New York, April 27, 2026, 07:01 (EDT)
- Jim Cramer urged investors to take profits on big data-center names following a strong run-up. He called IREN speculative—though he stopped short of outright dismissing the stock.
- IREN steps into its May 7 quarterly report with investors eyeing evidence that the company’s AI cloud expansion can justify the recent stock re-rating.
- It’s a packed week ahead for the broader trade, as Microsoft, Meta, Apple, Alphabet, and Amazon are all set to deliver earnings. Investors are bracing for updates on artificial-intelligence spending plans.
Jim Cramer telling investors to “take the gain” on IREN comes right as the AI data-center trade gears up for one of its busiest tests this quarter.
Friday, the CNBC host called the market “a beast” when it comes to anything connected to data centers—a category he stretched from Google and Amazon to Meta, Nvidia, and Broadcom. That session saw the Nasdaq jump 1.63%, while the Dow dropped roughly 80 points, highlighting just how much money is piling into the AI infrastructure trade. Internet Archive
This shift is significant, as IREN isn’t just a play on its bitcoin-mining past anymore. The stock now hinges on a different bet: demand for AI computing muscle must keep outpacing what it takes to construct data centers, snap up chips, and secure the funding required to keep the engine running.
Cramer didn’t issue a clear-cut sell on IREN. In his April 24 recap, he said he was “not going to veto IREN,” though he described the stock as speculative. He circled back to earlier worries over the company’s fundraising plans—mentioning both an ordinary share sale and a $1 billion convertible bond, which allows debt holders to swap for equity down the line. Insider Monkey
The real kicker landed at the close: don’t let greed take over if you’re already sitting on fast profits. Cramer noted his charitable trust cut back its stake in Broadcom—a key player in AI networking and custom chips—and advised anyone whose data-center stocks surged 30% or 40% within a week to lock in some gains Monday. That way, he said, you’ll have cash ready if prices dip.
Shares of IREN opened Monday at $50.64, slipping 2.7% from the last close. That price puts the company’s market cap near $15.1 billion.
The company describes itself as a vertically integrated AI cloud operator, handling everything from constructing massive data centers to assembling GPU clusters aimed at training and deploying AI models. GPUs—graphics processing units—are the backbone chips powering these demanding AI tasks. IREN is set to release its quarterly results for the period ending March 31 on May 7, with a conference call scheduled for 5 p.m. ET.
Scale remains the linchpin for the bull thesis. IREN says it has lined up $3.6 billion in GPU financing linked to its Microsoft deal, is planning a 140,000-GPU buildout, and is shooting for $3.4 billion in annual recurring revenue by 2026’s close. That figure reflects projected yearly sales from contracted or repeat business—though management flagged that not all of it is locked in yet.
The key piece here is still the November deal with Microsoft. That five-year pact has IREN supplying Microsoft with access to Nvidia GB300 GPUs—a contract weighing in at roughly $9.7 billion, with 20% paid upfront. Hardware rollouts will come in stages, stretching into 2026, all at IREN’s Childress, Texas site.
Back in February, co-founder and co-CEO Daniel Roberts described IREN’s demand as the “strongest…to date,” highlighting more than 4.5 gigawatts of secured power to support its expanding pipeline. But the results also underlined pressure on revenue, which slipped to $184.7 million for the December quarter, down from $240.3 million the previous quarter. IREN finished with a net loss of $155.4 million. IREN
Competition keeps shifting. Eyes are on data-center and bitcoin-miner pivot plays like Mara Holdings and Riot Platforms, both trailing IREN’s April 23 surge. Chip and infrastructure stocks—Nvidia and Broadcom—are also in focus, with Cramer grouping them in the broader data-center trade.
There’s more at stake than just a possible dip in AI demand. Hyperscalers—Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Meta—could decide to rein in budgets, stall new projects, or squeeze suppliers for better terms. IREN points to a laundry list of threats: execution issues, dependence on major customers, funding requirements, hardware supply, energy prices, and even permitting hiccups.
Whether that caution takes hold more broadly could be determined in the coming days. Reuters’ Mike Dolan noted Monday that Microsoft, Meta, Apple, Alphabet, and Amazon are all slated to release their earnings this week. Chip stocks, meanwhile, have been climbing, driven by AI equipment demand. JPMorgan flagged in a note that options markets are already pricing in higher-than-usual earnings swings.
That puts IREN in a tight spot. If Big Tech keeps pouring money into data centers, the story might stay hot through its May 7 report. But if there’s even a whiff that AI infrastructure is peaking, Cramer’s call to take profits could start to look not just cautious, but well-timed.