Bit Digital Q4 and Full Year 2025 Earnings Call - Repositioned as SAC focused on Ethereum staking and WhiteFiber AI infrastructure
Summary
Bit Digital declared a strategic pivot in 2025, repositioning itself as a Strategic Asset Company built around an Ethereum treasury and staking platform, plus a majority stake in WhiteFiber for AI infrastructure exposure. Management is deliberately winding down Bitcoin mining, scaling ETH holdings through disciplined capital allocation, and leaning on WhiteFiber as a non-dilutive, long-term asset. The company reported full year revenue of $113.6 million, with staking income and cloud/colocation growing while mining revenue shrank.
The financial picture is mixed. Staking revenue surged nearly 300% year over year, but an unfavorable digital asset revaluation drove a net loss of $84.9 million and negative adjusted EBITDA. Management is actively pursuing M&A targets that generate cash to create a flywheel to buy ETH non-dilutively, is exploring selective DeFi yield strategies while keeping most ETH staked natively, and says it will not monetize its WhiteFiber stake in 2026. Regulation and macro volatility remain wildcard risks.
Key Takeaways
- Company repositioned as a Strategic Asset Company centered on Ethereum and AI infrastructure, emphasizing ETH per share and long-term compounding.
- Management began exiting Bitcoin mining, active hash rate was approximately 1.5 exahash at year-end, and no growth or replacement capital will be allocated to mining.
- WhiteFiber is consolidated on Bit Digital’s statements, management holds a majority (about 70%) stake, and they do not intend to monetize that position in 2026.
- Staking revenue grew nearly 300% in 2025, with ETH staking revenue of $7.0 million versus $1.8 million in 2024, and nearly half of full-year staking revenue was generated in Q4.
- Full year revenue was $113.6 million, up 5% year over year; management also reported a referenced period revenue of $32.3 million for the current reporting period.
- Revenue mix is shifting: digital asset mining revenue was $27.3 million, down 53% year over year; cloud services revenue was $68.8 million, up 50% year over year; colocation revenue was $8.9 million, up from $1.4 million.
- Profitability metrics are mixed: reported gross profit for the referenced period was about $18 million with a gross margin of ~56% versus ~40% prior year, but net loss attributable to shareholders was $84.9 million for 2025 versus net income of $28.3 million in 2024, driven largely by unfavorable digital asset revaluation.
- Adjusted EBITDA was negative $24.9 million in 2025 compared to positive $73 million in 2024, where non-cash revaluation swings overwhelmed operating improvements.
- Balance sheet: cash and cash equivalents were $118.4 million at year-end versus $95.2 million a year earlier, and total digital assets were $415.7 million versus $161.4 million, reflecting ETH accumulation and price movement.
- Bit Digital issued $150 million of convertible notes in 2025, and proceeds were used to increase ETH holdings.
- About 89% of ETH holdings are actively staked, primarily native staking run through Figment, with roughly 10% deployed via third-party fund managers that are generating higher yields; management may increase third-party allocations toward ~20% selectively.
- Company favors native staking for risk-adjusted returns but is exploring selective enhancements such as restaking, liquid staking, and other yield strategies, while emphasizing counterparty quality and risk controls.
- Management is actively pursuing M&A to acquire cash-generating businesses that can fund ETH accumulation non-dilutively, with targets possibly including ETH-adjacent and agentic AI businesses; the process has been active since early January and additional headcount is being hired for due diligence.
- CEO highlighted a WhiteFiber commercial detail, noting an $865 million contract tied to a hyperscaler at a North Carolina site, underscoring the asset’s strategic value.
- Management stressed capital discipline, saying it will not accumulate ETH at any price and will prioritize accretive, per-share deployments over scale alone.
- CEO flagged regulatory uncertainty around the CLARITY Act and said its fate is tied to election politics, noting clearer rules could accelerate institutional adoption but the outcome remains uncertain.
Full Transcript
Operator: Hello, and welcome to the Bit Digital fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings conference call. We’ll begin shortly. During the call, all participant lines will be in listen-only mode. Following management’s remarks, we will open the line for questions. If you’d like to ask a question at that time, please press star one on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, today’s call is being recorded. I’ll now turn the call over to your host, Cameron Schnier, Head of Investor Relations at Bit Digital. Cameron, please go ahead.
Cameron Schnier, Head of Investor Relations, Bit Digital: Thank you, and welcome to Bit Digital’s fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. Joining me today are Samir Tabar, our Chief Executive Officer, and Erke Huang, our Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I’d like to remind everyone that certain statements made during today’s call may be considered forward-looking. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. For a discussion of these risks, please refer to our SEC filings, including our Form 10-K filed March 27, 2026. We will also refer to non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in our earnings materials available on our website. Following our prepared remarks, we’ll open the line for questions. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Sam. Sam.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Thank you, Cam, and thank you, everyone, for joining. I’ll start with our progress in 2025 and how we are positioning the business. We reposition the company as a strategic asset company or SAC, centered on Ethereum and AI infrastructure. We began exiting Bitcoin mining, built a scaled ETH position, and established WhiteFiber as a core asset. Let me start with our Ethereum strategy. We view ETH as core infrastructure, a productive asset, not a passive holding. It allows us to participate directly in network activity through staking within a disciplined risk framework. For investors, Bit Digital provides a yield-generating way to gain productive exposure to the broader Ethereum network. We combine treasury ownership and staking income and disciplined capital allocation. Our focus is on increasing ETH per share, not just growing the balance. We are not optimizing for short-term scale.
We are optimizing for long-term compounding. We approach this through a risk-adjusted lens, prioritizing security, liquidity, and counterparty quality while identifying opportunities to enhance returns. The recipe includes capital efficiency, yield generation, and long-term compounding. Our ETH position has grown more deliberately than some others in the market. That is intentional. We believe this approach allows us to scale over time without compromising the balance sheet. We’ve also been deliberate in how we deploy capital across market conditions. We are not accumulating ETH at any price. We are disciplined with how we use equity with a focus on long-term value per share. We are seeing more opportunities to deploy capital, but we will only do so if it’s accretive per share. We continue to believe Ethereum is foundational infrastructure for digital assets and on-chain financial activity, and that its role will expand over time.
We expect staking income to become a meaningful and recurring contributor to cash flow. Staking revenue grew nearly 300% in 2025. Nearly half of our full-year staking revenue was generated in the fourth quarter, reflecting the scaling of our ETH position over the course of the year. Turning briefly to Bitcoin mining. We continue to wind down the business in a deliberate manner. As of year-end, our active hash rate was approximately 1.5 exahash. We are not allocating growth or replacement capital to this segment. Exposure will continue to decline, and mining is no longer a strategic focus, but it does continue to generate cash flow as we complete the transition. Hash rate will continue to decline gradually while efficiency improves as old miners retire first. Turning now to WhiteFiber.
Our ownership in WhiteFiber provides key exposure to AI infrastructure, where demand for compute continues to outpace supply. We view this as a long-term position aligned with structural growth in the market. Our focus is on supporting the platform asset scales. We have also been clear on our intentions with respect to our ownership. We do not intend to monetize our WhiteFiber position in 2026. We view it as a core long-term strategic asset and a key part of our exposure to AI infrastructure. This ownership stake is a key differentiator for Bit Digital. It is a high-quality liquid asset on our balance sheet that provides differentiated flexibility as we scale the business. Over time, this flexibility can support capital allocation across the platform while reducing reliance on dilutive sources of capital. As we look ahead, our priorities are evolving.
The next phase of the stock model is building durable cash flow. This is critical to supporting continued investment and compounding across the platform. We expect to expand our operating footprint through disciplined investments. Our focus is on acquiring or building assets that fit our framework and generate consistent returns. Across Ethereum and AI infrastructure, our approach is consistent, capital efficiency, discipline, long-term compounding. We have operated through multiple market cycles as a public company. Volatility is not new to us. Our focus remains on execution and long-term value creation. I’ll now hand the line to Eric to discuss our financials.
Erke Huang, Chief Financial Officer, Bit Digital: Thank you, Sam. I’ll walk through our first quarter and full year 2025 results. Our 2025 results include WhiteFiber, which we continue to consolidate following its IPO. A portion of the results is attributable to non-controlling interests. First quarter revenue was $32.3 million, up from $25.8 million in the same period last year. Full year revenue was $113.6 million, a 5% increase compared to 2024. Results reflect growth in cloud, colocation, and staking alongside the wind down of Bitcoin mining. First quarter results were also impacted by digital asset revaluation similar to the full year. I will now break down revenue by segment. Revenue for Bit Digital...
Sorry, revenue from digital asset mining was $27.3 million for the year, down 53% compared to 2024, reflecting the continued wind down of the business. Cloud services revenue was $68.8 million, up 50% year-over-year. Colocation services revenue was $8.9 million, up from $1.4 million in the prior year. Ethereum staking revenue was $7 million, up from $1.8 million in 2024. As of year-end, the majority of our ETH holdings were actively staked, supporting ongoing yield generation. Overall, our revenue mix continues to shift away from mining and towards staking and infrastructure related revenue. Now turning to profitability. Gross profit for the first quarter was approximately $18 million, representing a gross margin of approximately 56% compared to approximately 40% in the same period last year.
Net loss attributable to Bit Digital shareholders was $84.9 million for 2025, compared to a net income of $28.3 million in 2024. This change was largely driven by a less favorable year-over-year impact from digital asset revaluation. Adjusted EBITDA for the year was negative $24.9 million compared to a positive $73 million in 2024. A change reflects the same dynamic, where non-cash digital asset revaluation offset improvements in our operating businesses. Now turning to balance sheet. We ended the year with $118.4 million in cash and cash equivalents compared to $95.2 million at end of 2024. This balance primarily reflects cash held at WhiteFiber, which is consolidated in our financial statements.
Total digital assets were $415.7 million at year-end, up from $161.4 million in the prior year. This reflects ETH accumulation partially offset by lower year-end ETH prices. During the year, we issued $150 million of convertible notes, which are reflected on our year-end balance sheet. Proceeds were used to increase our ETH holdings. Overall, 2025 reflects a transition in our business and financial profile. We reduced exposure to Bitcoin mining, scaled newer revenue streams, and repositioned the balance sheet around Ethereum and our ownership in WhiteFiber. Looking ahead, we expect our results to increasingly reflect recurring revenue and cash flow with less attribution contribution from legacy mining and reduced exposure to volatility over time. With that, I’ll turn it back to Sam for closing remarks.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Thank you, Eric. I’d like to close with a few thoughts on where we’re heading. We’ve made significant progress repositioning Bit Digital as a strategic asset company. Today, we are a business built around two core pillars, an Ethereum treasury and staking platform and a majority ownership stake in WhiteFiber, which gives us exposure to AI infrastructure. We believe that combination is differentiated. We believe it is difficult to replicate at scale, and we do not think it is fully reflective on how the company is valued today. We are not standing still. We are not trying to be a vehicle that simply raises capital to buy ETH. We do not believe that creates long-term value. Our objective is to build a business that can generate cash, deploy that capital efficiently and compound value over time. That is the next phase of the SAC model.
We believe adding a durable cash flow engine is critical to that evolution. It allows us to grow our ETH position in a more sustainable way and reduces reliance on external capital. M&A is part of that strategy. We are actively evaluating opportunities to acquire or build operating businesses that align with our framework and can generate consistent returns. We’re focused on assets we understand. We will prioritize long-term value creation over speed. Importantly, we also have flexibility that many others do not. Our ownership in WhiteFiber is a high-quality liquid asset that provides flexibility as we scale the business. It supports growth without relying on dilutive capital and gives us exposure to AI infrastructure alongside our Ethereum strategy. At the same time, we remain fully aligned with WhiteFiber’s long-term success. As we’ve said, we do not intend to monetize that position in 2026.
The goal is simple: build a business that generates cash, deploy that capital into high conviction assets like Ethereum, and continue compounding value per share over time. We have evolved the business significantly over the past year, and we expect that evolution to continue. We have operated through multiple market cycles, and our focus remains always on discipline, execution, and long-term value creation. With that operator, we can open the line for questions.
Operator: Thank you. If you would like to signal with questions, please press star one on your touch-tone telephone. If you’re joining us today using a speakerphone, please make sure your mute function is turned off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. Again, that is star one if you would like to signal with questions. The first question comes from Lucas Pipes with B. Riley Securities.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Hi, Nick.
Lucas Pipes, Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Thanks, operator. Good morning, guys. Appreciate the update. Sam, I’m intrigued to hear that M&A may be of increased focus. Can you just give us a sense for what that could entail? You know, would potential targets be other DATCOs that may have a lower MNAV than yours? What would be the rough framework we should be thinking about?
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: No. It would not be other dApps. It would be a business that is generating cash or is on its way to generating cash, so we can deploy that capital and invest it into Ethereum. We think that’s the better way. In some ways we have that already, but we’re sunsetting a business which is Bitcoin mining. That is generating cash. That’s another differentiator that other dApps don’t have. That is not a business of the future, Bitcoin mining. We’ve known that for a long time. In fact, we’re the first ones, or one of the first ones to announce that publicly. We are actively in the market right now, quite active, looking at M&A opportunities.
They could be crypto-adjacent businesses, aligned with Ethereum, even potentially with agentic AI that has an intersection with Ethereum. There is an intersection between agentic AI and Ethereum. If we can find a business that has a very clear path towards cash flow related to those work streams, those two sectors, we are very, very much interested. We’ve been actively in the market. We’ve already spoken to many candidates, actually. You gotta kiss a lot of toads before you find that prince or princess. In our case, it’s a matter of time when we find it. We have been very successful in M&A in the past, and that being for WhiteFiber when we acquired Enovum, but that’s for WhiteFiber.
Today is about Bit Digital, and we intend to make a successful acquisition as we’ve done for WhiteFiber, but this time for Bit Digital.
Lucas Pipes, Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Sam, that’s super helpful. That’s exactly what I was looking for. My second question was just, you know, can you speak to some of the trends you’re seeing across the Ethereum network? I think in the past you’ve spoken about stablecoins being built on top and, you know, number of developers that are using the Ethereum network. Just anything you’re seeing out there, you know, that’s kind of away from the price pressures that we see on our screen.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Yeah. I mean, with respect to the price pressures, it’s difficult to avoid talking about that. I think there’s been a lot of macro movements. I think two things happened with respect to price pressure. I know you’re not asking about that, but I do wanna make a comment about it. I think there was a rotation into gold. We’re now seeing that rotation out of gold and coming back into crypto. I also think that, you know, there’s obviously macro pressures such as the war that’s happening, that’s caused a darker mood, but that is coming to an end. I think those price pressures were not helpful, the movement towards gold and the war, but we’re surfacing out of those two trends, so now coming back into crypto.
I’m glad to see that happen. But with respect to Ethereum, the blockchain itself, I think it was Jamie Dimon that said the era of experimentation is now over. Let’s start using these technologies. I fully agree with that comment. The era of sandboxing this technology, the era of experimenting is over. The old world is now just changing, especially with AI. People are seeing that you just can’t hold things together in the old way. All these intermediaries and all these can be all streamlined through blockchain and agentic AI. I think we’re really living in an era where that old world is breaking down quite rapidly now, the two battering rams being blockchain and then AI.
It’s bound to happen. It’s not if, it’s when. I agree with the sentiment that the era of experimentation is over. Let’s get out of the sandbox. The regulations are becoming more clear, and we should be seeing more of a golden age in Ethereum. I think it’s gonna be Ethereum in particular because it doesn’t have any downtime, and I don’t think institutions can deal with a protocol that has uptime issues.
Lucas Pipes, Analyst, B. Riley Securities: Thank you, Sam. I really appreciate it.
Operator: Our next question will come from George Sutton with Craig-Hallum.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Hi, George.
George Sutton, Analyst, Craig-Hallum: Hi, Sam. Could you just walk a little in more detail around your recipe that you mentioned and, you know, the things that you are contemplating relative to building that ETH per share?
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Yeah. I mean, we have a pretty unique recipe. A lot of people classify us as a DAT. That’s a sub-strategy that we have. You know, we’re very different. If you look at our peers, we have, believe it or not, a profitable Bitcoin mining business that, of course, we are sunsetting. We have a 70% majority stake in WhiteFiber. You know, and WhiteFiber isn’t the topic of the conversation today, but I mean, just there’s obviously a lot of. I can’t comment to the price of particular stocks, but I can comment certain facts that, for example, WhiteFiber has an $865 million contract and has a hyperscaler that, you know, is attached to the end of that contract with respect to North Carolina site. Again, this is about Bit Digital.
My point is, there aren’t many companies that are positioned to have an infrastructure investment in the digital space, that being Ethereum, that we have an investment of a real business with incredible contracts attached to it with respect to WhiteFiber. We have, oh, by the way, an ongoing business with Bitcoin mining that we are sunsetting, but there are revenues, it’s still profitable. Now we are in the market very actively in M&A, and what we want to do with that business is take the cash flow from that business and create a flywheel, that we take the money from that business, and it has to be a high-growth business, and pour that into Ethereum. Now, by the way, we also have a non-dilutive source of capital through WhiteFiber in the future.
If you have a source of capital, all these levers that other DATS don’t have, the WhiteFiber lever, you know, the business that we intend to acquire in the future with its cash flow, these are real businesses, and we take that and we pour that into buying Ethereum. We think that is the way forward instead of just being a shell company that you just shoved a bunch of Ethereum on, and you’re just basically doing that, which we don’t think is really the best way forward. I think it’s also highly dilutive. You need different levers.
George Sutton, Analyst, Craig-Hallum: Understand.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: That’s the recipe.
George Sutton, Analyst, Craig-Hallum: Just on the agentic AI that you mentioned this morning relative to Ethereum, I believe the last number was something like 11,000 agents operating through 402 protocols. Can you just give us a picture of how well-positioned ETH is versus other blockchains relative to the agentic AI token side?
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Can you rephrase that question? Are you asking basically what’s the intersection between agentic AI and? Well, it has a lot to do with identification, but I’m not sure that’s your question. Are you asking about the activity?
George Sutton, Analyst, Craig-Hallum: Well, you mentioned for the first time today that you’re contemplating an agentic AI-related acquisition.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: It’s definitely one of the possibilities. Just to be clear, it’s a possibility. It’s something we’re looking into. We’ve always called out the trends before they happen in the mainstream, and we were the first DAT basically. We got out of Bitcoin mining. We’re the first ones. We did the AI infrastructure company. We believe that agentic AI is a huge future, and what we’re interested in are businesses, blockchain businesses that have an intersection with agentic AI. We think the agentic AI economy is going to blow up in a major way, and we wanna participate in the agentic economy. That’s our thesis.
George Sutton, Analyst, Craig-Hallum: Understand. Just, one other quick question with respect to the CLARITY Act. I’m just curious your thoughts on that, your thoughts on likelihood of that getting through, and as it’s currently constructed, how do you think it would influence the ETH assets that you own?
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: This is almost more of a political question. I’m happy to go there. I think the November elections are very much in play, and whoever controls Congress is going to have obviously some influence on whether certain legislation gets passed. I think the Democrats have a choice to make. If they’re gonna try to weaponize technology like they did in the last election, that’s gonna be very problematic. I hope that they’ve learned their lesson, and I hope that they do not go the way of Elizabeth Warren, and they’re more enlightened in their posture towards new technologies like blockchain. If they do that, if the Democrats have learned their lesson from the last election cycle, then I do believe that the CLARITY Act will have a chance to pass.
It all depends on political parties not weaponizing and politicizing technologies.
George Sutton, Analyst, Craig-Hallum: Thanks for your thoughts.
Operator: The next question.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Thanks for your question.
Operator: The next question will come from Kevin Dede with H.C. Wainwright.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Hi, Kevin.
Kevin Dede, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Hi, Eric. Yeah, hi, Sam. Hi, Eric. Would you mind digging in a little bit on the Ethereum yield strategy you’re considering? I know at one point you had wrapped ETH or liquid ETH. I’m wondering if you’re considering lending or borrowing on Aave. What sort of DeFi applications or initiatives might you consider in, you know, building your Ethereum returns?
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: I’d love to pass that question over to our CFO, Erke Huang.
Erke Huang, Chief Financial Officer, Bit Digital: Sure thing. Hi, Kevin. So far, majority of our ETH has stayed native. In the past we had explored our restaking, liquid staking, and all those strategies. You know, to make it very simple, majority is, you know, native. We are exploring some strategies around enhancing the return. So far, we think a native staking, you know, provides the, you know, the most, I would say, risk-adjusted fine returns. If we see other opportunities we might pursue, that’s the strategy right now.
Kevin Dede, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: The press release, Eric, the press release talked to 89% of your balance staked. Are you running all of that staking on your own validator nodes? What would it take for you to go to a full 100% staking?
Erke Huang, Chief Financial Officer, Bit Digital: Yeah. We worked with Figment for native staking. That’s through the partnerships, and they run the nodes for us. With respect to the 10%, that’s with our third-party fund managers. We deploy with them. That’s generating about 3%-4%, which is higher than a 3% native staking rewards. Working with a number of external fund managers to get the enhanced yield.
Kevin Dede, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Okay.
Erke Huang, Chief Financial Officer, Bit Digital: Our target is to increase the, you know, let’s say from 10% to 20%, but really it depends on, you know, what the strategies are and what the, you know, size of the strategy that would allow to generate such returns from the market, especially from the risks associated with deploying those strategies. We’re, you know, super careful about, you know, working and selective working with different counterparties.
Kevin Dede, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Well, thanks, Eric. You nipped my last question in the bud on counterparty risk. I’ll flip over to Sam. A lot of discussion on M&A activity. Can you offer a timeline? Is this something you hope to close before the end of the year? I know you want to keep it. You want to keep yourselves open and want to hold yourself to any obligation, but you just kind of give us something to look forward to. We appreciate it.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Sure. I mean, the last time I spoke about timeline, I got into some hot water, so I wanna make sure I don’t discuss timelines too aggressively, and I don’t wanna be optimistic. I prefer to be much more conservative when it comes to timelines. I could tell you what is happening. We’ve been on calls with M&A candidates for the past couple of months since early this year. In fact, we’ve started that process, yeah, I think early January. It’s a long process ’cause frankly, there’s a lot of trash out there. We wanna make sure that we buy a business we really love and is aligned with our philosophy and the future.
We don’t wanna buy some sort of impaired business or some business where it’s just not for us. In terms of when that’ll happen, I can’t give you a timeline, although I do hope for it to happen. I believe, don’t hold me to it, that’ll happen this year. I want to make sure I wanna make it clear that it’s more important that we do the right acquisition, and we don’t rush anything and buy the wrong business because that will end in tears for everybody. We have to be really careful on who we acquire.
We have a fantastic track record in M&A, and we intend to use that talent in spotting the right acquisition candidate to provide and unleash some value for BTBT.
Kevin Dede, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Yeah. Sam, on that topic of being careful and in the due diligence process, do you think you need to supplement your headcount in analyzing where you think agentic AI software development is and how legitimate the targets you’re looking at are?
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Yeah, I mean, again, it could be agentic AI, it could be more of an ETH adjacent play. We’re still looking at the various candidates. I think your question is just to be clear, if we’re to acquire that company, they will have headcount, so that headcount will automatically increase when we acquire X.
Kevin Dede, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Yeah. No, I understand that. Yeah, I understand that, Sam. I was just wondering if you think you need new people now to help you in the review process.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Yeah, I mean, we are going through an active process going on in hiring a headcount that is going to be looking at this, although we have a number of executives looking at this very closely, as well. All the candidates, all the M&A candidates that we have been speaking with, we’re all, you know, there’s a bunch of us on the call, and we are screening people out. There have been some interesting candidates, by the way, and those conversations continue. To answer your question directly, Kevin, we are hiring another person to help with the due diligence process of all this.
Of course, once we figure out our top, you know, three candidates, we’ll have to go through, you know, more even deeper dive process, and then we’ll be hiring, you know, the bankers, the lawyers and so on.
Kevin Dede, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Perfect. Thank you so much, Sam. I appreciate all the color.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Thank you.
Operator: The next question will come from Mike Grondahl with Northland Securities.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Hey, Mike.
Mike Grondahl, Analyst, Northland Securities: Hey, guys. Another question on the acquisitions you’re looking at for BTBT. It sounds like you’re looking to buy an acquisition that generates cash. Can you talk a little bit about the size of acquisition and how you would finance it? Secondly, if we could get kind of an update on the financing for WhiteFiber, that would be great.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: The financing for WhiteFiber. We did the WhiteFiber earnings call the other day. I believe that script and the audio recording of that is posted on our website. We’ll have that sent to you. It’s a much longer conversation, although it’s an exciting one on the financing for WhiteFiber with respect to financing. Going back to your first question with respect to the sizing, it depends on the candidate. It depends on, you know, of course, we do still have a balance sheet and, perhaps there are ways to finance it off the balance sheet.
I think, you know, we do have a healthy balance sheet still, and we’ll be using that to acquire the candidate we will have in mind as part of our overall strategy for Bit Digital. I wanna remind everybody on this call that no one is doing these things. Not in the least. I just see DATS just pressing the button, having one lever, and I don’t think that’s the way to go. Even MicroStrategy this week stops doing that. It’s not. It’s kind of a dumb strategy to just buy the digital asset and that’s it. I mean, what kind of headcount do you need for that strategy? Not many people. We’re trying to put some intellectual heft and differentiate ourselves, and we’ve done that so far with our exposure to AI infrastructure. We’ve done that.
We already have a, you know, Bitcoin mining business that continues to throw cash. We’re buying ETH not at any price. Now with respect to acquiring a business that’s throwing off cash or has a promising path towards throwing off lucrative cash, that’s going to be an additional lever for us to buy Ethereum in a non-dilutive manner, which I think is the way forward.
Operator: Sir, do you have any further questions?
Mike Grondahl, Analyst, Northland Securities: Nope.
Operator: Thank you. At this time, there are no further questions.
Samir Tabar, Chief Executive Officer, Bit Digital: Thank you, everybody. Thank you very much for attending this call and listening to us. We really look forward to the future and how we’ll continue to differentiate ourselves and we’re really excited by it. We look forward to the next quarterly call, and thank you very much for today.
Operator: Thank you. That does conclude today’s conference. We do thank you for your participation. Have an excellent day.