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DATE

Thursday, May 14, 2026 at 5 p.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Christopher Pavlovski
  • Chief Financial Officer — Michael Masci

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TAKEAWAYS

  • Northern Data Acquisition Progress -- Rumble (RUM 7.71%) secured approximately 81% of Northern Data (XETRA:NB2)’s outstanding shares, with all required regulatory approvals received, targeting transaction close in June.
  • Combined Revenue (Pro Forma) -- If the companies had been combined, top line revenue would have totaled roughly $75 million for fiscal Q1 ended March 31, 2026.
  • Rumble fiscal Q1 Revenue -- $25.5 million, a 7% increase compared to $23.7 million a year ago.
  • Audience Monetization Revenue -- Up $2.6 million, offset by an $800,000 decline in other initiatives, providing transparency to segment-level drivers.
  • Cost of Services -- $27 million, marking a 10% year-over-year decline, driven mainly by a $2.3 million reduction in programming and content costs and a $700,000 decrease in other service costs.
  • General and Administrative Expenses -- Dropped by 37% to $10.4 million due to a $6.7 million payroll reduction and $400,000 lower professional fees, partially offset by $700,000 higher other administrative expenses.
  • Research and Development Expenses -- Increased 20% to $5.7 million, reflecting investments in personnel and infrastructure to support product innovation.
  • Sales and Marketing Expenses -- Jumped 134% to $8.5 million, with $3.8 million in marketing and PR, $800,000 in additional payroll, and $300,000 in higher consulting costs.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- Loss of $21 million, an improvement from a $22.7 million loss last year.
  • Net Loss -- $30.3 million, compared to $2.7 million net loss the prior year, driven primarily by lower noncash benefits from warrants and derivatives, $4.8 million of acquisition-related costs, and a $2.4 million higher digital asset revaluation charge.
  • Total Liquidity -- $233.4 million at quarter-end, comprised of $219 million in cash and $14.4 million in Bitcoin (210.82 BTC at fair value as of March 31, 2026).
  • Net Cash Used in Operating Activities -- $16.6 million for the quarter, offering insight into cash utilization.
  • Monthly Active Users (MAUs) -- 56 million, marking sequential growth primarily via international expansion and Rumble Shorts engagement.
  • Rumble Shorts Performance -- Set a new record in May with approximately 2 million unique video views in a single day; not currently monetized but is driving MAU growth and slated for monetization in the second half of 2026.
  • Tether Advertising Commitment -- $100 million advertising commitment started scaling modestly this quarter, with plans for material ramp-up in the second half of the year and no linkage to the Northern Data transaction close.
  • Rumble Cloud Strategic Progress -- Signed Anchorage Digital as an institutional infrastructure partner, signaling increasing traction in digital asset and AI workloads.
  • Cloud Services Pipeline -- Rumble is actively negotiating GPU-as-a-Service deals and evaluating non-dilutive GPU financing offers.
  • Northern Data Operational Metrics -- Reported roughly EUR 43 million in fiscal Q1 record revenue (ended March 31, 2026), 85% GPU utilization (up from 62% in December 2025), full-year 2026 revenue outlook of EUR 130 million–EUR 150 million, and 22,000 GPUs across 9 data centers with 180 megawatts capacity at the Nashville site.

SUMMARY

Significant milestones were met in the progression toward acquiring Northern Data, with transaction closure expected in June and all regulatory approvals complete. The call highlighted plans for Rumble Cloud to become the company’s largest revenue stream, backed by a growing pipeline and strategic anchor customer wins in both AI and crypto infrastructure. Management indicated user growth is accelerating, fueled by Rumble Shorts, while new advertising monetization levers and scaling of the Tether commitment are expected to lift financial performance in the second half of 2026.

  • CEO Pavlovski said the strategic rationale for the Northern Data acquisition has "only strengthened" since announcement, and referenced record fiscal Q1 revenue for the acquiree.
  • Management stated that previously circulated revenue forecasts for standalone Rumble and Northern Data are "not guidance" and should not be used as such by investors.
  • Plans are in place to launch internal creator advertising tools this summer, aiming to grow ARPU and engage the existing user base ahead of U.S. midterm elections.
  • The CFO emphasized financial discipline as Rumble transitions into the Cloud sector, and noted that future guidance may be provided post-transaction evaluation.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • GPU-as-a-Service: A cloud computing model offering access to graphics processing units for scalable AI, compute, or video workloads, provisioned on-demand to enterprise clients.
  • Agentic AI: A form of artificial intelligence designed to operate autonomously as "agents" to execute complex tasks or workflows.
  • ARPU: Average Revenue Per User, a key metric for digital platforms reflecting monetization efficiency per active user.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Christopher Pavlovski: Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. This is a special moment in Rumble's history. This should be the last call before Rumble meaningfully enters into the Cloud and Agentic AI era. As the transaction with Northern Data is set to close in June, Rumble will undergo a major transformation. Cloud will become a pillar alongside video. And from early indications, Cloud should be the largest generator of revenue. This vision dates back to when we announced to go public in 2021. And today, we are fully executing on that vision. The acquisition of Northern Data continues to be on track to close this quarter.

Rumble has secured approximately 81% of Northern Data's outstanding shares, and we've received all required regulatory approvals for the business combination. That's an enormous milestone, and it clears one of the last meaningful hurdles to closing. The strategic logic of this acquisition has only strengthened in the months since we announced it. Northern Data reported their Q1 results yesterday, which included record revenue of roughly EUR 43 million, driven by increased utilization of its GPU estate from 62% in December 2025 to approximately 85% in March 2026. In addition, Northern Data confirmed its full year 2026 revenue outlook of between EUR 130 million and EUR 150 million, supported by a current pipeline of opportunities and recently executed customer contracts.

In addition to Northern Data's pipeline, the Rumble team has been working on its own pipeline. We are currently in negotiations with multiple customers for GPU-as-a-Service. Additionally, we also have several non-dilutive GPU financing offers in hand that we are currently evaluating. In parallel to our quickly emerging GPU-as-a-Service business, we have been investing into our CPU-as-a-Service business, which we believe will continue to play an important role for the Cloud business into the future as AI moves to the edge in an Agentic era. As an example, we recently launched one-click OpenClaw deployment on Rumble Cloud, making it dramatically easier for developers and enterprises to spin up high-performance AI agents in minutes.

We see this as an early but important step in positioning Rumble Cloud as the preferred platform for scalable production-grade AI deployment. In addition to playing a role in Agentic AI through the GPU infrastructure and application layer, Rumble Cloud is also in a unique position to play a significant role in crypto infrastructure and Agentic payments given the low latency, high-reliability infrastructure we built for video and our strong strategic partnership with Tether. Throughout Q1 and into Q2, we have seen strong validation of this product market fit from leading players in the digital asset space, including Anchorage Digital, which has selected Rumble Cloud as an infrastructure partner.

This win highlights our ability to meet the performance, security and reliability requirements of regulated institutional-grade platforms. It's a clear signal that Rumble Cloud is gaining traction with high-value, mission-critical workloads. As for the video platform, we are starting to see some encouraging results. Our MAUs hit 56 million monthly active users, which was driven by our marketing efforts with international expansion and Rumble Shorts. This marks another quarter of sequential growth. Since we last spoke, Rumble Shorts has continued to grow and set records. In May, we set a new record of roughly 2 million unique video views in a single day.

Rumble Shorts is now driving meaningful growth to our MAUs, and we see it complementing and eventually helping grow the long-form side of the platform. Additionally, since Shorts is not yet monetized, its growth had a negative impact on our ARPU. We are planning to roll out monetization of Shorts in the second half of this year and hope to see it lift ARPU accordingly. Second, we launched Rumble Wallet in partnership with Tether. The growth of this product will be heavily fueled by the $100 million advertising commitment from Tether, which has begun to slowly scale in our current quarter.

We plan to materially scale in the second half of the year, bringing a new cohort of creators to the platform. Stepping back, we have had many exciting moments over nearly 4 years as a public company, but I can honestly say this feels different. We are working on Cloud-based revenue deals, which are far larger than we've historically seen. We are on track to close Northern Data this quarter. And if we were a combined company, our top line revenue would have been roughly $75 million in Q1.

Before I turn over to our financials, I want to thank Brandon Alexandroff, who has been with us from the very beginning, taking us from single-digit million revenue to where we are today. Now let me formally introduce and welcome our new Chief Financial Officer, Mike Masci. This is Mike's first earnings call with Rumble, and I could not be more excited to have him in the seat. Mike was previously at Intel, coming with deep technology expertise across Cloud and AI, having spent his career at the intersection of finance and some of the most important compute and infrastructure businesses in the world.

That background, financial discipline paired with the real operating understanding of Cloud and AI economics is exactly the profile we wanted as Rumble steps into its next chapter as a Cloud and AI infrastructure company, prepares to close the Northern Data transaction and operates at a meaningfully larger scale. Mike has already hit the ground running, and I know investors, analysts and our team are going to value the rigor, perspective and partnership he brings. Mike, welcome to Rumble. I hand the call over to you to walk through the quarter.

Michael Masci: Thank you for the introduction, Chris, and good afternoon, everyone. It's an absolute privilege to join Rumble at such a pivotal moment for the company. After spending much of my career at Intel, leading Cloud and AI infrastructure, I'm psyched about the opportunity to join a company with Rumble's capabilities, which will combine an international data center portfolio with a leading video platform that delivers some of the lowest latencies in the live streaming industry. Finally, the incoming AI data centers and fleet of GPUs from Northern Data will build a Rumble portfolio, that's the foundation of what's needed for a significant Cloud infrastructure business poised to lead in the Agentic AI era.

We will be a high-growth company, but with a disciplined capital and financial approach for our shareholders. I look forward to meeting and working with many of you over the coming quarters. So with that, I'll take you through our first quarter 2026 financials at a high level before turning the call over to the operator for Q&A. For the first quarter of 2026, we reported revenue of $25.5 million, an increase of approximately 7% compared to $23.7 million in the first quarter of 2025. The $1.8 million year-over-year increase was driven by a $2.6 million increase in audience monetization revenues, partially offset by an $800,000 decrease in other initiatives revenues.

Cost of services in the first quarter was $27 million, a 10% decline year-over-year. The decrease was driven by a $2.3 million reduction in programming and content costs and a $700,000 decrease in other cost of services. General and administrative expenses decreased by $6.2 million or 37% to $10.4 million in the first quarter of 2026. The reduction was primarily driven by a $6.7 million decrease in payroll and related expenses and a $400,000 reduction in professional fees, partially offset by a $700,000 increase in other administrative expenses.

Research and development expenses increased by $1 million or 20% to $5.7 million, reflecting a $600,000 increase in payroll and related expenses and a $400,000 increase in costs associated with computer software, hardware and other expenditures used in research and development activities. Sales and marketing expenses increased by $4.9 million or 134% to $8.5 million. The increase reflected higher marketing and public relations spends of $3.8 million, increased payroll and related expenses of $800,000 and a higher consulting cost of $300,000. This step-up reflects the deliberate investment we are making beyond our brand, our products and our sales operations as we move into a midterm election year and ramp the Rumble Cloud commercial motions.

Adjusted EBITDA loss for the first quarter was $21 million, an improvement compared to a loss of $22.7 million in the first quarter of 2025. Net loss for the first quarter was $30.3 million compared to a net loss of $2.7 million in the first quarter of 2025. The year-over-year change in net loss was primarily driven by movements in noncash items, including a $14.9 million lower benefit from change in fair value of warrant liability, a $9.7 million lower benefit from change in fair value of derivatives, $4.8 million in acquisition-related transaction costs from the pending Northern Data acquisition, and a $2.4 million higher charge in change in fair value of digital assets, partially offset by operating improvements.

We ended the quarter with total liquidity of $233.4 million, consisting of $219 million in cash and cash equivalents and 210.82 Bitcoin valued at $14.4 million as of March 31. Our Bitcoin holdings are carried at fair value and remeasured each quarter. Net cash used in operating activities for the first quarter was $16.6 million. So in summary, we are seeing strong user growth on our video platform. Our Rumble Cloud continues to grow with strong customer momentum. With the addition of the Northern Data GPU and AI data center assets, our cloud business will expand meaningfully. I could not be more excited for where Rumble is headed. That concludes our prepared remarks.

Operator, we are now ready to open the line for questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Jason Helfstein from Oppenheimer.

Jason Helfstein: So 3 questions. So first, so I think most of us have seen the kind of forecast, I guess, whatever we call them in the S1. I guess, specifically, I'm just going to call out a few numbers, and I don't know if there's like any commentary you can put around them, but I think there was something like a $204 million revenue target for stand-alone Rumble for next year and then $878 million for Northern Data. I guess how should investors think about that? Like it's definitely not guidance, but it's a guardrail or just any kind of color how people should think about those numbers? Maybe I'll just do them one at a time, probably easier that way.

So let's start with that.

Michael Masci: Yes, sure. Jason, I'll take that one. So first, just to start out, no, those forecasts are not guidance. Specifically, those forecasts were internal in nature in connection with the transaction. And so overall, those are not guidance. That said, in the future, we are going to evaluate the transaction and the combined entity with Northern Data. And at that time, we may choose to provide guidance. So the way to think about that was the forecast and it's not guidance.

Jason Helfstein: Okay. So second question, so should we assume that Tether ad revenue commitments begin after the Northern Data close? And then are there any thresholds that need to be triggered? Or does the commitment kind of like come in ratably over the length of the commitment? And then I've got one more.

Christopher Pavlovski: Jason, this is Chris. So the Tether ad commitment has already begun this quarter. We're scaling it slowly right now to make sure that everything is working properly with the Rumble Wallet, and we want to embed some good promotions with it that we are looking to launch in the coming weeks. So we anticipate this to scale more so in the second half of the year, but it has begun slowly here in this quarter. There's no specific -- it doesn't have to happen after the transaction closes. It's not tied to that at all.

It's just based on the product and where we see the product and when we want to step on the gas with the product, and that's up to us here at Rumble.

Jason Helfstein: Okay. And then lastly, our understanding is that Northern Data has about 25 racks right now comprised of H100s and 200s. I mean any commentary that's like close to accurate? And then how should we think about like future contracts for more compute and power?

Christopher Pavlovski: So this is Chris again. Northern Data has 22,000 -- we've released that they've had -- and obviously, they've spoken about it publicly, they have around 22,000 GPUs. With respect to the amount of racks, I don't have that information at me right now, and that's something -- that information we can provide once the transaction is closed. But as of right now, they have 22,000 GPUs. They have about 9 data centers, and they have also properties as well like Nashville that has energized capacity of up to 180 megawatts.

Michael Masci: Just to add, fitting 22,000 GPUs and the number of racks that you mentioned would be extremely difficult.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Thomas Forte from Maxim Group.

Thomas Forte: Great. So first off, Chris, Tyler, Steve, Brandon, it was a pleasure working with you, and I wish you all the best of luck in your new role. And then Mike, welcome to the call. And then I apologize in advance if you touched on these in your prepared remarks, I'm juggling multiple calls right now. So 2 questions for me. Beyond Tether, how are your new President of Sales for Rumble Advertising and Rumble Shorts video efforts advancing your near-term and long-term advertising sales efforts?

Christopher Pavlovski: Tom, this is Chris. So in terms of the Rumble Advertising Center, we hired Greg Sherrill earlier in the year, and we're seeing a lot of progress on that. We're opening up programmatic channels, and we're seeing some success with that already. I don't anticipate us to start seeing meaningful numbers on the advertising side until about late 2026 and into 2027. With that said, though, there has been some real meaningful partners like avenues that have opened up on the programmatic side as we opened up the walled garden. On the Rumble Shorts side, that has been a very pleasant surprise for us. It's actually contributing to MAU growth.

And it is -- we just set a new record here in the month of May as well. We had a record when we -- in the last quarterly call, and we have another record here in the last couple of weeks as well for Rumble Shorts. That is not monetized yet. So it's not showing up in ARPU. We intend to start monetizing that in the second half of 2026, and we hope to see that having a meaningful lift to our ARPU.

But from what we are seeing in early stages, the growth that we are seeing with Rumble Shorts and the stickiness of Rumble Shorts, is something extremely promising, and it's something that we're going to continue to invest in. And we're very hopeful that we can monetize that here in this current year. I'll also add, we're in the process of building new functions into the Rumble Advertising Center where we're going to allow our current creator base and our current users to start advertising within the platform, something that all platforms do and they do very well like Facebook and X and Instagram where you can start boosting internally. We haven't had that function in the Rumble Advertising Center.

We are looking to release that this summer, and we think that we're going to see some real traction there by giving all the creators and users on the platform the ability to advertise within the platform. So we're looking forward to that as well.

Thomas Forte: Great. And then for my follow-up, as we get closer to the midterms, what are your current thoughts on how it may drive monetization later this year? And at a high level, how should we think about your ability to monetize on that engagement compared with the last midterms and also the last presidential election?

Christopher Pavlovski: Yes. I think we're in a much stronger position than we ever have been on the advertising front. And obviously, midterms is something that's going to be very important to us. And hopefully, we'll see that drive ARPU considerably. We've seen that previously with midterms in the past and obviously, the presidential election. We see a lot of budgets are coming in that Q4. We anticipate something similar happening for this midterms as well and obviously, the next presidential election. So we're looking to capitalize on that.

And I think actually one of the really cool features that we will have is that boosting capability that I think could really accelerate and help grow that even further than we've seen in the past. So we're looking -- like I said, we're looking to roll that out this summer and have that ready for the midterm. But like all other election seasons, that's a big moment for us, and we're looking to capitalize on it.

Operator: At this time, we no longer have any questions. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.