Nebius Group NV (NBIS) closed Wednesday up 6.54% at $94.69, which sounds great until you realize the stock is still sitting about 30% below its 52-week high of $141.10. For most companies, that kind of drop would trigger alarm bells. But for this Amsterdam-based AI infrastructure player, it's looking more like a mismatch between what the market thinks is happening and what's actually happening under the hood.
When the Numbers Tell a Different Story
Nebius just reported third-quarter results that make most AI companies look sluggish by comparison. Revenue rocketed 355% year over year to $146.1 million. Gross profit climbed 364.9% to $103.2 million, delivering a 70.6% gross margin. Those are the kinds of economics you typically see in mature cloud giants, not companies still in growth mode building out capacity.
Yes, the company posted a $130.2 million operating loss. SG&A and R&D spending ate up roughly two-thirds of revenue. But here's the thing: that's not a sign of broken economics. It's the AI infrastructure playbook. You scale first, figure out optimization later. The question isn't whether Nebius is profitable today — it's whether the unit economics work at scale. And with a 70% gross margin, they clearly do.
The Hidden Wildcard: Avride
What most investors seem to be overlooking is Avride, Nebius' autonomous-driving platform. This isn't some side project. Avride already has a partnership with Uber and is gearing up for commercial deployment. If this thing actually works, Nebius transforms from just another AI-compute provider into something more valuable: a company playing in applied AI, where margins tend to be better and market narratives rerate quickly.
That optionality doesn't seem to be baked into the current valuation at all. Which is interesting, because optionality in high-growth tech names usually commands a premium, not a discount.
Consolidation or Opportunity?
Even after a 22% pullback over the past month, Nebius is still up more than 210% year-to-date and 330% over the past twelve months. The stock chart shows weakness. The fundamentals show acceleration. Those two things don't usually stay disconnected for long.
If Avride proves itself commercially viable, buying NBIS 30% off its highs might end up looking like a really nice entry point wrapped in short-term volatility. Sometimes the market hesitates right before it reprices something sharply higher.