AI infrastructure firm CoreWeave (CRWV) remains under focus after mixed stock performance and analyst views. Shares declined 35% over the past year, yet they gained 48% year-to-date. Jim Cramer maintained a positive stance and cited strong execution in data center expansion.
CoreWeave, Inc. Class A Common Stock, CRWV
Cramer stated that CoreWeave leads peers in building advanced data center capacity at speed and scale. He compared the firm with Oracle and highlighted differences in execution and project timelines.
He said, “It has the best handle on the buildout,” while discussing current infrastructure demand. He also pointed to growing backlog expectations tied to future revenue visibility.
Cantor research reviewed company filings and identified stronger backlog trends than earlier estimates suggested. Cramer referenced this review and emphasized how backlog drives valuation in the sector.
He said the firm “trades on backlog,” while explaining investor focus on contracted workloads. He added that recent data suggests backlog may expand further in upcoming earnings reports.
Cramer described CoreWeave’s infrastructure as capable of supporting high-performance computing workloads. He linked that capability to demand from artificial intelligence developers and cloud clients.
Bernstein reiterated an Underperform rating on June 8 and set a $67 price target for CoreWeave shares. The firm based its view on valuation concerns and execution risks tied to rapid expansion.
The rating stands in contrast to bullish commentary from market figures like Cramer. However, Bernstein maintained its stance after reviewing financial and operational metrics.
Cantor’s review of debt documents suggested that CoreWeave secured about 90% of its 2027 commitments. This level of contracted capacity points to steady demand from enterprise clients.
Cramer cited this figure and linked it to long-term revenue visibility for the company. He said the commitment coverage strengthens confidence in future growth projections.
CoreWeave continues to focus on scaling data center infrastructure for AI workloads across the United States. The firm builds facilities designed for high-density computing and advanced GPU deployment.
Its business model centers on leasing compute power to technology firms and AI developers. This approach aligns with increasing demand for large-scale computing resources.
The stock performance reflects both growth expectations and concerns about capital requirements and debt exposure. While year-to-date gains reached 48%, long-term declines remain in focus.
Cramer maintained that execution remains the key factor for investors evaluating the company. He pointed to ongoing contract coverage and infrastructure delivery timelines as key data points.
The post Jim Cramer Backs CoreWeave as Hidden Backlog Data Emerges appeared first on Blockonomi.


