Upexi shares fell 8.16% on Tuesday after the Solana treasury company reported a wider fiscal third-quarter loss.
The company posted a net loss of $109.3 million, compared with a $3.8 million loss in the same quarter last year.
The loss came mainly from $92.3 million in unrealized losses on digital assets. Upexi said the figure reflected non-cash quarter-end fair value changes tied to its Solana holdings. Revenue still rose to about $4.6 million from $3.2 million a year earlier.
Upexi said its Solana tokens increased by about 189,000 during the quarter, or 9%. Digital asset revenue reached $3.5 million for the period, helped by staking activity.
As of March 31, Upexi held 2.5 million Solana tokens and $3.5 million in cash, according to its earnings call transcript. About 1.4 million tokens were liquid, while around 1 million were locked.
Moreover, CEO Allan Marshall said the quarter was shaped by a hard market for crypto treasury firms. He said Upexi faced pressure from Solana’s price decline and lower industry valuation multiples.
Marshall said the company was “not simply waiting around” for market conditions to improve. Upexi also repurchased about 2.9 million shares, reduced short-term debt by $7.6 million and completed a $36 million convertible note tied to locked Solana tokens.
Upexi is now one of the largest listed Solana treasury companies, but it remains behind Forward Industries. CoinGecko data shows Forward Industries holds 7,013,536 SOL, making it the largest public corporate Solana holder.
Related reports show Forward Industries has stayed active in the Solana ecosystem. The company and RockawayX recently backed a $5 million funding round for OnRe, a startup building reinsurance infrastructure on Solana.


