
Alpine Global Management moved on some shares of Trump Media & Technology Group. 783,379 of them, to be exact. About $10.69 million worth, if you’re keeping score. It wasn’t a shouting match, more like a quiet exit. These things happen. Money talks, conviction whispers, and sometimes, the two don’t agree.
The Numbers Tell a Story
The SEC filing showed Alpine shedding the shares in the last quarter. The paper loss on the position clocked in at $13.83 million, a combination of selling and the stock deciding to take a long nap. A company losing money isn’t news. A company losing money and watching its stock price follow suit? That’s a pattern.
What Alpine’s Doing
- Alpine’s stake in DJT now represents a sliver – 0.69% – of their total holdings. They’re trimming the fat, or maybe just bracing for impact.
- Their top holdings remain elsewhere: IMVT ($66.77 million), RIVN ($51.80 million), ACHR ($35.17 million), CVNA ($18.82 million), and ARES ($11.07 million). They’re spreading the risk, or at least, trying to.
- DJT itself is down 48% over the past year. The S&P 500? Up 21%. The difference is stark. It’s like comparing a slow leak to a geyser.
The Bare Facts
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Market capitalization | $2.8 billion |
| Revenue (TTM) | $3.7 million |
| Net income (TTM) | ($712.1 million) |
The Platform
- Trump Media & Technology Group runs a social network, offering content and information. It’s a digital echo chamber, if you want a blunt assessment.
- Revenue comes from engagement and advertising. A fragile foundation, built on likes and shares.
- They’re targeting a specific audience, those looking for an alternative. Everyone wants a corner of the internet to call their own.
Based in Florida, they’re trying to build something. A platform. A community. A profit. It’s a tough neighborhood out there.
What It Means
The stock took a hit – nearly 20% – when Alpine started selling. It hasn’t stopped falling. Another 27% this year. It’s a slow bleed. They’ve also been dabbling in cryptocurrency, hedging with Bitcoin. A risky game, layering volatility on top of volatility. The company reported a net loss of $712.3 million, blaming crypto price drops. Revenue? A meager $3.7 million for the entire year. They did manage a small positive cash flow, $14.8 million, and the CEO talks about a $2.5 billion balance sheet and M&A plans. Sounds good on paper. But paper doesn’t pay the bills.
Alpine still holds some DJT, less than 1% of their assets. They’ve reduced their share count by 70%. That’s a signal. A quiet one, but a signal nonetheless. They’re repositioning. Looking for something with a little more…traction. And in this market, traction is everything.
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2026-03-11 19:22