1 BTC
=
- USD

iShares Global Clean Energy ETF
As of May 30, 2026 at 09:50 UTC
Chart
About iShares Global Clean Energy ETF
No description available.
Market Statistics
Trading Metrics
How to Buy ICLN
Create Your Account
Sign up, deposit BTC, and transfer it to your Unified Trading Account. It only takes a moment.
Start Your Trade
From Terminal, click Trade Now on the asset you want to buy. You'll be purchasing its tokenized asset.
Buy ICLN
Enter the amount and confirm your purchase. That's it! You'll see the impact of the trade in your Unified Trading Account.
New to Tokenized Assets? Learn more in our Help Center.
Latest News
5 articlesFlorin Court Capital sold 199,800 shares of the iShares Global Clean Energy ETF (ICLN) worth $3.64 million in Q1 2026, despite the ETF's 84% surge over the past year. However, ICLN remains the fund's largest holding at 18.5% of assets, suggesting the sale was a portfolio rebalance rather than a loss of confidence in clean energy.
Despite regulatory headwinds from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act cutting renewable tax breaks, clean energy stocks have thrived due to improved solar technology, preferential treatment for nuclear and geothermal energy, and surging demand from AI data centers. Three stocks showing bullish moving average signals are highlighted: Nextpower (solar tracking systems with $5B backlog), Ormat Technologies (geothermal with data center exposure), and GE Verona (diversified renewables with strong fundamentals).
Kevin O'Leary warns that the US energy grid is critically unprepared to support the AI boom, with China adding 500 gigawatts of power capacity in the last 24 months while the US has added zero. He argues that without massive infrastructure upgrades, the US cannot sustain energy-hungry data centers needed for AI advancement. O'Leary also criticizes current tariff policies as inflationary and expresses skepticism about near-term rate cuts.
London-based Perbak Capital Partners fully exited its $6.33 million position in the iShares Global Clean Energy ETF (ICLN) during Q3, selling all 482,918 shares. Despite ICLN's strong 43% one-year rally outperforming the S&P 500, the fund's exit suggests the risk-reward profile no longer justified holding the concentrated clean energy bet. The move reflects a shift toward broader, diversified ETF exposure rather than thematic sector concentration.