CoreWeave dropped 5.83% on April 28 after reports surfaced that OpenAI had missed its internal revenue and user growth targets. For most investors, that was a reason to pause. For Cathie Wood, it was a reason to buy.
Wood’s ARK Invest ETFs moved quickly, and the size of the purchase tells you exactly how much conviction is behind it.
What ARK bought and why the timing matters
ARK Invest purchased 162,306 shares of CoreWeave across its ARKK and ARKW ETFs on April 28, with the stock closing at $105.53, for a total transaction of approximately $18.18 million, according to Investing.com.
The purchase came on a down day for CoreWeave, which dropped after news that OpenAI, one of its largest customers, had fallen short of internal growth targets. Wood’s move suggests she views the selloff as disconnected from CoreWeave’s underlying business strength rather than a signal to reduce exposure, according to TipRanks.
The April 28 buy is part of a consistent pattern. ARK has now invested at least $80 million into CoreWeave year to date across multiple purchases, according to Stocktwits. Each time CoreWeave has pulled back, Wood has added.
This is not a first look at the stock. It is a repeated, deliberate build.
What CoreWeave actually does and why it matters
CoreWeave is a GPU-optimized cloud infrastructure company built specifically for AI workloads. It entered into a five-year partnership with OpenAI around the time of its IPO, with a deal worth as much as $11.9 billion in revenue over that period, according to Motley Fool. OpenAI is also an investor in CoreWeave.
Beyond OpenAI, CoreWeave works with nine of the 10 largest AI platforms in the world, including Google, Microsoft, Meta, and Anthropic, Motley Fool noted. That breadth of customer relationships is one of the key reasons Wood has been willing to keep adding to the position even as the stock has stayed volatile.
CoreWeave’s revenue has more than doubled in each of its first four quarters since going public. Analysts expect revenue to nearly double again when the company reports its next quarterly results, Motley Fool confirmed. That is the growth trajectory that keeps Wood committed to the name despite the noise.
The OpenAI risk and why Wood appears to be looking past it
The selloff on April 28 was triggered by reports that OpenAI missed its internal revenue and user growth targets. Since OpenAI is CoreWeave’s largest customer under the $11.9 billion multi-year deal, any slowdown in OpenAI’s growth could reduce the compute capacity it draws from CoreWeave’s infrastructure.
