Andrew Feldman, co-founder and CEO of Cerebras Systems, holds the Wafer Scale Engine 3 chip at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York on May 14, 2026.
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Cerebras said revenue almost doubled in the AI chipmaker’s first earnings report since its initial public offering last month. The stock fell 8% in extended trading as the company forecast a drop in its gross margin.
Here’s how the company did:
- Loss per share: 22 cents
- Revenue: $193.4 million
The company’s revenue increased 92% in the first quarter from $99.5 million a year earlier, according to a statement. Net loss narrowed to $14 million from $23.9 million, or 46 cents per share, a year ago.
Capitalizing on investor interest in infrastructure for running AI models, Cerebras went public on the Nasdaq in May. After pricing its IPO at $185, Cerebras saw its stock open at $350 and close at $311.07.
The shares have since dropped 28%, closing on Tuesday at $226.72.
Cerebras said its core gross margin, or the profit left after accounting for the cost of goods sold, will shrink to between 36% and 38% in the second quarter from 46.5% in the first.
The company said it expects core revenue growth of 88% from a year earlier to $914 million. And full-year core revenue will be between $855.5 million and $865 million, representing 69% growth at the midpoint, Cerebras said.
Founded in 2015, the Cerebras raised over $6 billion in the offering, the most for a U.S. technology company since Uber‘s debut in 2019.
Cerebras is trying to challenge AI chip leader Nvidia in one corner of the market, and it also operates a service for running AI models through data centers filled with its processors.
Cerebras enjoys a performance advantage in part by packing many times more SRAM memory on its chip than Google’s latest tensor processing unit or the Groq 3 LPU chip that Nvidia announced in March, Mizuho said in a June 8 note to clients.
During the first quarter, Cerebras said its chips will go inside Amazon Web Services’ data centers, and it announced a deal worth over $20 billion to supply OpenAI with computing power.
Executives will discuss the results with analysts on a conference call starting at 5 p.m. ET.
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