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IREN (IREN) expanded its equity offering to $6B and shares fell 8.5%. The company purchased 50,000+ Nvidia B300 GPUs toward a 150,000-unit fleet targeting $3.7B in revenue. AMC Entertainment fell from $300+/share to $1+/share after similar dilution.
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IREN is financing its AI data-center expansion through a massive equity offering that raises dilution concerns similar to AMC’s repeated share issuances during the meme-stock era.
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Bitcoin miner-turned-AI cloud operator IREN (NASDAQ:IREN) shocked investors this week with a stunning announcement: it expanded its at-the-market (ATM) equity offering program to a whopping $6 billion — roughly half its current market capitalization. The news sent shares tumbling 8.5% in a single session as dilution fears gripped the market.
While the dilution won’t hit all at once — the ATM structure lets the company drip-feed new shares into the open market over time whenever it chooses — the move immediately evoked painful memories for longtime AMC Entertainment (NYSE:AMC) shareholders.
During the 2021 meme-stock frenzy, AMC repeatedly issued massive amounts of new stock, ballooning its share count and crushing value. What once traded well over $700 per share (after a 1-for-10 reverse stock split) at the height of the frenzy now sits just above $1 per share today. As the saying goes, history doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes.
READ: The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks
IREN filed a new prospectus supplement replacing its prior $1 billion ATM program, which it had already fully tapped through 66.7 million shares sold for $1 billion. The new $6 billion capacity gives the company broad flexibility to sell ordinary shares gradually through a syndicate of investment banks, with proceeds earmarked for general corporate purposes, including data-center expansions, hardware purchases, and working capital.
The program does not require a single large block sale — shares can be offered opportunistically at prevailing market prices. This structure provides IREN with ongoing access to capital without locking in terms upfront.
The announcement coincided with IREN’s aggressive push into AI infrastructure. The company revealed it had entered purchase agreements for over 50,000 Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) B300 GPUs, boosting its total fleet to 150,000 units. Deployment is planned in phases through the second half of 2026 across air-cooled data centers in Mackenzie, B.C., and Childress, Tex. Management projects this expanded capacity will support over $3.7 billion in annualized run-rate revenue from its AI Cloud segment by late 2026.
Over the past eight months, IREN has already secured $9.3 billion in various funding sources, including customer prepayments, convertible notes, and GPU financing, to cover an estimated $3.5 billion in additional capex for the GPU rollout, servers, networking, and related equipment.
AMC Entertainment followed a similar — but more aggressive — path during and after its meme-stock surge. Facing pandemic-era losses and heavy debt, the theater chain repeatedly tapped equity markets while its share price was elevated by retail enthusiasm. Beyond standard common-stock offerings and ATM programs, AMC created and issued “APE” (AMC Preferred Equity) units in 2022. These preferred shares traded separately from common stock and were distributed to existing shareholders on a one-for-one basis initially.
In late 2022 and 2023, AMC pursued a complex restructuring that included converting APE units into common shares, paired with the reverse stock split. The conversion rolled what had been hundreds of millions of APE units into the common share count, while the reverse split consolidated shares to help maintain listing compliance and facilitate further raises.
Management consistently sold newly issued shares (and APEs) directly into the open market, often against existing holders during periods of elevated volatility and retail-driven pricing. Each wave of issuance diluted ownership stakes dramatically and eroded per-share value as the initial hype faded. The share count exploded from tens of millions pre-mania to hundreds of millions, and post-reverse split adjustments still left existing investors with significantly reduced proportional ownership.
Critics, including many retail investors, viewed the maneuvers as prioritizing corporate survival and debt reduction over protecting long-term shareholder value, contributing to the stock’s prolonged decline.
The two situations are not completely the same as key differences stand out. AMC was fighting for financial survival, using dilution to stave off bankruptcy and restructure debt. IREN’s offering, by contrast, is designed to finance aggressive growth — most notably the purchase of tens of thousands of Nvidia GPUs to expand its AI cloud capacity toward a targeted $3.7 billion in annualized run-rate revenue. If IREN can deploy the capital effectively and generate growth that lifts its share price, the impact on existing shareholders will be far less devastating than what occurred with AMC.
However, such a massive offering also suggests the company had few other avenues open to it to raise money, which in itself is concerning. While IREN’s massive equity offering might not be the sister to AMC’s dilutive actions, it is at least a cousin once or twice removed.
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