IREN dropped 6% on Monday after the company announced a $2 billion convertible senior notes offering, spooking investors concerned about dilution.
IREN Limited, IREN
The notes are due December 1, 2033, and are being offered privately to qualified institutional buyers under Rule 144A. Initial purchasers also have the option to snap up an additional $300 million in notes.
The notes are senior unsecured obligations. They accrue interest paid semi-annually and can be converted into cash, ordinary shares, or a mix — at IREN’s election.
IREN holds redemption rights starting June 6, 2030, subject to share price conditions. Holders, meanwhile, get repurchase rights if certain fundamental changes occur.
A portion of the net proceeds will go toward funding capped call transactions. These are designed to reduce potential dilution to ordinary shareholders if and when notes are converted.
The remainder of proceeds are earmarked for general corporate purposes and working capital.
At the same time as this new offering, IREN plans to partially terminate existing capped call transactions. These are tied to its 3.50% Convertible Senior Notes due 2029 and its 3.25% Convertible Senior Notes due 2030.
The company flagged that hedging activity by financial counterparties — both around the new deal and the unwind — could move the price of IREN’s ordinary shares and convertible securities.
That kind of warning is standard in these deals, but it’s worth noting for anyone holding the existing notes or the stock.
The most recent analyst rating on IREN is a Sell, with a price target of $46.00.
TipRanks’ AI model rates the stock Neutral. It points to rapid revenue growth and improving operating cash flow as positives, but flags rising leverage and persistently negative free cash flow as concerns.
The stock’s technical trend was rated as bullish heading into this announcement, though the 6% drop on Monday will likely factor into near-term sentiment.
IREN’s current market cap sits at $20.3 billion, with an average daily trading volume of over 36 million shares.
The company has been an active user of convertible debt markets, with prior notes due in 2029 and 2030 both accompanied by capped call structures.
This latest $2 billion raise follows that same playbook — though the scale is larger than previous rounds.
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