DREDGECAP
NASDAQ·Finance Services
ABTC

American Bitcoin Corp.

American Bitcoin Corp. (ticker: ABTC) is an NASDAQ-listed finance services company. DredgeCap's structured extraction of ABTC's SEC filings surfaces 5 active risk signals, including 2 late-filing signals, 2 auditor-change signals, and 1 delisting/deregistration signal. ABTC reported $62.12M in revenue and -$81.79M for the period ending 2026-03-31, with operating cash flow of -$42.51M. Cash and equivalents stood at $10.05M. Total assets of $1.30B exceed total liabilities of $609.17M. Each signal on this page is sourced verbatim from the underlying SEC filing. Use the tabs above to drill into auditor history, going-concern citations, dilution mechanics, cash runway, and the full risk-flag inventory.

Is ABTC diluting shareholders? — Data Unavailable

American Bitcoin Corp.'s dilution status could not be determined from the SEC filings currently cached. We need at least one annual filing (10-K, 20-F, 40-F) with parseable share-count cover-page text to compute a trend.

Growth Rate
Unavailable
Current Shares
Not parseable
ATM Facility
Not detected
Convertible Notes
Not detected
Reverse Split
Not detected

What Dilution Means for ABTC Shareholders

Dilution refers to the reduction in existing shareholders' percentage ownership when a company issues new shares. Companies dilute for multiple legitimate reasons — funding growth, acquiring other companies, compensating employees with equity, or converting debt to equity. Whether dilution is good or bad depends on what the new capital is being used for and whether per-share value grows faster than the share count.

The dilution mechanism shareholders should monitor most closely is the presence of an ATM (at-the-market) equity facility. ATMs give the company standing authority to issue new shares into the open market at any time, often without separate shareholder notice. They create continuous-issuance overhang — even days when no new shares are sold, the facility itself weighs on the stock as supply might appear at any moment. American Bitcoin Corp.'s most recent annual filing does not mention an ATM facility — though that status can change with each new financing round.

Convertible notes are a separate forward-dilution mechanism: each note converts into shares at a defined price (or formula) at maturity, automatically expanding share count. The presence of large convertible-note balances on the balance sheet — even before conversion — is a material signal that future dilution is contractually scheduled. No convertible notes are mentioned in American Bitcoin Corp.'s most recent annual filing.

For broader context on ABTC's risk profile, see the ABTC Overview page. For audit-opinion status, see the Going Concern page.

Related on ABTC

Auditor & opinion →
Who signs off on share-issuance disclosures.
Going-concern history →
Auditor + management language across filings.
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Ranked share-count growth across DredgeCap coverage.
Disclosure: Share counts are extracted from the cover page of ABTC's cached SEC annual filings. Classification reflects share-count growth rate, presence of an ATM facility, and convertible-note disclosures at the time of the most recent annual filing. Status can change with new financing rounds. This page is not legal or investment advice.