New York, June 10, 2026, 08:02 (EDT)
- IREN closed Tuesday at $54.02, down 8.73%, and was moving lower ahead of Wednesday’s open. Shares have now given back most of Monday’s gains.
- The stock is trading in a tug-of-war. Bullish analysts are backing its AI cloud plans, but sellers are hitting high-growth tech and crypto stocks.
- Execution comes next. IREN now needs to take its Microsoft- and Nvidia-backed capacity and build it out into working AI infrastructure that actually brings in revenue.
IREN Limited (IREN) shares dropped again ahead of the open Wednesday, after two volatile sessions that have caught traders’ attention in AI infrastructure. The stock closed Tuesday at $54.02, down 8.73%, reversing its 8.91% move higher from Monday. IREN was last seen quoted at $52.01 by 7:56 a.m. EDT, off another 3.72%.
It’s not about new company guidance. The move is on risk sentiment. Bitcoin was last trading near $60,948, off 2.8%. Reuters reported U.S. tech futures fell as investors weighed high valuations, inflation reports, and new geopolitical risks. That’s affecting IREN, which trades between a crypto miner and an AI data-center stock.
IREN started up Tuesday after Bernstein stuck with its Buy and raised the target to $100, a new Street high, TipRanks said. Bernstein highlighted the Nvidia partnership and IREN’s Microsoft exposure. Shares gave back most of the early move as traders shifted their focus to risk around execution, power supply, and funding.
IREN doesn’t trade like a pure Bitcoin miner now. The company says it is an AI cloud operator. It’s pushing GPU-based compute rentals for AI model work, both training and inference. Reuters listed IREN among “neocloud” outfits—firms leasing out Nvidia chips to customers that don’t want to build data centers. Reuters
IREN’s bull story comes down to two things. Microsoft signed a five-year, $9.7 billion cloud deal with the company in November, which brought in access to Nvidia chips. Nvidia then agreed to invest as much as $2.1 billion in IREN, tied to plans to build up to 5 gigawatts of AI infrastructure. Reuters reported that future buildouts are expected to focus on IREN’s 2-gigawatt Sweetwater campus in Texas.
IREN landed a $3.65 billion investment-grade GPU financing facility for its Microsoft contract as of June 1. Investment-grade signals credit-rating agencies view the debt as lower risk. IREN said this facility, with customer prepayments, will fund around 96% of the $5.81 billion in GPU spending tied to Microsoft, at an average financing rate of 3.31%. Co-founder and Co-CEO Daniel Roberts said the deal “demonstrates the quality of our customer contracts” and noted IREN “own[s] the data center infrastructure these GPUs run in.” GlobeNewswire
IREN plans to ramp up capacity soon. Reuters reported on May 26 that IREN will buy Nvidia Blackwell systems from Dell, paying about $1.6 billion. The company expects to bring those systems online in its Childress, Texas, data centers by early 2027. IREN said the hardware should push its annualized run-rate revenue up to $4.4 billion from $3.7 billion.
IREN is pushing ahead with expansion. Last week, the company said it signed a transmission connection agreement for a planned 800-megawatt data center campus in Bundey, South Australia. It’s targeting 2028 to start energizing the site, which will include submarine fiber links to Singapore, Indonesia, South Korea, and Japan.
Analysts aren’t shifting on the stock even with the volatility. Nick Giles at B. Riley raised his price target to $96 from $88 and stuck with a Buy rating, saying the South Australia project shows IREN’s lead on AI compute while the needed infrastructure still lags, The Fly said via TipRanks. Joseph Vafi at Canaccord moved his target up too, to $79 from $70, after the funding update. Vafi flagged the investment-grade debt as important for future capital needs.
There’s a clear bear case here. IREN still needs to finish expensive, power-hungry builds and secure approvals for new sites. Keeping debt under control is key, and the firm will have to prove GPU demand can last if the AI trade slows. Reuters said the Microsoft agreement may collapse if IREN misses targets. In its guidance, IREN flags risks tied to hardware deliveries, access to funds, getting licenses, and having enough operating capacity.
CoreWeave and Nebius are both competing in the AI compute space, with top clients using their services. Reuters said Microsoft arranged another infrastructure agreement with Nebius following its IREN deal. If Big Tech demand slows or raising AI capital gets tougher, the smaller, capital-heavy players could feel the pinch before others.
Eyes aren’t just on price targets here. Bernstein expects the initial 200-megawatt Horizon center IREN is building for Microsoft to come online sometime in the third quarter of 2026, according to TipRanks, which says more may follow this year. Traders are sticking to that schedule. If Microsoft’s piece gets delivered as expected, it backs up the AI cloud pitch. If things slip, IREN’s latest drop could look less like a normal dip and more like trouble.