New York, June 14, 2026, 13:12 EDT —
- KEEL closed Friday at $5.59, up 1.27%, and was quoted at $5.66 after hours, with volume of 54.76 million shares versus a 39.87 million average.
- Keel’s recent $458 million convertible-note close eased one funding concern but kept dilution and execution risk in focus.
- KEEL appears on FTSE Russell’s preliminary Russell 3000 additions list, putting index reconstitution on the near-term watch list.
Keel Infrastructure Corp. enters the new week with its Nasdaq-listed stock still drawing heavy trading interest after Friday’s close. The shares ended June 12 at $5.59, up 1.27%, then rose to $5.66 after hours, with volume above Benzinga’s listed average. That matters for the stock price because investors are weighing a fast-rising AI-infrastructure story against a still loss-making business carrying a market value of roughly $3.4 billion.
The immediate company-specific backdrop is Keel’s June 9 closing of $458 million of 1.250% convertible senior notes due 2032. Convertible senior notes are debt that pays interest and may convert into common stock under set terms, giving a company capital while creating possible future dilution for shareholders. Keel said the offering included the full exercise of a $58 million additional-notes option and generated about $445.4 million in net proceeds before offering expenses and capped-call costs.
The financing cuts both ways for the stock. The bull read is that Keel now has more flexibility to fund long-lead equipment deposits, letters of credit and data-center development at Panther Creek, Sharon and Moses Lake through leasing. The bear read is that the initial conversion price is about $7.41 per share, above Friday’s price but still a potential dilution marker if the stock rallies. Keel also bought capped calls, which are hedge contracts intended to reduce dilution or extra cash payments on converted notes up to a stated cap; the initial cap price is $11.86 per share.
Keel is the U.S. successor and rebrand of Bitfarms, and its investment story now hinges on high-performance computing, or HPC, meaning large-scale computing power used for data-intensive workloads such as artificial intelligence. The company says it develops data centers and energy infrastructure for HPC and AI workloads and has a 2.2-gigawatt power-capacity pipeline with grid interconnections and energy assets in Pennsylvania, Washington and Québec. That pivot raises the potential reward, but it also shifts the risk profile from crypto-mining cycles toward capital-intensive data-center development.
The next near-term catalyst is index-related. FTSE Russell’s preliminary Russell 3000 additions list includes “Keel Infrastructure Corp” in technology, and LSEG says the newly reconstituted Russell indexes take effect after the U.S. market close on June 26, 2026. Index inclusion can increase attention and trading from funds tracking benchmarks, but FTSE Russell also states that inclusion in an index is not a recommendation to buy, sell or hold the stock. LSEG
The bull case is straightforward: Keel has fresh capital, a large power pipeline and a market narrative tied to AI data-center demand. The stock also has momentum, with TradingView data showing KEEL up 5.47% over five days and 36.01% over one month. A signed lease or colocation agreement with an AI or HPC customer at Panther Creek, Sharon or Moses Lake would be the clearest fundamental signal that Keel’s power pipeline is turning into contracted demand rather than only development potential.
The bear case is that the financial results do not yet support the valuation on their own. In its Q1 2026 filing, Keel reported revenue of $36.992 million, down 22% year over year, and a net loss of $145.353 million. Adjusted EBITDA, a profitability measure that excludes interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and selected items, was negative $16.710 million. Separately, Benzinga lists trailing free cash flow at negative $407.26 million, a price-to-sales ratio of 14.59 and a price-to-book ratio of 7.96, all of which point to a stock priced for execution rather than current profitability.
On today’s verified facts, KEEL looks risky rather than clearly cheap. The $5.66 after-hours price sits slightly above Benzinga’s listed $5.50 consensus price target, while negative earnings, high volatility and dependence on leasing milestones leave little room for disappointment. For investors, the near-term price catalyst is Russell index reconstitution, but the bigger value catalyst remains a real AI/HPC lease that validates Keel’s data-center pivot.