Fervo IPO Soars 35% as Microsoft Hunts AI Startups

Fervo’s Nasdaq Debut and Microsoft’s AI Moves Redefine the Tech Landscape

Two major stories are reshaping the technology and energy sectors right now. Fervo, a next-generation geothermal startup, delivered a stunning stock market debut. Meanwhile, Microsoft is actively scouting AI startups to diversify beyond OpenAI. Both moves point to the same underlying force: the explosive energy and compute demands of artificial intelligence. Together, they reveal how the AI infrastructure race is fundamentally reshaping investment priorities.

Fervo Surges 35% on First Day of Trading

Fervo closed its first trading day on the Nasdaq at $36.54 per share. That marked a 35% jump from its IPO price of $27 per share. The company issued 70 million shares of Class A common stock. Importantly, no existing shareholders sold into the offering.

Investors showed enthusiasm for companies solving data center energy problems, as evidenced by the strong debut. Fervo secured $1.89 billion through its upsized IPO listing. For context, the 22 climate-tech IPOs across all of 2025 raised a combined $14.2 billion, according to PitchBook data. Fervo‘s single raise represents a massive share of that total.

The company’s financials, however, tell a complex story. Fervo reported a $57.8 million loss on just $138,000 in revenue in 2025. Fees tied to geothermal production rights at a Nevada site caused revenue to drop 31% from the prior year’s $199,000. These numbers resemble a company still deep in R&D mode.

The Real Bet: A $7.2 Billion Revenue Backlog

Investors are not betting on today’s earnings. They are betting on Fervo‘s contracted revenue backlog of approximately $7.2 billion as of December 2025. The company also holds a 3-gigawatt framework agreement with Alphabet for power supply to Google‘s data centers. On top of that, Fervo secured power purchase agreements for a $421 million geothermal energy plant in Utah.

“Everyone who’s running a data center is in a scramble to get more capacity online,” said Piva Capital managing partner Mark Gudiksen. He described the current environment as “a perfect storm moment.” Gudiksen is not personally an investor in Fervo. His words reflect a broad market sentiment driving record valuations in energy tech.

Fervo‘s debut confirms what late-stage climate-tech investors already believe. The biggest opportunity in 2026 lies in solving the AI boom’s energy crunch. Geothermal energy also carries bipartisan political support in the US. It contributes directly to American energy independence, adding further appeal to investors.

AI Infrastructure Demand Is Pushing Investors Into New Territory

The AI infrastructure buildout keeps growing pressure on the energy grid. Hyperscalers and utilities actively seek companies that meet accelerating energy demands. Even nuclear fusion attracts record investor valuations today. That sector has yet to produce commercially proven technology.

The scramble for AI energy solutions stretches across every corner of the market. Companies like Fervo offer a rare combination of scale, clean energy credentials, and long-term contracted revenue. That mix makes them magnets for institutional capital. The alpha in climate tech for 2026, investors say, clearly favors energy-focused plays.

Microsoft Scouts AI Startups Beyond OpenAI

On May 13, 2026, Microsoft announced a strategic exploration of partnerships with emerging startups. The goal is to strengthen its AI capabilities beyond its existing relationship with OpenAI. Microsoft first backed OpenAI in 2019. It has since delivered $11.8 billion of a promised $13 billion commitment.

OpenAI‘s ChatGPT boosted Microsoft‘s AI profile and drove demand for its Azure cloud platform. But the partnership has grown more complicated over time. Contract terms shifted in late 2025, expanding what Microsoft can independently build. A late-April deal then gave OpenAI more freedom to work with rivals, including Amazon.

Cursor, Inception, and the Regulatory Tightrope

Microsoft reportedly explored buying Cursor, a code-generation startup. However, talks paused over concerns a deal could attract regulatory scrutiny. The concern stems from Microsoft‘s existing ownership of GitHub Copilot. Regulators might view such a combination as limiting competition.

Microsoft also held discussions with Inception, a Stanford-founded startup. Inception works on diffusion methods for generating text. Microsoft‘s venture arm M12 joined Inception‘s $50 million seed round. Inception reportedly seeks a valuation above $1 billion, though no deal is confirmed.

A Microsoft executive testified that OpenAI-related investment plus infrastructure and hosting exceeds $100 billion. That scale invites serious regulatory questions about market competition. Microsoft is actively diversifying its AI supply chain due to these shifts. Acquisitions and minority stakes now serve as a logical pressure valve.

The Broader Arms Race: Scale, Power, and Talent

Frontier AI labs push toward models requiring enormous computing resources. Microsoft faces a crowded field of rivals chasing the same startup targets. SpaceX and other tech giants compete for the same scarce AI teams and technologies. Access to chips and talent has become a defining bottleneck across the entire industry.

Large tech firms increasingly buy teams and techniques rather than build from scratch. For startups, multiple potential buyers create stronger negotiating leverage on price and deal terms. Especially when the buyer is also a major cloud provider, that leverage grows significantly. The arms race is shifting decisively from features to scale.

Both stories – Fervo‘s IPO surge and Microsoft‘s startup hunt – reflect the same urgent reality. AI is consuming resources at a pace the market has never seen before. Companies that move fast to secure energy and talent will shape the next decade. The race to power and build artificial intelligence is fully underway.