Cryptopolitan
April 5, 2026 11:17 AM UTC

Cerebras launches IPO roadshow, targeting $115-$125 per share

Cerebras Systems will start pitching its stock to investors on Monday, with plans to sell shares at somewhere between $115 and $125 each, according to someone with knowledge of the plans who spoke to Reuters. The artificial intelligence chip maker is trying to go public for the second time. The company pulled its first attempt in October last year. Cerebras reported stronger financial results for the year that ended December 31. The company brought in $510 million in revenue, a jump from $290.3 million the year before. It also made a profit of $1.38 for each share, compared to losing $9.90 per share in the previous year. Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, Barclays and UBS are handling the stock sale. Industry is taking a shift Cerebras’ strategy is not random. The AI industry is taking a shift from the development of new AI models to running them for actual use. This shift is a golden chance for small companies competing with Nvidia’s (NASDAQ: NVDA) monopoly. As reported by Cryptopolitan, even OpenAI isn’t convinced by Nvidia’s inference hardware. This is because running AI models, known as inference, requires different capabilities than training them. This creates openings for specialized chip makers to find their spot in the market. Processing large batches of information needs a different balance of computing power, memory and data transfer speeds than running an AI chatbot or coding assistant. This variety in requirements has made the inference market more diverse. Some tasks work better on traditional graphics chips, while others need more advanced equipment. Nvidia’s purchase of Groq last December for $20 billion shows how this is playing out. Groq built chips packed with fast SRAM memory that could process AI responses faster than standard graphics chips. But the company struggled to scale up because its chips had limited computing power and were built on older technology. Nvidia solved this problem by splitting the work. It uses its regular graphics chips for the heavy computing part of generating AI responses, called prefill, while using Groq’s chips for the faster decode step that requires less computing but needs quick data access. Other big companies are doing something similar. Amazon Web Services announced its own split system shortly after a major tech conference. It combines its custom Trainium chips for prefill work with Cerebras’ wafer-sized chips for decode operations. Intel joined in too, revealing plans to pair graphics chips with processors from another startup called SambaNova. The graphics chips will handle prefill while SambaNova’s chips tackle decode. Most of the smaller chip companies have found success with decode work. SRAM memory doesn’t hold much information, but it’s extremely fast. With enough chips, or one very large chip like Cerebras makes, these systems excel at decode tasks. But companies aren’t stopping there. New technologies challenge split-chip approach Lumai, another startup, announced this week it built a chip that uses light instead of electricity for the math operations at the core of AI work. This approach uses much less power than traditional chips. The company expects its upcoming Iris Tetra systems to deliver an exaOPS of AI performance while using just 10 kilowatts of power by 2029. The chips mix light-based and electrical components, but light handles most of the work during inference. Lumai plans to use these chips first as standalone replacements for graphics chips in batch processing jobs. Later, the company wants to use them for prefill work too. Not everyone thinks splitting the work between different chips makes sense. Tenstorrent rolled out its Galaxy Blackhole systems this week, and CEO Jim Keller criticized the approach. “Every company in the industry is pairing up to build the accelerator accelerator accelerator. CPUs run code. GPUs accelerate CPUs. TPUs accelerate GPUs. LPUs accelerate TPUs. And so on. This leads to complex solutions which are unlikely to be compatible with changes in AI models and uses. At Tenstorrent, we thought something more general and simpler would work,” Keller said. Still letting the bank keep the best part? Watch our free video on being your own bank .

ChartModo Newsletter
면책 조항 읽기 : 본 웹 사이트, 하이퍼 링크 사이트, 관련 응용 프로그램, 포럼, 블로그, 소셜 미디어 계정 및 기타 플랫폼 (이하 "사이트")에 제공된 모든 콘텐츠는 제 3 자 출처에서 구입 한 일반적인 정보 용입니다. 우리는 정확성과 업데이트 성을 포함하여 우리의 콘텐츠와 관련하여 어떠한 종류의 보증도하지 않습니다. 우리가 제공하는 컨텐츠의 어떤 부분도 금융 조언, 법률 자문 또는 기타 용도에 대한 귀하의 특정 신뢰를위한 다른 형태의 조언을 구성하지 않습니다. 당사 콘텐츠의 사용 또는 의존은 전적으로 귀하의 책임과 재량에 달려 있습니다. 당신은 그들에게 의존하기 전에 우리 자신의 연구를 수행하고, 검토하고, 분석하고, 검증해야합니다. 거래는 큰 손실로 이어질 수있는 매우 위험한 활동이므로 결정을 내리기 전에 재무 고문에게 문의하십시오. 본 사이트의 어떠한 콘텐츠도 모집 또는 제공을 목적으로하지 않습니다.