New York, Feb 4, 2026, 14:39 EST — Regular session
- IREN shares tumbled roughly 19% amid heavy afternoon trading.
- Trading firm Jane Street revealed a 4.7% stake in a recent filing.
- Investors are adjusting their positions ahead of IREN’s quarterly results, set to drop after Thursday’s close.
IREN Limited shares dropped almost 19% on Wednesday, erasing the previous day’s gains as investors retreated ahead of the company’s quarterly earnings. The stock fell $10.40 to $43.99 in afternoon trading, after hitting a low of $43.95, on volume exceeding 46 million shares.
This shift is significant since IREN now acts as a high-beta stand-in for two shaky bets: AI-driven infrastructure and crypto risk appetite. A fresh tech selloff has traders eager to trim positions in crowded stocks, often ahead of any company-specific updates. (Investopedia)
IREN runs data centers supporting bitcoin mining and AI cloud services, with its stock reacting sharply to changing forecasts around funding and delivery schedules. The company markets itself as an AI cloud provider spanning the U.S. and Canada, all while maintaining ties to bitcoin economics. (Reuters)
Shares tied to crypto took a hit as well. Riot Platforms, Marathon Digital, and CleanSpark each dropped roughly 11% to 13%. Coinbase dipped over 7%, with Bitcoin slipping about 2% on the day.
IREN will release its results for the quarter ending Dec. 31 after Thursday’s market close and hold a conference call at 5:00 p.m. Eastern. (GlobeNewswire)
On Monday, a Schedule 13G/A filing revealed that Jane Street Group and its affiliates hold 15,447,088.34 ordinary shares, representing 4.7% of the class. The filing cites a Dec. 31 event date. (Streetinsider)
Investors remain wary of dilution risks following IREN’s capital raise late last year. In December, the company completed a $2.3 billion convertible senior notes offering alongside a placement of roughly 39.7 million ordinary shares. These moves were linked to repurchasing parts of its outstanding convertible notes. (GlobeNewswire)
Convertible notes are debt instruments that can convert into shares under specific conditions. This potential dilution can dampen sentiment when stocks rally and investors begin calculating the impact on future share count.
The longer-term bull case has centered largely on AI cloud growth. In November, Microsoft inked a $9.7 billion, five-year deal with IREN that also grants access to Nvidia chips, Reuters reported. However, the contract includes a clause allowing termination if IREN misses delivery deadlines. (Reuters)
The downside is clear: if Thursday brings a cautious stance on spending, funding, or ramp timing, the stock could stay under pressure—especially with bitcoin weak or peers falling.
Traders are eyeing updates on AI cloud deployments, customer concentration, and the portion of IREN’s capacity devoted to AI compared to bitcoin mining.
Thursday’s results and the 5 p.m. call are next. Investors want details that could steady the stock following a volatile, headline-driven surge.