Iron Mountain stock reached a 52-week high of $108.18, representing a 14.14% increase over the past year. The company reported fourth quarter 2025 revenue of $1.84 billion, a 16.6% to 17% year-over-year increase, with earnings per share of $0.61, surpassing analyst expectations by $0.05. Data center revenue increased 30% in 2025 and Asset Lifecycle Management revenue rose 63%. Iron Mountain raised its fiscal year 2026 guidance and reaffirmed its quarterly dividend of $0.864 per share. The company expects first quarter adjusted FFO of approximately $1.39 per share, above the FactSet estimate of $1.34. Analysts have assigned a consensus "Moderate Buy" rating with an average one-year price target of $113.00.
Read full analysisIron Mountain stock reached a 52-week high of $108.18, representing a 14.14% increase over the past year. The company reported fourth quarter 2025 revenue of $1.84 billion, a 16.6% to 17% year-over-year increase, with earnings per share of $0.61, surpassing analyst expectations by $0.05. Data center revenue increased 30% in 2025 and Asset Lifecycle Management revenue rose 63%. Iron Mountain raised its fiscal year 2026 guidance and reaffirmed its quarterly dividend of $0.864 per share. The company expects first quarter adjusted FFO of approximately $1.39 per share, above the FactSet estimate of $1.34. Analysts have assigned a consensus "Moderate Buy" rating with an average one-year price target of $113.00.
Iron Mountain is a REIT historically known for physical records storage and information management, but it has rapidly pivoted toward data center operations and digital services. Its data center business grew 30% in 2025, and its Asset Lifecycle Management segment — which handles IT asset disposition — surged 63%, positioning the company as an AI-adjacent infrastructure play. This transformation is the central driver of the current rally, as investors reprice the stock around its high-growth data center and ALM segments following a strong Q4 earnings beat.