American Bitcoin says it lost $153.2 million in 2025 as a sharp late year crypto drop forced major accounting markdowns, even while revenue climbed.
American Bitcoin Corp reported a steep fourth quarter swing into the red, even as it grew revenue and kept mining margins strong. The main driver was not day to day operations, but the declining market value of its bitcoin holdings during a quarter when bitcoin sold off hard.
In its latest earnings update and SEC filing, American Bitcoin said Q4 revenue hit $78.3 million, up from the prior quarter and higher than the same period a year earlier. The company posted a 53% gross margin and said it had “mined Bitcoin at a 53% discount” compared with buying at spot prices.
Still, American Bitcoin reported a Q4 net loss of about $59.5 million, a sharp reversal from a year ago profit and from the prior quarter. The key issue was the value of bitcoin on its balance sheet falling during the quarter, not a collapse in mining output.
A major factor behind the full year $153.2 million loss was a large accounting markdown tied to digital assets. New Financial Accounting Standards Board guidance requires companies to mark crypto holdings to market. With bitcoin dropping roughly 23% in the quarter, American Bitcoin reported a $227 million non cash loss tied to the change in fair value.
This is the kind of result that can look confusing at first glance. The business can bring in cash and still report a big loss when the value of a large bitcoin treasury moves against it.
American Bitcoin is leaning into a mix of mining plus purchases. The company said it mined 1,654 BTC from the start of the second quarter through year end, including 783 BTC in Q4. Mining accounted for about one third of its year end stack, while the rest came from open market purchases and other transactions.
Co founder and chief strategy officer Eric Trump said the company ended 2025 with 5,401 BTC and that figure has since “grown to more than 6,000 Bitcoin.” The company also raised $150.5 million in Q4 through an at the market stock program to support its bitcoin accumulation strategy, and it said that helped lift per share bitcoin exposure by nearly 50%.
Even with what the company called “decisive execution,” the stock has been crushed, with reports putting it down as much as 85% over six months and close to 90% from prior highs. That matters because miners and crypto treasury firms often rely on equity markets to fund expansion. If shares stay under pressure, raising fresh capital can become harder.
The broader sector is also shifting. Some large miners are moving away from a pure mine and hold approach. Marathon has pointed to a push toward AI data center infrastructure, while Bitdeer has chosen to liquidate its remaining bitcoin reserves. Hut 8, which provides much of the infrastructure American Bitcoin relies on, also reported a large quarterly loss while highlighting its development pipeline and new credit facilities.
I found this earnings report to be a clean example of how bitcoin treasury risk can overpower strong operations. In my experience, miners that stack huge amounts of BTC are basically running two businesses at once: mining and a leveraged bet on the coin’s price. When the market drops, accounting rules make the pain show up fast and loud. If American Bitcoin wants to keep buying coins with stock sales, it needs the market to believe the strategy is worth the dilution. Right now, the share price action suggests investors are tired of that story, and the wider “Trump trade” energy in crypto has clearly cooled.
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