
B. Riley Securities | Canaccord Genuity | Cantor | Citigroup | Citizens Capital Markets | Compass Point | Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC | Jefferies | J.P. Morgan | Macquarie Capital | Roth Capital Partners | ||||||||||||||||||||

B. Riley Securities | Canaccord Genuity | Cantor | Citigroup | Citizens Capital Markets | Compass Point | Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC | Jefferies | J.P. Morgan | Macquarie Capital | Roth Capital Partners | ||||||||||||||||||||
AI Cloud Services | Platforms that provide access to AI/ML capabilities through cloud-based infrastructure. | ||
AI/ML | Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning. Artificial Intelligence (“AI”) is computer software that mimics human cognitive abilities in order to perform complex tasks, such as decision making, data analysis, language translation and a variety of tools and services across the emergent AI industry that have been developed to leverage AI capabilities. Machine Learning (“ML”) is a subset of AI in which algorithms are trained on data sets to become machine learning models capable of performing specific tasks. | ||
ASICs | An Application Specific Integrated Circuit is a type of integrated circuit that is custom-designed for a particular use, rather than intended for general-purpose use. | ||
Bitcoin | A system of global, decentralized, scarce, digital money as initially introduced in a white paper titled “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System” published on October 31, 2008, by an individual or group using the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto. | ||
Bitcoin network | The collection of all nodes running the Bitcoin protocol. This includes miners that use computing power to maintain the ledger and add new blocks to the blockchain. | ||
block | A bundle of transactions analogous with digital pages in a ledger. Transactions are bundled into blocks, which are then added to the ledger. Miners are rewarded for “mining” a new block. | ||
blockchain | A software program containing a cryptographically secure digital ledger that maintains a record of all transactions that occur on the network, that enables peer-to-peer transmission of transaction information, and that follows a consensus protocol for confirming new blocks to be added to the blockchain. | ||
Board | The board of directors of IREN Limited. | ||
difficulty | In the context of Bitcoin mining, a measure of the relative complexity of the algorithmic solution required for a miner to mine a block and receive the Bitcoin reward. An increase in global hashrate will temporarily result in faster block times as the mining algorithm is solved quicker - and vice versa if the global hashrate decreases. The Bitcoin network protocol adjusts the network difficulty every 2,016 blocks (approximately every two weeks) to maintain a target block time of 10 minutes. | ||
digital asset | Bitcoin and alternative coins, or “altcoins,” launched after the success of Bitcoin. This category is designed to serve functions including as a medium of exchange, store of value, and/or to power applications. | ||
EH/s | Exahash per second. 1 EH/s equals on quintillion hashes per second (1,000,000,000,000,000,000 h/s). | ||
fiat currency | A government issued currency that is not backed by a physical commodity, such as gold or silver, but rather by the government that issued it. | ||
fork | A fundamental change to the software underlying a blockchain which may result in two different blockchains, the original, and the new version, each with their own token. | ||
GPUs | Graphics processing units are a type of computing technology designed for parallel processing, which can be used in a wide range of applications, including graphics and video rendering, gaming, creative production and AI. | ||
hash | To compute a function that takes an input, and then outputs an alphanumeric string known as the “hash value.” | ||
hashrate | The speed at which a miner can produce computations (hashes) using the Bitcoin network’s algorithm, expressed in hashes per second. The hashrate of all miners on a particular network is referred to as the global hashrate. | ||
HPC | High-performance computing, which refers to the aggregation of computing power to achieve higher performance levels, often utilized to perform complex calculations in fields including science, engineering, finance, AI/ML and business. It typically involves using supercomputers or clusters of computers, often employing parallel processing, to perform calculations simultaneously, thereby greatly reducing computation time. | ||
miner | Individuals or entities who operate a computer or group of computers that compete to mine blocks. Bitcoin miners who successfully mine blocks are rewarded with new Bitcoin as well as any transaction fees. | ||
mining | The process by which new Bitcoin blocks are created, and thus new transactions are added to the blockchain in the Bitcoin network. | ||
mining pools | Mining pools are platforms for miners to contribute their hashrate in exchange for digital assets, including Bitcoin, and in some cases regardless of whether the pool effectively mines any block. Miners tend to join pools to increase payout frequency, with pools generally offering daily payouts, and to externalize to the pool the risk of a block taking longer than statistically expected from the network difficulty. Mining pools offers these services in exchange for a fee. | ||
proof-of-stake | An alternative consensus protocol, in which a “validator” typically may use their own digital assets to validate transactions or blocks. Validators may “stake” their digital assets on whichever transactions they choose to validate. If a validator validates a block (group of transactions) correctly, it will receive a reward. Typically, if a validator verifies an incorrect transaction, it may lose the digital assets that it staked. Proof-of-stake generally requires a negligible amount of computing power compared to proof-of-work. | ||
proof-of-work | A protocol for establishing consensus across a system that ties mining capability to computational power. Hashing a block, which is in itself an easy computational process, now requires each miner to solve for a certain difficulty variable periodically adjusted by the Bitcoin network protocol. In effect, the process of hashing each block becomes a competition and, as a result, the overall process of hashing requires time and computational effort. | ||
protocol | The software that governs how a blockchain operates. | ||
REC | Renewable Energy Certificate. | ||
SEC | U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. | ||
• | 4,987,244 ordinary shares issuable upon the exercise of options outstanding under our share issuance plans as of January 30, 2026, at a weighted-average exercise price of $72.70 per share; |
• | 20,295,401 ordinary shares issuable upon vesting of restricted share units outstanding under our Long-Term Incentive Plans as of January 30, 2026; and |
• | up to 111,244,042 ordinary shares issuable upon conversion of our Convertible Notes (as defined below). |
• | actual or anticipated fluctuations in our financial and operating results; |
• | the trading price of digital assets, in particular Bitcoin; |
• | changes in the market valuations of our competitors; |
• | rumors, publicity, and market speculation involving us, our management, our competitors, or our industry; |
• | announcements of new investments, new products, services or solutions, capital raising initiatives, acquisitions, strategic partnerships, joint ventures, capital commitments, integrations or capabilities, technologies, or innovations by us or our competitors; |
• | changes in financial estimates or recommendations by securities analysts; |
• | changes in laws or regulations applicable to us or our industry; |
• | the perception of our industry by the public, legislatures, regulators and the investment community; |
• | unfavorable or inaccurate press about or ratings or assessments of our environmental, social or governance (“ESG”) strategies or practices, regardless of whether or not we comply with applicable legal requirements, may lead to adverse investor sentiment toward us and our industry, which in turn could have an adverse impact on our share price, demand for our securities and our access to, and cost of, capital; |
• | additions or departures of key personnel; |
• | potential litigation or regulatory investigations; |
• | general economic, industry, political and market conditions and overall market volatility, including resulting from public health crises, including an outbreak of an infectious disease, war, incidents of terrorism, or responses to these events; |
• | sales of our ordinary shares by us, our directors and officers, holders of our ordinary shares or our shareholders in the future or the anticipation that such sales may occur in the future; and |
• | the trading volume of our ordinary shares on the Nasdaq. |
• | Bitcoin price and foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations; |
• | our ability to obtain additional capital on commercially reasonable terms and in a timely manner to meet our capital needs and facilitate our expansion plans; |
• | the terms of any future financing or any refinancing, restructuring or modification to the terms of any existing or future financing, which could require us to comply with onerous covenants, restrictions or guarantees, and our ability to service our debt obligations; |
• | our ability to successfully execute on our growth strategies and operating plans, including our ability to continue to develop our existing data center sites, design and deploy direct-to-chip liquid cooling systems, and diversify and expand into the market for high-performance computing (“HPC”) solutions (including the market for AI Cloud Services and potential colocation services such as powered shell, build-to-suit and turnkey data centers (collectively “HPC and AI services”)); |
• | our limited experience with respect to new markets we have entered or may seek to enter, including the market for HPC and AI services; |
• | our ability to remain competitive in dynamic and rapidly evolving industries; |
• | expectations with respect to the ongoing profitability, viability, operability, security, popularity and public perceptions of the Bitcoin network; |
• | expectations with respect to the useful life and obsolescence of hardware (including GPUs, hardware for Bitcoin mining and any current or future HPC and AI services we offer); |
• | delays, increases in costs or reductions in the supply of equipment used in our operations, including as a result of tariffs and duties, and certain equipment (including GPUs, hardware for Bitcoin mining and any other hardware for any current or future HPC and AI services we offer) being in high demand due to global supply chain constraints, and our ability to secure additional hardware (including GPUs, hardware for Bitcoin mining and any other hardware for any current or future HPC and AI services we offer), on commercially reasonable terms or at all; |
• | expectations with respect to the profitability, viability, operability, security, popularity and public perceptions of any current and future HPC and AI services we offer; |
• | our ability to secure and retain customers on commercially reasonable terms or at all, particularly as it relates to our strategy to expand into markets for HPC and AI services; |
• | our ability to establish and maintain a customer base for our HPC and AI services business and customer concentration; |
• | our ability to manage counterparty risk (including credit risk) associated with any current or future customers, including customers of our HPC and AI services and other counterparties; |
• | the risk that any current or future customers, including customers of our HPC and AI services or other counterparties, may terminate, default on or underperform their contractual obligations; |
• | our ability to perform under, and observe our obligations pursuant to, contractual obligations with counterparties, including customers of our HPC and AI services; |
• | changing political and geopolitical conditions, including changing international trade policies and the implementation of wide-ranging, reciprocal and retaliatory tariffs, surtaxes and other similar import or export duties, or trade restrictions; |
• | Bitcoin global hashrate fluctuations; |
• | our ability to secure renewable energy, renewable energy certificates, power capacity, timely grid connections, facilities and sites on commercially reasonable terms or at all; |
• | delays and costs associated with, or failure to obtain or complete, permitting approvals, grid connections and other development activities customary for greenfield or brownfield infrastructure projects, including as a result of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas’s (“ERCOT”) announced amendments to the approval process for large load interconnection requests; |
• | our reliance on power, network and utilities providers, third party mining pools, exchanges, banks, insurance providers and our ability to maintain relationships with such parties; |
• | expectations regarding availability and pricing of electricity; |
• | our participation and ability to successfully participate in demand response products and services and other load management programs run, operated or offered by electricity network operators, regulators or electricity market operators; |
• | the availability, reliability and/or cost of electricity supply, hardware and electrical and data center infrastructure, including with respect to any electricity outages and any laws and regulations that may restrict the electricity supply available to us; |
• | any variance between the actual operating performance of our miner hardware achieved compared to the nameplate performance including hashrate; |
• | electricity market risks relating to changes in laws, regulations and requirements of market operators, network operators and/or regulatory bodies, including with respect to interconnection of facilities of large electrical loads to the ERCOT grid (for example, via a process that may batch multiple large load interconnection requests), grid stability, voltage ride-through, frequency ride-through and curtailment obligations; |
• | heightened complexity and additional constraints in energy markets including load ramp requirements by utilities or grid operators, which may not align with our planned data center development and commissioning timelines; |
• | our ability to curtail our electricity consumption and/or monetize electricity depending on market conditions, including changes in Bitcoin mining economics and prevailing electricity prices; |
• | actions undertaken or inaction by electricity network and market operators, regulators, governments or communities in the regions in which we operate, including such actions that could result in the estimated power availability at secured sites being materially less than initially expected, available too late, delayed, conditioned upon technical or operational requirements or not available in each case whether at sustainable cost or at all; |
• | the availability, suitability, reliability and cost of internet connections at our facilities; |
• | our ability to operate in an evolving regulatory environment; |
• | our ability to successfully operate and maintain our property and infrastructure; |
• | reliability and performance of our infrastructure compared to expectations; |
• | malicious attacks on our property, infrastructure or IT systems; |
• | our ability to secure connection agreements to access power sources and permits or to maintain in good standing the operating and other permits, approvals and/or licenses required for our operations, construction activities and business which could be delayed by regulatory approval processes, may not be successful or may be cost prohibitive; |
• | our ability to obtain, maintain, protect and enforce our intellectual property rights and confidential information; |
• | any intellectual property infringement and product liability claims; |
• | whether the secular trends we expect to drive growth in our business materialize to the degree we expect them to, or at all; |
• | any pending or future acquisitions, dispositions, joint ventures or other strategic transactions, including our ability to consummate any such transactions on terms favorable to us or at all; |
• | the occurrence of any environmental, health and safety incidents at our sites, and any material costs relating to environmental, health and safety requirements or liabilities; |
• | damage to our property and infrastructure and the risk that any insurance we maintain may not fully cover all potential exposures; |
• | our failure to comply with any laws including the anti-corruption laws of the United States and various international jurisdictions; |
• | settlement and termination of proceedings relating to the default under certain equipment financing facilities, ongoing securities litigation, and any future litigation, claims and/or regulatory investigations, and the costs, expenses, use of resources, diversion of management time and efforts, liability and damages that may result therefrom; |
• | any failure of our compliance and risk management methods; |
• | any laws, regulations and ethical standards that may relate to our business, including those that relate to data centers, HPC and AI services, Bitcoin and the Bitcoin mining industry and those that relate to any other services we offer, including laws and regulations related to data privacy, cybersecurity and the storage, use or processing of information and consumer laws; |
• | our ability to attract, motivate and retain senior management and qualified employees; |
• | increased risks to our global operations including, but not limited to, political instability, acts of terrorism, theft and vandalism, cyberattacks and other cybersecurity incidents and unexpected regulatory and economic sanctions changes, among other things; |
• | climate change, severe weather conditions and natural and man-made disasters that may materially adversely affect our business, financial condition and results of operations; |
• | public health crises, including an outbreak of an infectious disease and any governmental or industry measures taken in response; |
• | damage to our brand and reputation; |
• | evolving stakeholder expectations and requirements relating to ESG issues or reporting, including actual or perceived failure to comply with such expectations and requirements; |
• | volatility with respect to the market price of our ordinary shares; |
• | that we do not currently pay any cash dividends on our ordinary shares, and may not in the foreseeable future and, accordingly, your ability to achieve a return on your investment in our ordinary shares will depend on appreciation, if any, in the price of our ordinary shares; and |
• | other risks factors disclosed under “Item 1A. Risk Factor” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K, incorporated by reference herein, and any further update in our subsequent filings with the SEC on Form 10-Q and Form 8-K. |
• | banks and certain other financial institutions; |
• | regulated investment companies; |
• | real estate investment trusts; |
• | insurance companies; |
• | broker-dealers; |
• | traders that elect to mark our ordinary shares to market for U.S. federal income tax purposes; |
• | tax-exempt entities; |
• | persons liable for alternative minimum tax or the Medicare contribution tax on net investment income; |
• | U.S. expatriates; |
• | persons holding our ordinary shares as part of a straddle, hedging, constructive sale, conversion, or integrated transaction; |
• | persons that actually or constructively own 10% or more of our stock by vote or value; |
• | persons that are resident or ordinarily resident in or have a permanent establishment in a jurisdiction outside the United States; |
• | persons who acquired our ordinary shares pursuant to the exercise of any employee share option or otherwise as compensation; or |
• | persons holding our ordinary shares through partnerships or other pass-through entities or arrangements. |
• | an individual who is a citizen or resident of the United States; |
• | a corporation created or organized in or under the laws of the United States, any state thereof or the District of Columbia; or |
• | an estate or trust whose income is subject to U.S. federal income taxation regardless of its source. |
a) | (Indirect Australian Real Property Interests) |
• | they, together with their associates as defined for Australian tax purposes, hold 10% or more of our issued capital, voting rights or rights to distributions on winding-up or otherwise at the time of disposal or for a 12-month period during the two years prior to disposal; and |
• | more than 50% of our assets held directly or indirectly, determined by reference to market value, consists of Australian real property (which includes land and leasehold interests) or Australian mining, quarrying or prospecting rights at the time of disposal; or |
b) | (Permanent Establishment) they have used the shares at any time in carrying on a business through an Australian permanent establishment. |
• | our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025, filed with the SEC on August 28, 2025; |
• | the information specifically incorporated by reference into our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended June 30, 2025 from our Definitive Proxy Statement on Schedule 14A, filed with the SEC on October 6, 2025; |
• | our Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q for the quarters ended September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2025 filed with the SEC on November 6, 2025 and February 5, 2026, respectively; |
• | our Current Reports on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on July 1, 2025, July 3, 2025 (only with respect to the second report filed on such date), September 8, 2025 (but only with respect to information included therein under Item 5.02), October 7, 2025, October 9, 2025, October 14, 2025, November 3, 2025 (but only with respect to information included therein under Item 1.01), November 24, 2025, November 28, 2025, December 1, 2025, December 3, 2025, December 8, 2025 and March 4, 2026; and |
• | the description of our share capital contained in our registration statement on Form 8-A dated November 16, 2021 (File No. 001-41072) filed under the Exchange Act, including any amendment or report filed for the purpose of updating such description. |

• | AI Cloud Services: platforms that provide access to AI/ML capabilities through cloud-based infrastructure. |
• | AI/ML: Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning. Artificial Intelligence (“AI”) is computer software that mimics human cognitive abilities in order to perform complex tasks, such as decision making, data analysis, language translation and a variety of tools and services across the emergent AI industry that have been developed to leverage AI capabilities. Machine Learning (“ML”) is a subset of AI in which algorithms are trained on data sets to become machine learning models capable of performing specific tasks. |
• | ASICs: An Application Specific Integrated Circuit is a type of integrated circuit that is custom-designed for a particular use, rather than intended for general-purpose use. |
• | Bitcoin: A system of global, decentralized, scarce, digital money as initially introduced in a white paper titled Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System by Satoshi Nakamoto. |
• | Bitcoin network: The collection of all nodes running the Bitcoin protocol. This includes miners that use computing power to maintain the ledger and add new blocks to the blockchain. |
• | block: A bundle of transactions analogous with digital pages in a ledger. Transactions are bundled into blocks, which are then added to the ledger. Miners are rewarded for “mining” a new block. |
• | blockchain: A software program containing a cryptographically secure digital ledger that maintains a record of all transactions that occur on the network, that enables peer-to-peer transmission of transaction information, and that follows a consensus protocol for confirming new blocks to be added to the blockchain. |
• | Board: The board of directors of IREN Limited. |
• | difficulty: In the context of Bitcoin mining, a measure of the relative complexity of the algorithmic solution required for a miner to mine a block and receive the Bitcoin reward. An increase in global hashrate will temporarily result in faster block times as the mining algorithm is solved quicker – and vice versa if the global hashrate decreases. The Bitcoin network protocol adjusts the network difficulty every 2,016 blocks (approximately every two weeks) to maintain a target block time of 10 minutes. |
• | digital asset: Bitcoin and alternative coins, or “altcoins,” launched after the success of Bitcoin. This category is designed to serve functions including as a medium of exchange, store of value, and/or to power applications. |
• | fiat currency: A government issued currency that is not backed by a physical commodity, such as gold or silver, but rather by the government that issued it. |
• | GPUs: Graphics processing units are a type of computing technology designed for parallel processing, which can be used in a wide range of applications, including graphics and video rendering, gaming, creative production and AI. |
• | hash: To compute a function that takes an input, and then outputs an alphanumeric string known as the “hash value”. |
• | hashrate: The speed at which a miner can produce computations (hashes) using the Bitcoin network’s algorithm, expressed in hashes per second. The hashrate of all miners on a particular network is referred to as the global hashrate. |
• | HPC: High-performance computing, which refers to the aggregation of computing power to achieve higher performance levels, often utilized to perform complex calculations in fields including science, engineering, finance, AI/ML, and business. It typically involves using supercomputers or clusters of computers, often employing parallel processing, to perform calculations simultaneously, thereby greatly reducing computation time. |
• | miner: Individuals or entities who operate a computer or group of computers that compete to mine blocks. Bitcoin miners who successfully mine blocks are rewarded with new Bitcoin as well as any transaction fees. |
• | mining: The process by which new Bitcoin blocks are created, and thus new transactions are added to the blockchain in the Bitcoin network. |
• | mining pools: Mining pools are platforms for miners to contribute their hashrate in exchange for digital assets, including Bitcoin, and in some cases regardless of whether the pool effectively mines any block. Miners tend to join pools to increase payout frequency, with pools generally offering daily payouts, and to externalize to the pool the risk of a block taking longer than statistically expected from the network difficulty. Mining pools offers these services in exchange for a fee. |
• | proof-of-stake: An alternative consensus protocol, in which a “validator” typically may use their own digital assets to validate transactions or blocks. Validators may “stake” their digital assets on whichever transactions they choose to validate. If a validator validates a block (group of transactions) correctly, it will receive a reward. Typically, if a validator verifies an incorrect transaction, it may lose the digital assets that it staked. Proof-of-stake generally requires a negligible amount of computing power compared to proof-of-work. |
• | proof-of-work: A protocol for establishing consensus across a system that ties mining capability to computational power. Hashing a block, which is in itself an easy computational process, now requires each miner to solve for a certain difficulty variable periodically adjusted by the Bitcoin network protocol. In effect, the process of hashing each block becomes a competition and, as a result, the overall process of hashing requires time and computational effort. |
• | protocol: The software that governs how a blockchain operates. |
• | REC: Renewable Energy Certificate. |
• | SEC: U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. |
• | Bitcoin price and foreign currency exchange rate fluctuations; |
• | our ability to obtain additional capital on commercially reasonable terms and in a timely manner to meet our capital needs and facilitate our expansion plans; |
• | the terms of any future financing or any refinancing, restructuring or modification to the terms of any future financing, which could require us to comply with onerous covenants or restrictions, and our ability to service our debt obligations, any of which could restrict our business operations and adversely impact our financial condition, cash flows and results of operations; |
• | our ability to successfully execute on our growth strategies and operating plans, including our ability to continue to develop our existing data center sites, design and deploy direct-to-chip liquid cooling systems, and diversify and expand into the market for high-performance computing (“HPC”) solutions (including the market for AI Cloud Services and potential colocation services such as powered shell, build-to-suit and turnkey data centers (“Colocation Services”) (collectively “HPC and AI services”)); |
• | our limited experience with respect to new markets we have entered or may seek to enter, including the market for HPC and AI services; |
• | our ability to remain competitive in dynamic and rapidly evolving industries; |
• | expectations with respect to the ongoing profitability, viability, operability, security, popularity and public perceptions of the Bitcoin network; |
• | expectations with respect to the useful life and obsolescence of hardware (including hardware for Bitcoin mining and any current or future HPC and AI services we offer); |
• | delays, increases in costs or reductions in the supply of equipment used in our operations including as a result of tariffs and duties, and certain equipment being in high demand due to global supply chain constraints; |
• | expectations with respect to the profitability, viability, operability, security, popularity and public perceptions of any current and future HPC and AI services we offer; |
• | our ability to secure and retain customers on commercially reasonable terms or at all, particularly as it relates to our strategy to expand into markets for HPC and AI services; |
• | our ability to establish and maintain a customer base for our HPC and AI services business and customer concentration; |
• | our ability to manage counterparty risk (including credit risk) associated with any current or future customers, including customers of our HPC and AI services and other counterparties; |
• | the risk that any current or future customers, including customers of our HPC and AI services or other counterparties, may terminate, default on or underperform their contractual obligations; |
• | changing political and geopolitical conditions, including changing international trade policies and the implementation of wide-ranging, reciprocal and retaliatory tariffs, surtaxes and other similar import or export duties, or trade restrictions; |
• | Bitcoin global hashrate fluctuations; |
• | our ability to secure renewable energy, renewable energy certificates, power capacity, facilities and sites on commercially reasonable terms or at all; |
• | delays associated with, or failure to obtain or complete, permitting approvals, grid connections and other development activities customary for greenfield or brownfield infrastructure projects; |
• | our reliance on power and utilities providers, third party mining pools, exchanges, banks, insurance providers and our ability to maintain relationships with such parties; |
• | expectations regarding availability and pricing of electricity; |
• | our participation and ability to successfully participate in demand response products and services and other load management programs run, operated or offered by electricity network operators, regulators or electricity market operators; |
• | the availability, reliability and/or cost of electricity supply, hardware and electrical and data center infrastructure, including with respect to any electricity outages and any laws and regulations that may restrict the electricity supply available to us; |
• | any variance between the actual operating performance of our miner hardware achieved compared to the nameplate performance including hashrate; |
• | electricity market risks relating to changes in regulations and requirements of market operators and regulatory bodies, including with respect to grid stability, interconnection and curtailment obligations; |
• | our ability to curtail our electricity consumption and/or monetize electricity depending on market conditions, including changes in Bitcoin mining economics and prevailing electricity prices; |
• | actions undertaken by electricity network and market operators, regulators, governments or communities in the regions in which we operate; |
• | the availability, suitability, reliability and cost of internet connections at our facilities; |
• | our ability to secure additional hardware, including hardware for Bitcoin mining and any current or future HPC and AI services we offer, on commercially reasonable terms or at all, and any delays or reductions in the supply of such hardware or increases in the cost of procuring such hardware; |
• | our ability to operate in an evolving regulatory environment; |
• | our ability to successfully operate and maintain our property and infrastructure; |
• | reliability and performance of our infrastructure compared to expectations; |
• | malicious attacks on our property, infrastructure or IT systems; |
• | our ability to maintain in good standing the operating and other permits and licenses required for our operations and business; |
• | our ability to obtain, maintain, protect and enforce our intellectual property rights and confidential information; |
• | any intellectual property infringement and product liability claims; |
• | whether the secular trends we expect to drive growth in our business materialize to the degree we expect them to, or at all; |
• | any pending or future acquisitions, dispositions, joint ventures or other strategic transactions; |
• | the occurrence of any environmental, health and safety incidents at our sites, and any material costs relating to environmental, health and safety requirements or liabilities; |
• | damage to our property and infrastructure and the risk that any insurance we maintain may not fully cover all potential exposures; |
• | ongoing proceedings relating to the default under certain equipment financing facilities, ongoing securities litigation, and any future litigation, claims and/or regulatory investigations, and the costs, expenses, use of resources, diversion of management time and efforts, liability and damages that may result therefrom; |
• | our failure to comply with any laws including the anti-corruption laws of the United States and various international jurisdictions; |
• | any failure of our compliance and risk management methods; |
• | any laws, regulations and ethical standards that may relate to our business, including those that relate to Bitcoin and the Bitcoin mining industry and those that relate to any other services we offer, including laws and regulations related to data privacy, cybersecurity and the storage, use or processing of information and consumer laws; |
• | our ability to attract, motivate and retain senior management and qualified employees; |
• | increased risks to our global operations including, but not limited to, political instability, acts of terrorism, theft and vandalism, cyberattacks and other cybersecurity incidents and unexpected regulatory and economic sanctions changes, among other things; |
• | climate change, severe weather conditions and natural and man-made disasters that may materially adversely affect our business, financial condition and results of operations; |
• | public health crises, including an outbreak of an infectious disease and any governmental or industry measures taken in response; |
• | damage to our brand and reputation; |
• | evolving stakeholder expectations and requirements relating to environmental, social or governance issues or reporting, including actual or perceived failure to comply with such expectations and requirements; |
• | that we do not currently pay any cash dividends on our ordinary shares, and may not in the foreseeable future and, accordingly, your ability to achieve a return on your investment in our ordinary shares will depend on appreciation, if any, in the price of our ordinary shares; and |
• | other risks factors disclosed under “Item 1A. Risk Factor” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K, incorporated by reference herein, and any further update in our subsequent filings with the SEC on Form 10-Q and Form 8-K. |
• | voting for a variation of class rights that only affect a single share class; |
• | voting for a compromise or arrangement proposed that would affect a certain class of holder, e.g. a plan of arrangement to transfer a class of share to a bidder; and |
• | voting in response to a takeover bid for a specific class of shares. |
• | that holder (or its affiliate or founder in respect of such holder) ceases to be a director due to voluntary retirement; |
• | the transfer of any B Class share by that holder (or an affiliate) to another person in breach of the Constitution (which is unremedied within 20 business days); |
• | the liquidation or winding up of the Company; or |
• | the date which is 12 years after the date upon which the company becomes first listed on a recognized stock exchange. |
• | by a foreign person (as defined in the FATA) or associated foreign persons that would result in such persons having an interest in 20% or more of the issued shares of, or control of 20% or more of the voting power in, an Australian company; or |
• | by a foreign government investor (as defined in the FATA) that would result in such a person having any direct interest (as defined in the FATA) in an Australian company. |
• | are the holder of the securities (other than if the person holds those securities as a bare trustee); |
• | have power to exercise, or control the exercise of, a right to vote attached to the securities; or |
• | have the power to dispose of, or control the exercise of a power to dispose of, the securities (including any indirect or direct power or control). |
• | has entered or enters into an agreement with another person with respect to the securities; |
• | has given or gives another person an enforceable right, or has been or is given an enforceable right by another person, in relation to the securities (whether the right is enforceable presently or in the future and whether or not on the fulfillment of a condition); or |
• | has granted or grants an option to, or has been or is granted an option by, another person with respect to the securities and the other person would have a relevant interest in the securities if the agreement were performed, the right enforced or the option exercised, |
• | when the acquisition results from the acceptance of an offer under a formal takeover bid; |
• | when the acquisition is conducted on market by or on behalf of the bidder under a takeover bid and the acquisition occurs during the bid period; |
• | when the dis-interested shareholders of the target company approve the takeover by resolution passed at general meeting; |
• | an acquisition by a person if, throughout the six months before the acquisition, that person, or any other person, has had voting power in the company of at least 19% and as a result of the acquisition, none of the relevant persons would have voting power in the company more than 3% higher than they had six months before the acquisition; |
• | as a result of a rights issue; |
• | as a result of dividend reinvestment schemes or bonus share plan; |
• | through operation of law; |
• | an acquisition which arises through the acquisition of a relevant interest in another listed company which is listed on a prescribed financial market; |
• | arising from an auction of forfeited shares conducted on-market; or |
• | arising through a compromise, arrangement, liquidation or buy-back. |
Corporate law issue | Delaware law | Australian law | ||||
Special Meetings of Shareholders | Shareholders generally do not have the right to call meetings of shareholders unless that right is granted in the certificate of incorporation or by-laws. However, if a corporation fails to hold its annual meeting within a period of 30 days after the date designated for the annual meeting, or if no date has been designated for a period of 13 months after its last annual meeting, the Delaware Court of Chancery may order a meeting to be held upon the application of a shareholder. | The Corporations Act requires the directors to call a general meeting on the request of shareholders with at least 5% of the vote that may be cast at the general meeting. Shareholders with at least 5% of the votes that may be cast at the general meeting may also call and arrange to hold a general meeting. The shareholders calling the meeting must pay the expenses of calling and holding the meeting. | ||||
Corporate law issue | Delaware law | Australian law | ||||
Interested Director Transactions | Interested director transactions are permissible and may not be legally voided if: • either a majority of disinterested directors, or a majority in interest of holders of shares of the corporation’s capital shares entitled to vote upon the matter, approves the transaction upon disclosure of all material facts; or • the transaction is determined to have been fair as to the corporation as of the time it is authorized, approved or ratified by the board of directors, a committee thereof or the shareholders. | A director or that director’s alternate who has a material personal interest in a matter that is being considered at a directors’ meeting must not be present while the matter is being considered at the meeting or vote in respect of that matter unless permitted to do so by the Corporations Act, in which case such director may: • be counted in determining whether or not a quorum is present at any meeting of directors considering that contract or arrangement or proposed contract or arrangement; • sign or countersign any document relating to that contract or arrangement or proposed contract or arrangement; and • vote in respect of, or in respect of any matter arising out of, the contract or arrangement or proposed contract or arrangement. Unless a relevant exception applies, the Corporations Act requires our directors to provide disclosure of any material personal interest, and prohibits directors from voting on matters in which they have a material personal interest and from being present at the meeting while the matter is being considered, unless directors who do not have a material personal interest in the relevant matter have passed a resolution that identifies the director, the nature and extent of the director’s interest in the matter and its relation to our affairs and states that those directors are satisfied that the interest should not disqualify the director from voting or being present. In addition, the Corporations Act may require shareholder approval of any provision of related party benefits to our directors, unless a relevant exception applies. | ||||
Corporate law issue | Delaware law | Australian law | ||||
Cumulative Voting | The certificate of incorporation of a Delaware corporation may provide that shareholders of any class or classes or of any series may vote cumulatively either at all elections or at elections under specified circumstances. | No cumulative voting concept for director elections. Voting rights can vary by share class, depending on the terms attaching to the shares under the constitution of the company. Ordinary shares carry one vote (by poll) per share and B Class shares carry 15 votes (by poll) per ordinary share held by the holder. | ||||
Approval of Corporate Matters by Written Consent | Unless otherwise specified in a corporation’s certificate of incorporation, shareholders may take action permitted to be taken at an annual or special meeting, without a meeting, notice, or a vote, if consents, in writing, setting forth the action, are signed by shareholders with not less than the minimum number of votes that would be necessary to authorize the action at a meeting. All consents must be dated and are only effective if the requisite signatures are collected within 60 days of the earliest dated consent delivered. | Australian public companies cannot pass resolutions by circulating written resolutions. | ||||
Business Combinations | With certain exceptions, a merger, consolidation, or sale of all or substantially all the assets of a Delaware corporation must be approved by the board of directors and a majority of the outstanding shares entitled to vote thereon. | No requirement for shareholder approval under Australian law, unless the transaction involves a transfer or issue or new shares or other securities to existing shareholders (for example, a business combination through a scrip-for-scrip merger) or a related party (generally, a director or its associates). | ||||
Limitations on Director’s Liability and Indemnification of Directors and Officers | A Delaware corporation may include in its certificate of incorporation provisions limiting the personal liability of its directors to the corporation or its shareholders for monetary damages for many types of breach of fiduciary duty. However, these provisions may not limit liability for any breach of the duty of loyalty, acts or omissions not in good faith or that involve intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of law, the authorization of unlawful dividends, stock purchases, or redemptions, or any transaction from which a director derived an improper personal benefit. Moreover, these provisions would not be likely to bar claims arising under U.S. federal securities laws. | Australian law provides that a company or a related body corporate of the company may provide for indemnification of officers and directors, except to the extent of any of the following liabilities incurred as an officer or director of the company: • a liability owed to the company or a related body corporate of the company; • a liability for a pecuniary penalty order made under section 1317G or a compensation order under section 961M, 1317H, 1317HA or 1317HB of the Corporations Act; a liability that is owed to someone other than the company or a related body corporate of the | ||||
Corporate law issue | Delaware law | Australian law | ||||
A Delaware corporation may indemnify a director or officer of the corporation against expenses (including attorneys’ fees), judgments, fines, and amounts paid in settlement actually and reasonably incurred in defense of an action, suit, or proceeding by reason of his or her position if (i) the director or officer acted in good faith and in a manner he or she reasonably believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the corporation, and (ii) with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, the director or officer had no reasonable cause to believe his or her conduct was unlawful. | company and did not arise out of conduct in good faith; or • legal costs incurred in defending an action for a liability incurred as an officer or director of the company if the costs are incurred: ○ in defending or resisting proceedings in which the officer or director is found to have a liability for which they cannot be indemnified as set out above; ○ in defending or resisting criminal proceedings in which the officer or director is found guilty; or ○ in defending or resisting proceedings brought by the Australian Securities & Investments Commission or a liquidator for a court order if the grounds for making the order are found by the court to have been established (except costs incurred in responding to actions taken by the Australian Securities & Investments Commission or a liquidator as part of an investigation before commencing proceedings for a court order); or ○ in connection with proceedings for relief to the officer or a director under the Corporations Act, in which the court denies the relief. | |||||
Appraisal Rights | A shareholder of a Delaware corporation participating in certain major corporate transactions may, under certain circumstances, be entitled to appraisal rights under which the shareholder may receive cash in the amount of the fair value of the shares held by that shareholder (as determined by a court) in lieu of the consideration the shareholder would otherwise receive in the transaction. | No equivalent concept under Australian law, subject to general minority oppression rights under which shareholders can apply to the Courts for an order in respect of Company actions that are unfairly prejudicial to a shareholder. | ||||
Corporate law issue | Delaware law | Australian law | ||||
Shareholder Suits | Class actions and derivative actions generally are available to the shareholders of a Delaware corporation for, among other things, breach of fiduciary duty, corporate waste, and actions not taken in accordance with applicable law. In such actions, the court has discretion to permit the winning party to recover attorneys’ fees incurred in connection with such action. | Shareholders have a number of statutory protections and rights available to them, regardless of the quantity of shares they hold. These include: • the ability to call a meeting of the company and propose resolutions; and • the right to apply to the court for orders in cases where majority shareholders, or the directors, act in an oppressive or unfairly prejudicial manner towards a single shareholder does not have a minimum shareholding requirement, and can result in a broad range of orders, including: ○ the winding up of the company; ○ modification of the company’s constitution; and ○ any other order the court determines to be appropriate. | ||||
Inspection of Books and Records | All shareholders of a Delaware corporation have the right, upon written demand, to inspect or obtain copies of the corporation’s shares ledger and its other books and records for any purpose reasonably related to such person’s interest as a shareholder. | Any shareholder of the Company has the right to inspect or obtain copies of our share register on the payment of a prescribed fee. Books containing the minutes of general meetings will be kept at our registered office and will be open to inspection of shareholders at all times when the office is required to be open to the public. Other corporate records, including minutes of directors’ meetings, financial records and other documents, are not open for inspection by shareholders (who are not directors). Where a shareholder is acting in good faith and an inspection is deemed to be made for a proper purpose, a shareholder may apply to the court to make an order for inspection of our books. All public companies are required to prepare annual financial reports and directors’ reports for each financial year, | ||||
Corporate law issue | Delaware law | Australian law | ||||
and to file these reports with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission. | ||||||
Amendments to Charter | Amendments to the certificate of incorporation of a Delaware corporation require the affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares entitled to vote thereon or such greater vote as is provided for in the certificate of incorporation. A provision in the certificate of incorporation requiring the vote of a greater number or proportion of the directors or of the holders of any class of shares than is required by Delaware corporate law may not be amended, altered or repealed except by such greater vote. | Amending or replacing the company’s constitution, requires a special resolution (75%) of the shareholders. | ||||
• | the title of the series; |
• | the aggregate principal amount; |
• | the issue price or prices, expressed as a percentage of the aggregate principal amount of the debt securities; |
• | any limit on the aggregate principal amount; |
• | the date or dates on which principal is payable; |
• | the interest rate or rates (which may be fixed or variable) or, if applicable, the method used to determine such rate or rates; |
• | the date or dates on which interest, if any, will be payable and any regular record date for the interest payable; |
• | the place or places where principal and, if applicable, premium and interest, is payable; |
• | the terms and conditions upon which we may, or the holders may require us to, redeem or repurchase the debt securities; |
• | the denominations in which such debt securities may be issuable, if other than denomination of $1,000 or any integral multiple of that number; |
• | whether the debt securities are to be issuable in the form of certificated debt securities or global debt securities; |
• | the portion of principal amount that will be payable upon declaration of acceleration of the maturity date if other than the principal amount of the debt securities; |
• | the currency of denomination; |
• | the designation of the currency, currencies or currency units in which payment of principal and, if applicable, premium and interest, will be made; |
• | if payments of principal and, if applicable, premium or interest, on the debt securities are to be made in one or more currencies or currency units other than the currency of denominations, the manner in which exchange rate with respect to such payments will be determined; |
• | if amounts of principal and, if applicable, premium and interest may be determined by reference to an index based on a currency or currencies, or by reference to a commodity, commodity index, stock exchange index, or financial index, then the manner in which such amounts will be determined; |
• | the provisions, if any, relating to any collateral provided for such debt securities; |
• | any events of default; |
• | the terms and conditions, if any, for conversion into or exchange for ordinary shares; |
• | any depositaries, interest rate calculation agents, exchange rate calculation agents, or other agents; and |
• | the terms and conditions, if any, upon which the debt securities shall be subordinated in right of payment to other indebtedness of our company. |
• | the title of such warrants; |
• | the aggregate number of such warrants; |
• | the price or prices at which such warrants will be issued; |
• | the currency or currencies in which the price of such warrants will be payable; |
• | the securities or other rights, including rights to receive payment in cash or securities based on the value, rate or price of one or more specified commodities, currencies, securities or indices, or any combination of the foregoing, purchasable upon exercise of such warrants; |
• | the price at which and the currency or currencies in which the securities or other rights purchasable upon exercise of such warrants may be purchased; |
• | the date on which the right to exercise such warrants shall commence and the date on which such right shall expire; |
• | if applicable, the minimum or maximum amount of such warrants which may be exercised at any one time; |
• | if applicable, the designation and terms of the securities with which such warrants are issued and the number of such warrants issued with each such security; |
• | if applicable, the date on and after which such warrants and the related securities will be separately transferable; |
• | information with respect to book-entry procedures, if any; |
• | if applicable, a discussion of any material United States federal income tax considerations; and |
• | any other terms of such warrants, including terms, procedures and limitations relating to the exchange and exercise of such warrants. |
• | the exercise price; |
• | the aggregate number of rights to be issued; |
• | the type and number of securities purchasable upon exercise of each right; |
• | the procedures and limitations relating to the exercise of the rights; |
• | the date upon which the exercise of rights will commence; |
• | the record date, if any, to determine who is entitled to the rights; |
• | the expiration date; |
• | the extent to which the rights are transferable; |
• | information regarding the trading of rights, including the stock exchanges, if any, on which the rights will be listed; |
• | the extent to which the subscription rights may include an over-subscription privilege with respect to unsubscribed securities; |
• | if appropriate, a discussion of material U.S. federal income tax considerations and material Australian tax considerations; |
• | if applicable, the material terms of any standby underwriting or purchase arrangement entered into by us in connection with the offering of the rights; and |
• | any other material terms of the rights. |
• | the terms of the units and of the warrants, debt securities, preferred shares and/or ordinary shares comprising the units, including whether and under what circumstances the securities comprising the units may be traded separately; |
• | a description of the terms of any unit agreement governing the units; and |
• | a description of the provisions for the payment, settlement, transfer or exchange of the units. |
• | through underwriters or dealers; |
• | directly to a limited number of purchasers or to a single purchaser; |
• | in “at the market offerings,” within the meaning of Rule 415(a)(4) of the Securities Act, into an existing trading market on an exchange or otherwise; |
• | through agents; or |
• | through any other method permitted by applicable law and described in the applicable prospectus supplement. |
• | the name or names of any underwriters, dealers or agents; |
• | the purchase price of such securities and the proceeds to be received by us, if any; |
• | any underwriting discounts or agency fees and other items constituting underwriters’ or agents’ compensation; |
• | any public offering price; |
• | any discounts or concessions allowed or reallowed or paid to dealers; and |
• | any securities exchanges on which the securities may be listed. |
• | negotiated transactions; |
• | at a fixed public offering price or prices, which may be changed; |
• | at market prices prevailing at the time of sale; |
• | at prices related to prevailing market prices; or |
• | at negotiated prices. |
• | effect service of process within the United States upon our non-U.S. resident directors or on us; |
• | enforce in U.S. courts judgments obtained against our non-U.S. resident directors or us in U.S. courts in any action, including actions under the civil liability provisions of U.S. securities laws; |
• | enforce in U.S. courts judgments obtained against our non-U.S. resident directors or us in courts of jurisdictions outside the United States in any action, including actions under the civil liability provisions of U.S. securities laws; or |
• | bring an original action in an Australian court to enforce liabilities against our non-U.S. resident directors or us based solely upon U.S. securities laws. |
• | our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025, filed with the SEC on August 28, 2025; |
• | our Current Reports on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on July 1, 2025, and July 3, 2025 (only with respect to the second report filed on such date); and |
• | the description of our share capital contained in our registration statement on Form 8-A dated November 16, 2021 (File No. 001-41072) filed under the Exchange Act, including any amendment or report filed for the purpose of updating such description. |
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| Date | Price Target | Rating | Analyst |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1/13/2026 | $80.00 | Sell → Buy | H.C. Wainwright |
| 12/18/2025 | $39.00 | Neutral | Goldman |
| 11/19/2025 | $80.00 | Mkt Outperform | Citizens JMP |
| 10/29/2025 | $45.00 | Buy → Sell | H.C. Wainwright |
| 9/26/2025 | $24.00 | Neutral → Underweight | Analyst |
| 9/24/2025 | $78.00 | Buy | Arete |
| 9/15/2025 | Buy | Compass Point | |
| 7/28/2025 | $16.00 | Overweight → Neutral | Analyst |
8-K - IREN Ltd (0001878848) (Filer)
8-K - IREN Ltd (0001878848) (Filer)
NEW YORK, March 04, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- IREN Limited (NASDAQ:IREN) ("IREN") today announced it has entered into purchase agreements for over 50,000 NVIDIA B300 GPUs that will expand its total fleet to 150,000 GPUs. Time-to-compute is an increasingly important factor in today's AI cloud market. Early procurement enables IREN to bring cloud capacity online with greater speed and certainty, ensuring deployment timelines remain on track as customer agreements progress. IREN expects to deploy the additional GPUs in phases through H2 2026 across its existing air-cooled data centers in Mackenzie, British Columbia and Childress, Texas. The 150,000 GPU fleet is expected to support AI Cloud a
NEW YORK, Feb. 17, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- IREN Limited (NASDAQ:IREN) ("IREN") today announced the appointment of John Gross as Chief Innovation Officer, a newly established role responsible for leading engineering standards, thermal architecture, and commissioning across IREN's next-generation data centers. Mr. Gross is a globally recognized leader in data center engineering, with two decades of industry experience and deep expertise in high-density and liquid-cooled data center design. He serves as Vice Chair of committees within ASHRAE (American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers), which develops global standards for high-density and liquid-cooled data ce
NEW YORK, Feb. 12, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- IREN Limited (NASDAQ:IREN) ("IREN") today announced it will be added to the MSCI USA Index, effective after close of trading on February 27, 2026. The MSCI USA Index measures the performance of large and mid cap segments of the U.S. equity market and represents approximately 85% of the free float-adjusted market capitalization in the US. This inclusion is expected to enhance IREN's visibility among institutional investors and index-tracking funds. Daniel Roberts, Co-Founder and Co-CEO of IREN, commented: "Being added to the MSCI USA Index reflects the scale and liquidity we have built in the business. We believe this milestone will broaden ins
3 - IREN Ltd (0001878848) (Issuer)
4 - IREN Ltd (0001878848) (Issuer)
4 - IREN Ltd (0001878848) (Issuer)
H.C. Wainwright upgraded IREN Limited from Sell to Buy and set a new price target of $80.00
Goldman initiated coverage of IREN Limited with a rating of Neutral and set a new price target of $39.00
Citizens JMP initiated coverage of IREN Limited with a rating of Mkt Outperform and set a new price target of $80.00
NEW YORK, Feb. 17, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- IREN Limited (NASDAQ:IREN) ("IREN") today announced the appointment of John Gross as Chief Innovation Officer, a newly established role responsible for leading engineering standards, thermal architecture, and commissioning across IREN's next-generation data centers. Mr. Gross is a globally recognized leader in data center engineering, with two decades of industry experience and deep expertise in high-density and liquid-cooled data center design. He serves as Vice Chair of committees within ASHRAE (American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers), which develops global standards for high-density and liquid-cooled data ce
Bakkt Holdings, Inc. ("Bakkt" or the "Company") (NYSE:BKKT) today announced the appointment of Mike Alfred to its Board of Directors. This addition strengthens Bakkt's governance and positions the Company to capitalize on the generational transformation in global financial infrastructure – redefining what money is, how it moves, and how markets trade and operate. "We're doubling down on our mission to build next-generation financial infrastructure by bringing world-class leaders onto our Board," said Akshay Naheta, CEO of Bakkt. "Mike's proven track record and reputation in the digital asset and fintech ecosystem brings unparalleled expertise, a powerful network and institutional credibil
BitGo, the digital asset infrastructure company, today announced the appointments of Brian Brooks, Sunita Parasuraman, and Justin Evans to its Board of Directors (the "Board"). These individuals collectively expand the Board's expertise across corporate finance, digital assets, regulatory policy, accounting, risk governance, and technology, and further strengthen BitGo's independent governance and oversight. "We are honored to welcome Brian, Sunita, and Justin to the Board," said Mike Belshe, CEO and Co-Founder of BitGo. "Their collective experience across finance, digital assets, regulation, and technology strengthens the foundation for BitGo's next stage of growth as a regulated digital
$3.6bn GPU Financing Secured for Microsoft Contract1 Targeted 140k GPU Expansion on Track to Deliver $3.4bn ARR by End of CY262 New 1.6GW Data Center Campus in Oklahoma NEW YORK, Feb. 05, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- IREN Limited (NASDAQ: IREN) ("IREN" or "the Company") today reported its financial results for the three months ended December 31, 2025. Highlights $3.6bn GPU financing secured for Microsoft contract1 Interest rate of <6% p.a.Together with Microsoft prepayment ($1.9bn) covers 95% of GPU-related capex Targeted 140k GPU expansion on track to deliver $3.4bn ARR by end of CY262 Horizon 1-4 construction progressing to scheduleBritish Columbia AI Cloud expansion ongoing, with ~$0.4
NEW YORK, Jan. 22, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- IREN Limited (NASDAQ: IREN) ("IREN") today announced that it will release its financial results for the three months ended December 31, 2025, on Thursday, February 5, 2026 and host a conference call beginning at 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time. The webcast will be recorded, and the replay will be accessible shortly after the event at https://iren.com/investor/events-and-presentations Webcast and Conference Call DetailsTime & Date:5:00 p.m. Eastern Time, Thursday, February 5, 2025 ParticipantRegistration Link Live WebcastUse this link Phone Dial-In with Live Q&AUse this link Participants joining the conference call via the phone dial-in option wil
Secured $9.7bn AI Cloud Contract with Microsoft Targeting $3.4bn AI Cloud ARR by End of 2026, Expansion to 140k GPUs 1 NEW YORK, Nov. 06, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- IREN Limited (NASDAQ: IREN) ("IREN" or "the Company") today reported its financial results for the three months ended September 30, 2025. Highlights Targeting $3.4bn in AI Cloud annualized run-rate revenue (ARR) by the end of 2026 (expansion to 140k GPUs)1Secured $9.7bn contract with Microsoft: Phased deployments at Childress through 20265-year average term20% customer prepayment$1.9bn expected ARR contribution2 New multi-year contracts including Together AI, Fluidstack and Fireworks AI, supporting growth to target AI Cloud
SC 13G/A - Iris Energy Ltd (0001878848) (Subject)
SC 13G/A - Iris Energy Ltd (0001878848) (Subject)
SC 13D/A - Iris Energy Ltd (0001878848) (Subject)