JPMorgan Hikes IREN Price Target to $46 but Stays Underweight on Circular NVIDIA Deal Concerns

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By David Moadel Published

Quick Read

  • JPMorgan raised its price target on IREN (IREN) stock to $46 from $39 while keeping an Underweight rating, citing concerns that the $3.4B five-year NVIDIA (NVDA) contract features circular economics and undefined GPU access guarantees despite IREN’s 720% one-year stock surge and forward P/E of 63x.

  • IREN’s transformation into an AI cloud provider depends on securing NVIDIA’s advanced chips in volume to meet its 150,000 GPU deployment target, but the partnership contract reportedly doesn’t lock in those allocations, creating structural risk to the company’s $3.7B revenue guidance.

  • The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 stocks and Iren wasn't one of them. Get them here FREE.

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JPMorgan Hikes IREN Price Target to $46 but Stays Underweight on Circular NVIDIA Deal Concerns

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JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM | JPM Price Prediction) raised its price target on Iren (NASDAQ:IREN) stock to $46 from $39 while keeping an Underweight rating. The unusual combination, a price target raise paired with a bearish stance, reflects the firm’s skepticism about the structure of Iren’s blockbuster NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) partnership.

For prudent IREN stock investors, the call is a reminder that bullish narratives and durable economics aren’t always the same thing. The split signal — higher target, unchanged caution — captures the tension between Iren’s growth optionality and the structural questions hanging over its NVIDIA deal.

Ticker Company Firm Action Old Rating New Rating Old Target New Target
IREN Iren JPMorgan Price target raised Underweight Underweight $39 $46

The Analyst’s Case

JPMorgan acknowledged that IREN continues to progress in its transition to a full neocloud provider, but cautioned: “While the NVIDIA contract and strategic partnership bolster Iren’s clout as a neocloud provider, the circular nature and the undefined access to GPUs from NVIDIA tempers our view of the deal.” The firm’s wording highlights a tension between strategic validation and the underlying economics of the partnership.

The “circular” critique refers to a structure where NVIDIA commits capital to a customer that turns around and spends those dollars on NVIDIA hardware. The economic value can appear amplified because the same dollars effectively flow in both directions. JPMorgan’s second concern, undefined GPU access, is arguably bigger: IREN’s gigawatt-scale buildout depends on receiving NVIDIA’s most advanced chips in volume, and the contract reportedly doesn’t lock in those allocations.

Company Snapshot

IREN is a vertically integrated data-center operator pivoting from Bitcoin (CRYPTO:BTC) mining to AI cloud services, with a market capitalization of roughly $20.3 billion. The NVIDIA deal includes a $3.4 billion five-year AI cloud contract and a $2.1 billion NVIDIA share purchase option, alongside a broader 5-gigawatt strategic partnership.

IREN’s latest results were uneven. Q3 FY2026 revenue came in at $144.8 million, missing consensus by 34%, with AI Cloud Services revenue nearly doubling sequentially to $33.6 million.

Why the Move Matters Now

IREN stock has rallied hard, climbing 47% over the past month and 720% over the past year. JPMorgan’s $46 target sits well below the analyst consensus of $71.15, underscoring real divergence on valuation.

For context on how richly IREN trades, see this AI infrastructure outlook. IREN’s forward P/E ratio sits at 63x, with a beta of 4.18, signaling extreme volatility around every data point.

What It Means for Your Portfolio

The bull case is straightforward: the NVIDIA tie-up validates IREN as a top-tier neocloud peer alongside CoreWeave (NASDAQ:CRWV), with management targeting $3.7 billion in annualized revenue by year-end and 150,000 GPUs deployed. If execution holds, that ramp would reset the multiple debate entirely.

The bear case is JPMorgan’s, in plain English. Circular economics can overstate the underlying demand, unguaranteed GPU access could throttle the buildout, and IREN still carries $3.7 billion in convertible note obligations against negative free cash flow.

Prudent investors weighing IREN stock should size positions for that volatility and watch for whether Q4 FY2026 results show contracted ARR converting into recognized revenue. Until then, JPMorgan’s split signal, higher target, unchanged caution, is itself the story.

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About the Author David Moadel →

David Moadel is financial writer specializing in stocks, ETFs, options, precious metals, and Bitcoin. David has written well over 1,000 articles for leading online publications, helping investors understand markets, income strategies, and risk.

His work has appeared in The Motley Fool, InvestorPlace, U.S. News & World Report, TipRanks, ValueWalk, Benzinga, Market Realist, TalkMarkets, Finmasters, 24/7 Wall St., and others.

With a master’s degree in education, David has taught at the elementary, high school, and college levels. That teaching background shapes his writing style: clear, educational, and practical. David has also built a loyal social-media audience by providing trustworthy financial content on YouTube, X/Twitter, and StockTwits.

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