NEW YORK, May 14, 2026, 10:25 EDT
IREN Limited climbed 4.7% to $57.75 in New York morning trading Thursday, after dipping as low as $54.17 earlier, according to market data. The move brought fresh attention to the shares, with the company’s bigger convertible-note offering set to close.
This rally stands out: IREN is putting its new AI cloud narrative to the test with its first large debt sale, moving away from its old bitcoin mining focus. Investors face a double-barreled calculation—on one hand, a bigger capital base for expansion; on the other, the looming risk of dilution if shares are converted down the line.
IREN disclosed in an SEC filing that it’s set the price on $2.6 billion of 1.00% convertible senior notes maturing in 2033, bumping up the deal size from its previous $2 billion target. Initial buyers can also snap up as much as $400 million more in notes within a 13-day window. Closing is slated for May 14, pending standard closing conditions.
A convertible note is a type of debt that can be swapped for equity. IREN’s initial conversion price landed at roughly $73.07 per share—32.5% above where the stock closed on May 11. The deal also included capped-call transactions, a hedging move to limit dilution, with the cap initially set at $110.30. Net proceeds are expected to come in around $2.57 billion, or $2.96 billion if buyers take up the full over-allotment.
The cash comes after Nvidia and IREN announced a strategic partnership on May 7, aimed at rolling out as much as 5 gigawatts of Nvidia DSX-based AI infrastructure across IREN’s global data-center portfolio. DSX, Nvidia’s blueprint for what it calls AI factories, centers on accelerated computing systems. As part of the deal, Nvidia secured a five-year option to purchase up to 30 million IREN shares at $70 apiece—potentially a $2.1 billion stake.
IREN struck a five-year AI cloud services agreement with Nvidia, a deal valued at roughly $3.4 billion. The arrangement will have IREN supplying Nvidia with managed GPU cloud access for its internal AI and research needs, all powered by Blackwell systems at IREN’s Childress, Texas site. “Fully managed cloud solutions”—that’s how Daniel Roberts, IREN’s co-founder and co-chief executive, described the offering. GlobeNewswire
The bridge between business lines hasn’t come together yet. In its latest quarterly report, IREN posted $144.8 million in total revenue for the March period. Bitcoin mining accounted for $111.2 million, while AI cloud services contributed $33.6 million. Net loss landed at $247.8 million. The company flagged risks to its AI push in the filing, pointing to the need for new customer contracts, enough GPUs — the chips that power AI — available gear, building out data centers, and securing both electricity and grid connections.
Wall Street’s take on IREN is still divided. JPMorgan bumped its price target up to $46 from $39, but stuck with its Underweight rating. The Nvidia partnership gives IREN a leg up as a “neocloud” provider — that is, a company specializing in renting out AI computing horsepower — yet questions linger. The bank flagged the “circular nature” of the deal and the lack of clarity on Nvidia GPU access as reasons for caution, per The Fly via TipRanks. TipRanks
Caution isn’t limited to the bears. Freedom Capital Markets’ Paul Meeks described Monday’s post-debt news drop as an “overreaction to the downside,” he told MarketWatch. Morningstar’s Luke Yang weighed in too, saying IREN may still require “tens of billions more funding” to ramp up its data-center footprint across Texas, Oklahoma, and British Columbia. MarketWatch
The fight for AI cloud dominance is heating up. Nebius posted nearly eight times higher quarterly revenue on Wednesday, and it’s now projecting capital spending for the year in the $20 billion to $25 billion range, ramping up its push to lock down power supplies and Nvidia GPUs. “There were several customers competing for every GPU,” CEO Arkady Volozh told Reuters. Reuters
Thursday’s rally for IREN doesn’t end the argument. The note sale brings cheaper capital for the moment, but the company still faces the challenge of turning contracts and construction into real operating capacity. Demand is only part of the equation in this sector. Power, chips, execution speed, and dilution—those factors will shape what happens next.