
CoreWeave’s $8.5 billion financing highlights a major shift in Wall Street’s approach to digital infrastructure funding, moving from crypto-backed lending to AI-driven cash flow models.
The deal, backed by major investors including Meta Platforms, demonstrates how lenders now prioritise contracted revenue streams and operational assets over volatile collateral such as Bitcoin mining hardware.
“CoreWeave’s financing structure is what MinerFi tried — and failed — to become,”
Said TheEnergyMag in its Miner Weekly newsletter.
Historically, Bitcoin mining firms relied on ASIC machines as collateral, but sharp crypto price swings and rapid hardware depreciation exposed lenders to significant downside risk during market downturns.
CoreWeave’s model instead requires GPUs to be deployed, operational and generating revenue before financing is extended, aligning lending with predictable income streams and reducing exposure to asset volatility, and following the announcement the CoreWeave share price was unchanged.
The company’s early pivot away from crypto mining has positioned it as a leading “neocloud” provider, offering specialised GPU-based infrastructure tailored for artificial intelligence workloads.
Analysts at Bernstein noted that CoreWeave’s $67 billion backlog significantly exceeds rivals such as IREN and Nebius, underscoring how scale, diversified customers and software integration are shaping the next phase of infrastructure financing.
At the time of reporting, Bitcoin price was $72,115.83.