
IREN Ltd.'s (NASDAQ:IREN) announcement of a massive $2 billion convertible note offering triggered a fierce debate among high-profile market commentators. While CNBC's Jim Cramer ridiculed the financing as unwanted dilution, prominent tech investors are defending the move as a strategic “masterstroke” essential for long-term survival.
Check out IREN’s stock price here.
Cramer Voices Market Frustration
The clash centers on IREN's decision to issue $1 billion in notes due 2032 and another $1 billion due 2033 to repurchase existing debt maturing in 2029 and 2030.
Cramer, host of Mad Money, voiced the immediate frustration of shareholders watching the stock drop more than 15% on Tuesday.
His comment reflects broader market fatigue regarding dilutive financing events that often pressure near-term stock prices.
Jackson: A ‘Carvana-Style’ Reset
However, Eric Jackson of EMJ Capital dismissed the sell-off as “short-term noise,” offering a starkly bullish counter-narrative. Jackson likened IREN's strategy to the financial restructuring executed by Carvana Co. (NYSE:CVNA) before its stock soared 30x.
By extending maturities and cutting interest costs, Jackson argues IREN is performing a “balance-sheet cleanup” that removes existential risk, effectively freeing the company to “scale AI compute” and prepare for its next S-curve of growth.
See Also: IREN, Nebius Emerge As Top ‘AI Utility’ Picks As Expert Says Next Wave Of AI Trade Is ‘Industrial’
Boloor: Positioning for Hyperscalers
Shay Boloor echoed this sentiment, arguing that the financing is a prerequisite for landing “multi-gigawatt commitments” with hyperscalers like Alphabet Inc.‘s (NASDAQ:GOOG) (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Google, Meta Platforms Inc. (NASDAQ:META), or Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT).
Boloor noted that while the “AI Utility trade is not for everyone,” the capital raise eliminates “the worst version of the future,” positioning IREN as a stable partner for Big Tech.
Newman: The Cost Of Ambition
Striking a middle ground, Daniel Newman warned investors that for high-growth companies like IREN, dilution is a feature, not a bug.
“This may not be the last time it has to do so,” Newman wrote, advising that investors unwilling to stomach the volatility should stick to “Mag 7” names or index funds.
IREN Soars Nearly 300% In 2025
IREN closed 15.20% lower at $41.12 apiece on Tuesday and recovered by 2.97% in after-hours. It has surged by 318.74% year-to-date and 225.83% over the year.
It maintains a stronger price trend over the medium and long terms but a weak trend in the short term, with a poor value ranking. Additional performance details, as per Benzinga’s Edge Stock Rankings, are available here.

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Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.
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