CoreWeave (CRWV) stock is getting fresh attention after a bullish call from Bank of America.
The firm sees a much bigger opportunity ahead, driven by demand for AI infrastructure drastically outpacing supply.
That imbalance is starting to shape the entire industry.
As more companies race to build and deploy AI models, access to compute, power, and infrastructure is becoming one of the biggest bottlenecks.
That puts companies like CoreWeave in a unique position. The question now is whether the shortage lasts long enough for CoreWeave to become a business with long-term staying power.
CoreWeave valuation snapshot
- Market cap: $39.3 billion
- Enterprise value: $66.0 billion
- Share price: $71
- Analysts’ avg target price: $120 (69% implied upside)
- 2-Year expected annual revenue growth: 112.4%
- Forward EV/revenue ratio: 5.3x
Source:TIKR.com
Bank of America sees a long runway as AI demand outpaces supply
CoreWeave stock moved higher after Bank of America reinstated coverage with a Buy rating and a $100 price target, pointing to strong demand for AI infrastructure and a broadening customer base.
“We believe CoreWeave is well positioned to capture share of the $79bn AI infrastructure as a service (Iaas) market, given 1) sustained demand for AI compute; 2) its proprietary software optimized for AI workloads; and 3) strategic alliances with top-tier AI-native companies such as Nvidia and OpenAI,” said analysts led by Bank of America analyst Tal Liani.
Analysts expect demand for AI compute to dramatically exceed supply for years. That creates a favorable setup for companies supplying infrastructure, especially those tied closely to major players like Nvidia and OpenAI.
Tal highlighted CoreWeave’s positioning in a rapidly expanding market, noting the company could gain share in what is expected to become a $79 billion AI infrastructure-as-a-service opportunity.
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More importantly, the firm believes supply constraints are not going away anytime soon.
Analysts noted that capacity shortages in compute, power, and other resources are likely to persist for years, and they do not expect the supply-and-demand imbalance to ease before 2029.
Backlog gives rare visibility into future demand
CoreWeave’s backlog climbed to $66.8 billion at the end of 2025, with CFO Nitin Agrawal noting this was “More than four times where we began the year, providing exceptional visibility as we scale into 2026 and beyond.”
This is an unusually large backlog for a company that generated a little over $5 billion in full-year 2025 revenue.
It also explains why management is pressing ahead so aggressively. A backlog of that size strengthens CoreWeave’s hand with suppliers, data center partners, and financing counterparties, as customers reserve compute capacity well in advance.
However, delays in power availability, hardware delivery, or customer ramp schedules remain key risks, as they would leave CoreWeave carrying financing and depreciation costs on a rapidly expanding infrastructure base while cash generation lags.
That makes backlog quality just as important as backlog size. Investors will likely need more clarity over time on customer concentration, contract duration, pricing, and how quickly that $66.8 billion should convert relative to the company’s current revenue base.
AI buildout is industry-wide; financing is not
CoreWeave’s spending surge reflects a broader AI infrastructure race. Demand for compute remains strong, and companies like Nvidia, Microsoft, and Alphabet are all investing heavily to expand capacity.
That validates the opportunity, but it doesn’t reduce the financing risk.
CoreWeave is leaning aggressively into AI demand, with a $30-$35 billion capital expenditure plan for 2026, more than double its 2025 spending. Management is building capacity against demand that it says is already booked.
However, the challenges are already showing up in the numbers. Big Tech can fund these buildouts with diversified cash flow. CoreWeave is trying to scale to meet that same demand with a far more levered balance sheet and already heavy interest expense.
In Q4, revenue rose 110% year over year to $1.57 billion, but the company still posted a net loss of $452 million. CoreWeave also carries $21.4 billion of total debt against just $3.3 billion in shareholders’ equity.
Strong demand for AI compute is driving Big Tech to fund massive infrastructure buildouts.
Depreciation is increasing as new infrastructure comes online, and financing costs remain heavy, with $388 million in interest expense in Q4 alone.
The same market that supports its growth case also leaves little room for missteps.
Competition adds another pressure point. As more industry capacity comes online, pricing could tighten.
What could drive shares higher
- Faster backlog conversion lifts revenue ahead of fixed costs and improves earnings power
- Higher utilization spreads depreciation across more billable workloads and supports margins
- Longer-duration customer commitments improve cash-flow visibility and ease financing pressure
- Better debt funding or refinancing reduces interest expense and lets more growth reach equity holders
- A more diversified customer base lowers contract risk and supports valuation
What could pressure the stock
- Delays in power, hardware, or site readiness slow revenue while costs keep rising
- Heavy depreciation outpaces monetization and keeps reported losses elevated
- Interest expense stays high as borrowing expands, limiting equity value creation
- Customer concentration leaves results exposed if a major tenant delays ramp plans
- Aggressive spending leads to tighter credit terms or equity issuance
- More industry capacity weakens AI compute pricing and cuts returns on new infrastructure
CoreWeave’s key takeaways
CoreWeave sits in one of the most attractive positions in the market, with strong customer demand and a clear role in the infrastructure layer powering AI.
CoreWeave needs to convert demand into revenue quickly, keep utilization high, and manage its balance sheet as it scales. If it does, the current buildout can support a much larger business.
If not, growth alone won’t be enough to drive returns for shareholders.