Don’t call us just a WLFI treasury company, says AI Financial

AI Financial, formerly known as Alt5 Sigma, wants the market to know that it’s more than just its token holdings, and calling it a $WLFI treasury company isn’t the right way to describe it.

“AiFi continues to operate an active fintech and digital payments business while executing on a broader long-term strategy across digital assets, settlement infrastructure, tokenization, and next-generation financial technologies,” a company spokesperson told CoinDesk in an email. “Characterizing the company solely as a ‘treasury company’ does not accurately reflect the breadth of AiFi’s operating business.”

AI Financial operates ALT5 Pay, its crypto payments platform, and ALT5 Prime, its over-the-counter digital asset trading business. Since quarter-end, it has also announced the acquisition of tokenization and ICO infrastructure firm Block Street, signed a commercial agreement with SuperQ Quantum, and outlined broader expansion into digital financial infrastructure.

The response from the spokesperson comes after AI Financial’s latest SEC filing painted a starkly different picture of its current financial profile.

The Nasdaq-listed company disclosed in this filing that it held 7.28 billion $WLFI tokens, worth $706.4 million at the end of March, down from an acquisition cost of roughly $1.46 billion. By comparison, its operating fintech business generated just $4.7 million in quarterly revenue.

AI Financial also warned in this filing that recurring losses and a $5.5 million working capital deficit raise “substantial doubt” about the company’s ability to continue as a going concern within one year after the financial statements were issued.

Complicating the picture further, the company’s $WLFI holdings remain contractually locked, limiting its ability to convert its largest asset into cash. AI Financial ended the quarter with just $10.5 million in cash.

AI Financial’s relationship with $WLFI goes far beyond ownership. World Liberty CEO Zach Witkoff serves as the company’s chairman. Co-founder Zachary Folkman sits on its board; $WLFI has lent it $15 million, secured by $WLFI tokens, and $WLFI holds rights equivalent to roughly 46% of its fully diluted equity.

But the question is, can investors see past $WLFI when looking at AI Financial as a whole?

AI Financial may be building a broader fintech and digital infrastructure platform, but its SEC filing suggests $WLFI remains the asset defining its financial story.

Unlike a typical digital asset treasury company holding bitcoin or another liquid asset, AI Financial’s relationship with $WLFI is more complex: the issuer of its core treasury asset also has deep governance, lending and equity ties to the company itself.

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