A man looks at his phone in front of the Microsoft logo during the 2025 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain on March 3. The Financial Times reported that Microsoft has withdrawn some of its agreements with cloud computing provider CoreWeave over delivery issues and missed deadlines.
BENGALURU (March 6): Microsoft has moved away from some of its agreements with cloud computing provider CoreWeave over delivery issues and missed deadlines, the Financial Times (FT) reported on Thursday citing unnamed sources.
Microsoft has a number of ongoing contracts with CoreWeave that provide it with computing capacity from data centres, a partnership which is worth billions of dollars, the newspaper said.
Founded in 2017, CoreWeave provides access to data centres and high-powered chips for artificial intelligence (AI) workloads, mainly supplied by Nvidia.
The Nvidia-backed company, which competes against cloud providers such as Microsoft's Azure and Amazon's AWS, has laid groundwork for what could be one of the biggest IPOs in recent times.
CoreWeave is seeking a valuation greater than US$35 billion (RM155.14 billion) in its New York flotation and is likely to target raising more than US$3 billion from its share sale, Reuters has reported.
Microsoft's decision to walk away from some business with the cloud technology provider is unrelated to a broader shift in its own data centre plans, FT said, citing one of the people close to the matter.
CoreWeave, Microsoft and Nvidia did not immediately respond to Reuters' request for a comment.
On Tuesday, CoreWeave acquired AI developer platform Weights & Biases for an undisclosed amount in a bid to extend its cloud platform offering.
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