New York, June 11, 2026, 12:27 (EDT)
- IREN climbed in midday trading on the Nasdaq, rebounding after two steep drops earlier this week.
- Needham lowered its 2026 and 2027 numbers for fiscal years, pointing to a slower pickup in AI cloud revenue through 2026.
- Investors watching IREN’s AI push got updates this week, as the company lined up a $3.65 billion GPU financing and detailed plans for an 800MW campus in South Australia.
IREN Limited was up midday Thursday, bouncing off two sessions of selling as traders sized up a new Needham downgrade and news about the company’s growing AI infrastructure pipeline. IREN (Nasdaq: IREN) was changing hands at $54.27, climbing $2.75, or 5.3%. The stock swung between $50.78 and $54.45 so far in the session, per market data.
IREN stock bounced after a rough run. Shares finished Wednesday, June 10, at $51.52, down 4.63%. On Tuesday, June 9, the stock dropped 8.73%, StockAnalysis price data show.
Needham is the latest to urge caution, cutting its financial forecasts for Iris Energy—still called IREN in some data feeds—for fiscal 2026 and 2027. Needham pointed to a slower ramp in AI cloud revenue into calendar 2026, with a bigger chunk of revenue from key contracts now expected in the fiscal third and fourth quarters, according to a Thursday report from Investing.com.
Needham’s comments didn’t dismiss IREN’s AI plans. The firm is sticking with its forecast for about $3.7 billion in annualized AI cloud revenue by Q1 of 2027. It still sees mining revenue dropping to near zero by the end of the year as IREN swaps out Bitcoin mining gear for GPUs running AI jobs.
The shift remains a key part of the IREN story. In its May business update, the company pointed to its March-quarter numbers as evidence of the move away from Bitcoin mining toward AI Cloud. Total revenue dropped to $144.8 million from $184.7 million in the previous quarter. Net loss widened to $247.8 million. IREN said lower Bitcoin prices and shutting down mining hardware before installing GPUs and starting billing weighed on revenue.
Investors want to see if IREN actually turns its major contracts and power into revenue as planned. IREN in May said it landed a $3.4 billion, five-year AI cloud deal with Nvidia for managed GPU service at its Childress, Texas site. “Fully managed cloud solutions, not just bare metal,” is how Daniel Roberts, IREN’s co-founder and co-CEO, described the contract. GlobeNewswire
IREN is stacking up financing and hardware deals as it ramps up. The company announced June 1 it closed a $3.65 billion investment-grade GPU financing facility to back its AI Cloud work with Microsoft. That deal includes a $2.10 billion U.S. private placement and a $1.55 billion delayed-draw term loan.
IREN’s expansion plans reached overseas too. The company announced on June 3 it signed a transmission connection agreement for an 800MW data center in Bundey, South Australia. Initial energization is planned from 2028. The campus is set to create more than 200 skilled jobs long term and over 500 construction roles.
IREN stayed far from its recent highs after bouncing Thursday. Shares traded at $53.96, up 4.75% at 11:55 a.m. EDT on Google Finance. The 52-week range was $9.52 to $76.87.
IREN has seen analysts stay split but leaning positive, according to Google Finance’s data snapshot. In the last three months, out of 10 tracked analysts, six rated the stock a buy, three kept it at hold, and one called it a sell. The average 12-month price target came in at $74.56.
Execution is now in focus for the stock: getting GPUs running, booking AI cloud sales, and handling the drop in Bitcoin mining business. Shares bounced Thursday as buyers came back after the recent slide, but Needham’s update kept the spotlight on IREN’s delay between signing AI contracts and seeing those revenues in the numbers.