CoreWeave, Inc. reported a substantial insider sale on April 13, 2026, when Brian M. Venturo, the company’s Chief Strategy Officer and a director, disposed of Class A Common Stock in a transaction documented on a Form 4 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The disposition, executed under a pre-established 10b5-1 trading plan, totaled $124.6 million and included shares sold at prices spanning $104.7966 to $113.8805.
The filing shows the shares sold were held indirectly through two entities: West Clay Capital LLC and the Venturo Family GST Exempt Trust dated June 30, 2023. West Clay Capital LLC sold 488,394 shares, and the Venturo Family GST Exempt Trust sold 224,924 shares as part of the transactions reported on the Form 4.
On the same date as the sales, the filing indicates Venturo enacted conversions of Class B Common Stock into Class A Common Stock. Specifically, 900,000 shares of Class B Common Stock controlled by West Clay Capital LLC were converted to Class A Common Stock, and 225,000 shares of Class B Common Stock controlled by the Venturo Family GST Exempt Trust were likewise converted to Class A Common Stock.
The insider activity comes amid a period of strong market performance for CoreWeave. Shares of CoreWeave have risen 191% over the last year and were trading at $118.69 at the time of reporting, with the company carrying a market capitalization of $61.6 billion. Analysis flagged in the filing notes that InvestingPro views the stock as overvalued relative to its Fair Value and places it in overbought territory.
Beyond the insider transactions, CoreWeave announced several material commercial and financing developments that have drawn investor attention. The company disclosed an expansion of its relationship with Jane Street that involves approximately $6 billion for access to CoreWeave’s artificial intelligence compute infrastructure. Alongside that access arrangement, Jane Street invested $1 billion in CoreWeave’s Class A common stock, acquiring shares at $109.00 each. The expansion is described as incorporating NVIDIA’s Vera Rubin platform together with CoreWeave’s software and services stack.
In addition to the Jane Street agreement, the company reported completion of two private debt offerings. The first raised $4 billion through Convertible Senior Notes, and the second raised $1.75 million in Senior Notes. The Convertible Senior Notes are scheduled to mature in 2032, carry an interest rate of 1.75% per year, and are convertible into cash or CoreWeave common stock.
Analyst coverage reacted to the announcements. Evercore ISI raised its price target on CoreWeave to $150 from $120 and kept an Outperform rating following the Jane Street transaction. Separately, Bernstein SocGen Group increased its price target to $67 from $56 while maintaining an Underperform rating; that change was made after the company disclosed new agreements including a $21 billion deal with Meta and an additional agreement with Anthropic.
The Form 4 filing documents and the corporate updates together lay out a mix of insider liquidity actions, equity-class conversions, large-scale commercial partnerships, and significant debt financing. Each disclosure in the paperwork and public announcements is a matter of record in regulatory filings and company statements.
This article presents the facts reported in the company filings and announcements without analysis beyond the information disclosed in those documents.