Exodus Movement, Inc. (AMEX:EXOD) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

Exodus Movement, Inc. (AMEX:EXOD) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript March 11, 2026

Exodus Movement, Inc. misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $-2.45 EPS, expectations were $0.00167.

Chris Merkel: Hi, everyone. Welcome to Exodus Movement, Inc.’s fourth quarter 2025 earnings call. I am your host, Chris Merkel, and with us today are Exodus Movement, Inc.’s Co-Founder and CEO, JP Richardson, and CFO, James Gernetzke. During today’s call, we may make forward-looking statements. The company cautions investors that any forward-looking statement involves risks and uncertainties and is not a guarantee of future performance. Actual results may vary materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements due to a variety of factors. These factors are described in forward-looking statements in our earnings press release and our most recent Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, available on the investor relations portion of our website.

We do not undertake any obligation to update forward-looking statements. As always, feel free to visit our social media accounts on X or Reddit to submit questions for our investor relations team after our call. I will now turn the call over to JP to discuss Exodus Movement, Inc.’s fourth quarter and full year 2025.

JP Richardson: Thank you everyone for joining. We want to try something a little different today. I have been told multiple times that my opening on earnings calls just does not sound like me, and I think that is a fair criticism, so we are going to keep this more conversational, a lot like how I speak publicly on interviews or even internally in company all-hands calls. So often, I love to tell stories, and today is going to be no different. A couple weeks ago, I took my kids skiing for the first time. My little boy, he is seven years old. And so we are on the bunny slope, where they teach the young kids, and he could barely stand up. He kept falling over and over again. And I am sure many of you with kids can relate to this.

But he kept getting up over and over again. Ultimately, he asked about going up on a lift on the mountain to actually go down. His mom looked at him and she goes, son, you are not ready yet, and your dad does not think that you are ready yet. He said to her, he is like, I am going to show him. Meaning me, of course. So me admiring his determination I said, okay. Well, let us go. Go to the top of the mountain. Let us check it out. So we all went up, and he is going up and he went down, and, yeah, he fell a couple times, but he made it down without any issue. It was actually really impressive. Thinking about this moment with my kids and heading into this call today, it is kind of a lot like what 2025 felt like for this company. The market kind of knocked us around.

Stock price and Bitcoin price just tested everyone’s patience, and every single time the team just kept building. Even when we get knocked down, we just kept building. Focused. We are building the infrastructure that makes us less dependent on market conditions, these very market conditions in the first place. We will walk you through what we built and where we are headed. Let us do a brief look back into 2025. 2025 was the most consequential year in the history of Exodus Movement, Inc. This is because of what we built while the market has been pulling back. As you remember, early 2025, it seems like an eternity now, we rang the bell on the New York Stock Exchange. Ultimately, being on the New York Stock Exchange opened the door for more investors that could not touch us in the OTC markets.

Q&A Session

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We announced Exodus Pay, one of the most important products in the company’s history. In November, we closed the Grateful acquisition, and this gave us a live payment sandbox in Latin America, where every lesson in Grateful is making its way back into Exodus Pay. In the same month, we signed the W3C acquisition—I am going to come back to that in a moment. We expanded ExoSwap to more signed partnerships—I am going to talk about that even later. We expanded our tokenized equity to Solana through Superstate’s Opening Bell platform. For full-year revenue, we grew 5% to $121.6 million. That growth came from improved monetization and B2B expansion, even as retail activity softened all the way toward the end of the year. Now for ten years, Exodus Movement, Inc.

was built on speculation. When crypto is up, we thrive. When crypto pulls back, we feel it, much like what we are seeing in the markets today. As a public company, the stock reflects this reality directly. This model has served us well for a decade, but it is not enough anymore. Everything we did in 2025 was in service of one goal, and that is creating more revenue streams—revenue streams that do not depend on where crypto trades tomorrow. We are becoming a payments company—one that serves people whether Bitcoin is at $30,000 or $130,000. One that earns revenue from the daily financial lives of real people, not just trading activity. The product at the center of the shift is Exodus Pay. Most people use at least three financial apps—I am guessing many of you on this call are going to be very familiar with this.

No doubt you have a banking app. You have a payments app like Venmo or Cash App. And you probably have a brokerage app like Robinhood or Fidelity. Exodus Pay makes it one. We are building the product that lets people send, spend, invest, and earn from a single interface. No seed phrases, no blockchain jargon, no L1, L2—which, later on, nobody cares about that stuff. No complexity. Self-custody should feel as easy as tap to pay. And at its core, Exodus Pay is built on stablecoins. Stablecoins are the dollars that move at Internet speed. You may have heard of them. We are making stablecoins usable for everyday payments—groceries, rideshare, restaurants, anywhere Visa or Mastercard is accepted. Again, from speculation-driven swap fees to revenue built on daily utility.

What is going to power Exodus Pay is the product of W3C. So let us talk about the W3C acquisition. It remains the centerpiece of our vertical integration strategy. Let me remind everyone why this deal matters in the first place. The first reason this deal matters: we get to own the full payment stack from self-custodial wallet to the spend card at the terminal. No other wallet owns end-to-end payment rails. The second reason is revenue diversification. Our revenue today is heavily tied to swap volume. The third reason is the B2B2C infrastructure for partners. W3C already powers MetaMask, Ledger, OKX, and Kraken in their cards. Owning this infrastructure means Exodus Movement, Inc. can provide card programs and payment rails to other wallets and apps.

This means more revenue from partners without acquiring those end users directly. We remain confident in the ability to close in 2026 and are working diligently toward closing. Switching to what seems these days like everybody’s favorite topic, AI, because it is reshaping both how we build and what we build. Let us first talk about how we build. I actually write code every single day using Claude Code. Tasks that used to take me months now take me just hours. It is that wild how good these tools are these days. What is true for me here is true for our entire engineering organization. We are pushing hard toward a model where AI ultimately writes all of our code. We are not there yet, but the productivity gains we are seeing so far have already been quite significant.

Now with what we build—how we think about the future here—is that we think AI agents represent an entirely new class of customer for Exodus Movement, Inc. These agents are going to need wallet infrastructure. They are going to need to send money, check balances, and make purchases. It is easy, when you think of payments apps like Exodus Pay, to think of the total addressable market as just 8 billion people of the entire world, right? But with AI agents, it will potentially be in the trillions because each one of these agents is going to need a wallet. Exodus Movement, Inc. aims to be the default wallet layer for this world. Let us hit on ExoSwap. ExoSwap continues to be a meaningful volume driver. In Q4, we signed—or in total, have—18 signed partnerships, 11 that are producing, $416 million in Q4 volume, 26% of our quarterly total.

This strength shows that our infrastructure is trusted by other major platforms like Ledger and MetaMask. MetaMask just went live in December with Solana. Following the close of W3C, we are going to be able to offer card issuance as well to a lot of these partnerships that are using ExoSwap, especially a lot of the new ones. I want to leave you with this. Our revenue today does not yet reflect the magnitude of what we have built. We have invested significant resources—capital, talent, time—into infrastructure, acquisitions, and product development that have not yet hit the top line. I understand this. I understand the patience it requires from you, our shareholders. I want you to understand what is on the other side. We are shifting from a company built on speculation to a company built on payments—on daily utility, on infrastructure that earns revenue every time someone taps a card, invests into their future, saves for a rainy day, or buys their groceries.

That is the company we are building. 2025 laid the foundation, and 2026 is where it starts to come to life. With that, I am going to hand it over to James to walk through our financial results. James, thank you. Let us start with Q4 and full-year revenue and swap volumes.

James Gernetzke: Full-year revenue was $121.6 million. That is up 5% from 2024. Q4 revenue was $29.5 million, which represents a 3% decrease from Q3 and a 34% decline from the record Q4 we had a year ago. To put that year-over-year comparison in context, Q4 2024 was our highest revenue quarter in company history, in a quarter where we saw major industry catalysts like the U.S. election and Bitcoin topping $100,000 for the very first time. As a recent industry backdrop, digital asset prices were also in decline for most of Q4 2025 after briefly enjoying early October highs. Full-year swap volume was $6.89 billion, which is a 21% increase from 2024. This is a meaningful increase that demonstrates the underlying growth in the platform, even as digital asset prices declined.

Q4 swap volume of $1.59 billion was down 9% sequentially and down 32% year over year, tracking the broader market pullback. ExoSwap, our B2B swaps platform, continued to be a significant volume driver for Exodus Movement, Inc. at $416 million of volume in Q4, or 26% of our total quarterly volume. Our growing B2B swap volume demonstrates that Exodus Movement, Inc. is increasingly a critical piece of infrastructure for the broader ecosystem. With regard to staking and other non-exchange revenue, full-year revenue from staking reached over $4 million for the year, nearly doubling 2024’s total. Our improvements to Solana staking in particular drove this acceleration. This is recurring revenue that can be compounded for as long as the assets remain under stake.

Fiat onboarding also saw a 28% increase in revenue versus 2024. Quarterly funded users—users who have actually put their money into Exodus Movement, Inc.—finished the year at 1.7 million. That is down 6% from last quarter and 11% from a year ago, reflecting the broader retail environment. Monthly active users at the end of Q4 were 1.5 million, down 35% from the previous year and unchanged sequentially. While monthly active users declined year over year in line with broader retail activity, our funded user base remained resilient, demonstrating the stickiness of our wallet. To pursue ownership of a full payment stack, during 2025, we funded $80 million of debt related to the W3C acquisition. While we initially used the Galaxy credit facility, we made the decision to pay off that debt prior to the end of the year.

This resulted in the first reduction of our Bitcoin treasury in quite some time, and during 2026, we have continued to sell digital assets as we prepare for the next disbursement related to the W3C acquisition. As we have stated in the past, we believe that our treasury, including our Bitcoin treasury, is available to fund M&A and other growth initiatives, ultimately growing our Bitcoin treasury. On a related note, we continue to evaluate ways to demonstrate the power of tokenized equity. However, we are pausing our Bitcoin dividend plans as we are prioritizing M&A and other growth initiatives at this time. We remain committed to exploring opportunities afforded to us and our shareholders through tokenized equities as their use continues to grow.

Finally, expanding on JP’s earlier note regarding ExoSwap, MetaMask is a notable name that we signed towards the end of last year. Their wallet launched support in the final days of 2025 for Bitcoin. Initial results are slowly ramping up as MetaMask users gain familiarity with the new multichain functionality. Chris, with that, let us get back over to you for questions.

Chris Merkel: Thank you, James. We will now open for questions. It is time for our analyst questions, and I see we have Andrew James Harte from BTIG. Go ahead, Andrew.

Andrew James Harte: Hi. Can you hear me okay?

Chris Merkel: Yes.

Andrew James Harte: Great. Thanks for taking the question. JP, I thought your comments about agentic payments were really interesting. I think the idea was that agents are going to need the wallet infrastructure to operate out of. I guess, can you just expand on the steps needed to go from where we are today, both in terms of capabilities or potential partnerships or integrations, to make that a reality? That would be very helpful. Thank you.

JP Richardson: Yeah. Great question. Ultimately, when you want to enable agents to be able to transact with wallets and send stablecoins, what you want to be able to do is have a world where the company or individuals that are using or leveraging these agents can maintain control over their wallets. I mean, I suppose what you could do, you could just set up an OpenClaude on your Mac mini, right, and have it go hog wild with Exodus Movement, Inc., then that would work today or should work today, right? But, again, what you want is to be able to say, okay, I have this mass amount of agents. Maybe I am a company in the travel industry, right? I am going to have an AI agent doing travel on behalf of consumers. Well, I need to be able to basically either give the consumer the ability to give access to, say, Exodus Movement, Inc.

in that AI agent or, as a business, be able to give an AI agent access to a number of wallets that I have full control over and can control the keys as well. Effectively, what that means is that from the consumer perspective—again, I am just going to step into the shoes of an Exodus Pay customer—that means having Exodus Pay or Exodus connect directly to, like, a ChatGPT or a Claude. Actually, that is something that behind the scenes we have had working for a while, but we just want to make sure the user experience works really well. When it comes to the business side—again, that travel agent example—what that ultimately means is that we would have to produce back-end software for these agents to be able to, again, view all these separate wallets.

There are a number of angles that we are looking at here. The one that we are most interested in in the short term is empowering consumers that have, again, just Exodus Movement, Inc. on their phone and are able to connect to, again, like, ChatGPT or even, in some cases, maybe even an OpenClaude as these agents become more commercialized and say, go ahead. Spend up to $500. I want you to go look for a flight, the best flight to, I do not know, Florida, right? Whatever it is. That is going to be critical, and to make all that work well and to make sure that the limits and restrictions are in, because, again, you do not—like, the worst-case scenario is if you say, okay, AI agent, you have full access to my wallet, be good with it, and then you find out it went and speculated and bought a bunch of Dogecoin from your entire wallet.

You would be pretty upset about that. So there are a lot of security controls that have to come in place as well.

Chris Merkel: Alright. Ed Engel from Compass Point is next up. Go ahead, Ed.

Ed Engel: Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to ask some questions about the cost structure here. Do you mind going through the costs or some of the one-time expenses we might have had in the fourth quarter related to M&A or anything else to call out? And then would it be fair to assume that might continue into the first quarter or maybe into the second quarter until the transaction closes?

James Gernetzke: Yes. Obviously, we had the legal costs. There is the interest associated with the Galaxy loan. The interest, obviously, since we paid it off, is not going to continue. There are some legal costs as we go through the regulatory process. There are certainly going to be some legal costs, but my assumption would be that it would be slightly less as we go through that process. But there still will be some for sure.

Ed Engel: Let us see. And sorry. And then you said some other one-time costs—

James Gernetzke: Yes. And then we have our standard, similar one-time costs that we have seen for non-M&A items from previous quarters. So yes, to answer the question, the M&A continues. We are still out there looking for other businesses and other opportunities. Obviously, we do not have anything to report at this time, and we are very focused on getting W3C closed and integrated. But that does not mean that we are not still working on a pipeline. I would say that in general, I would expect over the next quarter or so that the costs should be slightly lower than previous quarters, but not zero.

Chris Merkel: Alright. We have Gareth Gaceta up next. Hi, Gareth.

Gareth Gaceta: Hi, guys. Can you hear me alright?

Chris Merkel: Yes.

Gareth Gaceta: Awesome. I was wondering if you could provide some detail on the drivers to the improved monetization in the ExoSwap in the quarter. Do you guys think that there might be future opportunities for similar expansion, or was it maybe more of a one-time event?

James Gernetzke: Yeah. Let me start. I would say that in terms of ExoSwap, we have grown the book of business in terms of the number of partners that we are working with. As we grow that book, you will see different areas, different cost structures, etc., that come with it. Over time, as that product matures, we will start to get to a steady state. We do expect changes in the short term as the book continues to grow. We are pleased with the amount of new deals that have been signed and the work that is going on in that area. Now there are some—because this is a B2B2C, we are relying on the partners, and there is one partner that looks like it is probably going to stop operations over time. You will have those pluses and minuses, but I would say that we are definitely pleased with the direction and the amount of new contracts that have been signed and new partners that have come on.

JP Richardson: Alright. Thank you, James.

Chris Merkel: We have Michael John Grondahl from Northland. Go ahead, Mike.

Michael John Grondahl: Thank you. So sort of two questions, guys. One, I think you mentioned 18 signed ExoSwap partners and 11 operating. When do you think the next, I do not know, the next wave, the next seven, are going to ramp up, and any significant partners in that next wave? And then secondly, I would like to understand better kind of the go-to-market with Exodus Pay. Is that only going to be within sort of ExoSwap and the trading customers, or help us understand how we are going to see that Exodus Pay offering in the real world.

James Gernetzke: Let me start with the 11 and the 18. I think that we are seeing steady growth, and it is steady growth right now. In terms of significant names, we are pleased with the mix and the size of different clients that we are getting. Unfortunately, it is a B2B product. We need the client’s consent to share the names, and I do not have any larger names that have shared consent to offer you, unfortunately, right now. But I could definitely say—again, just to reiterate—we are pleased at the growth that we have seen in that, and we are looking forward to that continuing for the rest of the year. So JP, on Exodus Pay—

JP Richardson: Yeah. Let me hit a little bit more about the partners with ExoSwap here. Even though we cannot announce the names yet, the reality is that yes, we have signed other big partners, and we will be able to announce that in the future, which is going to be great. In addition to that, I think James had mentioned something that is really important: with the ExoSwap partnerships, we have to rely upon the partner’s timeline. Often what you see is that the partner in some scenarios might just enable, say, one asset, so you can swap from one pair to the other, and it does not have support for other assets and other blockchains. As we march forward and they get one going—like, oh, wow, this thing is working really well—now let us enable it for these other blockchains and make it work really well there and keep that train going.

We are going to see more and more of that, and we already have seen that, with timeframes that we will be able to announce in the future. I anticipate that will be the pattern moving forward: we will sign the partners, then there is the time to integrate, they go live on one blockchain, and then they expand out on additional blockchains. As we mentioned, we have some very big names in the industry that we have been working with for quite some time, and that becomes quite a strong testimonial as we start working with other partnerships. I think that is really important to call out. Now related to the question of—so you referred to it as ExoPay. I am assuming you were talking about Exodus Pay. So ExoPay—now, this is getting confusing—ExoPay is our fiat on-ramp, off-ramp.

We have recently renamed that to ExoRamp to separate the confusion. To be very clear here: think of ExoSwap as allowing people to swap from crypto to crypto. ExoRamp allows people to onboard into crypto via a bank account or a debit card, or off-ramp in time. So it is basically fiat on-ramp/off-ramp. Exodus Pay, again, is our initiative to, as earlier in this conversation I had mentioned, bring the world of all these disparate financial apps into one single app, right? The biggest is banking, a payments app like Venmo or Cash App, and then a brokerage app—Robinhood or Fidelity, E*TRADE, whatever you use—all into one application with no crypto complexity whatsoever. Now, when you ask about go-to-market, we had a very early test group that we experimented with, and we had conversations with people at events at ETHDenver.

Initial feedback was really good. We are marching forward. In fact, you are going to see something this week that is going to come out about another event that Exodus Pay is going to be a part of. Again, it is about mainstream payments, allowing people to easily use assets like stablecoins anywhere in the world that Visa or Mastercard is accepted, right? That is really important. The big aspect of go-to-market and how we think about Exodus Pay is that we want to align to big cultural moments. I am going to say that again. We want to align with big cultural moments. I wish some of you were not thinking, like, oh, does that mean he is going to go out and pull the trigger on a Super Bowl ad or something like that? We do not have any plans for that, but you never know.

No, but we have no plans for that whatsoever. But who knows? When it comes to big cultural moments, there are things that you will see this year that will answer that question. It is about being a part of mainstream conversations, mainstream payment experiences. There is a lot more that we will be able to unpack in future conversations. It is going to be great.

Chris Merkel: Alright. Kevin Dede from HC Wainwright. Hi, Kevin. How are you?

JP Richardson: Kevin, we cannot hear you if you are speaking.

Chris Merkel: Okay. Nope. Still cannot hear. Still cannot hear. Still cannot hear, Kevin.

Kevin Darryl Dede: Can you hear me at all now?

Chris Merkel: Okay.

JP Richardson: Hi, Kevin. Sorry about that. It is tough being a tech analyst and keeping your tech working.

Kevin Darryl Dede: So, JP, sort of a two-parter. I am going to think I am going to ask Mike’s question in a different way. The progress you are making with ExoSwap clearly indicates that you are embedding yourselves with complementary businesses, right? It is proving the B2B model that you have developed at Exodus Movement, Inc. But with Exodus Pay, it seems to me that—I mean, I hear what you say about leveraging big cultural moments. I get that. But you are taking on a sizable amount of risk in spending versus trying to build a consumer-facing app. I am wondering how you are going to approach that risk, how you plan to allocate capital to it, and how you expect it to roll out. And then I would also like to hear about the roadblocks you have to seeing W3C complete, and the timeframe to that. You did not offer much detail there.

JP Richardson: Kevin, can you just unpack the risk bit a bit more? I just want to make sure I really capture your question clearly.

Kevin Darryl Dede: Well, in my mind, there is a little bit of controversy over Exodus Movement, Inc.’s development in the B2B world versus a consumer-facing app. And Exodus Pay, I think, is the culmination of your consumer-facing initiatives, and that is clear through today’s call. What is not clear is the resources you will dedicate to building a consumer-facing business—arguably the most difficult thing to do in business. So I am just wondering how you are assessing the risk and allocating capital, and developing that capability.

JP Richardson: Got it. Okay. You are probably going to hate this answer, but I am going to say it anyway. Exodus Pay is the evolution of what Exodus Movement, Inc. is today. We were born—and the way that we thought about Exodus Movement, Inc. from the early days—was all about empowering consumers to control their wealth. That was the piece of it. From 2015, there was actually—I had a conversation with our cofounder, Daniel, just recently, and he was like, JP, do you remember in the early days when we put our phone number inside the software? I am like, yeah, I do. Is that not crazy? People would call. I am eating dinner with my family, and my kid has got spaghetti pouring out of his mouth, and then the phone is ringing nonstop.

I am trying—I am like, oh my gosh. I am eating? I share these stories because Exodus Movement, Inc. was always a company focused on consumer needs. Always. At that moment in time, the technology was not quite where we needed it to be. Regulations were not quite where we needed them to be. Mastercard and Visa were not quite where we needed them to be. The technology has now caught up where you do not have to think about the complexities of secret phrases and which layer you are on. You do not have to care about any of those things. The regulations have now started to catch up, especially with the Genius Act, in embracing stablecoins, right? That is really key and critical. Visa and Mastercard see what is happening, and that is why with W3C—which will be a good segue to talk about W3C in just a moment, per your other question—they see what is happening.

That is why there is starting to be the rise of these crypto cards that allow you to connect the card directly to your wallet, your self-custodial wallet, so you have full control and you can go and you can tap to pay anywhere. Again, Exodus Movement, Inc. was always a company built on the consumer experience. I think it is really important to highlight and call out. Now related to W3C, as mentioned in the opening statements, we are very committed to getting this done. Anybody that has been through acquisitions knows there are all sorts of complexities that come with it. With this acquisition, there are a number of subsidiaries that blend into what we are buying as a company, and each one of these subsidiaries has different levels of complexity that we have to ultimately address.

James, I am sure you can—you have been a big part of this as well along with me—you can probably add some additional color to this.

James Gernetzke: Yeah. I think on the W3C front, we are in front of the regulators right now, and we are progressing toward it on the timeline that we brought up when we signed the deal. In terms of capital allocation, to put a finer point on JP’s comments, because Exodus Pay is the evolution of Exodus Movement, Inc., that capital allocation, you should expect it to follow a similar path and the things that we said about our consumer business going forward in different fronts. Obviously, we have allocated a lot of capital to W3C and the B2B side. We still maintain that Amazon AWS playbook, even with the W3C acquisition.

JP Richardson: It might be important to mention too that per capital allocation, one aspect that is going to be important here is that because Exodus Movement, Inc., even though we were focused as a consumer app early on, it was more about those in crypto. You are going to allocate capital and think, oh, we are going to target crypto people. Uh-oh, there is a bear market. Better pull back and not think about how to reach the mainstream. That was historically the thought process. But now shifting closer to the mainstream, bear or bull market, it does not matter, right? Because Joe Plumber does not think about the price of Bitcoin. Joe Plumber does not actually even care about the price of Bitcoin. Actually, Joe Plumber may not be our ideal target use case; it is going to be maybe a younger demographic.

Let us say some 19-year-old watching college basketball on a Saturday or whatever it is, right? They may not really care about the price of Bitcoin, but they definitely care about how they spend money and how they think about the future. We still have to be thoughtful but yet bold when it comes to capital allocation when reaching that demographic.

Chris Merkel: Thank you. There are no more questions. Thanks, JP, James, and all of our analysts for submitting your questions. Please visit our social channels on X and Reddit to submit your questions for management. Our investor relations team is standing by. Thanks for joining us today, and we will see you next quarter.

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