Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Creating liberating content

French government to meet...

France’s Interior Ministry is reportedly set to meet with key players in the...

Polygon’s co-founder warns of...

Sandeep Nailwal, co-founder of Polygon, has flagged a troubling rise in deepfake scams...

Chinese-linked firm raises $300M...

A little-known tech company with ties to China is pledging up to $300...

Coinbase to launch wrapped...

Coinbase is expanding its footprint in the wrapped token space by preparing to...
HomeAnalysisCrypto VC funds...

Crypto VC funds struggle to capture money as startup fundraising rebounds in 2025

Crypto venture capital (VC) firms are experiencing operational strain and consolidation, even as project-level fundraising gains momentum. 

In the first quarter, crypto startups raised $5.85 billion, already accounting for nearly 61% of the capital raised throughout 2024, according to DefiLlama. 

Varys Capital head of venture Tom Dunleavy shared that, despite this influx, fewer active funds are deploying capital, and many firms launched during the last market cycle are no longer consistently participating in deals.

He attributed the pullback to dwindling capital reserves and a lack of meaningful returns and described the situation as “massive consolidation coming in crypto VC.”

Dunleavy noted that many funds raised in 2021 and 2022 are “shadow insolvent,” out of capital but still nominally active. He projected that many non-brand-name firms, and even some established names, will be functionally closed by 2026.

Crypto VC funds vs. startups

Galaxy Research data shows that while startup fundraising is recovering, venture capital funds are raising less money to invest in crypto projects. 

Additionally, the number of new crypto VC funds peaked in 2022 at more than 300 but has steadily declined yearly. Only around 50 new funds were launched in 2024, and just a fraction of that number entered the market in the first quarter of 2025. 

The number of repeat investors has also shrunk. DefiLlama data shows that of all active funds in the past 180 days, only 67 made more than one investment, which is less than half.

Dunleavy cited several causes, including the absence of distributions to paid-in capital (DPI), a lack of headline investment wins to renew attention from capital allocators, and slower inflows from ultra- and high-net-worth individuals. 

He added that institutional investors remain hesitant despite recent regulatory progress across jurisdictions.

Contraction in venture capital

The fundraising side does not mirror the contraction seen with venture firms. The increase in the first-quarter fundraising volumes suggests that interest in crypto startups is growing. However, capital flows from a narrower base of repeat participants and larger allocators.

As a result, venture activity is becoming more concentrated. Capital is no longer widely distributed across many generalist funds but is instead focused within a smaller group of active players with sufficient dry powder and differentiated theses. 

Dunleavy believes this new landscape is likely a massive positive development for the industry, as venture capital funds are much sharper with whom they deploy capital, resulting in better companies thriving.

The crypto fundraising landscape is entering a bifurcated phase. While startups continue to raise money faster than last year, crypto VC funds struggle to justify their relevance, raise new capital, and remain active in a leaner, more disciplined market.

The post Crypto VC funds struggle to capture money as startup fundraising rebounds in 2025 appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Get notified whenever we post something new!

spot_img

Create a website from scratch

Just drag and drop elements in a page to get started with BrandPR.

Continue reading

French government to meet crypto leaders over rising kidnapping threats

France’s Interior Ministry is reportedly set to meet with key players in the country’s crypto industry on May 16 to tackle a rising wave of kidnappings targeting digital asset entrepreneurs, Le Monde reported on May 14. According to the report,...

Polygon’s co-founder warns of deepfake video scam using his likeness targeting startups

Sandeep Nailwal, co-founder of Polygon, has flagged a troubling rise in deepfake scams using his likeness to deceive crypto founders. Polygon is one of the largest Ethereum layer-2 networks. In a May 13 social media post on X, Nailwal said...

Chinese-linked firm raises $300M from private investor to buy TRUMP memecoin

A little-known tech company with ties to China is pledging up to $300 million to purchase Bitcoin and the Trump-themed memecoin TRUMP, according to a May 11 filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. The move immediately raised alarms...

Enjoy exclusive access to all of our content

Get an online subscription and you can unlock any article you come across.