Today: 4 June 2026
IREN Stock Drops After $3 Billion Debt Deal: Why Nvidia’s AI Bet Just Got More Expensive

IREN Stock Drops After $3 Billion Debt Deal: Why Nvidia’s AI Bet Just Got More Expensive

NEW YORK, May 15, 2026, 11:02 EDT

  • IREN has wrapped up a $3.0 billion convertible senior notes sale, securing new funding to push forward with its AI cloud expansion.
  • Late Friday morning, shares changed hands at $54.46, off $3.94 from the previous close.
  • That financing comes on the heels of IREN’s $3.4 billion AI cloud deal with Nvidia, plus a sweeping 5GW infrastructure tie-up.

IREN Limited wrapped up a $3.0 billion convertible-note sale, securing funds for its rapid pivot from bitcoin mining to AI data centers and throwing a spotlight on the hefty price tag of that transition. According to a filing, the firm issued 1.00% convertible senior notes due 2033—this tally includes the full $400 million additional-purchase option.

Timing is crucial here. IREN’s push to convert land, energy, and data center assets into leased AI computing power comes right as a shortage of graphics processing units—the key chips behind artificial intelligence—has turned into one of tech’s main choke points.

Investors didn’t take the raise as straightforwardly positive. IREN was changing hands at $54.46 in late Friday morning trading in New York, off $3.94 from the previous close. Volume topped 14.7 million shares.

According to the filing, the notes will start off convertible at roughly $73.07 per share. IREN shelled out $201.3 million on capped-call transactions—a hedge designed to limit dilution, but only up to the initial cap price set at $110.30 per share.

IREN locked in low-cost borrowing, but there’s a catch. The arrangement could dilute shareholders down the road if new shares end up issued. That’s just how convertible debt works: it begins as a loan and may morph into equity.

Just days after announcing a five-year, $3.4 billion AI cloud agreement with Nvidia, IREN detailed plans to deploy air-cooled Blackwell systems across roughly 60 megawatts of existing data-center space at its Childress, Texas campus.

IREN rolled out news of an expanded partnership with Nvidia, targeting up to 5GW of AI infrastructure built around Nvidia tech throughout its worldwide pipeline. Nvidia picked up an option: for five years, it can acquire as many as 30 million IREN shares at $70 apiece—that’s a possible $2.1 billion outlay, though it depends on regulatory and other conditions.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang called AI factories “foundational infrastructure” in the partnership announcement. IREN’s co-CEO Daniel Roberts said the collaboration pairs Nvidia’s systems and architecture with IREN’s expertise in power, land, data centers, and operations.

IREN’s most recent quarter underlines the need to move quickly. Revenue dropped to $144.8 million in the March period, down from $184.7 million previously. Net loss also deepened, hitting $247.8 million, as the company retired old mining rigs in preparation for new GPU deployment and billing.

Roberts told investors the “bottleneck is delivered data center and GPU capacity.” He said IREN has made progress on data-center projects linked to its Microsoft contract, and is also shifting its current sites from ASICs—specialized bitcoin-mining machines—to GPUs.

The landscape is shifting fast. Jefferies analysts, with Jonathan Petersen at the helm, launched coverage on bitcoin-miners-turned-data-center operators like Cipher Digital, TeraWulf, and Core Scientific. Their note: these firms have a “head start” thanks to their hard-to-get power hookups. Investopedia

Rates remain in focus. Polymarket traders were putting 67% odds on the Fed making no cuts to rates in 2026, and 34% odds on at least one hike. That’s not an encouraging setup for any business still hungry for funding and hoping for lower capital costs.

There’s a risk the buildout could drag on longer or end up costing more than expected. IREN itself flags possible snags: more capital may be needed, securing grid hookups, sourcing hardware, customer delivery, or ticking the right regulatory boxes. Any of those hurdles could become an issue if cash inflows lag behind debt and construction outlays.

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