New York, February 6, 2026, 05:37 EST — Premarket
- Datavault AI shares ticked up around 0.3% in premarket, hitting approximately $0.64
- An SEC filing revealed preliminary, unaudited gross revenue for 2025 topping $30 million
- The CEO’s letter outlined a 2026 revenue goal of no less than $200 million. Investors are now focused on audited results and the token distribution scheduled for Feb. 21.
Shares of Datavault AI Inc (DVLT) ticked up roughly 0.3% to $0.64 in premarket trading Friday, following the company’s move to set a minimum revenue threshold for 2025 and unveil a significantly higher goal for 2026.
Datavault, a firm specializing in data licensing and monetization, has been advocating for tokenization—converting asset rights into blockchain-based digital tokens—as an innovative way to monetize data and digital assets. The latest figures provide investors with a clearer baseline before audited results arrive. (Reuters)
The timing is crucial. The stock is under a dollar, and guidance is carrying much of the weight—it gives investors a preview of how management views the year before the auditors finalize the numbers.
A filing on Thursday revealed that Datavault’s independent auditor hasn’t reviewed or audited the preliminary estimates, warning actual results could differ significantly. The company projected gross revenue of at least $30.0 million for the year ending Dec. 31, 2025, up from $2.7 million in 2024.
Datavault’s CEO, Nathaniel Bradley, revealed in a stockholder letter that the company secured $49 million in tokenization and technology-licensing deals during the fourth quarter. These agreements are expected to influence revenue streams in both 2025 and 2026. The letter also outlined a revenue goal of at least $200 million for 2026. (Datavault AI Inc.)
Bradley described the company’s “guiding principle” as pushing “national rollouts,” while acknowledging “many challenges that we have to overcome” as it advances cybersecure “edge nodes”—computing gear positioned closer to data sources—to handle tokenization and valuation processes. The letter highlighted a $150 million strategic investment from Scilex Holding aimed at building a supercomputer, along with tokenization deals promising up to $8 million in fees from a Triton Geothermal token offering and a $7 million minting contract with MTB Mining. (Nasdaq)
Datavault shares closed Thursday at $0.64, having fluctuated between $0.63 and $0.69 throughout the session, based on compiled market data. (StockAnalysis)
Tokenization is a crowded space, yet investors still struggle with the mechanics: revenue recognition often trails signed deals, and a lot hinges on whether customers actually use and transact on the platforms in question.
The downside is straightforward. The 2025 revenue number is still preliminary, and the 2026 target is more of a goal than a guarantee. Parts of the commercial plan depend on exchange rollouts and token offerings, which could be delayed, repriced, or face regulatory hurdles.
Datavault has set Feb. 21 as the date to distribute Dream Bowl Meme Coin II digital collectibles to record equity holders, though the board reserves the right to change or cancel this. Traders will also be watching for the company’s audited full-year results and any clearer guidance on how it plans to move from the 2025 revenue floor to its 2026 target. (Datavault AI Inc.)