Forward holds nearly 7M SOL bought near $232, leaving close to $1B in unrealized losses as prices fell near $85.
FWDI shares slid from about $40 to near $5, indicating pressure across crypto treasury firms as asset values decline.
With no debt, Forward stakes SOL for 6–7% yield and may act opportunistically as peers cut exposure.
Nasdaq-listed Forward Industries is facing a tricky time as crypto prices slide. The company, known for holding the largest publicly traded Solana treasury, disclosed steep unrealized losses as SOL fell near $85 in recent weeks. The decline has weighed on both its digital asset holdings and FWDI shares, which now trade near $5.
Forward Industries currently holds nearly 7 million SOL, more than its next three public competitors combined. Notably, the company acquired those tokens at an average price of about $232. At current market levels, the SOL stack is valued near $600 million, translating into an unrealized loss approaching $1 billion.
At the same time, FWDI stock has fallen sharply. Shares dropped from nearly $40 during last year’s peak to just above $5. However, this decline mirrors broader pressure across digital asset treasury firms, which have seen balance sheets shrink as crypto prices retreated.
Digital asset treasury companies, by design, concentrate crypto exposure on their balance sheets. As prices fall, asset values drop while leverage metrics worsen. Consequently, several firms have sold crypto holdings to manage debt obligations and liquidity needs. Forward Industries has not reported forced sales tied to debt servicing.
According to Ryan Navi, Forward Industries’ chief investment officer, the firm carries no corporate debt and remains fully unlevered. In an interview with CoinDesk, Navi said this structure allows flexibility while competitors reduce exposure. He added that scale and balance-sheet strength create room to act during market stress.
Forward’s treasury strategy shifted in 2025 after raising roughly $1.65 billion through a private investment in public equity. Galaxy Digital, Jump Crypto, and Multicoin Capital led the round. Following the raise, the firm became the largest Solana-focused treasury company in public markets.
Navi, who joined in December from KKR and ParaFi Capital, said equity prices across the sector remain dislocated. When valuations trade below net asset value, he noted, capital deployment can become more accretive.
Forward stakes its SOL holdings, earning yields near 6% to 7%. Additionally, the firm partnered with Sanctum to issue a liquid staking token, fwdSOL. That token earns staking rewards while remaining usable within decentralized finance platforms.
On Kamino, Forward can borrow against fwdSOL at rates below staking yields, according to Navi. Meanwhile, Multicoin Capital co-founder Kyle Samani recently stepped down as managing director. He remains chairman of Forward Industries and exited the Multicoin Master Fund using FWDI shares and warrants instead of cash.
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