CoreWeave stock jumped 6.5% in pre-market trading on Monday, hitting $116.60, as a string of catalysts landed at once.
CoreWeave, Inc. Class A Common Stock, CRWV
The main trigger was the company’s investment in Tensormesh, an AI inference optimization startup that closed a $20 million extended seed round. That brings Tensormesh’s total funding to $24.5 million. CoreWeave joined Nvidia’s venture arm NVentures and AMD Ventures in backing the round.
Tensormesh’s platform is built around KV caching technology, which the company says can cut latency and GPU costs by up to 10 times. For CoreWeave, that’s directly relevant to its core business of GPU-powered cloud infrastructure.
CoreWeave’s co-founder and Chief Development Officer Brannin McBee said Tensormesh is “working to solve infrastructure challenges that will ultimately impact the economics and scalability of AI.”
The move signals CoreWeave pushing further into the AI software stack, not just hardware.
The second big catalyst is index-related. On May 26, FTSE Russell named CoreWeave as a new entrant to the Russell 3000 Index, effective after market close on June 26.
Index inclusion matters because funds tracking Russell indexes are required to rebalance. That means automatic buying of CRWV as the date approaches, adding fresh demand to the stock.
Analyst sentiment is also supportive. The average 12-month price target sits at $138.56, with 22 analysts rating it a buy.
CoreWeave’s year-to-date price performance stands at nearly 53%, and it currently carries a market cap of $59.76 billion.
Also announced Monday, CoreWeave said it became the first AI cloud provider to deploy and validate Nvidia’s Vera Rubin NVL72 system.
The company claims the system delivers up to 10 times better inference per watt, needs up to one-fourth fewer GPUs, and costs one-tenth per million tokens compared to Blackwell.
To support the deployment, CoreWeave built custom infrastructure components including Racky, a unified rack control appliance, and Valvey, a liquid cooling management system.
The Vera Rubin platform consists of five specialized racks that function as an integrated AI supercomputer designed for agentic workloads.
It supports 1.6 Tb/s of backend bandwidth per GPU and runs on both NVIDIA Quantum-X800 InfiniBand and Spectrum-X Ethernet.
Beyond the hardware news, CoreWeave’s contract backlog is reported to be nearing $100 billion, pointing to strong long-term demand for its infrastructure.
The company also recently closed a $3.1 billion AI infrastructure loan facility — the first publicly syndicated high-performance computing infrastructure-backed financing vehicle. It was rated Ba2 by Moody’s and BB+ by Fitch.
The broader market provided a mild tailwind, with the S&P 500 up 0.2%, the Dow up 0.7%, and the Nasdaq up 0.2%.
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