Galaxy Digital’s fourth quarter numbers paint a rough picture. The company reported a $482 million net loss for Q4 2025.
For the full year, losses totaled $241 million. The culprit? Falling digital asset prices and a hefty $160 million in one-time costs.
Bitcoin’s price dropped about 20% during the fourth quarter. That decline hit Galaxy’s holdings hard.
The company’s balance sheet took the brunt of these crypto market moves. Digital asset depreciation drove the quarterly losses.
Still, Galaxy isn’t broke. The firm ended 2025 with $2.6 billion in cash and stablecoins sitting on its balance sheet.
Total platform assets reached $12 billion. The asset management division pulled in $2 billion in net inflows during the year.
Adjusted gross profit came in at $426 million for full-year 2025. Not a total disaster, but the net losses tell a different story.
Investors didn’t love the earnings report. Galaxy shares on the Nasdaq gapped down before Tuesday’s trading session.
Galaxy Digital, GLXY
The stock closed Monday at $26.44. It opened Tuesday at $25.23 and traded as low as $24.10.
Volume spiked to nearly 2 million shares. That’s heavy trading for Galaxy.
By the end of Tuesday’s session, shares had dropped roughly 15%. Some reports pegged the decline closer to 18.6%.
The market cap now sits around $8.41 billion. The stock trades with a PE ratio of 17.93.
Galaxy’s 50-day moving average is $26.99. The 200-day average sits at $29.50. Both above current trading levels.
Wall Street analysts aren’t abandoning ship. The consensus rating remains “Buy” with an average price target of $46.42.
That target implies substantial upside from current levels. BTIG reaffirmed its “buy” rating with a $50 price target.
Rosenblatt and Canaccord Genuity also reiterated buy ratings. Morgan Stanley initiated coverage in November with an “overweight” rating and $42 target.
Citizens JMP slapped a $60 price objective on the stock in December. Goldman Sachs took a more cautious stance with a “neutral” rating and $27 target.
Two analysts rate Galaxy a “Strong Buy.” Eleven have issued “Buy” ratings, while two assign “Hold” ratings.
The company actually beat Q4 adjusted earnings estimates. Analysts expected a loss of $1.24 per share. Galaxy reported a loss of $1.08 per share.
Institutional investors are showing confidence. Vanguard boosted its Galaxy holdings by 27.5% in Q4, now owning over 20.6 million shares worth $462 million.
Director Douglas R. Deason purchased 10,000 shares in November at $29.59 per share. Insider buying often signals confidence in future performance.
Galaxy announced Texas approval for an additional 830 megawatts of power capacity for its AI data center in January. Total approved capacity now exceeds 1.6 gigawatts.
Novogratz struck an optimistic tone despite the losses. “We’ve been here before,” he told shareholders, noting that longtime crypto investors recognize market cycles.
The company completed its reorganization as a Delaware entity with a Nasdaq listing. That corporate housekeeping removes some structural uncertainty.
Galaxy’s debt-to-equity ratio stands at 0.36. Current and quick ratios both sit at 1.35, indicating decent liquidity.
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