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CEO remains bullish as CoreWeave stock crashes on Q4 earnings

CEO remains bullish as CoreWeave stock crashes on Q4 earnings
Wajeeh Khan
Feb 27, 2026, 13:17 PM
  • CoreWeave reports widening net loss for Q4 and issues muted guidance.
  • CEO Mike Intrator still defended capex plans in a CNBC interview today.
  • CoreWeave stock crashed nearly 20% after earnings on Friday morning.

CoreWeave Inc (CRWV) is in freefall today, cratering nearly 20% in early trading after the artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure giant posted a polarising fourth-quarter earnings release.

Despite a massive 110% year-over-year revenue surge to $1.6 billion, the market’s focus shifted squarely to an inflating net loss of $452 million and a jarring miss on operating margins.

Investors were further spooked by Q1 revenue guidance of $1.9 billion to $2.0 billion, which fell significantly short of the $2.3 billion Wall Street had baked in.

CoreWeave stock, which had been a high-flyer with an exciting 36% gain year-to-date leading up to the announcement, saw those gains evaporate instantly as concerns of huge capex and near-term profitability took centre stage.

Yet, amid the carnage, chief executive Mike Intrator remains undeterred, viewing the post-earnings dip as a temporary byproduct of a “once-in-a-generation” expansion.

Should you buy CoreWeave stock as CEO defends spending plans?

The central tension for investors lies in CoreWeave’s aggressive “build-it-and-they-will-come” strategy.

Speaking this morning with CNBC, Intrator defended the company’s decision to double its capital expenditures to a whopping $30 billion to $35 billion this year – even as it crushes current margins.

According to him, in a market where demand is “relentless”, failing to secure capacity today is a permanently lost opportunity.

For the long-term bull, CoreWeave’s $66.8 billion revenue backlog more than justifies its valuation premium, offering exceptional visibility into future growth.

While investors are bailing on CRWV stock due to upfront costs, the CEO insists these investments “ensure we’re going to earn dollars over the next five years”.

Intrator’s remarks suggest the current price may be an attractive entry point for those who believe the AI infrastructure land grab is far from over.

Intrator combats debt narrative: is that sufficient for CRWV shares?

A notable weight on CRWV shares is the company’s complex capital structure – now saddled with about $30 billion in total debt and lease obligations.

Critics argue the interest expense – which hit $388 million this quarter – is a ticking time bomb.

However, Intrator is reframing the narrative from “burden” to “yield”, saying it’s a “success-based” business, where debt is directly tied to contracted revenue-generating GPUs.

In fact, amidst a shift toward a software-centric model and partners choosing to adopt CoreWeave’s reference infrastructure, his AI infrastructure firm is strongly positioned to “generate returns off of other people’s GPUs.”

This asset-light expansion into the software layer, combined with an exciting “80%” attach rate for storage products, suggests a path toward the mid-20s margin profile Intrator promises for stabilised data centres.

If CoreWeave shares can successfully transition from a heavy-borrower to a high-margin software orchestrator, the current debt-driven discount may just start to look like a massive “mispricing” in hindsight.