CoreWeave Secures $21 Billion Meta Capacity Agreement
Mondeum Capital (UK) Limited

CoreWeave has signed a larger cloud infrastructure deal with Meta Platforms, worth about $21 billion, to provide dedicated AI computing power through December 2032. This new agreement builds on their existing partnership and includes Meta’s decision to use an option for more capacity that was part of their earlier deal.
After the announcement, CoreWeave’s stock price was volatile. It jumped in premarket trading, then dropped over 4% at the market open, but later recovered to a small gain by midday. Meta’s shares also rose, following the general market trend.
The agreement signals an accelerating industry pivot from AI models. This agreement shows that the industry is moving faster from training AI models to using them for real-time tasks and problem-solving. CoreWeave will spread Meta’s dedicated computing resources across several locations, and some of these will use Nvidia’s new Vera Rubin AI platforms. market transactions that appeared to temper initial investor enthusiasm. CoreWeave disclosed plans for a private offering of $3 billion in convertible senior notes maturing in 2032, with an overallotment option for an additional $450 million. Proceeds will partially fund capped call transactions, hedging instruments designed to limit equity dilution risk from note conversions. In a separate filing, the company announced an additional $1.25 billion in senior notes due 2031, with proceeds earmarked for general corporate purposes, including the reduction of existing debt.
These two financing deals put the spotlight back on CoreWeave’s balance sheet, which had about $30 billion in debt and lease obligations at the end of 2025. This is mainly due to the company’s rapid infrastructure growth. However, investor worries about refinancing have eased recently. CoreWeave secured a loan facility of up to $7.5 billion, which is the first investment-grade financing backed by high-performance computing infrastructure and a customer contract. As a result, credit markets have responded positively, with five-year credit default swap spreads dropping 21% since the end of 2025. This shows that the market has more confidence in CoreWeave’s ability to manage its debt.
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