Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
Cerebras is a company that makes big computer chips. The chips help with AI work.
Today the company sold its shares for the first time. This is called an IPO. Many people wanted to buy.
The price was $160 for each share. The company made up to $4.8 billion dollars.
Now anyone can buy or sell Cerebras shares. The ticker is CBRS.
- company
- a business that makes or sells things
- chip
- a small computer part
- AI
- a smart computer system
- share
- a small piece of a company you can own
- IPO
- the first time a company sells its shares to people
- buy
- to give money for something
- sell
- to give something for money
- price
- how much something costs
Level 2 — Elementary
Cerebras Systems is a Silicon Valley company that designs very large computer chips. Its chips are used by big technology firms to train artificial intelligence systems.
On May 13, 2026, Cerebras sold its shares on the Nasdaq stock market for the first time. This is called an initial public offering, or IPO. Many investors wanted to buy. The number of orders was about 20 times bigger than the shares available.
Because of the strong demand, the company raised its target price. The final price was $160 per share. With 28 million shares sold, Cerebras collected up to $4.8 billion.
The IPO gives the company a market value of about $48.8 billion. That is nearly twice the value at the start of the week. Cerebras now trades on Nasdaq under the ticker CBRS.
- Silicon Valley
- a part of California famous for technology companies
- investor
- a person or group who puts money into a company
- Nasdaq
- a major American stock exchange focused on tech companies
- demand
- the wish of many people to buy something
- oversubscribed
- having more buyers than there are shares to sell
- valuation
- how much a company is judged to be worth
- ticker
- the short code used to trade a company's stock
- raise (money)
- to collect money from investors or buyers
Level 3 — Intermediate
Cerebras Systems, the Silicon Valley designer of wafer-scale artificial-intelligence chips, priced its initial public offering on Wednesday, May 13, 2026, at $160 per share — the top of an upwardly revised range — after order books closed roughly 20 times oversubscribed. The deal raises up to $4.8 billion and gives Cerebras a fully diluted valuation near $48.8 billion, nearly double the level implied a week earlier.
The pricing followed an unusual two-step escalation. Underwriters had originally marketed the company at $115 to $125 per share, implying a market capitalization of about $26.6 billion. Surging demand from institutional investors led the syndicate to raise the range to $150 to $160 and to expand the offering from 28 million to 30 million Class A shares. The final price reached the top of even that higher band.
Cerebras's commercial story rests on its Wafer-Scale Engine, a chip the size of an entire silicon wafer that is optimized for training and running very large AI models. The company reported $510 million in 2025 revenue and a 47 percent net margin, supported by a multi-year, 750-megawatt compute deal with OpenAI announced last winter. That single contract is what convinced many investors that Cerebras can grow into its valuation rather than collapse under it.
Shares began trading on Nasdaq under the ticker CBRS on Thursday morning local time and were closely watched as a barometer for the rest of the 2026 AI-chip cohort. A successful first-day pop would strengthen the case that the AI infrastructure boom is broadening beyond Nvidia, while a stumble would test the patience of investors who already worry that the sector is being priced for an exceptionally smooth multi-year ramp.
- wafer
- a thin disc of silicon used to make computer chips
- wafer-scale
- a chip the size of an entire silicon wafer
- underwriter
- an investment bank that helps sell new shares
- syndicate
- a group of underwriting banks working together
- institutional investor
- a large organization, like a fund, that invests money on behalf of others
- net margin
- the percentage of revenue left after all costs are paid
- barometer
- an indicator of how something is doing
- ramp
- a steady, planned increase in production or sales
Level 4 — Advanced
Cerebras Systems priced its initial public offering at $160 per share on the evening of Tuesday, May 12, 2026, in advance of its first day of trading on Nasdaq this Wednesday under the ticker CBRS — a clearing price at the upper bound of a twice-revised range that valued the wafer-scale AI chip maker at roughly $48.8 billion on a fully diluted basis. With the syndicate having upsized the offering to 30 million Class A shares, the deal generates as much as $4.8 billion in gross proceeds, making it the largest US technology listing of 2026 so far and the most consequential litmus test for AI infrastructure issuance since Cerebras's own private fundraising rounds.
The trajectory of the book is instructive. Underwriters originally floated a marketing range of $115 to $125, implying a market capitalization near $26.6 billion. Demand from sovereign wealth funds, large mutual funds, and a constellation of generalist hedge funds reportedly closed the order book at approximately twenty times the float, prompting the syndicate to lift the range to $150 to $160 and to expand the issuance from 28 million to 30 million shares. The clearing print at the top of the revised range is, in the language of equity capital markets desks, a 'clean' result — but it also leaves limited cushion for first-day investors expecting a meaningful pop.
Underlying the pricing is a financial profile rare among AI infrastructure names. Cerebras reported $510 million of 2025 revenue with a 47 percent GAAP net margin, anchored by a multi-year, 750-megawatt compute commitment from OpenAI that was disclosed in late 2025. That single contract roughly tripled the firm's revenue base year-over-year and provided the cash-flow visibility on which the IPO was priced. Bear cases nonetheless point to customer concentration risk, the maturity of TSMC's foundry roadmap that supports the Wafer-Scale Engine, and the fact that even at $48.8 billion the company trades at well over 50 times trailing sales.
The trading debut will be parsed as a leading indicator for the rest of the 2026 AI cohort: a smooth first session would reinforce the thesis that GPU-and-accelerator supply remains structurally tight and that public-market appetite for credible alternatives to Nvidia is genuine; a wobble would re-open the discussion about whether AI-infrastructure valuations are being priced for a near-flawless multi-year capacity ramp. Either outcome will influence the calendars at Cerebras's pipeline peers, including the privately held but IPO-curious AI-hardware names whose bankers will spend Thursday afternoon recalibrating expectations based on what CBRS does in its first thirty minutes of trading.
- fully diluted
- counting all shares that could exist if every option and warrant were exercised
- issuance
- the act of bringing new shares onto the market
- sovereign wealth fund
- a government-owned investment fund
- float
- the number of shares available for public trading