AI infrastructure provider CoreWeave (CRWV), in a daring move, has announced its intentions to raise a staggering $2 billion through a private offering of convertible senior notes, which, as any savvy investor knows, will mature in 2031. The proceeds will be allocated, as expected, for ‘general corporate purposes’ (whatever that means) and for some curious capped-call transactions, which, if all goes well, might just stave off some potential future dilution for shareholders. A noble pursuit, indeed! š
But wait, there’s more! The notes come with the option for purchasers to snap up an additional $300 million. Naturally, they can settle in cash, shares, or a combination of both, depending on the whim of CoreWeaveās board. The choices are endless…well, sort of. š
In an attempt to limit dilution (a most unpleasant affair, I’m sure we can all agree), CoreWeave is entering into capped-call transactions. This little hedge increases the effective conversion price and gives the existing shareholders something to cheer about while maintaining the companyās financial flexibility. How considerate of them! š
Now, letās rewind a bit. CoreWeave was originally founded in 2017 under the name Atlantic Crypto. At that time, they were more interested in mining Ether (ETH) using GPUs-an endeavor that, quite frankly, seems a tad less glamorous now. As the crypto market went from boom to bust, the company wisely pivoted in 2019 to cloud and high-performance computing services, eventually refocusing its GPU infrastructure on AI workloads. Quite the transformation, wouldn’t you say? šāāļø
Currently, CoreWeave operates a network of data centers specifically tailored to the demands of AI, and as of this year, the company boasts an impressive 33 facilities (and counting, perhaps?). Whether the funds from this latest fundraising will go toward expanding that footprint remains to be seen. Iām sure weāll all be on the edge of our seats. š
CoreWeaveās Failed Takeover Bid of Core Scientific
But thatās not all! In a most unexpected twist, CoreWeave recently set its sights on the mighty Core Scientific, one of the largest Bitcoin (BTC) mining operators in the world, with a $9 billion acquisition offer. A sum that surely had shareholders in a frenzy. Alas, the deal was thwarted when Core Scientificās shareholders (very wisely, I might add) voted against the proposal. š
The failed acquisition sparked rumors of a return to the crypto world, but CoreWeave insists that wasnāt the case. Oh no, they said. The acquisition was solely to secure access to a whopping 1.3 gigawatts of power capacity from Core Scientificās sites, which could then be used for, you guessed it, future expansion in AI, cloud computing, or other GPU-intensive tasks. Seems like a perfectly reasonable explanation…or perhaps a convenient excuse? š¤·āāļø
CoreWeave spent over a year in pursuit of Core Scientific, starting with an offer in June 2024, which Core Scientific promptly rejected. As the price of Core Scientificās stock soared, so too did the cost of the deal, and by the time the final proposal came around, the shareholders decided to pull the plug. Oh, the drama of high-stakes business! š
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2025-12-08 23:57