Blockchain Capital raises $580M for two new funds

Venture capital firm’s record funding comes as space is “teeming with exceptional innovators” despite bear market, execs say

article-image

Pepi Stojanovski/Shutterstock modified by Blockworks

share

Blockchain Capital has raised $580 million for two new investment funds.

One is the San Francisco-based company’s sixth early-stage fund — in line with such funds it has launched previously — while the other is its first so-called Opportunity Fund.

The $580 million marks the company’s largest raise in its ten-year history, according to Blockchain Capital executives Spencer Bogart, Bart Stephens and Jason Di Piazza.

Such funding coming during a bear market “reflects our investors’ trust in our long-term perspective,” they said in a Monday blog post — adding that innovation often thrives during tough economic times.

“Despite the downturn in liquid pricing, we see a space that is teeming with exceptional innovators and founders, each aligned with the first principles of open source innovation, credible neutrality and censorship resistance,” Stephens told Blockworks.  

The firm’s first Opportunity Fund was conceived as “a post-dislocation investment vehicle,” according to Blockchain Capital founder Bart Stephens. It was designed with a “high-conviction, concentrated mandate” to pursue financing opportunities at the later stage, he added.

Stephens told Blockworks that with the inflow of capital at the seed and pre-seed stage during the bull market in 2020 and 2021, valuations became distorted at the later stages. 

“We felt generalists and newcomers misjudged the opportunity-set,” he added. “In contrast, today the fundraising environment for late stage crypto companies is barren, creating a unique and compelling opportunity for targeted capital that understands Web3 technology.”

Crypto private financing declined 75% in the first half of 2023 compared to the prior year period, according to data from advisory firm Architect Partners. While the number of financings has remained fairly flat in recent quarters, the amount raised has dropped, particularly for later-stage rounds.

Blockchain Capital’s limited partners include “forward-thinking” university endowments, private foundations, financial institutions, sovereign wealth funds and US pension plans, such as the Teacher Retirement System of Texas.

Visa and PayPal are strategic investors of the firm, but have not finalized commitments for Blockchain Capital’s latest funds.

The company declined to comment further on specific investors.

Where the opportunities lie

Blockchain Capital has invested more capital into innovators over the past 20 months than at any time in its history, executives said in the Monday blog post. 

During the span, it has focused on investments in infrastructure, gaming, DeFi and “consumer and social sectors.” 

A key theme has been scalability, as reflected in the company’s investment into zero-knowledge proof tech pioneers Matter Labs and Risc Zero, Stephens told Blockworks.

Matter Labs’ zkSync Era — an EVM-compatible zk proof-based rollup with open-source code — opened on mainnet to all users in March.

Read more: ‘ZK embodies integrity, privacy and magic’: Matter Labs

Risc Zero said last month it would open-source its “Type 0” zkEVM, Zeth, in an effort to make zk infrastructure more accessible to developers.

Blockchain Capital is also exploring opportunities across consumer-focused segments as blockchains have the potential to democratize digital ownership and let individuals monetize online activities and contributions. 

“Recent technical improvements are creating smoother onboarding and improved user experiences, creating potential tailwinds to adoption and opening different avenues for distribution,” Stephens said. 

The company has also invested in Web3 social platforms and gaming during the bear market. From a research standpoint, it has focused on privacy, loyalty programs, security and the intersection of artificial intelligence and crypto. 

“Though we maintain an open-minded approach, we are not yet fully convinced of their immediate viability due to existing challenges in technology, value accrual or market demand,” he said.


Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters:

Tags

Decoding crypto and the markets. Daily, with Byron Gilliam.

Upcoming Events

Old Billingsgate

Mon - Wed, October 13 - 15, 2025

Blockworks’ Digital Asset Summit (DAS) will feature conversations between the builders, allocators, and legislators who will shape the trajectory of the digital asset ecosystem in the US and abroad.

recent research

Unlocked by Template (10).png

Research

Innovations on Aptos’ technical design through Raptr, Shardines, and Zaptos approach near-optimal latency and throughput by unlocking 100% utilization of network resources, with the capacity to settle 260k transactions per second with latencies less than 800ms. The original Move language was revamped with the launch of Move 2, supporting more expressivity in smart contract logic and a scalable ability to interact with high volume datasets. The ecosystem has benefitted from strong asset inflows, now hosting over $1.3B in stablecoins, $450M in bridged BTC, and $530M in RWAs. Activity in the Aptos ecosystem has grown notably over the past year, with monthly application revenue reaching ~$835k and monthly DEX volumes growing to over $5B, both at new all time highs.

article-image

Interchain Labs will focus on sovereign L1s and institutional demand, abandoning plans for smart contracts on the Cosmos Hub

article-image

Also, only three tokens have outperformed bitcoin so far this year: XMR, HYPE and SKY

article-image

The fund group has submitted proposals in recent months for other funds that would hold litecoin, solana, XRP, HBAR, Sui and others

article-image

Momentum’s back — BTC leads, risk assets follow

article-image

Ondo Finance’s acquisition of blockchain development company Strangelove follows its buy of Oasis Pro

article-image

Cryptocurrency and stock traders alike had a lot to unpack Wednesday