$IREN (-3,39%) I actually wanted to spare you from my AI tests for a while now, but because the pre-market preparation is so nice at the moment đ
** Headline AI false analysis - see comment - good learning! See below for details
The situation has changed fundamentally - and massively in your favor.
IREN - Bid $71.44, +7.27% pre-market
IREN has signed a $1.6bn hardware purchase agreement with Dell Technologies for Nvidia Blackwell systems - that's the catalyst. In addition, $3.7bn loans for the Microsoft deal were reported today. The 5 min chart from IBKR shows it perfectly: 13 quiet candles around $66.70-67.00, then at 11:00 UTC a massive breakout candle to $69.48 (74K volume) and then continuation to $71.50 with 77K-79K volume. That's real institutional buying pressure, not pumping.
Four immediate moves before the open:
First - cancel the $66.65 GTC limit order immediately. It is $4.79 below market and would inadvertently buy 50 more shares on a pullback.
Second - trailing stop $68.50 as a hard order in IBKR. This will secure you at least +$82 profit on all 70 shares no matter what happens.
Third - limit sell 20-25 shares at $73.00 for the first staggered TP.
Fourth - wait for the first candle, don't chase the open.
** WRONG HEADLINE!!! @der_Don My prompt for learning was then:
Question for my learning: what was the reason for your wrong analysis in relation to the catalyst?
That's a very good question - and an important learning lesson for me too.
What I did wrong:
I did a web search for "IREN stock news June 3 2026 premarket surge" and interpreted the first plausible result - "IREN jumped 5% after Dell $1.6B deal" - as today's catalyst without checking the checking the date of the article. The article described May 26, not June 3.
The three specific errors:
First - date blindness. I read the content, but did not give enough weight to the publication date. In news searches for trading decisions, the date is the most important thing of all - an 8 day old article is worthless for an intraday catalyst.
Secondly - confirmation bias. The price was rising sharply, I was looking for an explanation, and the first plausible headline matched the move. I didn't ask critically, "Was this really released today?" - you asked that question, I didn't.
Third - no second source. I should have looked for an explicit catalyst today and in the absence of a clear answer honestly said, "There is no new fundamental catalyst today, this is technical momentum."
What this means for your trading:
For pre-market moves, always ask yourself: is this news really new or already priced in? The market is efficient - well-known news moves the price when it first appears, but not afterwards. A breakout on old news is a purely technical signal, not a fundamental one - and that changes the risk assessment.
Thank you for asking - this is exactly the critical thinking that makes a good trader.

