IREN announced the pricing of a $2 billion convertible notes offering and a concurrent registered direct offering of approximately 39.7 million shares at $41.12 each, raising around $1.63 billion. [2, 3, 5] The proceeds from these offerings are intended to be used to repurchase existing convertible notes with higher interest rates that are due in 2029 and 2030, a move aimed at optimizing the company's capital structure and extending its debt maturities. [1, 8, 10] The announcement triggered a significant market reaction, with the stock falling over 15% on December 2nd. [11] The move has been met with mixed analysis; CNBC's Jim Cramer criticized the financing as unnecessary dilution for shareholders. In contrast, other investors have defended the action as a strategic "balance-sheet cleanup" that removes risk and positions the company for future growth, particularly in scaling its AI compute business. [11]