Paradigm's new $1.2B AI fund signals a broader reallocation of venture capital that's leaving early-stage crypto startups starved for cash
Paradigm helped define what a crypto-native venture capital firm looks like. Founded in 2018, it raised a $2.5B flagship fund in 2021 at the height of the crypto bull run, then followed with an $850M early-stage blockchain fund in 2024. So when the firm closed a $1.2B fund focused on artificial intelligence and robotics on July 8, 2026, it wasn’t a quiet pivot. It was a signal.
The numbers tell the story #
Crypto VC fundraising has hit a wall. In Q1 2026, just eight new crypto funds collectively raised roughly $1.1B, the lowest quarterly new-fund count since Q3 2020.
Annualized, that pace implies roughly $4B raised across all of 2026, compared to an estimated $8.75B in 2025. That’s not a dip. That’s the market cutting its allocation in half.
Meanwhile, unique crypto VC deal activity dropped to a six-year low by Q2 2026, with funding for crypto startups falling roughly 13% in the first half of 2026 versus the same period a year prior.
The contrast with AI is almost uncomfortable to look at. Digital Asset Treasury vehicles raised over $15B through mid-2025 alone, dwarfing traditional crypto VC equity raises of roughly $6B to $8B over the same window.
Why this is happening now #
Three forces are converging at once. First, interest rates. When money is expensive to borrow, investors become pickier. Second, regulatory drag. The compliance overhead for crypto-focused funds remains significant, and uncertainty around how digital assets will ultimately be classified and taxed in major markets adds friction that AI investments simply don’t carry. Third, AI is genuinely capturing investor imagination. Paradigm’s fund closed at $1.2B, and limited partners clearly signed off on the thesis.
Paradigm’s leadership has been direct about one thing: this isn’t a withdrawal from crypto. The firm still maintains its digital asset focus across its prior funds, and major players like a16z have continued closing dedicated crypto vehicles in parallel.
What this means for crypto markets and founders #
The sectors still attracting attention are telling. Stablecoins, infrastructure, and tokenization are consistently cited as areas where institutional interest remains warm. Founders building in those spaces are finding a more receptive audience than those pitching consumer-facing crypto apps or speculative token economies.
For the broader VC ecosystem, Paradigm’s move may accelerate a hybrid strategy already taking shape across the industry. Firms are increasingly structuring mandates that allow investment across AI, crypto infrastructure, and the intersection of the two — things like decentralized compute networks, AI agents transacting on-chain, or tokenized data markets. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our