Galaxy Digital posted a heavy loss for the year as the crypto slump bit into its holdings and trading business. The numbers show a company that weathered big markdowns on digital assets while trying to bulk up its cash and new revenue streams.
Losses And Liquidity
Reports say Galaxy recorded a GAAP net loss of $241 million for the full year, and a much larger hit in the fourth quarter alone: a $482 million net loss.
The quarterly shortfall came after a steep drop in the value of the firm’s crypto holdings and lower trading volumes, which together pushed reported results well below Wall Street expectations.
The Downturn Behind The Numbers
According to the company’s results, the value of its digital assets and investments fell sharply late in the year, producing most of the headline losses.
Trading activity cooled, and that reduced fees and transaction income. At the same time, one-time charges tied to mining infrastructure and a corporate reorganization added to the drag on annual results.

Source: Galaxy Digital
Data Center And New Business
Galaxy has not only been a crypto trading and asset management shop. It has been building out a large data-center footprint in Texas, including the Helios campus with approvals to scale power capacity to over 1.6 GW.
The company says that infrastructure work and deals with cloud partners could produce steadier revenue streams over time, even if crypto markets stay weak in the near term.
Cash Cushion And Balance-Sheet Moves
Reports note that Galaxy finished the year with roughly $2.6 billion in cash and stablecoins, a position management highlights as a buffer against further market volatility.
The firm also raised capital and tapped debt markets late in the year, steps meant to preserve optionality while trading revenues slump.
At the same time, some asset management lines reported record activity, which helped offset a part of the losses when measured on an adjusted basis.
Market Reaction And Outlook
The market reacted quickly. Shares slid in premarket trading after the release and then fell further as investors digested the scale of the write-downs.
Analysts are split: some see the data-center push as a sensible hedge against volatile crypto returns, while others point out that near-term earnings will remain pressured until trading volumes and asset prices recover.
Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView






