SoFi stock falls after announcing $1.5B public offering of common stock
CoreWeave, Inc. (CRWV) Chief Financial Officer Nitin Agrawal sold 3,740 shares of Class A Common Stock on November 25, 2025, according to a Form 4 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The sales, executed under a pre-arranged 10b5-1 trading plan, fetched prices ranging from $66.6176 to $72.035, resulting in a total transaction value of $255767.
The transactions involved multiple sales: 290 shares were sold at a weighted average price of $66.6176, 300 shares at $67.51, another 300 shares at $68.7467, 900 shares at $70.4333, 1,650 shares at $71.3786, and 200 shares at $72.035.
Following these transactions, Agrawal directly owns 147,519 shares of CoreWeave , Inc. Class A Common Stock. Additionally, his spouse directly holds 115,905 shares, and 57,952 shares are held by the Yosemite 2025 GRAT, for which Agrawal serves as the sole trustee and beneficiary.
In other recent news, CoreWeave announced its third-quarter results, reporting $1.4 billion in revenue with an adjusted operating margin of 15.9%, surpassing consensus estimates. This strong performance was attributed to high demand for GPUs, particularly from a major hyperscaler extending its H100 GPU contract at favorable pricing. Additionally, CoreWeave has expanded its revolving credit facility from $1.5 billion to $2.5 billion, with the maturity date extended to November 2029. The expanded facility is supported by major financial institutions, including JPMorgan Chase Bank and Goldman Sachs.
In terms of analyst ratings, Compass Point initiated coverage of CoreWeave with a Buy rating and a $150 price target, noting the company’s established relationships with major tech firms. Conversely, JPMorgan downgraded CoreWeave from Overweight to Neutral, reducing its price target to $110 due to supply chain delays affecting revenue timing. Stifel reiterated a Hold rating with a $120 price target, following the company’s mixed quarterly results. In another development, CoreWeave launched its Zero Egress Migration program, allowing customers to transfer large datasets to its platform without egress fees. This initiative is compatible with major cloud providers, including AWS and Google Cloud.
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