PHILADELPHIA, May 14, 2026, 17:05 EDT
Shares of Datavault AI Inc. (DVLT) last traded at $0.5861, climbing $0.0544 from the prior close. Volume was heavy—over 65 million shares changed hands. Investors piled in a day ahead of the company’s first-quarter earnings update. For the past two weeks, the Nasdaq-listed player has been working to reposition itself, leaning hard into AI infrastructure, tokenized assets, and cybersecurity.
Friday’s call lands right after the company wrapped up a $60 million stock sale, announced plans to spin off a division, and saw a Senate committee vote with potential implications for digital assets. The company says Chief Executive Nathaniel Bradley and Chief Financial Officer Brett Moyer will be on the line at 8:30 a.m. ET.
The policy front shifted Thursday as the Senate Banking Committee cleared the CLARITY Act—legislation that sets out when crypto tokens count as securities, commodities, or something else, according to Reuters. Polymarket’s odds for the Act getting signed into law in 2026 held at 70% “Yes,” with roughly $894,635 in bets placed. Reuters
Datavault is leaning on the buzz around real-world asset tokenization—essentially, using digital tokens to stand in for stakes in actual assets. The company on Monday outlined plans to finish a “quantum-ready” edge network spanning 100-plus U.S. cities by the end of 2026. Part of the rollout: a fleet of 48,000 GPUs, the chips that power AI workloads, with commercial deployment set to kick off in the third quarter. Bradley described Datavault as “in the right place at the right time.” For its part, Available Infrastructure CEO Daniel C. Gregory said his team is building a sovereign “vault” network tailored for Datavault. Datavault AI Inc.
Capital requirements here are hefty. Look at CoreWeave: Reuters said last week it bumped up the lower end of its 2026 capital-spending outlook to $31 billion. Over at Nebius, Wednesday brought fresh numbers—capex guidance now sits at $20 billion to $25 billion for the year, after an almost eightfold jump in revenue. Both firms dwarf Datavault, but their budgets drive home just how expensive building out a GPU network can get.
Datavault wrapped up a notably smaller raise this month. The company on May 5 completed a registered direct offering, selling 109,090,910 common shares and pulling in roughly $60 million in gross proceeds. Datavault said the capital will go toward building out its quantum-ready GPU edge network, as well as equipment, working capital, and general corporate expenses.
This also spells dilution—a routine hurdle for smaller firms when they issue fresh stock.
On Thursday, an amended SEC Form 4 revealed Bradley picked up 2,588,235 LTIP shares, while his spouse—Datavault employee Sonia Choi—took in 1,213,236 LTIP shares. LTIP stands for long-term incentive plan, with these shares set to vest in tranches between September 2026 and September 2029, provided service continues. The update fixed a previous transaction code, switching it from disposition to acquisition, according to the filing.
Datavault, for its part, is considering a break-up. On May 7, the company disclosed that management is looking at spinning out Acoustic Sciences—along with ADIO, WiSA, Event Citadel, and API Media—into a separate public entity named API Media. The ticker “ADIO” would be set aside for the new firm. Any move hinges on board sign-off, binding agreements, and regulatory or exchange approvals. Datavault AI Inc.
Bradley described the spin-out as a move to “unlock the full potential” of the acoustic unit, aiming to free up Datavault to zero in on data monetization. Bold words, but the process hasn’t wrapped yet.
CyberCatch is also in play. Datavault and CyberCatch Holdings announced on May 1 they’ve inked a binding letter of intent for Datavault to buy out CyberCatch in an all-stock transaction pegged at roughly C$136.8 million. The move would bring CyberCatch’s AI-powered cyber risk and compliance platform under Datavault’s umbrella, likely slotting into its edge-computing ambitions.
Friday’s figures will draw attention, given the tangled baseline. Back in March, Datavault posted 2025 revenue at $39.1 million—up sharply from $2.67 million in 2024—and disclosed its first quarterly net profit of $661,000 in Q4. The company also stuck to its full-year 2026 revenue goal of $200 million, setting a high bar for Q1.
The risks jump off the page. Datavault’s 2025 annual report flagged recurring losses, a pressing need for fresh funding, and the potential for sharp swings in revenue or shares if assumptions don’t hold. There’s also the Nasdaq issue: the company got a notice about falling short of the $1 minimum bid, with a compliance deadline set for Aug. 24, 2026. A crypto bill might give the mood a lift, but it won’t build a network, close deals, or turn contracts into revenue.
Friday’s call lands heavier than normal for DVLT stock. Investors are looking for specifics: how cash will be spent post-offering, updates on the GPU rollout, and clarity around revenue recognition from tokenization work. They’ll also want to know if either the spin-out or the CyberCatch deal alters the near-term cost base. There’s little tolerance for hazy responses this time.