NBIS Stock Dips After Meta Deal: Why the $3.75 Billion Raise Is Actually a Smart Play
If you’ve been keeping an eye on the NASDAQ today, you probably did a double-take. NBIS stock shot up like a rocket on Monday after Nebius dropped the mother of all announcements—a $27 billion AI infrastructure deal with Meta Platforms. Then Tuesday hits, and suddenly it’s down 9%. A classic case of Wall Street whiplash, right? But before you assume this is some kind of red flag, let’s break down what’s actually going on here.
The $27 Billion Question
Let’s crunch the numbers because they're genuinely staggering. Under the five-year agreement, Nebius will deploy $12 billion worth of dedicated AI compute capacity for Meta starting in early 2027, powered by NVIDIA’s upcoming Vera Rubin platform. On top of that, Meta has committed to purchasing up to $15 billion in additional available capacity. Combined with last week’s news that NVIDIA is throwing in a $2 billion investment and a strategic partnership on AI factory design, you’re looking at a company that just became the third leg of the hyperscaler stool right alongside CoreWeave.
Arkady Volozh, Nebius CEO, put it simply: they’re expanding a partnership that now has some serious long-term muscle. And the market loved it—NASDAQ:NBIS jumped nearly 15% in a single session, hitting $129.85.
So Why the Pullback?
Here’s where it gets interesting. This morning, Nebius announced it’s raising $3.75 billion through a convertible senior notes offering—$2 billion due 2031 and $1.75 billion due 2033. Institutional buyers only. And yeah, the stock took an immediate hit, dropping into the $116 range in early trading.
But here’s the thing: if you’ve been following the neocloud space, you know this isn’t desperation—it’s just how the game is played. Companies like Nebius and CoreWeave are capital-intensive by nature. You want to build data centres and buy GPUs at the scale required to service a Meta or a Microsoft? You need serious cash. The company explicitly said the proceeds will go toward financing growth, including data centre build-outs and procuring components. This isn’t a distress signal; it’s a growth signal.
What Smart Investors Are Watching
One seasoned tech investor with a focus on infrastructure plays has been pounding the table on data centre names like IREN, AI infrastructure plays like NBIS, and special situations like BNED. The thesis is simple: the demand for AI compute isn’t slowing down, and the companies that own the physical infrastructure—the chips, the cloud platforms, the factories—are sitting in the catbird seat.
Consider this:
- Nebius expects to hit an annualised revenue run rate of $7 billion to $9 billion by the end of this year, up from $1.25 billion at the end of 2025.
- Several analysts tracking the neocloud space just raised their price targets on NBIS to $200, citing the Meta deal as validation that Nebius belongs in the top tier of neocloud providers alongside CoreWeave.
- Another research firm followed suit with a $200 target, noting that Nebius has grown its infrastructure to 170 megawatts of active capacity and about 2 gigawatts of contracted power.
That’s not a company in trouble. That’s a company scaling fast and using every tool in the box—including debt—to get there.
The Red Flags (Because There Are Always Some)
Look, Episode 309: The Curious Case of Nebius -- Why We Bought Despite Some Red Flags wasn’t wrong to flag concerns. The company posted a Q4 net loss of $250 million on revenue of $228 million, missing analyst estimates. The capex profile is heavy, and there’s always execution risk when you’re building out multiple generations of NVIDIA infrastructure simultaneously. Plus, with Meta as such a massive customer, concentration risk is real.
But here’s the counterargument: every hyperscaler and neocloud provider is burning cash on build-outs right now. It’s the cost of entry. The difference is that Nebius has locked in demand before building the supply. That $27 billion deal isn’t just a headline—it’s revenue visibility straight through to 2030.
The Bottom Line
If you’re the type who panics when a stock dips after a debt announcement, fair enough—this space isn’t for everyone. But if you understand that building AI factories requires capital, and that locking in Meta and NVIDIA as partners gives you a moat that most competitors can’t touch, then Tuesday’s pullback starts to look like an entry point rather than an exit.
Wall Street’s consensus is a Strong Buy, with an average price target around $168. That’s about 45% upside from current levels. And with institutional investors like Morse Asset Management quietly building positions, it’s clear the smart money isn’t scared of a little convertible debt.
Sometimes the best stories aren't the ones without risks—they're the ones where the risks are understood, priced in, and ultimately overshadowed by the upside.