During his June 16 Mad Money broadcast, Jim Cramer argued that CoreWeave (CRWV) may be sitting on more locked-in customer commitments than currently reflected in market expectations — and the upcoming quarterly report could validate his thesis.
CoreWeave, Inc. Class A Common Stock, CRWV
Cramer referenced analysis from a third-party research firm that examined CoreWeave’s debt documentation, indicating the $99.4 billion backlog revealed in Q1 2026 might understate actual commitments. “The backlog may be much greater when they report,” he noted.
CRWV began trading Friday at $117.95. Shares have climbed 49% since the start of the year, though they remain approximately 28% below their level from twelve months ago. The 52-week trading band spans from $63.80 to $187.00.
The $99.4 billion contracted backlog reported as of March 31, 2026 represents a substantial figure by any measure. This total includes a $21 billion agreement with Meta inked in March alongside approximately $22.4 billion in combined commitments from OpenAI. CEO Michael Intrator described it as “the strongest bookings quarter in CoreWeave’s history.”
The growth trajectory leading to this milestone is equally remarkable. The backlog measured $30.1 billion in Q2 2025, advanced to $55.6 billion in Q3, reached $66.8 billion in Q4, before vaulting to nearly $100 billion in the most recent quarter.
Should Cramer’s information prove accurate and the debt documentation reveals additional contracted obligations, the number announced during the next earnings release — tentatively scheduled for approximately August 13, 2026 — could show meaningful upward movement.
Cramer framed it plainly: “If you want to put a rocket into space with a data center… you might at least peruse CoreWeave’s work, because that’s the one that knows how to build them fast.”
Revenue figures reinforce the rapid-deployment narrative. Q1 2026 sales reached $2.078 billion, representing a 112% year-over-year surge and exceeding analyst estimates by 6%. For the full 2025 calendar year, revenue totaled $5.131 billion, up 168% — positioning CoreWeave as the fastest cloud infrastructure provider in history to achieve $5 billion in annual sales.
The organization surpassed 1 GW of operational power capacity in Q1 2026 and maintains contracts for over 3.5 GW of power, with ambitions to exceed 8 GW by 2030. NVIDIA deployed $2 billion into Class A shares and established an $8.5 billion non-recourse delayed draw term loan facility. CoreWeave also earned designation as NVIDIA Exemplar Cloud for inference workloads utilizing GB200 NVL72 infrastructure.
Institutional ownership trends show growing conviction. Vanguard expanded its position by 275.6% during Q4 to 27.9 million shares valued at roughly $2 billion. Deutsche Bank increased its stake by more than 22,000%. Caitong International boosted holdings by 35.8%, elevating CRWV to its sixth-largest position at approximately $9.99 million.
The Q1 results also highlight why the optimistic narrative faces headwinds. CoreWeave recorded a $740 million net loss. Earnings per share landed at -$1.40, falling short of the -$1.20 consensus projection. Interest expenses doubled to $536 million, while capital expenditures consumed $7.695 billion in just one quarter. Total liabilities now measure $50.814 billion, producing a debt-to-equity ratio of 3.68.
CEO Michael Intrator divested 200,000 shares on June 16 at an average price of $116.65, generating $23.33 million in proceeds. CFO Nitin Agrawal sold 58,429 shares at $116.70 for $6.82 million. Both sales occurred through pre-established 10b5-1 trading arrangements.
A pending securities fraud class action lawsuit alleging undisclosed data center construction setbacks continues to linger.
Wall Street maintains a Moderate Buy consensus, derived from 20 Buy recommendations, 12 Hold ratings, and 2 Sell opinions. The mean price target stands at $131.52.
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