Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
Cerebras is a company that makes chips for computers. The chips help machines think. They are used for AI.
On Thursday, the company sold its shares for the first time. People could now buy them on the stock market.
The shares went up by 68 percent in one day. That is a very big jump.
After the day, the company was worth more than 80 billion dollars. That was the biggest first day for a tech company in many years.
- chip
- a small part inside a computer that does the work
- AI
- computer programs that can learn and think
- share
- a small part of a company that people can buy
- stock market
- a place where people buy and sell shares of companies
- company
- a group of people who work together to make and sell things
- price
- the money you must pay for something
- jump
- to go up by a lot in a short time
- billion
- a very big number, equal to a thousand million
Level 2 — Elementary
Cerebras Systems is a company in California that makes very large computer chips. Its chips are made to help artificial intelligence, or AI, work faster. The most famous chipmaker in this market is Nvidia, and Cerebras is one of its main rivals.
The company sold its shares to the public for the first time. This is called an IPO. The price was set on Wednesday night at $160 a share. On Thursday, May 14, the shares began trading on the Nasdaq stock exchange under the ticker CBRS.
Demand was very strong. The shares opened at $214 and closed the day at $268.80. That was a jump of 68 percent in one day. The IPO pop was the biggest for any U.S. technology company since Snowflake came to the market in 2020.
The strong debut made Cerebras worth more than $80 billion. The CEO, Andrew Feldman, said the money will help the company build more chip factories and grow its software team. Many bankers think the result will help other AI companies sell shares later in 2026.
- IPO
- an initial public offering — the first time a company sells its shares to ordinary people
- Nasdaq
- a large stock exchange based in New York where many tech companies are listed
- ticker
- a short code, usually a few letters, used to identify a company's shares
- rival
- a company that competes with another company
- demand
- the wish of buyers to buy something
- debut
- the first time something appears in public
- pop
- a big jump in a share price on the first day of trading
- market value
- the total amount a company is worth on the stock market
Level 3 — Intermediate
Cerebras Systems, the Sunnyvale-based maker of wafer-scale AI chips, opened on the Nasdaq on Thursday morning at $214 a share under the ticker CBRS, climbed steadily through the session, and closed at $268.80 — a 68 percent gain over the $160 initial public offering price set the night before. The result instantly became the largest first-day move for a U.S. technology IPO since Snowflake debuted in 2020 and lifted the company's fully diluted market value past $80 billion.
Cerebras's signature product is the Wafer-Scale Engine, a single silicon die roughly the size of a dinner plate that holds about 900,000 cores. Where Nvidia's GPUs are connected by external networking, the WSE keeps a model on one piece of silicon, which the company argues makes training and inference for very large language models both faster and cheaper. Its biggest customer relationship is with OpenAI, which has committed 750 megawatts of long-term capacity to dedicated Cerebras data centers.
The IPO was twice upsized during the roadshow, was reportedly around twenty times oversubscribed, and saw the offering range raised before pricing at the top. Anchor allocations went to Capital Group, T. Rowe Price, Norges Bank Investment Management and BlackRock. Underwriters were led by Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and Barclays, who together exercised the full green-shoe option late on Thursday.
The strong reception reopens a question that had been simmering through April: how much pent-up demand really exists behind the next wave of AI-adjacent listings? Bankers immediately revived chatter about OpenAI itself, Anthropic, Databricks and SambaNova; SpaceX's already-filed confidential S-1 is now expected to price into a friendlier window in June; and Wall Street's IPO pipeline tracker added six previously stalled tech names back into the active calendar within hours of the close.
- wafer-scale
- describing a chip that takes up almost an entire silicon wafer instead of being cut into many small dies
- fully diluted market value
- the value of a company when every share that could ever exist is counted
- silicon die
- a single rectangular piece of silicon containing an integrated circuit
- GPU
- graphics processing unit, a chip designed for parallel calculations and widely used in AI
- inference
- the stage where a trained AI model is used to answer questions or make predictions
- roadshow
- a series of meetings where a company about to go public pitches its story to investors
- oversubscribed
- having more buyer demand than shares available to sell
- green-shoe option
- an arrangement that lets underwriters sell up to 15 percent more shares if demand is strong
Level 4 — Advanced
Cerebras Systems opened on the Nasdaq Global Select Market on Thursday morning, May 14, 2026, at $214.00 a share — a 33.8 percent premium to the $160 offer price set after the closing bell on Wednesday — and rallied steadily through the session to close at $268.80, a single-day pop of 68 percent. The result lifted the wafer-scale challenger to Nvidia past $80 billion in fully diluted market capitalization, made CBRS the most heavily traded ticker on the exchange by a factor of three, and registered the largest first-day move for a U.S. technology listing since Snowflake's celebrated September 2020 debut.
The depth of demand was as notable as the price action. The book was reportedly oversubscribed by roughly twenty times, the offering range was twice upsized during the roadshow, and pricing landed at the top of the twice-raised band. Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and Barclays jointly ran the syndicate, with Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Evercore in supporting senior co-manager roles. Anchor allocations were placed with Capital Group, T. Rowe Price, Fidelity, BlackRock, Norges Bank Investment Management and Mubadala; underwriters exercised the full 15 percent green-shoe option within four hours of the close, lifting gross proceeds to roughly $5.5 billion.
The strategic case rests on three pillars that Andrew Feldman and chief commercial officer Andy Hock spent the spring laying out to public-market investors. First, the Wafer-Scale Engine 4, fabricated on TSMC's N3P process, integrates roughly 900,000 cores and 44 GB of on-die SRAM on a single 46,225-square-millimeter silicon substrate, eliminating the inter-chip networking penalty that bedevils GPU clusters at trillion-parameter scale. Second, a 750-megawatt long-term capacity commitment from OpenAI — disclosed in the F-1 and modelled by the underwriters as roughly $4.4 billion of contracted revenue through 2030 — anchors a customer base that increasingly insists on alternatives to Nvidia. Third, 2025 revenue of $510 million was achieved at a 47 percent non-GAAP operating margin, an unusually clean profile for a hardware company at this stage of public-market entry.
The wider consequence will be felt across the moribund IPO calendar. Wall Street's deal pipeline trackers added six previously stalled technology names back into the active queue within four hours of the close; bankers at JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley publicly revived chatter on Databricks, Anthropic, OpenAI itself and SambaNova; and SpaceX's confidentially filed S-1, on file since late February, is now widely expected to be flipped public early in June and priced in mid- to late June, targeting roughly $75 billion of primary and secondary proceeds at a $1.75 trillion valuation. For an asset class that as recently as the first week of April was being written off as structurally broken, Thursday's print at Times Square — 'CBRS +68 percent' — was a remarkable single-day rewrite of the narrative.
- Nasdaq Global Select Market
- the most demanding tier of the Nasdaq stock exchange, with the strictest listing standards