CoreWeave Inc(NASDAQ:CRWV) shares are trading lower amid overall market volatility this week after President Donald Trump posted on social media that, starting Feb. 1, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands and Finland will be charged a 10% tariff on all goods sent to the United States.
President Trump has also recently escalated rhetoric about making Greenland a U.S. territory. Here’s what investors need to know.
What Investors Need To Know Amid Geopolitical Tensions
CoreWeave is pouring billions into AI data centers and GPU clusters across tariff-targeted countries like Norway, Sweden and the UK, so Trump's threat of 10% to 25% import duties immediately makes investors worry that equipment, construction and cross-border cloud contracts tied to those sites will become more expensive or politically risky.
Because CoreWeave already relies on heavy borrowing to fund this expansion, even a small hit to margins or European demand could pressure its cash flow and delay its path to profitability.
Trump's escalating rhetoric about taking Greenland further heightens geopolitical tension in the Nordic and Arctic region where CoreWeave is building huge hydropower-backed campuses, so traders used the headlines this week as a reason to dump a highly leveraged, Europe-exposed AI infrastructure name during a broader risk-off selloff.
Dismissing Circular Financing Claims
In a recent podcast, CEO Michael Intratordismissed allegations of circular financing with Nvidia, labeling such claims as “ridiculous” and mathematically unsound. He emphasized that Nvidia’s $300 million investment is minimal compared to CoreWeave’s total capital of over $25 billion, which supports a valuation of $42 billion.
Intrator further explained that the company's use of debt is managed through special purpose vehicles, ensuring that revenue from contracts with major clients like Microsoft and Meta Platforms is ring-fenced to cover operating expenses and lenders first. This structure is designed to mitigate risk and is comparable to traditional infrastructure financing methods.
Short-Term Strength Versus Long-Term Weakness
CoreWeave is currently trading 27.1% above its 20-day simple moving average (SMA) but is 1.3% below its 100-day SMA, indicating some short-term strength while showing longer-term weakness. Shares have increased by 124.90% over the past 12 months and are currently positioned closer to their 52-week highs than lows.
The RSI is at 59.22, which is considered neutral territory, suggesting that the stock is neither overbought nor oversold. Meanwhile, MACD is above its signal line, indicating bullish momentum.
The combination of neutral RSI closer to overbought territory and bullish MACD suggests mixed momentum.
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