CoreWeave (NASDAQ: CRWV) Earnings Live: What You Need to Follow
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CoreWeave's Revenue Soars 420% in Q1 2025 Amid AI Demand Surge
Shares are up after earnings, now trading at $70.51 as of 4:20 pm Eastern.
CoreWeave, Inc. reported strong financial results for the first quarter of 2025, driven by significant demand for its AI platform. The company achieved a revenue of $981.6 million, marking a substantial increase of 420% compared to the same quarter last year. Despite this growth, the company reported a net loss of $314.6 million, which widened from a $129.2 million loss in Q1 2024.
The increase in net loss was partly due to a significant rise in operating expenses, which included $177 million in stock-based compensation. The company also raised $1.4 billion through its IPO, supporting its strategy to expand its cloud computing capabilities. CEO Michael Intrator highlighted the company’s strategic deals, including a major agreement with OpenAI, and emphasized the robust demand for CoreWeave’s AI infrastructure. The company’s revenue backlog reached $25.9 billion, indicating strong future demand. CoreWeave plans to provide further guidance during its earnings call.
AI, HPC, and Beyond
CoreWeave’s business spans multiple verticals, served from the same GPU cloud infrastructure:
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AI/ML Training & Inference: Primary growth driver (open models, foundation model training)
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VFX, Rendering, Simulation: High-utilization, non-AI clients — 40% of GPU hours in Q4
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Enterprise & Financial Compute: Smaller but expanding, especially in modeling and SaaS hosting
Investors will want color on GPU allocation, client mix, and site-level utilization. Any early enterprise traction outside of AI would expand the TAM narrative.
Not Just AI Training — Also Dominating Rendering, VFX
Most investors see CoreWeave as an AI compute play. But buried in prior releases is that ~40% of Q4 GPU utilization came from non-AI workflows: VFX, simulations, and financial modeling.
“We’re winning share in rendering pipelines and simulation workloads that hyperscalers still price inefficiently.”
If the call includes logos or volume signals from these use cases, it may widen CoreWeave’s addressable story beyond the Nvidia hype cycle.
CoreWeave Now Up 84% Since April 21
Here’s an astonishing figure headed into CoreWeave’s earnings: the company is now up 84% since April 21st.
There has been company news in that time, such as the company renting NVIDIA’s newest GB200 NVL72 systems. Yet, the company now trades above many Wall Street estimates.
For example, on April 22nd, Stifel initiated at a price target of $55, Goldman Sachs at a price target of $54, and Citi at a target of $43.
CoreWeave shares are trading for $65 headed into earnings.
What to expect tonight
Analysts are looking for $857 million in Q1 revenue and an EPS loss of –$0.12. That would still reflect exponential growth — Q1 2024 revenue was just $16M — but scaling efficiently is now the bar.
Investors will be watching:
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Whether revenue clears $900M
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Gross margin expansion vs. last quarter
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Commentary on GPU supply and 2025 pipeline
This is CoreWeave’s first full quarter as a public company. If it misses the bar on revenue or signals cloud customer delays, the market may reassess recent valuation expansion.
CoreWeave (Nasdaq: CRVW), the fast-scaling GPU cloud provider, reports earnings this evening for the first time as a public company. Consensus estimates call for a –$0.12 loss per share on revenue of $857 million, though expectations vary widely given explosive topline growth.
The company posted $1.9 billion in revenue last year — up from just $229 million in 2023 — and is riding a wave of AI infrastructure demand. Backed by NVIDIA and major institutional investors, CoreWeave is positioned as a hyperscale alternative to AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud in GPU-intensive workloads.
Investors will be looking for signals on:
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GPU supply constraints (NVIDIA delivery timing)
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Gross margin sustainability amid rapid scale
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Visibility into 2025 revenue pipeline and potential capacity buildouts
Also in focus: data center expansion, particularly new site announcements or signed tenant deals in sectors like LLM training, VFX rendering, and AI inference.
This first earnings print will be closely watched as a benchmark for execution and visibility. With shares up more than 60% since the IPO, any signs of delayed scale or unexpected margin pressure could test sentiment.
Joel South covers large-cap stocks, dividend investing, and major market trends, with a focus on earnings analysis, valuation, and turning complex data into actionable insights for investors.
He brings more than 15 years of experience as an investor and financial journalist, including 12 years at The Motley Fool, where he served as an investment analyst, Bureau Chief, and later led the Fool.com investing news desk. He has also co-hosted an investing podcast and appeared across TV and radio discussing market trends.
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