TLDR: AI cloud provider CoreWeave has dramatically altered its growth strategy, acquiring Python notebook startup Marimo after its ambitious $9 billion all-stock deal to acquire infrastructure giant Core Scientific was rejected by shareholders. The pivot from infrastructure to software comes amidst a highly competitive ‘AI arms race’ and suggests a re-evaluation of market valuations in the overheated AI sector.
In a significant strategic realignment, CoreWeave, a prominent AI cloud provider, has announced the acquisition of Marimo Inc., an open-source Python notebook startup. This move follows the unexpected collapse of CoreWeave’s previously planned $9 billion all-stock acquisition of Core Scientific, a bitcoin miner and data center operator. The deal, initially announced in July, was formally terminated after Core Scientific shareholders voted against the offer, citing a belief that the company was undervalued given the rapidly escalating valuations in the AI infrastructure market.
The shareholder rejection highlights a growing conviction that pure-play infrastructure assets, with their vast power capacity and data center footprints—critical bottlenecks in the AI industry—are a more valuable bet than a diversified company in the current market. This sentiment was reportedly echoed by proxy advisory firms ISS and Glass Lewis.
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CoreWeave’s strategic pivot occurs amidst what has been described as a capital-intensive ‘AI arms race,’ which has fueled the company’s rapid expansion. The company experienced a turbulent IPO in March 2025, quickly followed by a successful $2 billion debt offering aimed at funding its aggressive growth. The contrast between the failed $9 billion infrastructure bid and the acquisition of a software startup like Marimo, which PitchBook estimates had raised approximately $5 million in funding, underscores a dramatic shift in CoreWeave’s M&A focus. Instead of investing heavily in physical power infrastructure, the company is now focusing on tools for the developers who will ultimately consume that power, signaling a potential adjustment to an increasingly overheated AI market.


