LMFA November 14, 2025

LM Funding America Q3 2025 Earnings Call - Strategic Growth and Per-Share Bitcoin Acceleration

Summary

LM Funding America emphasized Q3 as a quarter of strategic execution, integration, and disciplined capital allocation toward becoming a vertically integrated Bitcoin miner. Key moves included expanding mining capacity with a new 11 MW facility in Mississippi, boosting hash rate by 50% since June, and adding 164 Bitcoin to their treasury after a $21 million capital raise. They also aggressively repurchased shares and warrants to reduce dilution and improve Bitcoin per share. Operational efficiency improved with deployment of Bitmain’s next-gen S21 immersion-cooled miners set for December, which promise lower costs and higher uptime.

Financially, revenues rose 13% sequentially to $2.2 million with mining margins expanding to 49%. The company operates 6,700 machines with a current mining cost of $66,000 per Bitcoin, down from $70,000 last quarter. With a Bitcoin treasury worth nearly double the market cap, and equity valued at nearly three times the market cap, management underscored the disparity between market price and underlying asset value. They are focused on long-term value accretion through per-share Bitcoin growth and leverage their balance sheet and operational control to weather market volatility and position for future cycles.

Key Takeaways

  • LM Funding America raised $21 million capital, used to quickly acquire 164 Bitcoin and grow treasury to 304.5 Bitcoin valued at $35 million by quarter end.
  • Acquired 11 MW mining facility in Columbus, Mississippi, bringing total capacity to 26 MW across two owned sites with diversified power and climate exposure.
  • Bitcoin production increased 28% month-over-month in October, from 5.9 to 7.6 Bitcoin, reflecting expanded capacity and operational improvements.
  • Completed $8 million private repurchase of 3.3 million shares and 7.3 million warrants, reducing dilution and simplifying capital structure.
  • Authorized additional $1.5 million public buyback program to opportunistically repurchase shares when valuation is attractive relative to Bitcoin holdings.
  • Deployed 6,700 mining machines with plans to energize Bitmain S21 immersion-cooled units in December adding 70 petahash and enhancing efficiency and uptime.
  • Mining costs per Bitcoin decreased from $70,000 in Q2 to $66,000 in Q3, aided by curtailment and energy sales offsets and fleet optimization.
  • Revenue for Q3 was $2.2 million, up 13% sequentially and 74% year-over-year, with mining margins improving to 49%.
  • Bitcoin treasury value roughly double the company’s market capitalization, highlighting a significant disconnect between intrinsic and market value.
  • Management emphasized a long-term strategy focused on increasing Bitcoins per share rather than growth for growth’s sake, balancing mining expansion with direct Bitcoin acquisition.
  • Mississippi facility integration outperformed expectations with potential for additional 4 MW expansion; Oklahoma site will benefit from new immersion-cooling technologies.
  • The company has substantial liquidity and credit capacity, supporting operations and enabling continued focus on per-share value accretion.

Full Transcript

Operator: Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the LM Funding America Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during this session, you will need to press star 11 on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message: "Advise your hand is raised." To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Cody Fletcher. Please go ahead, sir.

Cody Fletcher, Investor Relations, LM Funding America: Thank you, Operator, and thank you all for joining LM Funding America’s Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. Joining us today are Chairman and CEO Bruce Rodgers, President of U.S. Digital Mining Ryan Duran, and CFO Richard Russell. For today’s call, we have uploaded an accompanying supplemental investor presentation, which can be found under the Events section of LM Funding’s Investor Relations website. Before we get started, please note that our remarks today may include forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, and actual results may differ materially. We will also reference certain non-GAAP financial measures today. Please refer to our 10-Q filing and our website for a full reconciliation of these non-GAAP performance measures for the most comparable GAAP measures.

For a more comprehensive discussion of these and other risks, please refer to our filings with the SEC available on sec.gov and in the Investors section of our website at lmfunding.com/investors. I’ll now turn the call over to our CEO, Bruce Rodgers.

Bruce Rodgers, Chairman and CEO, LM Funding America: Thanks, Cody. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Third quarter was one of execution, integration, and disciplined capital allocation as we continued building LM Funding into a vertically integrated Bitcoin miner with a simple ambition: increase Bitcoin per share and grow intrinsic value over time. We entered the quarter with momentum from our Oklahoma site and a growing Bitcoin treasury. As summer progressed, we added meaningful scale and strengthened our foundation. In August, we bolstered our balance sheet with $21 million of capital designated primarily for Bitcoin accumulation and quickly deployed a large portion of those proceeds to purchase 164 Bitcoin, accelerating our treasury growth. Just weeks later, we closed on the acquisition of an 11 megawatt facility in Columbus, Mississippi, bringing our total capacity to 26 megawatts across two wholly controlled sites.

This move expanded our operational base, diversified our power and climate exposure, and gave us full control of energy and uptime across a second location. By the end of September, we had integrated Mississippi, energized additional capacity, and exited the month with approximately 304.5 Bitcoin in treasury, valued then at nearly $35 million versus a market capitalization of roughly half that amount. That disconnect between our treasury value alone and our equity valuation underscores the opportunity we are working toward. In October, we advanced two core priorities simultaneously. We enhanced our per-share economics and positioned our mining fleet to improve productivity. In a private securities repurchase, we retired more than 3.3 million shares and over 7.3 million warrants in a single transaction, reducing dilution, simplifying our capital structure, and increasing our Bitcoin per share.

Subsequently, in early November, we announced a $1.5 million stock buyback, further committing our resources to increasing Bitcoin per share. During the same quarter, we secured Bitmain’s S21 immersion-cooled machines to grow our immersion systems at our Oklahoma site. We expect these machines to come online in December. Importantly, October was also our first full month with Mississippi operating at steady state, and the results validate our strategy. Bitcoin production increased 28%, rising from 5.9 Bitcoin in September to 7.6 Bitcoin in October. Taken together, Q3 and October were about strengthening control of our energy, expanding our mining footprint, growing our treasury, and reducing our share count, all in service of improving Bitcoin ownership on a per-share basis. We strongly believe in Bitcoin as a growth asset. We built our company to take advantage of Bitcoin’s growth and long-term value proposition.

We find inexpensive power machines to add to our Bitcoin holdings, and we are active in the capital markets trying to increase our total Bitcoins held and our Bitcoins per share. It’s a long game, and it starts with sound mining operations. With that, let me turn it over to Ryan for an operational update.

Ryan Duran, President of U.S. Digital Mining, LM Funding America: Thanks, Bruce. Operationally, the last four months were about turning owned infrastructure into accelerating hash power and building an asset base that compounds efficiency over time. We moved from a single-site facility at roughly 0.48 exahash in June to exiting October with roughly 0.71 exahash energized, plus additional growth coming online in December, representing roughly 50% hash rate expansion in one build cycle. That growth came from owning and controlling our power, upgrading fleet mix, and integrating our second site at Mississippi. The acquisition added roughly 7.5 megawatts of energized capacity and approximately 230 petahash of installed hash rate at an attractive 3.6 cents per kilowatt-hour power cost, giving us a second low-cost self-managed facility and a diversified operating base. Equally important, we quickly integrated Mississippi, and the site immediately started contributing to our mining operations.

When we reached our first full month of steady-state operation in October, total production of the company increased, as Bruce mentioned, 27% month over month from 5.9 Bitcoin to 7.6 Bitcoin. This gain reflects not only expanded capacity but also the compounding benefits of tighter operational control, optimized firmware, refined curtailment and power sales scheduling, and more efficient fleet deployment in warmer months. We now operate approximately 6,700 machines across the fleet and additional units staged for deployment behind immersion. Our energized hash rate held stable through high heat periods, supported by curtailment and energy sales that directly improve our margins, and we position the fleet for stronger winter uptime when performance conditions naturally improve. Looking forward, we are entering our next efficiency phase.

We secured Bitmain S21 immersion-cooled units that will add roughly 70 petahash of compute power to our Oklahoma site and are scheduled to energize in December. This upgrade is meaningful. Immersion cooling improves heat transfer, reduces thermal strain, tightens fan load overhead, and increases uptime, especially during seasonal peaks. Combined with the S21’s efficiency profile, this gives us a step change in efficiency and should meaningfully increase Bitcoin per megawatt at the site. This is the same philosophy that guided our site acquisition: combine owned power with modern generation hardware and operate it with discipline. We now operate a cleaner, more efficient, and fully controlled mining platform, improving uptime and next-gen hardware and immersion coming online. The foundation is built. From here, the focus is simple: increased production, efficiency, and Bitcoin per share. With that, I’ll turn it over to Rick to walk through the financials. Rick?

Richard Russell, CFO, LM Funding America: Thanks, Ryan. For the third quarter, revenue was $2.2 million, up approximately 13% sequentially and 74% year over year. The sequential increase reflects stronger average Bitcoin pricing of $114,000 and contributions from the newly operational Mississippi facility for the second half of September. Mining margins improved to 49%, driven by a shift from hosting fees to self-mining, utilizing our curtailment and energy sales to offset mining expenses and higher fleet efficiency. Curtailment and energy sales totaled $152,000, down from $223,000 in Q2 due to cooler seasonal temperatures. We reported a net loss of $3.7 million and a core EBITDA loss of $1.4 million, both driven by increased staff costs and payroll expenses. Following quarter-end, we executed a substantial balance sheet and equity enhancement initiative, completing an $8 million private repurchase of around 3.3 million shares and 7.3 million warrants, financed through our $11 million Galaxy facility secured by Bitcoin.

This transaction removed a large warrant overhang and materially reduced the share count, improving per-share economics and shareholder alignment. We paired that with a newly authorized $1.5 million public share repurchase program, which gives us flexibility to act opportunistically when our market value trades meaningfully below our Bitcoin holdings and infrastructure value. In terms of our balance sheet, at quarter-end, LM Funding held cash and cash equivalents of $300,000 and 304 Bitcoin valued at $34.7 million, nearly double our market cap, while our equity was $50 million, nearly three times our market cap. As of October 31, our Bitcoin treasury stood at approximately 295 Bitcoin, valued at roughly $31.9 million, or $2.62 per share, compared to a stock price near $1.07 on 12.2 million shares.

Our liquidity, treasury, and credit capacity give us flexibility to support operations, growth, and continue share repurchases while limiting dilution and preserving long-term upside for shareholders. The numbers tell a clear story: expanding hash rate, improving operating leverage, disciplined cost control, and a balance sheet and cap table built to improve per-share value over time. Thanks, Rick. Our focus remains clear: increase Bitcoin per share, expand owned infrastructure, and close the gap between intrinsic value and market value. We built a vertically integrated platform that gives us operational control, cost efficiency, and treasury leverage. With Mississippi fully online, Oklahoma adding immersion, and Bitmain S21 machines coming online in December, we are entering a phase where scale, efficiency, and productivity converge.

From a capital strategy standpoint, we will continue to balance Bitcoin accumulation, strategic investment, and opportunistic share repurchases that we’ll use only when it strengthens the balance sheet without sacrificing per-share value. We have no interest in growing for growth’s sake. We are interested in growing per-share Bitcoin and per-share intrinsic value. We believe deeply in the long-term value of Bitcoin, and we believe just as deeply in the long-term value of LM Funding. Every action we take, every machine deployment, every site decision, every capital move is designed to improve per-share ownership, per-share cash flow, and per-share Bitcoin. We like the path we’re on, and we like the structure we’ve built. LM Funding is one of the few microcap miners with active invested management. We’ve built this business to endure volatility and to scale into the next cycle. Our focus is to keep executing methodically, patiently, and with conviction.

Thank you for your continued support. We’ll now open the line for questions.

Operator: Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. One moment. Our first question is going to come from the line of Matthew Galenko with Maxim Group. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Matthew Galenko, Analyst, Maxim Group: Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Congrats on all the progress over the last few months. With your mining infrastructure pretty radically different from where it was entering 2025, I’m curious if you could maybe give us some thoughts on how you think about your path in 2026 as far as the Bitcoin mining infrastructure and equipment go.

Bruce Rodgers, Chairman and CEO, LM Funding America: Sure. The Mississippi acquisition has worked really, really well. First off, it’s doing what it was supposed to. Secondly, Greenwich left behind some low-hanging fruit, and they did some things to grow there that they didn’t take advantage of that we’re now kind of slipping into. We have a nice runway there that we didn’t anticipate. I look for more growth there, and the magnitude of what we’ve achieved this year seems foreseeable. That’s there. Oklahoma, we’re adding the two immersion machines in there. We’ll have that thing built out pretty soon. It just starts paying for itself and making money after that. It’s going to be a long-term Bitcoin mining site, given the energy pricing there.

Ryan Duran, President of U.S. Digital Mining, LM Funding America: This is Rick. We also have the ability to expand in Mississippi by an additional 4 megawatts.

Matthew Galenko, Analyst, Maxim Group: Got it. Okay. If I could read between the lines there, it sounds like you’re not necessarily pursuing or close on any additional site acquisitions, or is that something you’re still exploring, but just nothing appealing at this point?

Bruce Rodgers, Chairman and CEO, LM Funding America: We always have people exploring site acquisitions, and we do it based on where the energy tariffs are, and then we look for property that goes with those energy tariffs.

Matthew Galenko, Analyst, Maxim Group: Got it. Last question for me, and I’ll jump back in the queue. Just with the, I guess, with the perspective that you have the, I guess, mandate now to maximize your Bitcoin per share, how do you, I guess, think about allocating between mining business and directly acquiring additional Bitcoin?

Bruce Rodgers, Chairman and CEO, LM Funding America: We always say you have to take a dollar and decide whether the price of Bitcoin, the price of the infrastructure, etc., and then it is a target of where in the future you want that to pay off. We kind of play a long game, five years on that, looking at what do we think the price of Bitcoin is. That means you do not necessarily make a dollar decision based on the current circumstances. You have to make it on a pro forma basis, which kind of makes it a little more black magic, I get it, but it is a long game. Growing the mining helps pay the bills, and it has the potential to be accretive to the overall treasury strategy. The treasury strategy is a balance between your equities market and the Bitcoin market.

Operator: Thank you. We will move on to our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Kevin Dede with HCW. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Sky Moore, Analyst, HCW: Hello, LMFA. This is Sky Moore calling for Kevin Dede. Thanks for taking my call. I’ve got two questions for y’all. The first is going to be with about 15% of your old machines in storage, as reported in the company’s October update, how are you guys managing your fleet of these machines going forward?

Bruce Rodgers, Chairman and CEO, LM Funding America: Ryan, do you want to—that’s kind of granular. Do you want to handle that? Ryan.

Ryan Duran, President of U.S. Digital Mining, LM Funding America: Yeah, sorry. Hey, Sky. Took a second to get off mute there. Yeah, those machines are kind of sitting in the wings. As we’ve hit on, we do have build-out capacity available already immediately at Mississippi. As Bruce already alluded to as well, we’re exploring other opportunities. We feel strongly that having those machines in the wings is a great way to quickly deploy once that power becomes available. As we’re doing in Oklahoma, we kind of set our roots in and then upgrade the fleet from there. That is generally our strategy.

Sky Moore, Analyst, HCW: Awesome. Thanks for that. My final question is, you mentioned more efficient machines being placed at your current sites. Could you guys provide a current cost of mining one Bitcoin or perhaps a range of mining one Bitcoin?

Ryan Duran, President of U.S. Digital Mining, LM Funding America: Yeah, this is Rick. Our current mining cost right now per Bitcoin for this most recent quarter was $66,000. Last quarter, it was like $70,000. So we’ve been able to reduce it by direct mine cost quarter over quarter.

Sky Moore, Analyst, HCW: Awesome. Thank you so much for taking my questions. I look forward to speaking with you guys next earnings.

Bruce Rodgers, Chairman and CEO, LM Funding America: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. This will conclude today’s question and answer session. Ladies and gentlemen, this will also conclude today’s conference call. Thank you for participating, and you may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.