Cerebras delivers monster IPO pop as traders clamor for fresh AI investment opportunitiesCerebras delivers monster IPO pop as traders clamor for fresh AI investment opportunities
If you had any doubt whether traders are hungering for more AI trades to bite into, yesterday’s IPO of Cerebras is your answer.
Cerebras Systems increased the expected price (and size) of its long-awaited initial public offering from a range of $115 to $125 at the start of the week all the way to $185, raising $5.5 billion.
But it opened at a whopping $350 in its Nasdaq debut, giving the company a market cap of at least $75 billion — and more than that on a fully diluted basis.
- “Pretty good day, huh?” CEO Andrew Feldman said in an interview on Bloomberg TV, after being told the stock was indicated to open at $350.
- The IPO was more than 25x oversubscribed, per Feldman. With investor appetite like this, it’s little wonder that SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic are champing at the bit to join Cerebras in making this leap.
- Cerebras, an AI chip designer, counts OpenAI and Amazon among its customers. Its offerings aim to provide more of a one-stop shop for AI compute rather than a highly specialized key ingredient in the data center stew. That is, its wafers are physically much larger than GPUs, which can unlock more efficiencies in moving around information.
“There’s just an extraordinary demand right now for fast inference,” Feldman said. “We’re the fastest, not by a little bit, but by more than an order of magnitude — we’re 15x faster than the next nearest competitor.”
And as CEO of this newly public company, which closed its first day of trading at ~$312,Feldman himself is about $3 billion richer, thanks to his roughly 5% stake.
The Takeaway
There’s a massive investor appetite for AI semiconductor plays that offer a credible alternative to Nvidia, and while it was a long and winding road for Cerebras, the timing seems finally right to IPO… if you’re an AI-related company, that is. Three crypto firms just paused IPO plans, as the “appetite has been sold to AI.”
Meanwhile, the excitement for SpaceX’s IPO keeps growing, just like the valuations for the two biggest nonpublic AI companies, OpenAI and Anthropic, which are each nearing $1 trillion.A
Perplexity:
Here’s a practical ranked watchlist by AI exposure, focused on where the article suggests the durable money may flow.
Highest-conviction AI infrastructureHighest-conviction AI infrastructure
Cloud and platform layerCloud and platform layer
Secondary beneficiariesSecondary beneficiaries
Higher-risk private-market signalsHigher-risk private-market signals
How I’d rank the themeHow I’d rank the theme
If I had to simplify it, I’d group the opportunity like this:
The key takeaway is that the article supports owning the infrastructure behind AI more strongly than trying to predict which chatbot brand wins outright.https://ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws.com/web/direct-files/attachments/80009512/003667cb-5595-46ae-bebb-bf6f6e01deb4/Who-Owns-the-Future-of-AI.pdf
Would you like a version narrowed to only large-cap stocks, or a more aggressive list including mid-cap names?
For a more aggressive AI basket, I’d tilt toward higher-beta names that can move sharply if AI spending stays hot.
Aggressive AI namesAggressive AI names
More speculative angleMore speculative angle
If you want the most aggressive approach, I’d focus on:
How to size itHow to size it
A more aggressive AI basket usually works better as a small sleeve rather than a core holding. The risk is that these names can fall hard if AI capex slows, margins compress, or the market rotates away from the theme.
A simple aggressive split could be:
I’d keep the speculative names smaller than the infrastructure names, because the volatility is much higher.
Nothing about the construction companies?
#1479985
They have too much overhead, margins are thin
But they will get massive revenue from this AI build out
and yet you recommended passing on them
You concluded pass on construction companies in your post