said Cerebras provides a “dedicated low-latency inference solution” for the platform. Cerebras
Amazon has a role here. In March, AWS and Cerebras said they would work together on a system that links AWS Trainium with Cerebras CS-3, using Amazon Bedrock. AWS’s David Brown called speed a “critical bottleneck” for tougher AI jobs. Cerebras
Cerebras has been a bumpy name since its debut. The stock priced at $185, started trading at $350, topped out at $386 that same day and finished at $311. It then slid down to $201 last Friday before bouncing back on Monday.
Concentration and execution remain key risks here. Barron’s said some of the caution on the stock is tied to Cerebras leaning heavily on one big OpenAI cloud deal, which makes up most of its $24.6 billion backlog for 2025, even with its AWS partnership bringing in other customers. If OpenAI orders change, delays hit deployments, or Nvidia and AMD push back harder, the scarcity premium driving CBRS could disappear fast.
Cerebras is being seen on Wall Street as one of the purer plays on rapid AI inference among listed names. That story is driving interest, but the shares remain jumpy.