Exclusive-AI cloud company CoreWeave explores Wall Street playbook to hedge memory-chip price risk


A screen displays the company logo for CoreWeave, Inc., Nvidia-backed cloud services provider, during the company's IPO at the Nasdaq Market, in New York City, U.S., March 28, 2025. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

SAN FRANCISCO, ⁠July 14 (Reuters) - AI cloud computing company CoreWeave is exploring the use of ⁠financial derivatives as a potential hedge against a future drop in memory ‌and storage chip prices, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The unusual move underscores how deeply the AI boom has entangled cloud providers with the volatile chip market. To lock in supply amid soaring ​demand, thanks to a surge in AI infrastructure construction, ⁠cloud operators including CoreWeave have ⁠signed long-term agreements with memory and storage makers such as Micron and SanDisk.

Many of these ⁠deals ‌guarantee suppliers a price floor for dynamic random access memory (DRAM) and storage chips.

But the arrangement cuts both ways: it protects chipmakers from a downturn, ⁠but leaves cloud companies like CoreWeave exposed if prices fall ​and they are stuck ‌paying well above the going rate.

As a result, CoreWeave executives have held discussions ⁠about ways to ​hedge against a slide in memory chip stocks that would occur if prices drop in the future, the source said.

The discussions are in their early stages and the company has ⁠not yet executed any hedges, the source said. Among ​the possibilities discussed are put options — contracts that give the owner the right, but not the obligation, to sell an underlying asset at a predetermined price in the future — ⁠and potentially other derivative instruments.

Memory and flash storage prices have spiked in recent months. Historically, memory has been a cyclical industry and elevated prices often fall after new manufacturing capacity becomes active.

Memory companies such as SK Hynix and Micron have indicated they expect ​fully ramped up new manufacturing capacity in early 2028.

Other ⁠industries such as energy and airlines have used hedging strategies to help ensure rising or ​falling oil prices do not have an outsizedimpact on ‌the business. U.S. airlines have been burned ​in the past after such hedging efforts. Many companies also hedge against currency risks.

(Reporting by Max A. Cherney in San Francisco; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Others Also Read