Key Takeaways
American Bitcoin Corp. (NASDAQ: ABTC), the mining company co-founded by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., announced Monday the purchase of 11,298 new ASIC mining machines – a move that expands its total fleet by roughly 12%, bringing owned hardware to 89,242 units.
The new equipment adds 3.05 exahashes per second (EH/s) to the company’s operational capacity, pushing total owned hashrate to approximately 28.1 EH/s. The machines are rated at 13.5 joules per terahash – a respectable efficiency figure that the company says will help manage operational costs. Deployment is slated for this month at ABTC’s facility in Drumheller, Alberta.
The added capacity represents about 0.3% of the global Bitcoin network’s total hashrate – modest, but not insignificant for a single operator.
At a Bitcoin price of around $68,000, the newly acquired miners could generate approximately $2.9 million in monthly gross revenue – roughly $35 million annually – before electricity, maintenance, and overhead are factored in. Whether that math holds depends entirely on where Bitcoin trades in the months ahead.
What’s harder to spin are the financials behind the expansion. ABTC reported a $59.45 million net loss in Q4 2025. The company attributes the bulk of that figure to non-cash mark-to-market adjustments on its Bitcoin treasury, which stands at over 6,000 BTC. Accounting quirk or not, a nine-figure loss in a single quarter is not a number management can easily footnote away.
Shares have fallen approximately 87% from their September 2025 peak. For a company that made its public debut with considerable fanfare, the descent has been steep and relatively swift.
The acquisition lands at an awkward time for the pure-play mining business model. Several of ABTC’s competitors have spent the past year quietly repositioning – diverting data center infrastructure toward AI workloads and high-performance computing, where margins are less exposed to Bitcoin’s volatility.
American Bitcoin is not following that path. Eric Trump has framed the company’s strategy around strengthening “American-owned, professionally operated hashrate” in the Bitcoin network – a positioning that blends industrial ambition with a nationalist pitch that will resonate with a specific investor base, even if it leaves analysts cold.
The contrarian logic isn’t entirely without merit. If Bitcoin appreciates significantly, a company holding 6,000 BTC and operating close to 90,000 miners is well-positioned to benefit. But that thesis requires Bitcoin to cooperate – and in the meantime, the operating losses are real, and the stock chart is ugly.
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