Datavault AI posts 443% revenue growth but margins and costs pressure stock
DVLT falls 10% as earnings expose cost pressure despite major RWA contracts

DVLT stock sinks as Q1 earnings reveal heavy costs behind rapid revenue growth
Datavault AI selloff deepens as $750M contracts fail to offset cost concerns
DVLT drops after Q1 update highlights weak margins and aggressive expansion
Datavault AI Inc. (DVLT) stock dropped sharply after its first-quarter update exposed a wide gap between growth targets and current earnings. DVLT fell 10.37% to $0.5253, as an early price spike faded into heavy selling. The move came despite new tokenization contracts and a bold 2026 revenue target.
Datavault AI Inc., DVLT
Datavault AI reported first-quarter revenue of $3.4 million, up 443% from $0.6 million a year earlier. The company linked the increase to its acquisition of CompuSystems Inc. However, the revenue base remained small against its full-year 2026 target.
Gross profit stayed near $0.1 million during the quarter. Gross margin fell to 3% from 11% a year earlier. The company said lower-margin CompuSystems revenue reduced overall profitability.
Operating costs also rose across major business lines. Research and development expenses increased to $5.7 million, while sales and marketing costs reached $6.6 million. General and administrative expenses climbed to $18.7 million because of hiring, legal costs, consulting fees, and acquisitions.
Datavault AI said it signed about $750 million in tokenization contracts during the first quarter. The company also announced a planned GoldVault program tied to King Mining Capital. That program includes a stock-funded purchase of 20,000 ounces of physical gold bullion.
The company expects the gold-backed tokenization program to exceed $150 million. It also plans to relaunch IDE, IEE, and NYIAX later this summer with upgraded features. These planned updates include CLEAR, watsonx.ai, and Fiserv integrations.
Datavault AI also signed a binding letter of intent to acquire CyberCatch Holdings in an all-stock deal. The company aims to add cyber risk tools and quantum-resistant security to its SanQtum platform. This move supports its broader push into secure infrastructure for tokenized assets.
Datavault AI has started its quantum-ready distributed GPU edge network in New York and Philadelphia. The rollout came through its partnership with Available Infrastructure. The company plans to expand the network to more than 100 U.S. cities by year-end.
The planned network could support around 48,000 GPUs across the United States. Datavault AI also signed a term sheet with Scilex for a proposed $120 million cash contribution. The funding would support GPU deployment, high-performance computing, and secure enterprise services.
Datavault AI also closed a $60 million registered direct offering in May. The company plans to use the funds for equipment, network build-out, working capital, and corporate needs. Still, DVLT’s sharp selloff showed the market focused on losses, margins, and execution risk.
The post Datavault AI Inc. (DVLT) Stock: Q1 Earnings Selloff Deepens Despite $750M Tokenization Contracts appeared first on CoinCentral.


