NEW YORK, May 11, 2026, 09:09 EDT
IREN Ltd. dropped in U.S. premarket action Monday, after the AI cloud and data-center firm announced plans for a $2 billion convertible-note offering. Shares, which had recently surged on Nvidia-related headlines, traded at $55.43—off 9.43%—as of 8:17 a.m. New York time, according to Markets Insider.
This shift reframes the conversation for IREN. Only days ago, the market was focused on Nvidia’s public backing of IREN’s infrastructure. Now, attention has swung to the looming question of just how much cash IREN has to raise to get those projects off the ground. Nvidia secured a five-year option to snap up as many as 30 million IREN shares at $70 apiece, tied to its broader plan to roll out up to 5 gigawatts of AI infrastructure.
IREN inked a $3.4 billion, five-year AI cloud deal with Nvidia. The arrangement has IREN delivering managed GPU cloud services—basically, AI-ready compute rentals running on Blackwell systems—out of its Childress, Texas campus.
The notes would come due Dec. 1, 2033. IREN is also giving initial investors a shot at an extra $300 million. These are convertible notes, meaning the debt could turn into equity if certain conditions are met. The company noted the interest rate, conversion rate, and other details will get locked in when pricing happens.
IREN said it’s earmarking some of the funds for capped-call transactions—essentially, options contracts that help blunt dilution tied to convertible debt. The remainder is slated for working capital and general corporate needs. Still, those caps only go so far: the company flagged the risk that dilution could kick in if shares climb past the cap price. IREN also cautioned that there’s no guarantee the deal will close, or that it won’t end up on different terms.
The financing comes on the heels of a softer fiscal Q3. IREN reported revenue dropping to $144.8 million, down from $184.7 million in the previous quarter. Net loss deepened as well—$247.8 million versus $155.4 million—blamed in part on weaker Bitcoin prices and retired mining hardware.
AI cloud brought in $33.6 million, up from $17.3 million. Bitcoin mining, though, slipped to $111.2 million compared to $167.4 million before. The shift jumps out: mining shrinks, cloud swells, and the business is hungry for more power, hardware, and project cash.
“The world is structurally short compute,” Co-founder and Co-CEO Daniel Roberts told reporters last week. IREN has moved ahead at Sweetwater and Childress, he said, shifting from ASICs—those specialized Bitcoin-mining rigs—to GPU infrastructure aimed at AI workloads. GlobeNewswire
The conversation around the stock has shifted into a debate over assets, too. On Friday, a Seeking Alpha contributor made the case that IREN’s valuation didn’t reflect its full data-center and power holdings—pointing specifically to the Nvidia option and the company’s ambitions past Bitcoin mining. Now, with Monday’s debt plan on the table, that argument faces a tougher hurdle: assets may look attractive, but there’s still the matter of financing them.
Analyst opinions are divided. On Monday, J.P. Morgan’s Reginald Smith bumped his target up to $46 from $39 but stuck with a Sell call, according to TipRanks. Needham’s John Todaro maintained Hold as of May 8. Both H.C. Wainwright’s Mike Colonnese and Bernstein’s Gautam Chhugani kept their bullish stance, sticking with price targets of $85 and $100, respectively.
Cantor Fitzgerald’s Brett Knoblauch bumped his price target on IREN up to $77 from $61, keeping the Overweight call. He flagged the Nvidia tie-up, the $3.4 billion cloud agreement, and new Spanish capacity as key drivers. Knoblauch’s note also highlighted IREN’s Microsoft cloud contract, arguing these moves are shifting investor perception—IREN is starting to look less like a mining play, more like a heavy-duty AI infrastructure story.
Rivals keep pushing ahead. Just last week, Hut 8 announced a massive 15-year, $9.8 billion AI data-center lease in Texas—underscoring how fast old mining and power players are hustling for tenants, electricity, and Nvidia-based designs before someone else locks them up.
Here’s the immediate risk. If IREN manages a clean pricing on the debt and turns its Nvidia and Microsoft deals into reliable income, Monday’s drop might just reflect temporary financing pressure. But if the terms fall short, costs on the build go up, or AI cloud demand stumbles, this same deal starts to look like an early warning that the shift is costing more than expected.