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CoreWeave Stock Falls After CEO Michael Intrator Sells $7.2 Million in Shares
30 March 2026
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CoreWeave Stock Falls After CEO Michael Intrator Sells $7.2 Million in Shares

NEW YORK, March 30, 2026, 16:56 EDT

CoreWeave shares slid $5.67 to $69.15 on Monday as investors reacted to a fresh SEC filing: CEO Michael Intrator recently unloaded about $7.2 million worth of stock in pre-arranged sales. That price tag is a far cry from the $85 to $88 range Intrator fetched on those trades, leaving the AI cloud firm’s shares lagging well behind.

This disclosure lands as CoreWeave looks for investors willing to back one of the industry’s most aggressive expansion drives. Back in February, the company pegged its capital spending for this year at $30 billion to $35 billion. Its backlog stands at $66.8 billion—revenue under contract but not yet booked—which hinges on new data centers hitting their deadlines.

CoreWeave, a so-called neocloud focused on AI cloud infrastructure, rents out high-powered Nvidia hardware for AI model training and inference. The New Jersey-based company made its public debut in March 2025 with shares priced at $40. Even after Monday’s drop, the stock remains above its IPO price.

According to a Form 4 filing, Intrator unloaded 82,456 Class A shares on March 25. That tally includes 50,000 shares disposed through Omnadora Capital LLC. Weighted-average prices fell between roughly $85.60 and $88.25.

The trades took place under a Rule 10b5-1 plan set up May 23, 2025, according to the filing. These plans let insiders lock in sales ahead of time. After unloading shares, Intrator retained 5,666,501 Class A shares in his direct account. He also held additional Class B shares—convertible to Class A on a one-to-one basis—listed separately in the same filing.

In a separate filing last week, Chief Development Officer Brannin McBee’s Canis Major 2025 GRAT and Canis Minor 2025 GRAT converted 22,915 Class B shares into Class A, then immediately sold them for approximately $1.9 million. The transaction, like the prior one, was executed under a Rule 10b5-1 plan, the filing noted.

CoreWeave insists the increased spending is intentional. “We made the decision to go ahead and to build faster so that we can deliver more infrastructure,” Intrator told Reuters back in February. He said the bigger investment should position the company to secure long-term contracts. Reuters

CoreWeave is under the microscope as investors weigh it against rivals. Earlier this month, Reuters reported that Nebius landed an AI infrastructure agreement with Meta, potentially valued at $27 billion across five years. Meanwhile, CoreWeave’s competition stretches to Microsoft and Amazon Web Services, both vying for the same customers hunting for AI compute.

Still, insider sales set in advance don’t shift CoreWeave’s near-term outlook. The bigger issue remains: can the company actually fund its expansion, keep margins intact, and ramp up output quickly enough to convert its backlog into sales? That’s the knot Russ Mould at AJ Bell pointed out, noting investors were “concerned about the long-term economics and how the company plans to fund the investment.” Reuters

Monday’s drop didn’t knock the stock below its $40 IPO price set in March 2025. Shares were still sitting far under the most recent insider sale levels, keeping attention on management’s share disposals while investors watch to see if CoreWeave’s aggressive spending will deliver results.

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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