In 2024, Cerebras filed to go public. In 2025, the company withdrew its IPO. And yesterday, Cerebras hit the public markets, at long last.

The chipmaker, which designs and manufactures AI inference chips, has long billed itself as an Nvidia challenger, and its first day stock pop certainly reflected Nvidia-mania: Cerebras shares rocketed 70% by market close.

The factors that ruffled prospective investors in 2024 seem, for now, far in the rearview mirror. At the time, there were concerns around customer concentration, Cerebras’s ties to UAE-connected G42, and CEO Andrew Feldman’s own distant past. (Feldman pled guilty to accounting fraud in the 2000s at a previous company.) Now, though, the company’s multi-billion partnership with OpenAI, also a shareholder, seems to be key to the company’s momentum and future prospects. I asked Feldman on Thursday about the key differences in the company between today and 2024.

“We’re a stronger company,” he told Fortune. “I think we have bigger customers. We have more deployments. Our technology’s more mature. I think we have a better roadmap… We told the world we’d win a big customer like G42 and we’d learn from it. They were a billion-dollar customer and everyone said ‘you have only one.’ But we were ready, and in a position to move quickly.”