Free NewsletterPro Login
S&P 500 6,287 +0.42%
DOW 44,521 -0.18%
NASDAQ 21,103 +0.71%
S&P 500 +12.4%
Briefs Finance Fund +24.8%
JOIN THE FUND →

Cerebras Just Pulled Off The Biggest U.S. Tech IPO Since Uber

Published May 14, 2026
[tts_player]
Share:
Summary:
  • Cerebras opened at $350 on Nasdaq Thursday after pricing shares at $185, valuing the AI chip maker above $100 billion.
  • The deal raised $5.55 billion, the biggest U.S. tech offering since Uber went public in 2019.
  • A single UAE university made up 62% of Cerebras's 2025 revenue.

Cerebras opened at $350 on Nasdaq Thursday after pricing shares at $185 just hours earlier. The first public day was already the biggest one - and yet the filing tucks away a detail that usually kills an IPO before it can list.

One Customer Made Up 62% Of Revenue

A single UAE school - the Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence - made up 62% of Cerebras's revenue last year. Add in Microsoft-backed G42, another UAE customer, and the customer mix gets even tighter.

Most companies tuck numbers like that into the risk section and watch buyers back away. Cerebras did it on the way to a $100 billion debut.

This isn't even the first time the deal nearly died over it. Cerebras filed to go public in 2024 and pulled the filing a little over a year later after the prospectus came under heavy scrutiny over its reliance on G42.

The company refiled this April with a wider customer mix - 24% from G42 last year, down from 85% the year before. Revenue jumped 76% to $510 million in 2025, and the company swung from a $481.6 million loss to $88 million in profit.

CEO Andrew Feldman put it plainly to CNBC: "There's some whales out there, there's some really big customers. That is one of the characteristics of this market."

If you want plain-English breakdowns of moves like this every morning, join Market Briefs - five minutes a day, with a free investing masterclass when you sign up.

The AI IPO Pipeline Is Stacked

The U.S. had only 31 tech IPOs in 2025, down from 121 four years earlier. Cerebras just raised $5.55 billion in one offering.

The line behind it is long. Elon Musk's SpaceX - fresh off its February merger with xAI - is preparing a share sale, while OpenAI and Anthropic could go public later this year.

Cerebras was the test balloon, and it floated.

The company is also using the listing as leverage, moving away from selling hardware boxes and toward cloud access to its chips. That puts it head-to-head with Google, Microsoft, Oracle, and CoreWeave.

A $20 billion cloud deal with OpenAI signed in January runs through 2028. Amazon Web Services is now putting Cerebras chips inside its data centers, and both Amazon and OpenAI hold warrants on the stock.

Nvidia Is Already Responding

Cerebras's pitch is that its chips beat Nvidia's on speed and price because of how they're built. Nvidia noticed - in December it paid $20 billion for assets from a similar startup called Groq, then rolled out Groq-based products months later.

Investors aren't waiting around. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF - a basket of chip stocks - is up 58% this year, with Intel, AMD, and Micron all posting triple-digit gains.

What To Watch

Cerebras is now priced for the AI boom to keep going. Two things will tell the story: whether customer mix shifts as the Amazon and OpenAI deals scale, and whether Nvidia lets Cerebras eat into its market without a fight.

The whales filled the tank - and now the company has to find more of them.

Sign up for Market Briefs for the daily read on the market plus a free 45-minute investing course as a bonus.

Disclosure

Recent News

1 2 3 30

Get Market Briefs delivered to your inbox every morning for free!

No fluff. No noise. No politics. Just finance news you can read in 5 minutes.

Blogs

June 29, 2026
Portfolio Diversification: Why Putting All Your Eggs in One Basket Destroys Wealth
  • Real diversification means spreading investments across all 11 economic sectors plus bonds, alternatives, and cash so no single bet can sink the portfolio.
  • Different sectors perform at different times, so a diversified portfolio captures upswings while smoothing the brutal drawdowns that wipe out concentrated bets.
  • Total market index funds offer the simplest path to diversification, and annual rebalancing is what keeps the structure working over time.
Read More
June 29, 2026
Non Taxable Income: What It Is and Why It Matters
  • Non taxable income is money you receive that you don't owe income tax on.
  • The tax code treats workers, investors, and business owners very differently, and investors often come out ahead.
  • Learning how income is taxed is a quiet superpower for keeping more of what you earn.
Read More
June 29, 2026
Semiconductor Stocks: A Simple Guide for Investors
  • Semiconductor stocks are companies that design and make computer chips, the brains inside nearly every modern device.
  • The AI boom has turned chips into one of the market's most important and most watched groups.
  • They offer big growth potential, but come with high valuations and a notoriously cyclical history.
Read More
June 25, 2026
How Stocks Work: A Simple Guide for Beginners
  • A stock is a slice of ownership in a company - buy one, and you own a piece of the business.
  • You make money two ways: the share price rising over time, and dividends paid to shareholders.
  • The simplest path for most beginners is buying into the whole market through a low-cost index fund.
Read More
June 25, 2026
Stop Loss vs Stop Limit: What's the Difference?
  • A stop loss order sells your stock once it hits a trigger price, prioritizing getting you out.
  • A stop limit order only sells within a price range you set, prioritizing price over a guaranteed exit.
  • The trade-off: a stop loss almost always executes; a stop limit might not if the price moves too fast.
Read More
June 25, 2026
Energy Stocks: A Simple Guide for Investors
  • Energy stocks are companies that produce and supply the power the world runs on, from oil and gas to newer sources.
  • They make up one of the 11 sectors of the market and tend to move with energy prices and big-picture shifts.
  • Like any sector, the key is diversification and understanding the forces driving demand.
Read More
June 18, 2026
What Is a Stop Loss Order? A Simple Guide
  • A stop loss order automatically sells a stock once it falls to a price you set.
  • It's a tool to cap losses or lock in gains without watching the market all day.
  • It works best for active strategies, and can backfire if used carelessly on long-term holdings.
Read More
June 18, 2026
Best S&P 500 Index Fund: How to Choose One
  • The best S&P 500 index fund for most investors is simply the cheapest, most established one that tracks the index well.
  • Funds like VOO, IVV, and SPY all hold the same 500 companies, so the biggest difference is the fee.
  • Pick one, automate your buys, and let time do the heavy lifting.
Read More
June 17, 2026
What Are Penny Stocks? Risks and Rewards Explained
  • Penny stocks are very low-priced shares of very small companies, often trading for just a few dollars or less.
  • They promise huge gains but carry huge risks: low liquidity, high failure rates, and wild price swings.
  • Most investors are better served by quality companies and funds than by chasing cheap shares.
Read More
June 17, 2026
Best Stocks for Beginners With Little Money
  • The best stocks for beginners with little money usually aren't individual stocks at all - they're low-cost index funds.
  • You can start with $100 or less and use small, regular investments to build wealth over time.
  • Focus on diversification and consistency, not on picking the next big winner.
Read More
1 2 3 24
Share via
Copy link