IREN fell sharply on Thursday, dropping 9% to trade as low as $34.44 before settling at $34.83. The stock had closed the previous session at $38.28. Volume came in at around 40.7 million, roughly in line with its daily average.
The drop adds to a rough stretch for the stock. IREN has now fallen around 41% over the past month, raising questions about near-term momentum and investor confidence in the company’s pivot away from Bitcoin mining toward AI cloud infrastructure.
The immediate trigger was news that Meta Platforms is preparing to enter the commercial cloud infrastructure space. That move spooked investors already nervous about how crowded the AI data center trade has become.
On top of that, an $800 million restricted stock grant awarded to IREN’s co-CEOs drew backlash. Critics say it signals potential dilution risk at a time when the company is already dealing with a multi-billion dollar funding gap for its AI build-out.
IREN is also falling alongside peers CoreWeave and Nebius, suggesting broader pressure on the neocloud sector rather than a company-specific blow-up.
Wall Street hasn’t completely lost the faith. IREN carries a Moderate Buy consensus rating, with an average analyst price target of $82.36 — more than double where the stock is currently trading.
Freedom Capital upgraded IREN to Strong Buy on July 6. Cantor Fitzgerald has an Overweight rating with a $99 target, while BTIG has a Buy and a $80 price target. HC Wainwright also rates it a Buy with an $85 target. JPMorgan is the outlier, rating it Underweight with a $46 target.
The stock’s 50-day moving average sits at $53.23, well above current levels, while the 200-day moving average is $47.70.
Not everyone is heading for the exit. Retail traders have been actively buying the dip in neocloud names including IREN, NBIS, CRWV, and APLD, according to recent market data.
On the institutional side, Invesco lifted its stake by 45.9% in Q2, adding over 936,000 units. NewEdge Advisors boosted its position by 245%. Sei Investments and Peapack Gladstone also opened or added to positions during the quarter. In total, institutional investors hold just over 41% of the stock.
IREN also made a C-suite hire this week, appointing Eric Hammersley as Chief Information Security Officer — a move seen as supportive of its AI cloud expansion plans.
On the fundamentals side, IREN’s last quarterly report showed revenue of $144.79 million, missing the $219.69 million consensus estimate. EPS came in at -$0.25, also below the expected -$0.22. The company carries a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.44 and a P/E of 72.56, with analysts forecasting full-year EPS of -$1.25.
The stock’s market cap stood at approximately $12.45 billion as of Thursday’s trading.
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