Datavault AI Inc (NASDAQ: DVLT) soared nearly 20% in premarket on Monday after announcing two new patents tied to blockchain-enabled content licensing and tokenised monetisation.

The patent announcement reinforces DVLT’s ambition to transform digital content and real-world assets into trackable, licensable, and monetizable data objects.

However, significant underlying risks remain, warranting caution in playing Datavault stock even though it’s currently down a massive 65% versus its year-to-date high in the final week of October.

Why Datavault stock rallied on Monday

The newly granted patents expand Datavault’s toolkit for managing and monetising digital content.

One of them outlines a system for turning creative works into tokenized assets – with automated tracking of usage, smart contracts to enforce licensing terms, and built-in payment distribution.

The other involves a broader platform for registering and licensing content across multiple formats, with transparent royalty flows and secure identifiers to prevent misuse.

Together, these filings strengthen Datavault’s commitment to building a “licensing engine” for the Web3 era.

In short, DVLT shares are pushing higher today mostly because the patents offer legal protection, an opportunity to sign partnerships, and potential revenue streams tied to recurring licensing fees.

Are DVLT shares worth owning for 2026?

On the surface, underlying financials sure warrant owning Datavault shares heading into 2026.

After all, the Nasdaq-listed firm saw a remarkable 148% year-on-year increase in its Q3 revenue, and the management sees the top-line growing over 10x next year to north of $30 million.

However, guidance is not audited performance. When it comes to investing in an overvalued (103x sales) micro-cap name like DLVT, it’s only prudent to demand proof in terms of signed contracts.

Moreover, the AI stock lacks cash flow durability and consistent execution to justify buying amidst speculative momentum.

Simply put, Datavault’s recent surge appears more sentiment-driven than fundamentals-backed – and that often leaves late investors exposed to sharp reversals once the hype fades.

Datavault faces a real risk of delisting

Another major red flag on DVLT is its penny stock status, which makes it vulnerable to extreme volatility and pump-and-dump behaviour.

Plus, despite the patents-driven rally, Datavault shares continue to hover around $1 only, signalling a real risk of delisting on a sustained dip below this threshold.

For long-term investors, penny stock territory is a huge warning sign: it signals limited institutional support, heightened susceptibility to dilution, and regulatory risk.

Until DVLT demonstrates durable revenue growth and stabilises its share price above compliance levels, the stock’s speculative appeal will remain overshadowed by structural vulnerabilities.

What’s also worth mentioning is that DVLT stock currently receives coverage from one Wall Street analyst, indicating scarce institutional support and heightened risk that investors will have to make do without professional guidance and estimates.

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