Nebius Group (NASDAQ: NBIS) is inching down this morning after reporting $227.7 million in revenue on a $249.6 million loss for its fourth financial quarter (Q4).
The headline numbers – a revenue miss and a widened net loss – sent a wave of jitters through the trading floor, causing the company’s stock price to sink in early trading.
In fact, Nebius stock now looks headed to challenge its 200-day moving average (MA) at the $177 level. A decisive break below that price may accelerate bearish momentum in the near-term.
Still, for discerning investors, this post-earnings dip represents a “rare window of opportunity” to grab a high-growth artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure play at a discount to its October peak.
Why Nebius stock is worth buying on the post-earnings dip
Investors are bailing on NBIS stock mostly because they believe the firm posted a “weak” Q4.
However, what “should” be more important than a near-term miss, at least for long-term investors, is the sheer scale of its growth. In Q4, Nebius saw its revenue come in a remarkable 547% up YoY.
While it sure was a hair under the $247 million that analysts had forecast, is it really fair to call a quarter “weak” when a company sees its revenue more than quintuple on a year-over-year basis?
After all, in the world of enterprise tech, how many businesses can you truly count that are growing at that sort of pace? This isn’t just growth; it’s a vertical ascent.
What the signals are: the demand for Nebius’s AI-native cloud services is “so high” that the company remained essentially sold out of capacity throughout the quarter, proving the “miss” likely wasn’t about a lack of interest but a race to build fast enough to meet insatiable clients.
Why widening loss shouldn’t deter investors from NBIS shares
On the surface, a net loss of $249.6 million – more than double the previous year’s loss – may look like a red flag. But again, context is everything.
In the high-stakes arms race for AI supremacy, a widening loss is often the price of admission for future dominance.
Nebius is aggressively front-loading its expenses to secure the most sought-after hardware on the planet: Nvidia’s Blackwell and Rubin GPUs.
These aren’t “bad” losses; they’re capital investments in the literal engines of the next industrial revolution.
By scaling its infrastructure now, NBIS is ensuring it can fulfill multi-billion-dollar contracts with giants like Microsoft and Meta.
In short, for this Dutch firm, spending money today is the only way to print it tomorrow – and that warrants sticking with Nebius shares despite a headline Q4 loss.
How Wall Street recommends playing Nebius Group
Risk-tolerant investors should consider buying the dip in Nebius also because Wall Street analysts remain bullish as ever on the AI infrastructure company.
According to Barchart, the consensus rating on NBIS shares sits at “strong buy” currently, with the mean target of about $142, indicating potential upside of nearly 65% from here.
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