CoreWeave (NASDAQ:CRWV) gained 6.77% this week, closing at $96.04 on February 13.
That performance stands in sharp contrast to the S&P 500 (NYSEARCA:SPY), which dropped 1.29% over the same period. Year to date, CoreWeave has surged 34.12%, climbing from $71.61 to current levels, while the broader market has remained essentially flat.
Three distinct storylines explain what’s driving this AI infrastructure provider.
Earnings Coming on February 26th
CoreWeave’s most recent quarterly report showed meaningful progress on profitability. The company posted an adjusted loss of $0.08 per share in Q3 2025, beating estimates of -$0.35 by a substantial margin.
Revenue hit $1.36 billion, topping the $1.29 billion consensus. That marked the third consecutive revenue beat since the company’s March IPO.
The trajectory matters here. CoreWeave went from a $.61 per share loss in Q1 to this quarter’s beat. The company had missed earnings badly in its first two reports but beat in Q3.
This suggests the business model is stabilizing even as the company burns cash to build out capacity. With the next earnings report scheduled for February 26, investors are betting that momentum continues. Wall Street expects CoreWeave to report a $.49 loss next quarter, we’ll see if the company can extend its earnings beat streak to two straight quarters.
Class Action Lawsuits Create Legal Overhang
More than a dozen law firms filed coordinated securities fraud class actions against CoreWeave this week, alleging the company misrepresented its capacity to fulfill customer demand between March 28, 2025 and December 15, 2025. The complaints center on three issues: concealed reliance on a single third-party data center supplier, undisclosed construction delays at the Denton, Texas facility, and a terminated merger deal that management allegedly failed to properly disclose.
The upcoming March 13, 2026 lead plaintiff deadline creates near-term legal pressure, though the stock’s resilience suggests investors view these suits as nuisance litigation rather than existential threats. CoreWeave’s $49.9 billion market cap and $2 billion NVIDIA investment provide substantial financial cushion. Still, the allegations about capacity constraints cut directly against the company’s core value proposition as a scalable AI compute provider.
Analysts Stay Bullish Ahead of Earnings
CoreWeave trades at 11.6x trailing sales despite posting a -17.8% profit margin and negative -1.66 EPS. The company’s 30.18x EV/EBITDA multiple reflects aggressive growth expectations, but also explains why any operational missteps or capacity questions trigger legal scrutiny.
Analysts maintain a consensus target of $126.37, implying 32% upside from current levels, with 18 buy ratings against 11 holds.
The bull case hinges on whether CoreWeave can convert its massive backlog and hyperscaler partnerships into sustainable profits. The bear case points to mounting legal risks and questions about whether the company oversold its near-term capacity. February 26’s earnings call will likely address both narratives directly, making it the most important catalyst since the IPO.
One positive: Nebius (Nasdaq: NBIS) released Q4 earnings this week and missed on earnings and revenue. Yet, shares gained following the release. Investors are more focused on the future versus what the company delivered last quarter. This is to say, if you’re a CoreWeave investor, make sure to pay close attention to 2026 commentary when the company next reports. Wall Street expects $12 billion in 2026 sales and just a $.22 adjusted loss in 2026.