Nebius Group stock fell sharply on Wednesday, losing more than 13% as two separate forces hit the AI infrastructure company at the same time.
Nebius Group N.V., NBIS
The first blow came from Bloomberg, which reported that Meta Platforms is building a cloud business to sell excess AI computing capacity to outside customers. That news sent NBIS down around 10% in premarket trading alone.
Meta’s internal effort, called Meta Compute, is designed to generate revenue from the company’s growing AI infrastructure. It would put Meta in direct competition with neocloud providers — a category that includes Nebius.
One option on the table for Meta is selling access to hosted AI models, similar to how AWS Bedrock works. This would include Meta’s own Muse Spark models, with developers paying for access while Meta runs the underlying data centers and chips.
Meta is also considering selling raw computing capacity. Both options represent a move by the social media giant into a space Nebius has built its business around.
NBIS stock was already priced for perfection heading into Wednesday. The stock is up nearly 230% year-to-date, giving it a market cap of around $69.5 billion — a level that left little room for negative surprises.
The second hit came from the macro side. A stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs report pushed Federal Reserve rate cut expectations further out, weighing on high-growth, capital-intensive tech names.
When rate expectations rise, investors tend to sell richly valued growth stocks first. Nebius, with its heavy spending and rising debt load, fit that profile.
The sell-off was also partly a “sell the news” reaction. Nebius had recently been added to the Nasdaq-100, a milestone that often triggers a short-term price peak as index-tracking buying fades.
Nebius runs an AI cloud platform, and its long-term story rests on growing recurring revenue — a sign that customers are staying and providing more predictable cash flows.
But the business requires heavy ongoing capital spending. Any delays or cost overruns could squeeze margins at a time when the market is becoming less patient with capital-intensive growth stories.
That tension is now in sharper focus. Meta entering the space as a well-funded competitor raises the stakes for every neocloud operator.
Nebius is not alone in feeling the pain. Other hyperscaler-adjacent and neocloud stocks also pulled back on the Meta news.
The average daily trading volume for NBIS sits at over 17 million shares, and Wednesday’s session was shaping up to be far above that.
As of the latest data, NBIS carries a “Buy” technical sentiment signal, though the stock’s valuation and macro headwinds have clearly rattled investor confidence.
The post Nebius (NBIS) Stock Drops 13% as Meta Enters Cloud Market appeared first on CoinCentral.

