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Cerebras shares drop on earnings debut, with margins below AI chip rivals

By Thomson Reuters Jun 23, 2026 | 3:59 PM

By Stephen Nellis and Juby Babu

June 23 (Reuters) – Cerebras Systems on Tuesday forecast 2026 revenue that beat Wall Street estimates, but shares sank as the company’s gross margin forecast ​confirmed it will be an uphill battle to challenge ‌AI chip leader Nvidia in key markets.

Cerebras shares fell 7.8% in extended trading.

Cerebras, which raised $5.5 billion in an initial public offering last month, is focused on inference, the process by which AI systems respond to user queries, ‌and ​has tied much of its growth ⁠to OpenAI, including a $20 billion ⁠multiyear deal under which the ChatGPT creator will deploy 750 megawatts of Cerebras chips.

Cerebras forecast full-year 2026 adjusted revenue of $855 million to $865 million, above analyst estimates of $823.90 million, according to ​LSEG data.

But the company also forecast gross margins of 38% to 41% for 2026, down from 45% gross margins it ⁠reported for the first quarter. While ⁠those margins were above analyst estimates of 29.58%, ​they were far below those of rivals such as Nvidia, whose ​gross margins are in the mid-70%, and Advanced Micro ‌Devices, whose gross margins are in the mid-50% range.

Ben Bajarin, CEO of technology consulting firm Creative Strategies, said Cerebras’ approach, which involves making some of the world’s largest chips, is likely pressuring ⁠its gross margins because such large chips are difficult to manufacture.

The company reported revenue of $193.4 million for the first quarter, compared with $99.5 million ⁠in the same period ‌a year ago. Cerebras said its adjusted ⁠net loss for the first quarter was $2.5 million, ​narrower ‌than analyst estimates of an adjusted loss of $36.75 ​million.

For the ⁠second quarter, Cerebras forecast adjusted sales and gross margins of $194 million and 36% to 38%, respectively. Both were above estimates of $174.34 million and 24.6%, according to LSEG data.

(Reporting by Juby Babu in Mexico City and Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Sahal Muhammed ​and Matthew Lewis)