CoreWeave's IPO filing offers one of the clearest looks yet at the business model powering the AI boom. The Nvidia-backed cloud provider said revenue surged to about $1.9 billion in 2024 from roughly $229 million a year earlier, but it also posted a net loss of about $863 million, underscoring how expensive it is to turn GPU demand into a durable business.
Hypergrowth, With a Catch

The filing makes clear that AI monetization is no longer theoretical: customers are paying at scale for access to scarce compute. That matters because much of the recent AI narrative has depended on the assumption that demand for model training and inference would eventually translate into real infrastructure revenue. CoreWeave's numbers suggest that translation is happening.
But the same figures show the trade-off. CoreWeave has had to finance large purchases of Nvidia chips and data-center capacity before those assets can generate returns, leaving investors exposed to high capital expenditure, leverage and execution risk even as top-line growth accelerates. In other words, AI cloud may be a genuine growth market, but it is also a business that consumes enormous amounts of cash before it proves it can reliably produce it.
Concentration Risk Comes Into Focus

Microsoft accounted for more than 60 per cent of CoreWeave's revenue, making a single customer central to the investment case rather than a secondary concern. CoreWeave is also deeply tied to Nvidia for hardware supply, while its wider ecosystem includes OpenAI and financial backers such as BlackRock and Coatue. Those relationships add credibility, but they also highlight how dependent the company remains on a small circle of powerful counterparties.
That is what makes the prospectus so revealing: it strips away some of the abstraction around AI infrastructure and shows a business with real demand, real scale and real strategic value, but also one that must keep spending heavily just to stay in position. CoreWeave's IPO does not weaken the case for AI cloud. It clarifies that the opportunity is likely to be enormous, while the economics may remain punishing for far longer than the market wants to believe.