Editor’s note: This is Mergers & Money, a monthly column by Senior Reporter Chris Metinko that covers dealmaking and the flow of venture capital.
So far this year, crypto startups have taken in nearly $16 billion of funding—far outpacing any prior year.
Subscribe to the ¸½½üÉÏÃÅ Daily
While interest and acceptance in crypto has increased among the general public—Bitcoin hit a new all-time high of more than $66,000 this week—that also is true among many traditional venture capital firms that seemingly had a lukewarm feeling for the industry not so long ago.
In the past, crypto used to be dominated by venture firms laser focused on the sector, but this year has seen increased involvement from large VC players often associated with other big categories of consumer and enterprise tech. While firms such as are not newcomers to the crypto space—it was an initial investor in and just this summer announced its third crypto fund, a $2.2 billion tranche—many of the investment world’s big-name cohorts, such as , , and others, are participating in rounds at a rate never seen before.

Leading the charge
Many of these more traditional venture firms were likely drawn into the crypto world by the legitimization of the currency in the last couple of years.
While once questioned by many and thought of as a finance tool used only by cybercriminals, cryptocurrency’s more recent acceptance by large banks, investment institutions and companies seems to have ushered in new investors.
Large financial services companies like and have helped validate the sector, and even is planning its own digital wallet and currency—now called Diem. Large crypto players such as Coinbase—with a market cap of $65.5 billion— and have gone public, further justifying the space and showing venture investors the size of the space and the volume of transactions they handle.
Those events likely have driven many of these large growth firms to double or triple—or 7x in the case of Tiger—their bets in the crypto world from past years.
Many of these firms are not just increasing how many crypto companies they invest in, but are also bringing the large growth-equity checks with them that have helped push venture funding to levels never seen before in the space, helping mint more than 25 new unicorns this year alone.
Those large checks allowed these firms to take the lead—or co-lead—in many of these rounds, and produced high valuations only a few crypto companies previously reached. Firms such as Andreessen Horowitz, Tiger Global and Coatue have led more rounds in crypto this year than ever in their firms’ histories.

Some of the large rounds led or co-led by those not normally associated with the crypto space this year include:
- Miami-based , a crypto payments infrastructure developer, raised $400 million in funding led by Tiger Global and Coatue earlier this month. The deal reportedly will value the company at $3.4 billion.
- New Jersey-based cryptocurrency lending firm raised a $350 million Series D led by Tiger Global, , partners of , and in March at a valuation of $3 billion.
- New York-based , which helps with a variety of business issues around digital assets—from security to compliance to governance—raised a $310 million Series D co-led by , Coatue, , , and at a $2.2 billion valuation in July.
Leading the charge
So far this year, there have been 39 large growth rounds of $100 million or more in crypto—with 14 of them being led or co-led by the firms mentioned above, according to ¸½½üÉÏÃÅ data. Last year saw only seven such rounds, with one being led or co-led by one of those firms, and in 2019, the crypto space saw eight large growth rounds with only one led by those firms.
Those numbers further indicate the amount of cash many of these firms bring to the table in deals—something that until this year crypto had not seen.

The almost $16 billion in venture capital invested in crypto so far this year dwarfs the $3.7 billion invested all of last year. The amount of money in rounds led this year in crypto by Coatue, $1.9 billion; Tiger Global, $1.4 billion; and Andreessen Horowitz, $759 million, alone surpass all of last year’s funding.
While some uncertainty hangs over the industry due to China making crypto transactions illegal and talk of further government regulations in the U.S.—large venture firms now seem more certain than ever that crypto is a large economic opportunity that cannot be missed.
Even if many seemed unsure just a few years ago.
Methodology
Crypto, as defined in this article, includes startups in the ¸½½üÉÏÃÅ dataset that are working within the industries of cryptocurrency and blockchain.
Illustration:
Stay up to date with recent funding rounds, acquisitions, and more with the ¸½½üÉÏÃÅ Daily.


67.1K Followers