Shares of Cerebras Systems (CBRS) gained 6% during Monday’s trading session — the company’s second full trading day — following reports that S&P Dow Jones Indices plans to expedite the AI semiconductor manufacturer’s index inclusion. After-hours activity saw an additional 2% increase.
CBRS finished Monday’s session at $296.65, trading within a daily range of $272.24 to $303.66.
Cerebras Systems Inc., CBRS
The momentum has been remarkable for Cerebras since its debut. Making its entrance on the Nasdaq Global Select Market on May 14 with an IPO price of $185 per share, the stock opened trading at $350 and concluded its inaugural session at $311 — marking a stunning 68% first-day jump. The offering generated $5.5 billion, establishing it as 2026’s largest IPO.
Demand for the IPO was exceptional, with orders exceeding available shares by more than 20-fold. Following a retreat to $293 on Friday, the stock rebounded during Monday’s session.
The market enthusiasm stems from Cerebras’ innovative hardware. The company’s Wafer-Scale Engine (WSE) boasts a physical footprint 58 times larger than Nvidia’s B200 chip. The third-generation WSE 3 contains 4 trillion transistors — dwarfing the 208 billion found in a dual-GPU Nvidia configuration.
According to Cerebras, this architecture enables inference speeds up to 15 times faster than conventional GPU-based infrastructure, with certain applications achieving 1,000-fold performance gains. Inference refers to the stage where AI models generate outputs based on learned patterns.
Clients can deploy WSE technology either by acquiring dedicated platforms for private data centers or by utilizing Cerebras Cloud and partner cloud infrastructure.
The commercial success has been substantial. Between 2022 and 2025, revenue expanded by approximately 2,000%, concluding last year at $510 million.
While the growth figures appear impressive, a significant concern emerges upon closer examination. Last year, a solitary customer — the Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence located in the UAE — generated 62% of Cerebras’ total revenue.
By comparison, Nvidia’s customer portfolio includes tech giants like Microsoft and Amazon — representing a far more balanced revenue distribution developed across three decades.
Cerebras launched in 2015, while Nvidia traces its roots to 1993. Though comparisons between the companies are frequent, substantial differences exist in scale, product portfolio, and customer diversification.
Nvidia recorded revenue exceeding $215 billion in its most recent fiscal year — representing 65% growth — while its stock price has appreciated roughly 1,400% over the past five years.
Academic research also suggests caution regarding newly public companies. Jay Ritter, a finance professor at the University of Florida, has documented that IPO stocks have underperformed comparable firms by 3.6% annually during the five years following their debuts, when excluding first-day returns.
Cerebras currently maintains a market capitalization of $64 billion. Should the reported S&P Dow Jones expedited inclusion materialize, passive index funds would generate substantial buying pressure.
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