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GIG

GigCapital7 Corp.

GIG

GigCapital7 Corp. NASDAQ
$10.49 0.05% (+0.01)

Market Cap $354.39 M
52w High $12.50
52w Low $9.96
Dividend Yield 0%
P/E -64.75
Volume 7.34K
Outstanding Shares 33.78M

Income Statement

Period Revenue Operating Expense Net Income Net Profit Margin Earnings Per Share EBITDA
Q3-2025 $0 $1.27M $-212.08K 0% $0.01 $-212.08K
Q2-2025 $0 $384.593K $1.544M 0% $0.046 $1.544M
Q1-2025 $0 $371.833K $1.618M 0% $0.049 $1.618M
Q4-2024 $120.417M $350.604K $1.832M 1.521% $0.043 $2.182M
Q3-2024 $0 $213.755K $610.95K 0% $0.044 $610.95K

Balance Statement

Period Cash & Short-term Total Assets Total Liabilities Total Equity
Q3-2025 $456.58M $919.756M $309.74M $610.016M
Q2-2025 $610.7K $208.26M $686.801K $207.574M
Q1-2025 $926.474K $206.535M $505.607K $206.03M
Q4-2024 $1.344M $204.826M $203.503M $1.323M
Q3-2024 $2.007M $203.359M $201.669M $1.69M

Cash Flow Statement

Period Net Income Cash From Operations Cash From Investing Cash From Financing Net Change Free Cash Flow
Q3-2025 $2.521M $-4.906M $-260.069M $330.606M $65.735M $-5.094M
Q2-2025 $1.544M $-315.774K $0 $0 $-315.774K $-315.774K
Q1-2025 $1.618M $-417.754K $0 $0 $-417.754K $-417.754K
Q4-2024 $1.832M $-293.435K $0 $-368.849K $-662.283K $0
Q3-2024 $610.95K $-528.48K $-200M $202.474M $2.007M $0

Revenue by Products

Product Q2-2024Q1-2025Q2-2025
Reportable Segment
Reportable Segment
$0 $30.00M $30.00M
FixedPrice Contract
FixedPrice Contract
$10.00M $0 $0
TimeandMaterials Contract
TimeandMaterials Contract
$20.00M $0 $0

Five-Year Company Overview

Income Statement

Income Statement GigCapital7 is still a blank‑check company, so its income statement is almost empty in an economic sense. The tiny amount of revenue is essentially financial income on its funds, not the result of any real business activity. Operating costs modestly exceed this income, so there is a small operating loss, but net results hover around break‑even. Overall, the current income statement tells you almost nothing about the future Hadron Energy business; it mainly reflects the cost of keeping a SPAC listed while it searches for and prepares a merger target.


Balance Sheet

Balance Sheet The balance sheet is simple and typical of a newly listed SPAC. Assets are small and largely financial in nature, with very limited cash directly shown and only a token amount of debt. Equity makes up nearly all of the capital structure, which is what you would expect before a de‑SPAC merger. There are no meaningful operating assets, no production facilities, and no sizable liabilities linked to a real business. After the merger with Hadron, you should expect a completely different balance sheet, including substantial long‑term assets, higher cash needs, and potentially much more debt or additional equity issuance over time.


Cash Flow

Cash Flow Cash flows are currently negligible and mainly reflect the passive holding of funds and routine corporate expenses. There is no real operating cash flow, no investment in property or equipment, and free cash flow is effectively flat. This is normal for a SPAC, which is designed to hold capital in trust until a deal closes. The key future shift will be post‑merger: Hadron’s development, licensing, and deployment of micro‑reactors will likely require significant, sustained cash outflows before any meaningful inflows arrive, making future financing and cash burn key risks to monitor.


Competitive Edge

Competitive Edge As of now, GigCapital7 has no operating business and therefore no competitive position of its own. Its future standing hinges entirely on Hadron Energy. Hadron aims to occupy a distinctive niche in advanced nuclear by offering transportable, modular light‑water micro‑reactors. Its use of proven reactor technology, early and active engagement with U.S. regulators, and a management team with deep nuclear experience give it a potential edge versus rivals pursuing more experimental designs. However, the broader small‑reactor field is getting crowded, the regulatory bar is extremely high, and the first‑mover advantage could fade if licensing or commercialization slips. Competition for customers, talent, and capital will be intense.


Innovation and R&D

Innovation and R&D GigCapital7 itself does not conduct meaningful research or product development; it is a financial shell. All innovation upside rests with Hadron’s “Halo” micro‑modular reactor concept. The design leans deliberately on established pressurized‑water reactor technology, wrapped in a compact, transportable form meant for remote sites, data centers, and defense uses. Safety features, long refueling cycles, and the planned use of advanced nuclear fuel are key differentiators. Hadron’s strategy is less about radical physics and more about re‑packaging proven nuclear science into an industrial product that regulators can understand. The main uncertainties are whether the company can clear regulatory hurdles, build a reliable fuel supply chain, and scale manufacturing without costs spiraling.


Summary

GigCapital7 today is essentially a cash shell with minimal operations and very simple financials, so its current accounts do not reflect the business it is expected to become. The real story lies in the proposed merger with Hadron Energy, which would transform GIG from a passive SPAC into a highly ambitious advanced nuclear company. That future entity would combine potentially differentiated technology and early regulatory engagement with the heavy challenges of a capital‑intensive, tightly regulated industry. From a financial‑statement perspective, investors should recognize that the historical figures tell you almost nothing about future earnings or cash flows; the key drivers will be regulatory milestones, the pace of customer adoption, the ability to fund development, and how well Hadron manages technical and execution risks over many years.