$IREN co-founders just got approved for a $1.14 billion pay package.
It lands a week after a $50 million a year Warriors jersey patch deal, and four months after a $6 billion ATM that replaced the $1 billion they’d already fully tapped.
The optics look like a management team spending someone else’s money. The mechanics say something different.
Here’s what the package actually is:
Nine million shares each, vesting in tranches through 2030. They have to hold every tranche two years before they can sell a single share. The board locked out any new grants until FY2031.
Now the number that matters. Each brother owns about 3.9% of IREN today, 14 million shares. Add the new grant and they’re each sitting on roughly 23 million shares once fully vested. Combined founder ownership pushes toward 12%.
That’s the same range Arkady Volozh holds at $NBIS, arguably the most founder‑aligned name in this entire AI infrastructure trade. The Roberts brothers just bought themselves into that same tier.
Here’s the part I’m not waving away. This grant is the third major capital and spending decision from this board in four months, after the $6 billion ATM and the Warriors deal. Stack a nine‑figure equity package on aggressive share issuance and a Bay Area sponsorship splash, and you get a leadership team spending like the AI Cloud ramp is already proven, when bitcoin mining still made up the majority of last quarter’s revenue.
A $1.14 billion pay packet reads like excess until you notice it’s the same bet Volozh made on Nebius: get paid in shares, get locked in for years, let the buildout do the talking.
The Roberts brothers just wagered four years of their own net worth on hitting numbers they haven’t hit yet.
I’m still long. But I also want the next earning to show results for the path forward. And based on recent activities and lack of PR I think @danroberts0101 owes retail some clarity.
‑BP
Not financial advice.
