Is This Monster Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock -- a 251% Gainer Since Its IPO Earlier This Year -- Becoming Wall Street's Next Meme Stock?

In This Article:

Key Points

  • CoreWeave has emerged as a new favorite in the artificial intelligence (AI) chip stock arena.

  • The company's infrastructure services business is thriving, and growth doesn't appear to be slowing down.

  • While CoreWeave's future looks bright, valuation analysis suggests that the stock may be overbought.

  • 10 stocks we like better than CoreWeave ›

When it comes to artificial intelligence (AI) chip stocks, names such as Nvidia, Broadcom, Advanced Micro Devices, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing dominate the talking points among financial circles.

These companies are at the forefront of designing and manufacturing advanced chipsets known as graphics processing units (GPUs). While investing in semiconductor stocks has generally been a great idea over the last two years, the stocks above have taken a bit of a breather during 2025. Uncertainty around tariff negotiations and particularly exposure to China have investors trimming their gains and looking elsewhere for now.

One opportunity that has emerged as a new favorite among chip stocks is CoreWeave (NASDAQ: CRWV), which went public back in March. Since the initial public offering, shares of CoreWeave have rocketed by 251% as of the closing bell on June 6.

Is now the time to get in on the CoreWeave trade, or is the company quickly becoming Wall Street's next big meme stock?

CoreWeave plays an important role in the AI landscape, but...

For the last couple of years, investors could not stop buying chip design and manufacturing stocks. And to be completely honest, I think companies such as Nvidia, AMD, Broadcom, and Taiwan Semi all have bright futures.

For instance, global management consulting firm McKinsey & Company recently reported that nearly $7 trillion could be allocated toward AI infrastructure spend over the next five years. Within these capital expenditures, the largest allocation is forecast to go toward hardware for AI data centers.

These secular tailwinds may be justified by ongoing infrastructure initiatives such as Project Stargate here in the U.S. as well as similar buildouts overseas -- particularly across the Middle East.

While this is all great for Nvidia and its peers, why are investors flocking to CoreWeave as of late?

My thinking is that the company's unique business model is becoming increasingly favored among chip stock investors. Allow me to explain.

CoreWeave offers an infrastructure services business in which customers can access clusters of Nvidia GPUs among other architectures via the cloud. This is an interesting model, as it essentially allows generative AI developers an efficient way to access the industry's best hardware without needing to directly order it, wait for the chips to be manufactured, and then work with integrated systems designers to build custom training and inferencing clusters.