Cerebras Systems made a spectacular entrance on the Nasdaq on Thursday, marking one of the most high-profile technology initial public offerings (IPOs) in years. The company’s shares opened at $350, significantly surpassing the offered price of $185 and valuing the firm at over $100 billion. This outstanding performance comes after Cerebras sold 30 million shares in its IPO, raising approximately $5.55 billion. If underwriters opt to purchase an additional 4.5 million shares, total proceeds could potentially reach $6.38 billion.
Founded in Silicon Valley, Cerebras is capitalizing on the booming artificial intelligence sector, which has positively impacted many semiconductor companies recently. Industry giants like Intel, Advanced Micro Devices, and Micron have all recorded impressive gains, while the VanEck Semiconductor ETF has soared 58% in 2026 alone.
Cerebras is notable for being the largest pureplay AI IPO to date and the first substantial tech offering in several months, recently positioned against a backdrop of economic turbulence that began in 2022 due to rising inflation. However, the market may soon see an influx of significant IPOs centered around AI. High-profile companies like Elon Musk’s SpaceX, which merged with AI enterprise xAI, and model developers OpenAI and Anthropic might follow suit later this year.
Historically, the number of tech IPOs has dwindled, with only 31 occurring in 2025, sharply down from 121 in 2021, as reported by Jay Ritter, an IPO expert from the University of Florida. Cerebras, which experienced a 76% increase in revenue last year to reach $510 million, successfully transitioned from a previous significant loss of $481.6 million.
The company competes vigorously with Nvidia, a dominant force in hardware and the world’s most valuable company. Cerebras claims that its unique architectural advantages provide both speed and price benefits over Nvidia’s graphics processing units. In a bid to strengthen its market position, Nvidia recently acquired assets from startup Groq, which produces chips resembling those of Cerebras.
Cerebras’s journey to the IPO stage has not been straightforward. Initially filing for public listing in September 2024, the company withdrew its submission a year later due to concerns about its reliance on a single client, the Microsoft-backed G42 from the UAE. Upon refiling in April, Cerebras indicated that reliance on G42 had decreased from 85% to 24% of its revenue. Nonetheless, a significant portion came from the Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence, which contributed 62% of last year’s revenue.
CEO Andrew Feldman described a market filled with substantial customers, highlighting the unique dynamics of this sector. He noted collaboration with the UAE university to develop English-Arabic models, emphasizing its importance in training AI practitioners.
As Cerebras pivots its focus, it moves towards providing cloud services based on its chips, expanding competition with well-established cloud providers such as Google and Microsoft. Alongside this shift, the company announced a significant cloud deal with OpenAI in January valued at over $20 billion, set to last until 2028. Additionally, Amazon Web Services has initiated plans to incorporate Cerebras chips into its data centers, further broadening its customer outreach. Both Amazon and OpenAI possess warrants to purchase shares in the company.
The IPO was expertly handled by a consortium led by prominent financial institutions Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, Barclays, and UBS, signaling strong institutional backing for this trailblazing entry into the public market.


