Today: 9 June 2026
IREN Stock Approaches $60 as AI Data-Center Bet Hits Key Point
9 June 2026
2 mins read

IREN Stock Approaches $60 as AI Data-Center Bet Hits Key Point

NEW YORK, June 9, 2026, 09:04 EDT

  • IREN closed Monday at $59.19, up 8.9%, and was quoted higher before Tuesday’s open.
  • The move followed a bitcoin-linked rebound and renewed focus on IREN’s shift toward AI cloud infrastructure.
  • The stock remains exposed to bitcoin swings, funding needs and delays in building large data-center sites.

IREN Limited was indicated slightly higher before Tuesday’s Nasdaq open after jumping 8.9% on Monday, a quick rebound for one of the market’s more volatile AI-and-crypto infrastructure names. The shares closed at $59.19 on June 8 and were quoted at $60.07 in premarket trade at 8:36 a.m. EDT, StockAnalysis.com data showed.

The move matters now because investors are trying to decide whether IREN should trade like a bitcoin miner or like an AI cloud company. AI cloud means renting out graphics processing units, or GPUs — chips used to train and run artificial-intelligence models — from data centers that have large amounts of power and cooling. TipRanks said IREN and other AI cloud infrastructure and bitcoin-mining stocks rose Monday as bitcoin rebounded about 2% after sliding toward $60,000 late last week.

The tape helped. U.S. stock futures were set for a higher open on Tuesday, with Nasdaq 100 futures up 0.7% at 8:23 a.m. ET, as chipmakers extended gains and broader risk appetite improved, Reuters reported.

Bitcoin was not giving a clean follow-through signal. It last traded near $62,600, down about 1.8%, while early quote data showed crypto-linked peers MARA Holdings, Riot Platforms and Core Scientific also higher, keeping the group tied to both digital-asset flows and AI-infrastructure demand.

Fresh attention on IREN followed its planned 800-megawatt data-center campus in Bundey, South Australia, with megawatts here referring to electrical capacity the site is expected to support. DataCenterNews Asia Pacific reported Tuesday that the project would be IREN’s first announced Australian data-center development, with four 330kV feeder exits expected to support up to 800 megawatts without network upgrades and energisation targeted from 2028.

Daniel Roberts, IREN’s co-founder and co-chief executive, said South Australia offers “abundant clean energy” and connectivity for the Asia-Pacific region. The company has said the project could create more than 500 construction jobs and more than 200 ongoing skilled roles. GlobeNewswire

The Australian plan is part of a larger pivot already underway. In its May quarterly update, IREN said it had signed a five-year, $3.4 billion AI cloud contract with Nvidia, formed a 5-gigawatt strategic partnership with the chipmaker, and had $3.1 billion of annualized run-rate revenue under contract; annualized run-rate revenue is a rough annual revenue figure implied by current contracts or capacity, not the same as audited full-year sales. Roberts said then that the world is “structurally short compute.” GlobeNewswire

A bigger anchor is still the Microsoft deal. Reuters reported in November that Microsoft signed a $9.7 billion, five-year contract with IREN for access to Nvidia’s advanced chips at the company’s Childress, Texas, campus, with deployment milestones tied to the contract.

Analyst support has not disappeared, despite the stock’s swings. TipRanks data showed Bernstein’s Gautam Chhugani reiterated a Buy rating on IREN on June 8 with a $100 target, while the broader analyst set carried a Moderate Buy consensus based on six Buys, three Holds and one Sell.

Bernstein analysts led by Chhugani have argued that power access is the key bottleneck in AI cloud, saying bitcoin miners are “well positioned in a power-constrained environment.” Wolfie Zhao, head of content at TheEnergyMag, struck a more careful note, saying success also depends on “enterprise-grade uptime,” customer wins, software and timely delivery — harder things than simply owning power. Sherwood News

But the downside case is not hard to see. IREN still has bitcoin exposure, is spending heavily, and its South Australia project remains subject to regulatory approvals, procurement and grid conditions; the company’s own forward-looking statement flags risks around growth execution, capacity targets, cooling systems and expansion into high-performance computing. If bitcoin rolls over again or AI hardware arrives late, investors could mark the stock back toward miner multiples rather than data-center valuations.

Stock Market Today

  • Grab Shares Flat as Singapore Merchant Program and Taiwan Expansion Highlight Growth Focus
    June 9, 2026, 9:28 AM EDT. Grab Holdings' shares on Nasdaq were roughly unchanged at $3.33 in pre-market trading as the company unveiled a new food-and-beverage merchant programme in Singapore and detailed partner commitments in Taiwan. The Singapore initiative, called "Grab Full House Mission," targets smaller merchants with promotions and support to offset rising costs and softer consumer demand. In Taiwan, Grab plans a zero-cost transition and quicker onboarding for delivery partners contingent on regulatory approval of its foodpanda acquisition, marking its first expansion beyond Southeast Asia. Investors are assessing these growth strategies amid regulatory scrutiny, market incentives, and consumer spending pressures.

Latest articles

IREN Stock Approaches $60 as AI Data-Center Bet Hits Key Point

IREN Stock Approaches $60 as AI Data-Center Bet Hits Key Point

9 June 2026
IREN surged 8.9% to $59.19 and was quoted higher premarket after a bitcoin rebound and renewed focus on its pivot to AI cloud infrastructure, but the stock remains exposed to bitcoin swings, heavy spending, and risks tied to its new 800MW South Australia data center project and major contracts with Nvidia and Microsoft.
AT&T Moves Higher Pre-Market on $45 Billion Payout Plan Still in Focus

AT&T Moves Higher Pre-Market on $45 Billion Payout Plan Still in Focus

9 June 2026
AT&T shares edged up to $22.58 pre-market after reaffirming 2026 guidance and a $45B+ shareholder return plan, providing a cash-flow marker as satellite broadband competition looms; the stock remains pressured by SpaceX risks flagged by Oppenheimer, with second-quarter free cash flow seen at $4.0–$4.5B.
GSK’s $10.6 Billion Oncology Leap Goes Deeper Than Headlines Show

GSK’s $10.6 Billion Oncology Leap Goes Deeper Than Headlines Show

9 June 2026
GSK will buy Nuvalent for $10.6 billion in cash, paying a 40% premium, to boost its oncology pipeline ahead of looming HIV drug patent expiries; Nuvalent shares jumped 38.9% premarket while GSK fell 1.4%, with the deal expected to add to GSK sales and profit from 2027 but dilute earnings per share 2026-2028 if it closes in Q3, and final outcome depends on FDA approvals and regulatory clearance.
AmpliTech’s 5G Radio Test Moves AMPG Shares

AmpliTech’s 5G Radio Test Moves AMPG Shares

9 June 2026
AMPG soared 26.7% to $6.57 after AmpliTech revealed its 64T64R Massive MIMO radio was the only one of its kind at O-RAN PlugFest, showing interoperability with major carriers’ equipment, but no new orders were announced, leaving sales conversion as the key investor focus.
Cartesian Growth Ticker Change Draws Trader Attention to Factorial Energy

Cartesian Growth Ticker Change Draws Trader Attention to Factorial Energy

9 June 2026
Factorial Energy surged 16% to $13.80 in its Nasdaq debut as FAC, with premarket trading near $20.70, after replacing CGCT via SPAC merger that raised over $100 million for battery commercialization and implied a $1.3 billion equity value; former CGCT shares now trade as FAC, with founders retaining majority voting power and staged lock-up releases ahead.
AT&T Moves Higher Pre-Market on $45 Billion Payout Plan Still in Focus
Previous Story

AT&T Moves Higher Pre-Market on $45 Billion Payout Plan Still in Focus

Go toTop