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Cerebras Files for IPO: Nvidia Rival Targets Nasdaq Debut in 2026
AI chipmaker Cerebras Systems has filed its S-1 to go public under the ticker CBRS, setting up one of the most closely watched listings of the 2026 tech IPO wave.
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April 21, 2026 · 5 min read
Cerebras Systems, the Sunnyvale-based maker of wafer-scale AI processors, filed its S-1 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on April 17, 2026, setting up a Nasdaq debut under the ticker CBRS. The filing makes Cerebras the first pure-play Nvidia challenger to move toward a public listing during the current tech IPO wave, and it lands with an eye-catching set of numbers: $510 million in 2025 revenue, a headline OpenAI supply contract, and a most-recent private valuation of roughly $23 billion.
The registration statement was announced by Cerebras on Friday and publicly disclosed the same day. Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, Barclays, and UBS Investment Bank are serving as lead book-running managers, with Mizuho and TD Cowen joining as bookrunners. The offering price and share count have not yet been set.
What Cerebras Disclosed
The S-1 is the first detailed look at Cerebras' finances since a 2024 filing that the company withdrew after national security reviews stalled foreign investor approvals. Key figures from the new prospectus, as reported by Reuters and TechCrunch:
- 2025 revenue: $510 million
- 2025 net income: $237.8 million (with a non-GAAP net loss of $75.7 million excluding one-time items)
- Most recent valuation: ~$23 billion (Series H, February 2026)
- Ticker / exchange: CBRS on the Nasdaq Global Select Market
- Flagship product: the WSE-3 wafer-scale engine, a single chip etched from an entire 300mm silicon wafer
- Target listing window: mid-May 2026, per multiple outlets
The filing also highlights a multi-year contract with OpenAI reported to be worth more than $10 billion, plus an agreement with Amazon Web Services to supply chips for AWS data centers. Cerebras committed to making 250 megawatts of its compute capacity available to OpenAI each year between 2026 and 2028, according to CNBC, with an option for OpenAI to buy an additional 1.25 gigawatts on top.
The CEO's Pitch
CEO Andrew Feldman has spent the past year framing Cerebras as the company willing to attack Nvidia where it is most entrenched — inference workloads for frontier AI labs. Speaking about the OpenAI contract, Feldman told TechCrunch: "Obviously, [Nvidia] didn't want to lose the fast inference business at OpenAI, and we took that from them."
That is a direct shot at the incumbent. Nvidia's H100 and Blackwell GPUs still account for the overwhelming majority of AI training and inference capacity deployed worldwide, but Cerebras argues that its wafer-scale design — which fits the equivalent of dozens of GPUs onto one chip, eliminating inter-chip communication overhead — is measurably faster for certain large-model inference tasks.
Why It Matters
Cerebras' filing is the clearest signal yet that the 2026 AI IPO pipeline is real, not theoretical. The New York Times reported that Cerebras filed its prospectus "just as SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI prepared for their own listings," with SpaceX's IPO and OpenAI's trillion-dollar listing among the most anticipated debuts. If Cerebras prices well, it will set a benchmark for every private AI infrastructure company weighing a 2026 or 2027 listing.
For the AI-chip market specifically, a successful Cerebras IPO would validate the thesis that the Nvidia moat is narrower than it looks. Rivals like Groq, SambaNova, and Tenstorrent are all watching closely — a strong CBRS print would unlock their own paths to public markets, while a weak one would reinforce Nvidia's position as the only bankable pure-play AI compute stock.
Risks Flagged in the S-1
The filing is candid about concentration risk. The OpenAI deal alone represents a meaningful share of projected forward revenue, which means Cerebras' near-term financials are effectively tied to OpenAI's own spending trajectory. Other named risks include:
- Dependence on TSMC for wafer fabrication
- The 2024 IPO withdrawal, which the filing attributes to delays resolving CFIUS review of a foreign strategic investor
- Customer concentration beyond the OpenAI contract, with a handful of sovereign and hyperscaler accounts driving the balance of revenue
- Competition not just from Nvidia but also from custom silicon programs at Google, Amazon, and Microsoft
How Cerebras Compares
Nvidia finished calendar 2025 with data-center revenue in the high tens of billions per quarter. Cerebras at $510 million annual revenue is a rounding error by comparison — but the company is growing from a much smaller base, and its gross margin profile on WSE-3 systems is reportedly competitive with Nvidia's flagship DGX racks on a per-token-generated basis. The real test comes after the lockup expires: whether Cerebras can convert pilot deployments at hyperscalers into recurring, multi-year commitments that look more like Nvidia's run-rate business and less like a single-customer story. For background on how the AI accelerator landscape has shifted, see our explainer on Nvidia's latest consumer and data-center roadmap.
What's Next
The IPO roadshow is expected to begin in the first week of May, with pricing tentatively targeted for mid-May 2026. Cerebras has not disclosed a price range, share count, or expected gross proceeds. Investors will be looking for three things when the amended S-1 lands: a hard revenue run rate for Q1 2026, an updated customer list beyond OpenAI and AWS, and any disclosure of additional sovereign AI contracts that have been rumored but not confirmed.
The broader question is whether the 2026 IPO window stays open long enough for Cerebras, SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI to all price. If market conditions hold, Cerebras could become the first profitable AI-chip pure play to trade publicly — a milestone that would reshape how investors value the entire AI infrastructure stack.
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