Investor interest in crypto startups is regaining strength—though not in volume.
In the first quarter of 2025, venture capitalists poured $6 billion into the digital asset space, more than doubling last year’s Q1 total, even as the number of deals tumbled.
New data from PitchBook shows that only 405 crypto-related investments were made in Q1, down nearly 40% from the 670 recorded a year ago. Despite the slowdown in deal activity, capital commitments surged, driven by large bets on exchanges, asset managers, and infrastructure projects.
According to PitchBook analyst Robert Le, the market’s appetite remains firmly rooted in practical crypto applications. Nearly $2.6 billion went into financial service firms alone, while infrastructure ventures secured close to $1 billion. Web3 companies followed with $231 million across two dozen deals.
The upcoming IPO of Circle—stablecoin issuer and payments heavyweight—is expected to serve as a critical stress test for investor sentiment. A strong debut, particularly at or above the rumored $4–5 billion valuation, could shift benchmarks across the industry and draw new late-stage capital.
Meanwhile, stablecoins have quietly expanded their market presence, growing from $202 billion to $227 billion in Q1. Le sees this as proof that dollar-based settlement remains crypto’s strongest and most insulated use case, even as volatility affects other areas of the market.
Looking ahead, areas like payments, custody, and key management may attract growing investor attention, especially in the wake of February’s $1.4 billion Bybit exploit—one of the largest hacks in crypto history.
Circle, the company behind the USDC stablecoin, made a dramatic entrance onto the New York Stock Exchange on June 5, with its stock skyrocketing 167% by market close.
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