New York, February 13, 2026, 16:20 (EST) — After-hours
- CoreWeave (CRWV) edged up 0.3% to $96.02 in after-hours trading. Shares moved between $91.11 and $100.67 during Friday’s session.
- CEO Michael Intrator put in a Form 144, flagging a planned share sale. Chief Development Officer Brannin McBee, meanwhile, disclosed sales on a Form 4.
- U.S. markets are closed Monday for Presidents Day. Next up for investors: CoreWeave’s results on Feb. 26.
CoreWeave (CRWV) ended after-hours trading on Friday with a small gain, up 0.3% to $96.02. The stock swung between $91.11 and $100.67 during a volatile session, with volume reaching more than 21.9 million shares.
Wall Street slides into the holiday lull, with the New York Stock Exchange shuttered Monday for Presidents Day and trading set to resume Tuesday. Investors, meanwhile, are left to sift through insider filings and legal news, with no new market session to absorb the headlines. 1
CoreWeave has set Feb. 26 for its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 earnings release, with the conference call lined up for 5 p.m. Eastern. That’s the next major marker for a stock that’s been driven by questions over both execution and funding, not just AI demand. 2
Chief executive Michael Intrator moved to sell as many as 32,455 shares—roughly $3.1 million worth—according to a Form 144 filed Feb. 11. Morgan Stanley is listed as the broker. The document mentions a Rule 10b5-1 trading plan set up back on May 23, 2025. 3
Insiders signal their intent to sell affiliate or restricted stock by filing a Form 144, but that filing doesn’t confirm an actual sale. A 10b5-1 plan, on the other hand, sets up prearranged trading instructions designed to limit trades based on later-acquired, non-public information.
Chief Development Officer Brannin McBee disclosed in a separate filing that he sold 128,330 Class A shares on Feb. 9, executing the trades across a price range of about $89.45 up to $97.70. Those sales brought in approximately $12.3 million at those prices. The filing noted the use of a 10b5-1 trading plan. 4
Insider selling isn’t an automatic red flag. Yet when those sales start stacking up—especially for a growth name with sentiment that can flip on a dime and an earnings call just days off—they can muddy the picture.
Bleichmar Fonti & Auld announced a securities fraud class action has been brought against CoreWeave and several executives, giving investors until March 13 to apply for lead-plaintiff status. The law firm noted the suit is currently before a federal court in New Jersey. 5
CoreWeave, a GPU rental outfit catering to AI developers, landed on Nasdaq in March 2025. Nvidia had already signed on to pour $2 billion into CoreWeave back in January, deepening their data-center alliance. CEO Intrator called Nvidia “the leading and most requested computing platform at every phase of AI.” 6
Attention turns next to Tuesday, when markets reopen after the holiday. CoreWeave’s report on Feb. 26 is also on deck; investors want fresh details on capacity buildout, customer demand, and the company’s balance sheet.