LMFA March 27, 2026

LM Funding America Q4 2025 Earnings Call - Doubled Bitcoin Treasury and Scaled to 26 MW, Yet Equity Trades Below NAV

Summary

LM Funding closed 2025 having built a multi-site, vertically integrated mining platform while more than doubling its Bitcoin treasury. The company finished the year with two wholly owned sites, 26 MW of capacity, and energized hash rate that moved from roughly 560 PH to about 750 PH by year-end, driving higher production even as Bitcoin prices fell. Management pushed immersion cooling, fleet refreshes, and a targeted M&A pipeline to drive efficiency and Bitcoin per share.

The financials tell the tradeoff. Q4 revenue rose modestly to $2.4 million on 22 BTC mined, but margin compression, a $5.4 million equipment impairment, and a $7.8 million unrealized Bitcoin markdown produced a Q4 net loss of about $17.9 million and a core EBITDA loss near $9.3 million. The balance sheet shows $51.3 million in assets with roughly $31.2 million in Bitcoin at year-end, yet the equity still trades at a material discount to that BTC-linked NAV. Management’s playbook is clear, scale production, cut unit costs via immersion and low-cost power, and accrete Bitcoin, while keeping an eye on accretive bolt-on buys in the sub-20 MW range.

Key Takeaways

  • Company scale and treasury: LM Funding finished 2025 with two wholly owned sites (Oklahoma and Columbus, Mississippi), 26 MW of owned capacity, and Bitcoin holdings that grew from ~150 BTC at start of 2025 to ~356 BTC at December 31, 2025.
  • Production and energized hash rate: The company mined 22 BTC in Q4 2025 (up 25% sequentially from 17.6 BTC in Q3) and produced ~82.3 BTC for full-year 2025. Energized hash rate rose to roughly 750 PH across 22.5 MW at year-end, and reached ~782 PH after February 2026 deployments.
  • Revenue and margins: Q4 revenue was $2.4 million, up 8.7% sequentially and 19% year-over-year. Mining margin fell to 25% in Q4 from 49% in Q3, driven primarily by a lower average BTC price and fixed cost absorption.
  • Bitcoin pricing impact: Average Bitcoin price fell from about $114,000 in Q3 to ~$99,700 in Q4, and to ~$88,000 at December 31 for mark-to-market purposes, producing a $7.8 million unrealized fair value loss in Q4.
  • Non-cash charges and profitability: Q4 reported net loss was approximately $17.9 million, with a core EBITDA loss around $9.3 million. Key drivers included the $7.8 million BTC markdown, a $5.4 million non-cash impairment on mining equipment, and higher depreciation from an expanded asset base.
  • Asset and balance sheet snapshot: As of December 31, total assets were $51.3 million, with Bitcoin holdings valued at about $31.2 million across current, long-term, and cloud classifications. Total liabilities were $22.4 million, including an $11 million Galaxy Digital master digital currency loan and a $7 million short-term note payable.
  • Galaxy facility and capital actions: Management deployed $8 million from the Galaxy facility in October to retire over 3.3 million shares and 7.2 million warrants. The Galaxy loan balance is roughly $11 million and maturity was extended to April 24, 2026 to preserve optionality.
  • Immersion program and fleet refresh: December energized the first BC40 Elite immersion container with 160 S21 immersion miners adding ~35 PH. A second immersion container came online in January 2026 adding another ~35 PH. Late February deployments of ~300 S21 XP miners increased energized hash to company highs.
  • Power and site economics: The Mississippi acquisition added ~7.5 MW of energized capacity and ~220 PH, with favorable power pricing around 3.6 cents per kWh. Management targets new deals in the <$20 MW range with power around $0.035 to $0.045 per kWh.
  • Curtailment and uptime: Q4 curtailment-related energy sales totaled ~$135,000, down from $150,000 in Q3, reflecting cooler seasonal conditions, increased immersion mix, and higher uptime.
  • Capital allocation posture: Management says it balances buying BTC, buying miners, and M&A opportunistically, guided by projections of BTC price and the goal of increasing BTC per share. They remain active in M&A for 5-20 MW opportunities.
  • Recent BTC purchases: In 2025 the company bought 164 BTC on August 20 and 47 BTC in December, contributing materially to the year-over-year treasury growth.
  • Market valuation disconnect: Management emphasized that equity trades at a material discount to the value of the Bitcoin treasury and productive infrastructure, and stated they will continue operational execution and transparent communication to close the gap.
  • Operational fleet size: In Q4 the company operated approximately 6,850 machines across the two sites after consolidating hosted machines into owned infrastructure and replacing older S19J Pro units with more efficient S21 and XP miners.

Full Transcript

Operator: Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the LM Funding America fourth quarter 2025 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are on a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising that your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one 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 with Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Cody Fletcher, Investor Relations, LM Funding America: Thank you, operator, and thank you all for joining LM Funding America’s fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings conference call. Joining us today are Chairman and CEO, Bruce Rodgers, CFO, Richard Russell, and President of US Digital Mining, Ryan Duran. For today’s call, we have uploaded an accompanying supplemental investor presentation, which can be found under the Events section of our 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-K filing for a full reconciliation of these non-GAAP performance measures to the most comparable GAAP measures.

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

Bruce Rodgers, Chairman and CEO, LM Funding America: Thanks, Cody. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. 2025 was a transformational year for LM Funding. We entered the year as an early-stage, vertically integrated miner with a single-owned site and a modest Bitcoin treasury. We exited as a multi-site, vertically integrated platform with a significantly larger treasury and a simplified capital structure and the operational foundation to support the next phase of our growth. Let me walk you through what we accomplished across the year before turning to the specifics of Q4. On the infrastructure side, we started the year completing the ramp-up of our Oklahoma site, our first wholly-owned facility. Over the course of 2025, we completed the acquisition of our 11-MW site in Columbus, Mississippi, bringing our total owned capacity to 26 MW across two facilities.

On the treasury side, we grew our Bitcoin holdings from approximately 150 Bitcoin at the end of last year to just over 356 Bitcoin at December 31st, more than doubling our holdings. That growth came through a combination of mining production and disciplined strategic accumulation. Turning to Q4 specifically, the quarter was about building momentum heading into 2026. We mined 22 Bitcoin during the quarter, up from 17.6 in Q3, as our Mississippi facility continued to ramp up, and our Oklahoma site benefited from cooler operating conditions and improved uptime in the fall months. At December 31st, our Bitcoin holdings were valued at approximately $31.2 million based on year-end Bitcoin prices, including the Bitcoin held by Galaxy, compared to a market capitalization well below that level.

The net result, we exit 2025 with a stronger operational platform, larger Bitcoin holdings, and a more aligned capital structure. At the same time, our equity continues to trade at a material discount to the value of our Bitcoin treasury and productive infrastructure. A disconnect that we remain focused on addressing, and addressing through continued operational execution. As we enter 2026, our focus shifts from foundation building to scaling. With our immersion expansion progressing in Oklahoma and our Mississippi site continuing to operate at a steady state, we have the platform to grow production, improve efficiency, and increase Bitcoin per share. With that, let me turn it over to Ryan to walk through the operational details for the quarter and the year. Ryan?

Ryan Duran, President of US Digital Mining, LM Funding America: Thanks, Bruce. 2025 was the year we built and scaled our mining platform. We started with a single site in Oklahoma at approximately 560 petahash energized, and we exit with two wholly owned sites, Oklahoma and Mississippi, totaling 26 MW of capacity and approximately 750 petahash energized across 22.5 MW at the end of the year, with further expansion continuing into Q1. Let me give you some additional context of how this played out operationally. In the first half of the year, we focused on completely exiting from a third-party hosting site and consolidating our entire fleet at our wholly owned site in Oklahoma. That relocation, which moved roughly 800 machines to our own vertically integrated site, replaced older S19J Pro miners with more efficient S21 and XP hardware.

Our Oklahoma site also benefited from significantly lower power costs compared to what we had previously been paying at the hosted site, which drove significant power cost savings and margin expansion. In Q3, we closed on the acquisition of an 11-MW Bitcoin mining facility in Columbus, Mississippi. The acquisition immediately added approximately 7.5 MW of energized capacity and approximately 220 petahash of operational hash rate. This site comes with favorable power pricing of approximately 3.6 cents per kWh, one of the most cost-effective power rates in our portfolio. October marked the first full month of production with our newly integrated Mississippi site online, driving a 27% increase in Bitcoin production from 5.9 BTC in September to 7.5 BTC in October. In Q4, we shifted focus to the next efficiency layer, immersion.

In December, we successfully energized our first BC40 Elite immersion-cooled unit in Oklahoma, powering 160 Bitmain S21 immersion miners, which added approximately 35 petahash to our energized hash rate. This marked the beginning of our immersion program. On fleet performance, in Q4, we operated approximately 6,850 machines across our two sites. The cooler fall and winter conditions in Oklahoma contributed to improved uptime and higher production relative to the curtailment-heavy Q2 and Q3 periods. Curtailment in energy sales totaled approximately $135,000 in the quarter, down from $150,000 in Q3. Which was expected as a result of cooler temperatures in Q4 and a higher mix of immersion machines, which requires lower curtailment. More recently, in January 2026, we energized a second immersion container, adding another 35 petahash.

In late February, we deployed approximately 300 Bitmain S21 XP miners at Oklahoma, replacing older machines and reallocating higher terahash units to Mississippi, bringing our total energized hash rate to approximately 782 petahash, the highest in company history. Looking ahead into 2026, we are now operating at record highs in energized hash rate, Bitcoin production, and overall fleet efficiency, driven by our two vertically integrated sites with structurally low-cost power. As the Bitcoin market recovers, we believe our strengthened platform and enhanced economies of scale will deliver strong value to our shareholders. With that, I’ll turn it over to Rick to walk through the financials. Rick.

Richard Russell, Chief Financial Officer, LM Funding America: Thanks, Ryan. For the fourth quarter 2025, total revenue was $2.4 million, up 8.7% sequentially from Q3 and up 19% year-over-year. The sequential increase reflects higher Bitcoin production of 22 Bitcoin in Q4 versus 17.6 Bitcoin in Q3. A 25% improvement, partially offset by a lower average Bitcoin price of approximately $99,700 in Q4 versus $114,000 in Q3. Mining margin for the quarter was 25% compared to 49% in Q3 2025. The sequential decline was driven primarily by a lower average Bitcoin price, which compressed revenue per coin against a relative fixed cost base. Lower curtailment in energy sales were a secondary factor at approximately $135,000 versus $150,000 in Q3.

The reduction netted directly against our cost of revenues and put additional pressure on reported margins. It’s worth noting that lower curtailment also reflects more mining uptime. Q4 production of 22 Bitcoin was up 25% sequentially from Q3, which partially offset the price-driven revenue compression. Taken together, price and reduced energy sales account for the margin compression in the quarter, while the uptime improvement demonstrates the underlying operational progress. We reported a net loss of $18.2 million and a core EBITDA loss of $9.4 million for Q4 2025. The Q4 net loss reflects four primary factors. First, mark-to-market movements in our Bitcoin treasury as Bitcoin price declined from approximately $114,000 at September 30 to approximately $88,000 at December 31, producing an unrealized fair value adjustment of $7.8 million.

Second, a non-cash $5.4 million impairment loss on mining equipment as a result of the reduced Bitcoin pricing environment. Third, depreciation and amortization associated with our expanded asset base. Fourth, increased operating expenses related to the full quarter integration of the Mississippi facility. These are the expected costs of building and integrating new infrastructure, and they should be evaluated against the strategic and operational progress they enable. For the full year 2025, total revenue was approximately $8.8 million, and we mined approximately 82.3 Bitcoin during the year. Curtailment in energy sales totaled approximately $658,000, showcasing our ability to capitalize on our assets year-round. Net loss for the year was approximately $27 million and a core EBITDA loss of $10.9 million.

More importantly, we grew our Bitcoin holdings from approximately 150 Bitcoin at the start of 2025 to approximately 356 Bitcoin at December 31, which includes 145 Bitcoin reported as a receivable for the Galaxy Digital loan. This is more than doubling our prior year position. That growth came from both mining and strategic purchases, including a 164 Bitcoin acquired in August 20, 2025, and 47 Bitcoin acquired in December 2025. Turning to the balance sheet, as of December 31, total assets were $51.3 million, with Bitcoin holdings of approximately $31.2 million spread across current, long-term, and cloud classifications, anchoring the asset base.

On the liability side, total liabilities of $22.4 million, the primary components being our $11 million Galaxy Digital master digital currency loan and $7 million short-term note payable. These are manageable relative to our asset base, and more importantly, we put our Galaxy facility to active use in 2025. Deploying $8 million in October to retire more than 3.3 million shares and 7.2 million warrants in a single transaction. That was a deliberate choice to improve per share economics and simplify our capital structure, and we believe it was the right use of that capital at the time. In February 2026, we also renegotiated the Galaxy facility, extending the maturity date to April 24, 2026, giving us flexibility to evaluate settlement options on our own timeline.

As of February 28, 2026, we held 354.7 Bitcoin valued at approximately $23.8 million, based on a Bitcoin price of approximately $67,000 or approximately $1.11 per share. Even after executing the share repurchase, funding two capital raises and completing the Mississippi acquisition entirely from our balance sheet, we entered 2026 with a $51 million asset base, growing Bitcoin holdings in equity that remains well in excess of our current market capitalization. Closing that gap is the work we are doing every quarter. With that, I’ll turn it back to Bruce for closing remarks.

Bruce Rodgers, Chairman and CEO, LM Funding America: Thanks, Rick. Let me leave you with where we stand and where we’re going. In 2025, we transitioned from building to scaling. Two owned sites, 26 MW of wholly controlled capacity, Bitcoin holdings that more than doubled. A capital structure we actively managed to reduce dilution and improve per share economics, and an immersion program that is now live and scaling. As we move through 2026, our priorities are straightforward. Grow production, improve efficiency, and increase Bitcoin per share. We are already tracking toward record monthly production in early 2026, with February being our highest production month in company history. Our second immersion unit came online in January 2026, and we continue to evaluate accretive M&A opportunities in the 5-20 MW range. The same disciplined approach that led us to our Mississippi acquisition at roughly $355,000 per MW.

We have active invested management, owned infrastructure, and low-cost power. Our Bitcoin treasury has grown meaningfully. Our operational footprint has expanded, and our per share intrinsic value has improved. Yet our equity continues to trade at a material discount to NAV. We remain focused on continuing to close that gap through disciplined execution and transparent communication with our shareholders. We like the path we’re on and the structure we’ve built. Thank you for your continued support. We’ll now open the line for questions.

Richard Russell, Chief Financial Officer, LM Funding America: If this is Richard Russell, I just want to clarify that we reported a net loss of $17.9 million and a core EBITDA loss of $9.3 million for Q4 2025. We’ll take the first question now.

Operator: Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Matthew Galinko with Maxim Group. Your line is now open.

Matthew Galinko, Analyst, Maxim Group: Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Maybe firstly, will it take time to optimize production from the immersion cooled units, or are you kind of just right out of the gate where you want to be?

Bruce Rodgers, Chairman and CEO, LM Funding America: Ryan, you want to take that?

Ryan Duran, President of US Digital Mining, LM Funding America: Good morning, Matt. Yeah, so we right out of the gate, we’re maxed out our two FogHashing containers with S21 immersion miners that are the best we could get. I guess in that context, yes, we are maxed out at roughly that 35 petahash per container as of right now and what’s available on the market. Yeah, I hope that answers your question.

Matthew Galinko, Analyst, Maxim Group: All right, great. As far as your pipeline for new site acquisition versus existing site expansion, can you maybe just go through how those two buckets look?

Ryan Duran, President of US Digital Mining, LM Funding America: Yeah. We’re always on the hunt. We’re always looking, keeping our finger on the pulse of what’s out there. We are looking as we’ve always maintained in that less than 20 MW range at ideally a power price in that $0.035-$0.045 range. That’s what we target, whether it be existing sites or greenfields. We also do our main focus as of right now. I’d say that the easiest thing to point to is the additional little over 3 MW that we have available at our current Mississippi site to continue building out. That’s already in our hands.

Matthew Galinko, Analyst, Maxim Group: Got it. Maybe just, you know, final question on maybe just reiterate how, you know, you think about funding new site acquisition and miner acquisition and, you know, how your current discount to NAV might influence how you think about, you know, capital spending and site acquisition and, you know, hash rate expansion. Thank you.

Bruce Rodgers, Chairman and CEO, LM Funding America: That’s a good question, Matt. It’s got the same answer, but a moving target. You have to look at the dollar, and then we look at projecting out as to where we want to be in terms of acquiring Bitcoin and holding Bitcoin when Bitcoin realizes price. We put targets based on projections of where Bitcoin will be, and then we sort of back into it. We’re currently trading Bitcoin outside of the range where our forecasts were, so it makes some of our thinking more in the moment than using the long-range discipline. It really boils down to you spend a dollar today, is it going to, how much will it increase our Bitcoin holdings five years from now or three years from now?

That leans heavily towards both increasing the treasury and increasing the miners when it’s at this price point. Then some of the mining opportunities are just timing based, so you have to take the opportunity when it’s there and make it fit towards your future growth developments. It’s always a challenge, and there’s really no formula to it.

Matthew Galinko, Analyst, Maxim Group: Great. Thank you. I’ll turn back in the queue.

Operator: Thank you. As a reminder to ask a question at this time, please press star one one on your touchtone telephone. Since there are no further questions, I would like to thank everyone for joining us on LM Funding America, Inc.’s fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. You may now disconnect.