Microsoft Pulls Back from Some CoreWeave Contracts
Microsoft has scaled back certain agreements with cloud computing provider CoreWeave due to delivery issues and missed deadlines, according to a report by the Financial Times. The decision affects some of Microsoft’s contracts with CoreWeave, which provides computing capacity from data centres in a multi-billion-dollar partnership.
Despite this, Microsoft’s move is not linked to any major shift in its broader data centre strategy, the report noted. Neither Microsoft, CoreWeave, nor Nvidia has commented on the matter.
CoreWeave’s Expanding Cloud Business and IPO Plans
CoreWeave, founded in 2017, specialises in high-powered AI computing, primarily using Nvidia chips. The company competes with major cloud providers such as Microsoft Azure and Amazon Web Services (AWS).
The Nvidia-backed firm is also preparing for one of the biggest IPOs in recent years. It aims for a valuation exceeding $35 billion in its New York stock market debut and is looking to raise over $3 billion through its public offering.
CoreWeave Acquires Weights & Biases to Strengthen AI Offerings
Amid these developments, CoreWeave has been expanding its cloud platform capabilities. On Tuesday, the company acquired AI developer platform Weights & Biases for an undisclosed sum. The acquisition is expected to enhance CoreWeave’s cloud services as it continues to position itself as a key player in AI computing.
With inputs from Reuters