NEW YORK, February 14, 2026, 17:54 EST
- IREN is set to join the MSCI USA Index following the market close on Feb. 27.
- Landing a spot in an index tends to spark buying from passive funds, pulling yet another crypto-linked stock further into the heart of mainstream benchmarks.
- As bitcoin price volatility puts pressure on their cash flow, miners are pushing more aggressively into AI data-center projects.
IREN Limited is set to join the MSCI USA Index after markets close on Feb. 27, opening the door for index funds to pick up its stock. “Scale and liquidity”—that’s how co-founder and co-CEO Daniel Roberts described the company’s position, tying the MSCI move to IREN’s efforts in driving its AI cloud strategy. (Nasdaq)
The MSCI USA Index, a staple for passive managers, covers roughly 85% of the market’s free-float adjusted value by tracking large- and mid-cap U.S. stocks. Shares of IREN climbed 2.85% on Friday, pushing its market cap up to around $13.7 billion, according to BlockBeats. (Bitget)
This all comes as the debate over how index providers handle crypto-heavy balance sheets drags on. MSCI, just last month, scrapped a plan to cut out “digital asset treasury companies”—those where more than half the assets are digital currency. The company told Reuters it needs to study further how to differentiate operating companies from pure investment vehicles. (Reuters)
IREN, known for its renewable-powered bitcoin mining, has started to rebrand as an AI cloud infrastructure player, TheStreet reported. That’s now a central talking point as miners try to move beyond being seen as just bitcoin proxies and lean into the data-center narrative. (TheStreet)
Bitdeer Technologies Group — another U.S.-listed bitcoin miner with its eyes on AI — said this week it’s speeding up efforts to shift toward high-performance compute infrastructure and colocation, meaning it will lease data-center capacity and electricity to clients. “The fourth quarter of 2025 marked a strategic inflection point,” said Matt Kong, Bitdeer’s chief business officer. The company highlighted a roughly 3.0 gigawatt power portfolio and its Clarington, Ohio pipeline site, which is set up for 570 megawatts of HPC and AI.
On Saturday’s Blockspace podcast, hosts pointed out that bitcoin shed $16,000 in just 12 hours last week, tumbling 21% in a single day—a hit that puts quick pressure on miners. They mentioned that six out of the past seven bitcoin “difficulty” adjustments were negative, so the network eased its computational requirements as mining power slipped. Miner revenue, or “hash price,” landed around $35 per petahash by their count. The episode also highlighted legal trouble at Bitdeer’s Ohio AI facility and mentioned IREN’s upcoming MSCI entry, set for the March 2 session. (Blockspace Media)
Risks cut both ways for index traders. Passive inflows can snap back quickly, while sudden bitcoin jolts may push miners to offload coins or seek new capital in thin markets. IREN isn’t out of the woods—its AI cloud initiative still needs to show it can generate consistent revenue. MSCI, for its part, hasn’t ruled out tweaking its rules again for crypto-centric firms.
The MSCI decision highlights just how fast crypto-related stocks are finding their way into major indexes. Still, bitcoin’s notorious volatility lingers, and there are ongoing debates over the network’s ability to outpace potential cryptography threats down the road.