CB Insights: Nine Predictions for the Fintech Sector in 2026, with Asset Tokenization Already Becoming a Trend
Powerful forces are converging that will reshape the financial services industry in 2026. Emerging banks are going public and applying for full banking licenses. Native cryptocurrency companies are collaborating with or competing against the world's largest banks. AI agents are beginning to autonomously transfer funds. These developments collectively signal a transformation in how financial services are constructed and the ownership of customer relationships.
Prediction 1: Emerging Banks Entering New Markets Will Take Consumer Deposits from Traditional Banks
New banks are no longer startups closely following traditional banks. A new type of digital-first institution is expanding globally, going public, and applying for full banking licenses, directly competing with traditional banks for major consumer banking relationships.
The booming IPO market indicates growing confidence in the commercial maturity of new banks. Chime completed an $864 million IPO in June 2025, setting a historical high for new bank IPOs in the U.S. PicPay subsequently went public on Nasdaq in January. The largest new bank, Nubank, received conditional approval for a U.S. banking license in January, choosing to apply for a full license independently rather than partnering with a sponsoring bank, and relocating its co-founder to the U.S. full-time to lead this new subsidiary.
In the private sector, CB Insights' hiring momentum scores reveal which B2C new banks are expanding most aggressively.
Revolut leads with a perfect score of 100 in hiring momentum. The company raised $2 billion in November, achieving a valuation of $75 billion, making it the highest-valued private new bank in history, with a significant portion of the funds earmarked for expansion in the U.S. Its hiring strategy demonstrates a systematic market entry approach, such as recruiting senior regulatory and compliance leaders simultaneously in over 20 countries. Other companies include:
YouTrip (33.6) is aggressively expanding in the Asia-Pacific region, particularly focusing on the Australian market.
Kuda (31.6), focused on the Nigerian market, is hiring across multiple African regions.
Toss Bank (20.8) is recruiting for international remittance and foreign exchange-related positions, marking the company's cross-border expansion from South Korea.
Even new banks that have not yet expanded geographically are changing their models: FairMoney (21.1) is transforming from a digital lending institution into a full-service pan-African bank, while N26 (25.4) is shifting towards AI integration, mortgages, and risk management to deepen its competitive position in existing European markets.
As this generation of new banks enters new markets with increasingly comprehensive services, consumer deposits across banks of all sizes face pressure from a new class of competitors.
Prediction 2: The Battle of Buy Now Pay Later Banks
"Buy Now Pay Later" (BNPL) is no longer just a checkout feature. Klarna (expected to be the largest fintech IPO in 2025) and Affirm (with a higher market cap and actively expanding into Europe) are building comprehensive consumer banking services, as indicated by CB Insights' business relationship data, which shows they are achieving this through overlapping infrastructures. These two companies rank among the most active payment companies in terms of partnerships, with 27 shared partners—including Apple, Adyen, Google, and JPMorgan—integrating BNPL into various aspects from device-based checkout processes, digital commerce to merchant banking and payment processing.
Recent initiatives have further deepened this infrastructure layout. Affirm's partnership with Fiserv and Klarna's expansion into credit card services through Marqeta have integrated BNPL services into debit cards, banking services, and everyday payments, far exceeding the scope of installment loans at checkout. Klarna holds licenses in the EU and the UK and announced in June a pilot launch of debit card services in the U.S. in collaboration with Visa. Meanwhile, Affirm plans to expand its business beyond existing savings accounts (held by Cross River Bank) and submitted an application to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) in January.
Our hiring insights show that Affirm is recruiting leaders focused on analytics to develop its partner bank debit card program. Klarna is enhancing its fraud detection and risk management capabilities by establishing specialized positions, particularly focusing on regulatory compliance in the UK market.
As smart AI reshapes the way consumers shop, the pure BNPL model may lose momentum, and the next phase for both companies will be comprehensive consumer banking.
Prediction 3: Robinhood Will Become a Financial Super App
In 2025, equity financing in the wealth tech sector grew by 90% year-on-year, the largest increase among all fintech sub-sectors. The highest-valued company in this field, Robinhood, is actively expanding its banking, credit, and cryptocurrency infrastructure business.
In investment, Robinhood is moving towards vertical integration. It has acquired Bitstamp (an institutional-grade cryptocurrency trading platform) and LedgerX (a cryptocurrency futures platform), extending its business beyond retail brokerage. Additionally, it has partnered with Offchain Labs to build the L2 chain "Robinhood Chain" specifically for EU users, indicating that Robinhood's ambitions extend beyond asset distribution to owning on-chain market infrastructure.
In banking, Robinhood is continuously expanding its capabilities in preparation for launching comprehensive banking services. In November 2025, Robinhood partnered with GoPuff and Coastal Community Bank to integrate cash delivery services; in September 2025, Robinhood acquired Stakk to further enhance its core banking capabilities. Our hiring data also supports this shift, showing an increase in positions directly related to credit cards, banking products, and credit limit enhancements:
Full-stack engineers and software backend engineers for credit cards and banking
Banking product design managers and senior product engineers
Credit business analysts for banking fraud
Robinhood is not merely relying on partnerships to layer functionalities but is building a vertically integrated financial system and talent pool covering trading, cryptocurrency infrastructure, deposits, and credit. In the thriving wealth tech landscape, Robinhood is reshaping consumer banking in the name of brokerage.
Prediction 4: Large Cryptocurrency Companies Will Challenge Large Banking
Cryptocurrency companies are no longer providing alternatives to traditional banking services but are building the next phase of traditional banking services.
The most actively expanding cryptocurrency-native companies in 2025 are Ripple, Coinbase, and Circle, each establishing over 50 partnerships. According to our business relationship insights report, these three leading companies are targeting the traditional banking system:
Ripple is building institutional-grade custody infrastructure for real-world asset tokenization and digital fund management, achieving this through white-label solutions supported by well-known financial institutions like BBVA and Absa Group.
Coinbase is expanding from retail brokerage to provide institutional brokerage, custody, and payment infrastructure services to financial institutions like JPMorgan and Standard Chartered.
Circle is embedding USDC directly into core banking systems and payment processors (such as FIS, Fiserv, and Finastra) to enable traditional financial institutions to seamlessly adopt stablecoins.
Ripple is actively entering the institutional banking business and has established partnerships with 9 of the top 100 traditional banks by asset size since 2023, including DBS Bank and BNY Mellon. Its strategic planning over the past year shows that the company has made 4 acquisitions in the fields of fund management fintech, prime brokerage, and B2B cross-border transaction processing to build its fintech stack:
Palisade (acquired in November 2025) is a wallet-as-a-service custody platform for fintech companies and cryptocurrency-native companies, used for high-frequency trading, deposits, and wallet configuration.
GTreasury (acquired in October 2025 at a valuation of $1 billion) is a fund management software provider used by large enterprises to manage cash, foreign exchange risk exposure, and payment operations.
Rail.io (acquired in August 2025 at a valuation of $200 million) is a B2B stablecoin payment startup providing businesses with inbound/outbound gateways and cross-border transaction infrastructure.
Ripple Prime (acquired in April 2025 at a valuation of $1.25 billion, formerly Hidden Road) is a multi-asset institutional brokerage that clears approximately $30 trillion annually for hedge funds and financial institutions.
In December last year, Ripple and Circle, along with BitGo, Fidelity Digital Assets, and Paxos, received conditional approval for a national trust bank license in the U.S. Next step: these cryptocurrency-native companies are preparing to move beyond partnerships and compete to establish full-stack banking relationships.
Prediction 5: In Response to the Flourishing of Cryptocurrency Companies, Banks Will Tokenize Existing Assets to Maintain Control Over Deposits
Banks are actively responding to the flourishing of cryptocurrency companies by converting deposits into blockchain-based tokens. Tokenized deposits are digital representations of ordinary currency held by regulated banks, still liabilities on the bank's balance sheet, providing customers with the same protections as ordinary deposits. On blockchain platforms, tokenized deposits can support faster settlements and programmable transfers, while the issuing bank retains regulatory authority and core customer relationships.
According to ratings, tokenized deposit issuance is currently the most dynamic blockchain market, with an average commercial maturity score of 3 (in deployment) or lower, even surpassing the Mosaic scores for stablecoin settlements and payments. According to our ESP (Execution, Strength, and Positioning) matrix, key players include:
Stablecore (Mosaic score in the top 2%, score 747) enables banks and credit unions to offer digital asset products, facilitate transactions, and manage cryptocurrency collateral for loans.
Fireblocks (Mosaic score as high as 867, ranking in the top 1%) provides flexible institutional-grade technology for tokenizing fiat currency, money market funds, digital currencies, and real-world assets. In February 2026, Fireblocks launched the Canton Network, a Layer 1 blockchain designed for the institutional finance sector.
Strategic partnerships are driving this movement:
JPMorgan launched tokenized deposits and tokenized money market funds and began exploring interoperability of tokenized TradFi products with DBS Bank in November.
Citi's existing Citi Token Services solution added interbank payment capabilities in September.
Vantage Bank launched tokenized deposit services in October in collaboration with Custodia Bank, while Standard Chartered partnered with Ant International in December.
With the proliferation of stablecoins, banks will increasingly tokenize their balance sheets, modernizing settlement channels while maintaining deposit relationships, transforming defensive measures into competitive strategies.
Prediction 6: Stablecoins Will Become the Rail for Agent Payments
AI agents require programmable, always-available funds, and stablecoins fit this need perfectly. This integration is natural: AI agents need verifiable identities, programmable funds, and autonomous execution capabilities, all of which are inherently provided by blockchain-native currencies.
Data shows that this is already underway. According to our Technology Trends Report, by 2025, the financial services industry will lead all sectors in AI agent collaborations, while payment processors building smart commerce rails are accelerating the integration of cryptocurrencies: for example, Mastercard's cryptocurrency partnerships increased from 6 in 2024 to over 25 in 2025.
From startups to industry giants, stablecoins are the common foundation for AI agent payment infrastructure. In the AI agent payment infrastructure market we analyzed, companies at various stages of commercial maturity rely on stablecoins to operate, including Circuit & Chisel (CM 1), Catena Labs (CM 2), Skyfire (CM 3), Crossmint (CM 4), and Coinbase (CM 5). Investors like Coinbase Ventures and Stripe have further reinforced this overlap.
As AI agents manage subscriptions, checkout processes, and after-sales services on behalf of consumers, stablecoins will naturally transition from cryptocurrency-native tools to the settlement layer of agent-driven commerce. We predict that by 2026 and beyond, stablecoins will provide instant, programmable payment methods for online marketplaces, cross-border retail, and embedded checkout experiences.
Prediction 7: On-Chain AI Agent Platforms Are Laying the Foundation for the Autonomous Agent Economy
Stablecoins are becoming a key payment channel for smart commerce. But a further parallel infrastructure layer is emerging: platforms where AI agents operate entirely on-chain.
Blockchain-based AI agent platforms provide the tools needed to create, deploy, and manage autonomous agents that run natively on-chain. These agents can execute decentralized finance (DeFi) transactions, participate in governance, interact with decentralized applications, and coordinate with other agents without human intervention.
Beyond execution, these platforms also enable shared ownership and monetization of agents through tokenization, pointing towards an agent economy where autonomous software participants can independently earn, spend, and allocate capital.
Thanks to advancements in agent AI technology, startups in this field are transitioning from the experimental phase to infrastructure building. Although the average commercial maturity score is only 2 (validation stage), this remains the earliest market among over thirty blockchain sectors. However, the field is poised for explosive growth.
From 2023 to 2025, equity financing nearly doubled, and employee numbers grew by about 50%. In the past two years, every independent company has raised funds, indicating strong investor confidence and foreshadowing rapid expansion in 2026.
So far, agent payments have primarily focused on consumers and e-commerce, with Mastercard, Visa, Stripe, and Shopify planning to launch agent commerce tools in 2025.
Blockchain-based AI agent platforms lay the groundwork for economic autonomous entities to transact and operate on decentralized networks. As agent payment infrastructure matures, this deeper layer of coordination will become the cornerstone of the next phase of agent finance.
Prediction 8: New "Know Your Agent" (KYA) Tools Will Emerge for Regulating Agent Payment Behavior
As AI agents gain transaction permissions, new compliance boundaries are forming.
Among the 96 cybersecurity markets we track, AI agent security and risk management platforms are currently the fastest-growing sub-segment. "Know Your Agent" (KYA) startups differ from traditional "Know Your Customer" (KYC) providers, and although their average commercial maturity score is only level 3 (still developing), funding growth over the past year has exceeded 450%.
Early-stage startups are building identity, permission, and behavior scoring systems for autonomous software participants. Although they are still in their infancy, each of the following companies is showing strong momentum, ranking in the top 15% of all companies according to our proprietary Mosaic scores:
Keycard (commercial maturity 2, raised $30 million in Series A funding in October, Mosaic ranking in the top 2%) builds programmable identity and access infrastructure for AI agents, enabling secure identity verification, wallet control, and policy-based permissions in financial applications.
Helmet Security (commercial maturity 2, raised $9 million in Series A funding in December, ranking in the top 8% of Mosaic) develops agent-native compliance and risk tools, embedding transaction monitoring, policy execution, and auditability directly into autonomous workflows.
RunLayer (commercial maturity 1, completed $11 million in seed funding in December, ranking in the top 6% of Mosaic): provides execution infrastructure for AI agents, managing credentials, environmental isolation, and secure task orchestration across enterprise systems.
Overmind (commercial maturity 1, completed seed funding in September, ranking in the top 15% of Mosaic) focuses on behavior monitoring of AI agents, tracking activity patterns and implementing safeguards to prevent abuse, fraud, or policy violations.
T54 Labs (commercial maturity 1, completed seed funding in February 2026, ranking in the top 12% of Mosaic) scores payment agents based on comprehensive, dynamic risk profiles covering transaction history, counterparties, and behavioral signals.
As regulators and businesses demand accountability for machine-driven finance, KYA tools will become the foundation of agent payments, just as KYC does for human banking.
Prediction 9: Prediction Markets Will Attempt to Transition from Gambling Platforms to Trusted Data Providers
Prediction markets (platforms where users trade on the outcomes of real-world events) are experiencing unprecedented growth momentum. Driven by Polymarket and Kalshi, equity financing in 2025 grew 35 times year-on-year, soaring from $106 million in 2024 to $3.7 billion. CB Insights' Mosaic data shows that prediction market platforms are the fastest-growing fintech sub-sector among over 150 financial services and blockchain markets.
Changes in valuation and employee numbers indicate rapid development for these two companies. In 2025 alone, Polymarket's valuation grew from $1 billion to $9 billion, with a 333% increase in employee numbers; Kalshi's valuation increased by 120%, and its team size expanded by 72%.
Our hiring insights show that Polymarket's top priority is to build regulated U.S. exchange infrastructure and expand its business into mainstream consumer groups beyond politics and cryptocurrency with new marketing talent. Kalshi is similarly investing resources in marketing roles to drive mainstream consumer acceptance of its products while establishing strong ties with traditional financial platforms through multiple engineering positions.
Strategic partnership data further emphasizes that both Polymarket and Kalshi aim to enter the mainstream financial services sector while repositioning themselves as trusted signal providers:
In December 2025, Kalshi partnered with Harvard University to provide prediction market data to academic researchers.
Polymarket collaborated with Dow Jones to distribute market insights to institutional audiences.
Last December, Crypto.com teamed up with Kalshi to launch a national prediction market alliance, expanding their user base from cryptocurrency-native users to mainstream financial channels. Both companies have also adopted similar strategies to win consumer trust: both opened grocery store pop-up shops in New York in February 2026.
In this field, the ultimate winners will not merely be those with the highest trading volumes but those capable of transforming collective market signals into institutional-grade data products and establishing partnerships with mature institutions. For Polymarket and Kalshi, their ultimate goal is to transform prediction markets from speculative tools into core information infrastructures for decision-makers.
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Sun Valley Releases 2025 Financial Report: Bitcoin Mining Revenue Reaches $670 Million, Accelerating Transformation to AI Infrastructure Platform
On March 16, 2026, in Dallas, Texas, USA, CanGu Company (New York Stock Exchange code: CANG, hereinafter referred to as "CanGu" or the "Company") today announced its unaudited financial performance for the fourth quarter and full year ended December 31, 2025. As a bitcoin mining enterprise relying on a globally operated layout and dedicated to building an integrated energy and AI computing power platform, CanGu is actively advancing its business transformation and infrastructure development.
• Financial Performance:
Total revenue for the full year 2025 was $688.1 million, with $179.5 million in the fourth quarter.
Bitcoin mining business revenue for the full year was $675.5 million, with $172.4 million in the fourth quarter.
Full-year adjusted EBITDA was $24.5 million, while the fourth quarter was -$156.3 million.
• Mining Operations and Costs:
A total of 6,594.6 bitcoins were mined throughout the year, averaging 18.07 bitcoins per day; of which 1,718.3 bitcoins were mined in the fourth quarter, averaging 18.68 bitcoins per day.
The average mining cost for the full year (excluding miner depreciation) was $79,707 per bitcoin, and for the fourth quarter, it was $84,552;
The all-in sustaining costs were $97,272 and $106,251 per bitcoin, respectively.
As of the end of December 2025, the company has cumulatively produced 7,528.4 bitcoins since entering the bitcoin mining business.
• Strategic Progress:
The company has completed the termination of the American Depositary Receipt (ADR) program and transitioned to a direct listing on the NYSE to enhance information transparency and align with its strategic direction, with a long-term goal of expanding its investor base.
CEO Paul Yu stated: "2025 marked the company's first full year as a bitcoin mining enterprise, characterized by rapid execution and structural reshaping. We completed a comprehensive adjustment of our asset system and established a globally distributed mining network. Additionally, the company introduced a new management team, further strengthening our capabilities and competitive advantage in the digital asset and energy infrastructure space. The completion of the NYSE direct listing and USD pricing also signifies our transformation into a global AI infrastructure company."
"As we enter 2026, the company will continue to optimize its balance sheet structure and enhance operational efficiency and cost resilience through adjustments to the miner portfolio. At the same time, we are advancing our strategic transformation into an AI infrastructure provider. Leveraging EcoHash, we will utilize our capabilities in scalable computing power and energy networks to provide cost-effective AI inference solutions. The relevant site transformations and product development are progressing simultaneously, and the company is well-positioned to sustain its execution in the new phase."
The company's Chief Financial Officer, Michael Zhang, stated: "By 2025, the company is expected to achieve significant revenue growth through its scaled mining operations. Despite recording a net loss of $452.8 million from ongoing operations, mainly due to one-time transformation costs and market-driven fair value adjustments, the company, from a financial perspective, will reduce its leverage, optimize its Bitcoin reserve strategy and liquidity management, introduce new capital to strengthen its financial position, and seize investment opportunities in high-potential areas such as AI infrastructure while navigating market volatility."
The total revenue for the fourth quarter was $1.795 billion. Of this, the Bitcoin mining business contributed $1.724 billion in revenue, generating 1,718.3 Bitcoins during the quarter. Revenue from the international automobile trading business was $4.8 million.
The total operating costs and expenses for the fourth quarter amounted to $4.56 billion, primarily attributed to expenses related to the Bitcoin mining business, as well as impairment of mining machines and fair value losses on Bitcoin collateral receivables.
This includes:
· Cost of Revenue (excluding depreciation): $1.553 billion
· Cost of Revenue (depreciation): $38.1 million
· Operating Expenses: $9.9 million (including related-party expenses of $1.1 million)
· Mining Machine Impairment Loss: $81.4 million
· Fair Value Loss on Bitcoin Collateral Receivables: $171.4 million
The operating loss for the fourth quarter was $276.6 million, a significant increase from a loss of $0.7 million in the same period of 2024, primarily due to the downward trend in Bitcoin prices.
The net loss from ongoing operations was $285 million, compared to a net profit of $2.4 million in the same period last year.
The adjusted EBITDA was -$156.3 million, compared to $2.4 million in the same period last year.
The total revenue for the full year was $6.881 billion. Of this, the revenue from the Bitcoin mining business was $6.755 billion, with a total output of 6,594.6 Bitcoins for the year. Revenue from the international automobile trading business was $9.8 million.
The total annual operating costs and expenses amount to $1.1 billion.
Specifically, they include:
· Revenue Cost (excluding depreciation): $543.3 million
· Revenue Cost (depreciation): $116.6 million
· Operating Expenses: $28.9 million (including related-party expenses of $1.1 million)
· Miner Impairment Loss: $338.3 million
· Bitcoin Collateral Receivable Fair Value Change Loss: $96.5 million
The full-year operating loss is $437.1 million. The continuing operations net loss is $452.8 million, while in 2024, there was a net profit of $4.8 million.
The 2025 non-GAAP adjusted net profit is $24.5 million (compared to $5.7 million in 2024). This measure does not include share-based compensation expenses; refer to "Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures" for details.
As of December 31, 2025, the company's key assets and liabilities are as follows:
· Cash and Cash Equivalents: $41.2 million
· Bitcoin Collateral Receivable (Non-current, related party): $663.0 million
· Miner Net Value: $248.7 million
· Long-Term Debt (related party): $557.6 million
In February 2026, the company sold 4,451 bitcoins and repaid a portion of related-party long-term debt to reduce financial leverage and optimize the asset-liability structure.
As per the stock repurchase plan disclosed on March 13, 2025, as of December 31, 2025, the company had repurchased a total of 890,155 shares of Class A common stock for approximately $1.2 million.

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Sun Valley Releases 2025 Financial Report: Bitcoin Mining Revenue Reaches $670 Million, Accelerating Transformation to AI Infrastructure Platform
On March 16, 2026, in Dallas, Texas, USA, CanGu Company (New York Stock Exchange code: CANG, hereinafter referred to as "CanGu" or the "Company") today announced its unaudited financial performance for the fourth quarter and full year ended December 31, 2025. As a bitcoin mining enterprise relying on a globally operated layout and dedicated to building an integrated energy and AI computing power platform, CanGu is actively advancing its business transformation and infrastructure development.
• Financial Performance:
Total revenue for the full year 2025 was $688.1 million, with $179.5 million in the fourth quarter.
Bitcoin mining business revenue for the full year was $675.5 million, with $172.4 million in the fourth quarter.
Full-year adjusted EBITDA was $24.5 million, while the fourth quarter was -$156.3 million.
• Mining Operations and Costs:
A total of 6,594.6 bitcoins were mined throughout the year, averaging 18.07 bitcoins per day; of which 1,718.3 bitcoins were mined in the fourth quarter, averaging 18.68 bitcoins per day.
The average mining cost for the full year (excluding miner depreciation) was $79,707 per bitcoin, and for the fourth quarter, it was $84,552;
The all-in sustaining costs were $97,272 and $106,251 per bitcoin, respectively.
As of the end of December 2025, the company has cumulatively produced 7,528.4 bitcoins since entering the bitcoin mining business.
• Strategic Progress:
The company has completed the termination of the American Depositary Receipt (ADR) program and transitioned to a direct listing on the NYSE to enhance information transparency and align with its strategic direction, with a long-term goal of expanding its investor base.
CEO Paul Yu stated: "2025 marked the company's first full year as a bitcoin mining enterprise, characterized by rapid execution and structural reshaping. We completed a comprehensive adjustment of our asset system and established a globally distributed mining network. Additionally, the company introduced a new management team, further strengthening our capabilities and competitive advantage in the digital asset and energy infrastructure space. The completion of the NYSE direct listing and USD pricing also signifies our transformation into a global AI infrastructure company."
"As we enter 2026, the company will continue to optimize its balance sheet structure and enhance operational efficiency and cost resilience through adjustments to the miner portfolio. At the same time, we are advancing our strategic transformation into an AI infrastructure provider. Leveraging EcoHash, we will utilize our capabilities in scalable computing power and energy networks to provide cost-effective AI inference solutions. The relevant site transformations and product development are progressing simultaneously, and the company is well-positioned to sustain its execution in the new phase."
The company's Chief Financial Officer, Michael Zhang, stated: "By 2025, the company is expected to achieve significant revenue growth through its scaled mining operations. Despite recording a net loss of $452.8 million from ongoing operations, mainly due to one-time transformation costs and market-driven fair value adjustments, the company, from a financial perspective, will reduce its leverage, optimize its Bitcoin reserve strategy and liquidity management, introduce new capital to strengthen its financial position, and seize investment opportunities in high-potential areas such as AI infrastructure while navigating market volatility."
The total revenue for the fourth quarter was $1.795 billion. Of this, the Bitcoin mining business contributed $1.724 billion in revenue, generating 1,718.3 Bitcoins during the quarter. Revenue from the international automobile trading business was $4.8 million.
The total operating costs and expenses for the fourth quarter amounted to $4.56 billion, primarily attributed to expenses related to the Bitcoin mining business, as well as impairment of mining machines and fair value losses on Bitcoin collateral receivables.
This includes:
· Cost of Revenue (excluding depreciation): $1.553 billion
· Cost of Revenue (depreciation): $38.1 million
· Operating Expenses: $9.9 million (including related-party expenses of $1.1 million)
· Mining Machine Impairment Loss: $81.4 million
· Fair Value Loss on Bitcoin Collateral Receivables: $171.4 million
The operating loss for the fourth quarter was $276.6 million, a significant increase from a loss of $0.7 million in the same period of 2024, primarily due to the downward trend in Bitcoin prices.
The net loss from ongoing operations was $285 million, compared to a net profit of $2.4 million in the same period last year.
The adjusted EBITDA was -$156.3 million, compared to $2.4 million in the same period last year.
The total revenue for the full year was $6.881 billion. Of this, the revenue from the Bitcoin mining business was $6.755 billion, with a total output of 6,594.6 Bitcoins for the year. Revenue from the international automobile trading business was $9.8 million.
The total annual operating costs and expenses amount to $1.1 billion.
Specifically, they include:
· Revenue Cost (excluding depreciation): $543.3 million
· Revenue Cost (depreciation): $116.6 million
· Operating Expenses: $28.9 million (including related-party expenses of $1.1 million)
· Miner Impairment Loss: $338.3 million
· Bitcoin Collateral Receivable Fair Value Change Loss: $96.5 million
The full-year operating loss is $437.1 million. The continuing operations net loss is $452.8 million, while in 2024, there was a net profit of $4.8 million.
The 2025 non-GAAP adjusted net profit is $24.5 million (compared to $5.7 million in 2024). This measure does not include share-based compensation expenses; refer to "Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures" for details.
As of December 31, 2025, the company's key assets and liabilities are as follows:
· Cash and Cash Equivalents: $41.2 million
· Bitcoin Collateral Receivable (Non-current, related party): $663.0 million
· Miner Net Value: $248.7 million
· Long-Term Debt (related party): $557.6 million
In February 2026, the company sold 4,451 bitcoins and repaid a portion of related-party long-term debt to reduce financial leverage and optimize the asset-liability structure.
As per the stock repurchase plan disclosed on March 13, 2025, as of December 31, 2025, the company had repurchased a total of 890,155 shares of Class A common stock for approximately $1.2 million.
