American Bitcoin Reports Loss Despite Operational Growth
American Bitcoin faces a $117M paper loss due to BTC price volatility while reducing mining costs by 23% and expanding capacity to 28.1 EH/s.
The latest results highlight an increasingly clear divide in the crypto mining sector between operational efficiency and the accounting volatility tied to the price of Bitcoin.
The primary reason for the reported loss was not an operational failure but an accounting effect. The company was forced to report an impairment charge of approximately $117 million after BTC declined during the reporting period.
According to management, this is a “paper loss” that does not reflect the actual health of the business. CEO Mike Ho stated that without these accounting adjustments, the core mining operations remained profitable.
Company Aggressively Cuts Costs
Despite the negative market reaction, investors are paying close attention to another metric: the sharp improvement in mining efficiency.
American Bitcoin reduced its cost to mine a single Bitcoin to approximately $36,200, down from nearly $46,900 in the previous quarter.
This represents an improvement of roughly 23% in just three months—one of the strongest performances among major public miners.
During the Consensus Miami conference, Eric Trump even remarked that the company is effectively “buying” Bitcoin at a nearly 47% discount compared to the market price through its own mining operations.
American Bitcoin Accelerates Expansion
Record production follows an aggressive infrastructure expansion over recent months. In March, the company completed the installation of over 11,000 new Bitmain machines at its Drumheller site, bringing the total fleet to nearly 90,000 devices.
Total mining capacity has surged to 28.1 EH/s, positioning American Bitcoin as one of the largest players in the sector.
The company now ranks among the top 20 corporate Bitcoin holders globally, maintaining a reserve of approximately 7,300 BTC.
Market Remains Cautious
Despite the operational growth, the company’s shares fell by approximately 7% to 8% following the release of the results. Investors reacted negatively to revenues of about $62 million, which fell short of analyst expectations.
The market also remains divided regarding the company’s aggressive HODL strategy. Instead of selling mined tokens to fund operations, American Bitcoin continues to actively accumulate reserves.
In the first quarter alone, the company purchased an additional 803 BTC, nearly matching the amount it mined during the same period.
Miners Increasingly Resemble Bitcoin Funds
American Bitcoin’s strategy is starting to closely mirror the MicroStrategy model—utilizing a corporate structure to accumulate the maximum amount of Bitcoin rather than focusing on short-term profitability.
Management emphasized that “every share of American Bitcoin today owns more BTC than it did three months ago.”
This shift demonstrates how major miners are evolving from pure infrastructure providers into hybrids of energy operators, investment funds, and public crypto reserves.
For investors, however, the risk remains evident: as long as the Bitcoin price dictates reserve value, accounting rules can turn even operationally strong quarters into massive reported losses.

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