NEW YORK, May 17, 2026, 12:05 (EDT)
- IREN dropped 9.35% to $52.94 on Friday. The stock finished the week roughly 13.5% under where it closed on May 8.
- The company finished a $3.0 billion convertible-note sale after rolling out plans for an AI infrastructure push tied to Nvidia.
- Nvidia’s earnings on May 20 are the next focus for the AI-compute trade.
IREN finished the week down. The data-center stock slipped after IREN completed its $3.0 billion convertible-note deal, with the market questioning if its Nvidia-backed AI buildout could move ahead without hitting shareholders with extra strain.
U.S. markets are closed Sunday, so the latest price for IREN is Friday’s close. IREN ended down 9.35% at $52.94 after touching a low of $52.86, market data from StockAnalysis and IREN’s investor page show. The Nasdaq Composite lost 1.5% Friday with tech stocks leading the drop from recent highs.
That’s relevant now because IREN isn’t simply a bitcoin miner anymore. The company wants to make it big in AI cloud, selling data center space and GPUs—graphics chips used for AI work. That shift could mean more valuable sales, but it comes with big upfront costs for energy, facilities, hardware, and software.
IREN confirmed Thursday it wrapped up its $3.0 billion offering of 1.00% convertible senior notes set to mature in 2033. These notes can be turned into equity down the line. The company said net proceeds totaled about $2.96 billion. It paid $201.3 million for capped call transactions, which are option contracts designed to help limit dilution from conversion up to a certain stock price.
IREN’s latest financing came after the company said on May 7 it was teaming up with Nvidia to back as much as 5 gigawatts in AI infrastructure. The deal gives Nvidia a five-year option to buy as many as 30 million IREN shares at $70 each, for a possible $2.1 billion outlay, if conditions are met. Reuters called IREN a “neocloud,” meaning a new cloud firm that leases Nvidia-powered computing to clients who choose not to own their own data centers.
Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang called AI factories “foundational infrastructure for the global economy” in the companies’ statement. IREN co-founder and co-CEO Daniel Roberts said the deal puts Nvidia’s AI tech together with IREN’s access to power, land, data centers and GPUs.
IREN has signed a five-year, $3.4 billion AI cloud deal with Nvidia to use air-cooled Blackwell GPUs, the company said. Deployment is planned at up to 60 megawatts of its current data center space in Childress, Texas, with a ramp starting in early 2027. Nvidia’s Blackwell platform is its latest AI accelerator.
IREN posted a tougher set of earnings for the March quarter, with total revenue at $144.8 million, dropping from $184.7 million in the previous quarter. The net loss was $247.8 million. Bitcoin mining revenue slid to $111.2 million from $167.4 million. AI cloud services revenue, though, increased to $33.6 million from $17.3 million.
Roberts said in the results release, “the world is structurally short compute,” and pointed to delivered data-center and GPU capacity as the main bottleneck. He said IREN is pushing ahead with its Childress data centers linked to the Microsoft deal and shifting current data centers from ASIC bitcoin-mining chips to GPUs for AI work.
IREN moved sharply in the days leading up to Friday. Shares jumped 7.65% on May 8 after the Nvidia headline, dropped 9.89% on May 11 with the note sale, then bounced back Tuesday and Thursday before sliding again on Friday. The stock fell about 13.5% from a May 8 close of $61.20 to $52.94 on Friday.
The drop was not limited to IREN. CoreWeave, which also does AI cloud work, slipped nearly 6.0% Friday. Riot Platforms gave up 4.7% and MARA Holdings dropped 6.3%. These losses point to how fast investors can move out of both AI-infrastructure and bitcoin-related bets when worries over rates, oil, and stretched valuations stack up.
IREN spells out the risks in its own filings. The miner says results hinge on getting capital, building data centers on time, getting enough GPUs, securing power and contracts, and delivering in new markets. Capped calls can cut dilution, but only to a set share price. IREN also said annual recurring revenue counts contracts for GPUs that aren’t bringing in revenue until they’re delivered and running.
Nvidia’s first-quarter fiscal 2027 results are due May 20 at 2 p.m. Pacific time, and that stands out as the main event this week. For IREN, it’s less about the exact numbers from one chipmaker and more about whether the market still buys into the AI buildout at the current scale—power, debt, and data-center capacity all in play.