- K Wave Media said it can redirect up to US$485 million from a Bitcoin treasury strategy into AI infrastructure.
- The company plans to sell Play Co., Ltd. and remove about US$48 million in debt and contingent liabilities.
- KWM shares fell nearly 25% to US$0.307 on May 4 as investors weighed the pivot and shareholder approvals.
K Wave Media shares fell nearly 25% on May 4 after the Nasdaq-listed company redirected up to US$485 million (AU$674.2 million) from a Bitcoin treasury strategy into an AI infrastructure pivot.
K Wave filed a Form 6-K and issued a company release saying it had executed an amendment to its Securities Purchase Agreement with Anson Funds.
Anson had committed up to US$500 million (AU$695.0 million) to support K Wave’s Bitcoin treasury strategy, but the amendment allows the remaining US$485 million (AU$674.2 million) in ordinary-share sale proceeds to fund AI infrastructure instead.
The company said the shift is part of a broader restructuring that includes disposing of Play Co., Ltd., its largest wholly owned subsidiary, to Play’s previous owner. K Wave expects the transaction to remove about US$48 million (AU$66.7 million) in debt liabilities, including related contingent liabilities.
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Bitcoin Plan Replaced
K Wave said its board approved a strategic transformation to reposition the company as an AI infrastructure-focused business. Planned investment areas include data centers, GPU compute and rental operations, and acquisitions or partnerships in critical AI infrastructure components.
The board is also evaluating a corporate rebrand to Talivar Technologies. Both the Play disposition and any name change remain subject to shareholder approval, with the company’s annual meeting scheduled for early July 2026.
This marks a defining inflection point for KWM. By exiting our legacy business, eliminating nearly all liabilities, and securing significant access to capital, we are positioning the Company to become a meaningful participant in the rapidly growing AI infrastructure sector.

Ted Kim, KWM’s Chief Executive Officer Noticeably, Wave fell nearly 25% on May 4 to finish at US$0.307 (AU$0.43). The decline followed a prior rally linked to the company’s separate plan to tokenise South Korean entertainment intellectual property on Solana.
The size of the capital access also contrasts sharply with K Wave’s current market profile, having a market capitalisation of about US$21 million (AU$29.2 million), meaning the US$485 million (AU$674.2 million) facility is roughly 23 times the company’s equity value.
There’s more than US$18.83 million (AU$26.2 million) in total debt and a current ratio of 0.29, indicating short-term obligations exceeded liquid assets before the planned restructuring.
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