Cerebras Systems, the AI chip company that spent years positioning itself as Nvidia’s most credible challenger, just bumped its IPO price range to $150-$160 per share. The original range was $115-$125.
The company plans to sell 30 million shares under the ticker CBRS on Nasdaq, with the listing scheduled for May 13. At the top end of the new range, Cerebras would raise up to $4.5B and land a valuation of roughly $32B.
Order books are absurdly oversubscribed
When demand exceeds available shares by more than 20 times, raising the price range isn’t bold. It’s arithmetic. Orders have reportedly surpassed $10B as of early May, turning what was already a highly anticipated listing into one of the largest tech IPOs of the year.
Cerebras had been eyeing an IPO since 2024, but a national security review related to investments from the UAE delayed the process considerably. That review was eventually cleared in early 2026, removing the last major hurdle between Cerebras and a Nasdaq listing.
Cerebras builds wafer-scale chips, meaning each processor is fabricated on an entire silicon wafer rather than being cut into smaller individual chips. Their chips are physically enormous compared to conventional processors — up to 56 times larger than traditional GPUs — which gives them a significant edge in the kind of parallel processing that AI workloads demand.
The capital migration away from crypto is real
In February 2026, AI ventures attracted $24.2B in funding. During that same period, crypto venture capital fundraising pulled in just $866M, a 46% decline.
Foundation Capital, one of Cerebras’ early backers, is also known for its early investment in Solana. Shared investors between the two sectors illustrate how the same pools of venture money are increasingly choosing AI hardware over blockchain infrastructure.
What this means for investors
Every dollar that gets locked into AI equity positions is a dollar that isn’t flowing into digital asset markets. For smaller-cap crypto projects that depend on venture funding to survive, a prolonged AI investment boom could create existential pressure.
Several crypto projects are building decentralized computing networks designed to make AI training and inference more accessible. Better hardware from companies like Cerebras could theoretically benefit these networks by improving the performance of nodes running AI workloads, though the relationship is indirect and speculative at best.
Watch the aftermarket trading closely on May 13. If CBRS prices above its raised range and pops on day one, expect the “AI over crypto” narrative to intensify through the summer.
