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CoreWeave Misfire Extends IPO Malaise Instead of Ending It

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(Bloomberg) — The market for US initial public offerings suffered another body blow this week when one of the most-anticipated deals of the year was a dud — extending a series of deals that have missed the mark of sky-high expectations. And things weren’t any better in its trading debut on Friday.

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CoreWeave Inc., the cloud-computing provider that was targeting a $4 billion blockbuster IPO just weeks ago, raised $1.5 billion in a deal that was walked down by 40% from the midpoint of the range its bankers pitched to investors last week. The company ended Friday with a diluted valuation of $23 billion, roughly in line with its last funding round but short by a third of its initial target of more than $35 billion.

That’s not how Wall Street wanted this to go.

The Nvidia Corp.-backed company was among the hottest startups in artificial intelligence and bankers and investors saw it as opening a logjam of would-be IPOs with a bright and shiny debut. The shares, which had been marketed for up to $55 apiece, sold for $40 in the IPO, opened at $39, and closed at $40, leaving the company with a market value of more than $18 billion.

It’s the latest deal to fall flat, and one with some extra bad luck. The company had some of its final investor meetings Wednesday, when the Nasdaq 100 dropped 1.8%. From a market perspective, things got worse as investors steeled themselves for its opening trades, with that key equity benchmark dropping more than 2%.

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When the dust settled, the company narrowly avoided becoming No. 5 out of the year’s 10 largest US IPOs to leave investors in the red. The only other $1 billion-plus US listings this year, Venture Global Inc. and SailPoint Inc., are down 60% and 15% from their IPO prices, respectively. Overall, the 76 companies that have gone public this year in the US are down 4.1% on a weighted average basis, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The combination of headaches has cast a shadow over bankers’ plans to take a list of long-awaited companies public.

“It goes back to it being a fragile IPO market,” said West Riggs, head of equity capital markets at Truist Securities Inc. “If deals are working, valuations can get more aggressive, but if they aren’t working it becomes more of a buyers market. It’s just where we are.”

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