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Core AI Holdings revenue surges 59% in 2025 amid strategic AI pivot and Siyata divestiture
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Core AI Holdings revenue surges 59% in 2025 amid strategic AI pivot and Siyata divestiture

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Core AI Holdings (NASDAQ:CHAI) reported its financial results for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2025, highlighting a transitional period marked by strong top-line growth from its ongoing digital platforms and a total restructuring of its operational model.

The company posted full-year revenue from continuing operations of $55.2 million, a 58.6% year-over-year increase compared to the $34.8 million recorded in fiscal year 2024.

The top-line growth reflects the initial scaling of Core AI's digital platform and high-growth technology operations following its corporate rebranding and structural pivot.

However, the aggressive realignment toward next-generation artificial intelligence architecture impacted near-term profitability.

Continuing operations generated a minor gross profit loss of approximately $(302,662) for the year, which corporate management attributed directly to non-recurring transition costs, restructuring activities, and localized operational realignment.

To clear a path for its AI-centric future, Core AI executed a decisive corporate split by divesting its legacy, underperforming Siyata Push-to-Talk (PTT) cellular hardware business.

The carved-out operations were reclassified under discontinued operations for the financial year.

The discontinued Siyata PTT segment brought in roughly $3 million in isolated revenue and $878,000 in gross profit during its final post-merger transition window from October 3 through December 31, 2025.

The exit from the hardware business incurred heavy, concentrated accounting impairments.

Core AI posted a total net loss from the discontinued Siyata PTT operations of approximately $24.4 million.

The loss was heavily driven by aggregate transaction fees, strict inventory write-downs, employee severance, financing costs, and the capital overhead required for strategic repositioning.

Concurrently, general and administrative expenses from the ongoing enterprise rose as the firm expanded its public corporate infrastructure and built out its AI data center joint ventures.

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