Crypto GPs' Midlife Crisis: No PMF, No LP's Next Check

链捕手Publicado a 2026-06-01Actualizado a 2026-06-01

Resumen

The article "The Midlife Crisis of Crypto GPs: No PMF, No LP's Next Check" analyzes the shifting crypto fundraising landscape. It argues that the era of LPs funding vague "vision" is over; GPs must now offer products with clear Product-Market Fit (PMF) to secure capital. The market has matured. LPs, disillusioned by the last cycle's failures and wary of long lock-up periods, now demand tangible, near-term returns rather than speculative narratives. The proliferation of accessible crypto ETFs and other liquid products has reduced the need for VC blind pools as an entry point. The author categorizes crypto fundraising products into three types: Primary (VC funds, with blind pools or clear pipelines), Liquid (alpha/beta, directional/market-neutral strategies), and CeFi/DeFi Native Yield (crypto-specific mechanisms like staking, farming). Focusing on the Primary market, the piece details why traditional LP rationales for investing in crypto VCs have weakened: easier beta access via ETFs, diminished "access" and "judgement" premiums as LPs build internal teams, and a widespread lack of proven superior returns from GPs. Ultimately, only specific players are likely to remain at the primary VC table: large funds with access to patient endowment capital, family offices/HNWIs investing proprietary capital, the few funds with demonstrable excess returns from the last cycle, and those with clear "deal-making" or ecosystem resource advantages. For others, the path forward is to rebuil...

Author: Yi.Pineapple

LPs no longer buy dreams; GPs must sell products. This article will attempt to categorize current crypto fundraising products into three types: Primary, Liquid, and CeFi / DeFi Native Yield. The first part will focus on Primary: After VC blind pools lose their appeal, who remains at this table, and who must prove themselves anew? The answer is at the end; feel free to scroll down.

Note: This article aims to provide a landscape description of the entire crypto fundraising market. The first part mainly categorizes and explains the market status from a product perspective, while the next part will analyze it more from the LP's perspective. As the author is primarily in the Asian market, this article may have a regional bias.

Market Status

After losing the grand vision, most Crypto GPs who failed to earn excess returns this cycle must now ground themselves and launch a product with PMF (Product-Market Fit). They must either re-prove their ability to generate excess returns for LPs in niche markets or demonstrate their capacity to solve specific problems for LPs/partners to survive.

  • For most GPs, the market has long transitioned from a phase of "buying a future vision" to one of "buying a specific product."
  • LPs have lost patience and no longer want to gaze at the stars and the ocean; they want to see immediate, tangible, and relatively certain opportunities to make money.
  • Crypto LPs have lost trust in the market and are no longer willing to easily believe the "next cycle" narrative (this has been discussed too much and won't be elaborated here). Moreover, many haven't made easy money this cycle; when money becomes harder to earn, investment actions tend to become more cautious and conservative.
  • Most traditional LPs have also completed a round of learning, moving past the storytelling phase. The 2020/2021 bull market was the peak of market FOMO. Dollar funds were cheap (Treasury yield near 0), LPs were making relatively easy money (on the eve of the economic downturn), and Crypto was in an explosive growth phase (with numerous rags-to-riches stories and dreams to sell). Back then, many were willing to impulse buy into the dream even if they didn't fully understand crypto, or they entered strategically to learn.
  • AI and declining labor costs have also changed GPs' niche. The cost for LPs to learn, hire, analyze data, trade, and make small direct investments is decreasing. The trend of LPs transforming into GPs is significant. GPs who only offer vague capabilities like "I understand crypto" will find their value increasingly precarious.
  • In terms of storytelling, unless it's a strong US-based fund with a proven track record pitching visions in specific niches (like a16z leveraging its AI advantage to pitch crypto * AI, or Dragonfly pitching internet capital markets based on its investments in Ethena/Polymarket), opportunities remain. In Asia, this niche is already difficult, as both crypto projects and funds, to some extent, only get the chance to tell stories if they are "White Papers."

Product Landscape

This article divides crypto fundraising products into three main categories for discussion: Primary, Liquid, and CeFi / DeFi Native Yield (Note: This classification is not entirely precise, with some blurry areas between the three). (*This part covers Primary first)

Primary VC:

In terms of transparency, they can roughly be divided into blind pools and those with clear pipelines.

In terms of liquidity, they can roughly be divided into primary and primary-secondary markets.

Liquid:

Divided by source of returns, roughly into alpha-focused (buying the GP's personal skill) and beta-focused (buying industry trends).

Divided by directionality, roughly into directional (buying cycle timing) and market neutral (buying market inefficiencies in immature markets).

There are many ways to categorize; this is just one idea.

CeFi/DeFi Native Yield:

Theoretically, CeFi/DeFi Native Yield could be seen as a source of returns within or spanning both the crypto primary and liquid markets. The main reason for separating it is that from a TradFi investor's perspective, they usually use traditional financial frameworks to understand crypto: for example, crypto VC can be seen as a sub-sector of VC, and staking/lending yield can be analogous to fixed income or cash management products.

However, crypto does have some mechanisms and playbooks not fully mirrored in traditional finance, such as farm-and-dump, points/airdrop farming, protocol incentives, and on-chain liquidity mining. These are more like crypto-native distribution, customer acquisition, and incentive mechanisms, warranting separate discussion.

Secondly, for many Crypto Native Investors, their initial entry point to understanding financial markets was not the traditional equity/bond market, but crypto-native scenarios like exchange wealth management products, staking, DeFi lending, providing liquidity, points/airdrop farming, and basis trades. Therefore, they might not first translate this yield into TradFi terms like fixed income, cash management, or alternative yield. Instead, they more naturally understand it from angles like protocol incentives, liquidity provision, token emission, on-chain risks, counterparty risk, and capital efficiency.

For Crypto Native LPs, accessing this yield doesn't require a GP, maybe just a reliable key account manager.

For TradFi LPs, some institutions are now packaging this yield into fund products to sell to them.

Primary Market

From the perspective of the entire primary market, crypto VC is just a sub-sector under the broad VC category. 2021 was a crazy year; whether crypto or non-crypto, the real returns from that vintage are poor. As a cruel fact, LPs have learnt their lessons and are tired of any product with ultra-long lock-ups (traditional VC often 10 years, crypto VC often 5-10 years). Because without hard locks, they at least have a chance to withdraw some money if circumstances change.

In some sense, crypto is worse off than traditional VC because the grand vision has collapsed. It is not a new industrial revolution, at most a revolution in financial infrastructure. This judgment is not to disparage crypto; financial infrastructure revolution is still important, but it's not as grand as many imagined in the last bull run. Worse, the market was too immature back then; many projects were funded without sufficient due diligence and legal protection. Many failures are a combination of investment failure and founder exit. Too many articles in the industry describe the current misery, so we won't elaborate here.

Investing in VC is like VC investing in startups: it's a power-law business, a lottery-like business. As long as someone is willing to buy lottery tickets, this table won't disappear.

Why LPs invested in crypto VC back then, and why these reasons have weakened now:

1. Invest to capture the beta of the industry

This reason was particularly true for TradFi LPs. It held early on because market choices were few. For outsiders, onboarding, buying tokens, going on-chain, using CEXs, and managing wallets were difficult. They feared losing private keys and CEXs running away. Investing in VC seemed like a more reliable access point.

But today, a traditional LP entering crypto has a full suite of choices: BTC ETF, ETH ETF, crypto ETPs, DATs, custody accounts, SMAs, structured products. More importantly, these products don't require learning on-chain operations; they trade like stocks.

According to CoinShares, global digital asset investment products AUM (ETF/ETP/trust/closed-end funds, etc.) reached about $156.9B in mid-May 2026. This number isn't total industry AUM, just a tally of listed or quotable products, but it shows: gaining crypto exposure no longer requires investing in a VC blind pool.

However, for long-term capital with clear mandates (e.g., endowments, etc.), this reason still applies. For them, positioning in an industry often involves a basket of assets, so there's still likely a 1~2% allocation to Crypto VC.

2. Invest for deal accessibility

This typically applied to crypto LPs and some TradFi LPs with strategic layout visions. Many such LPs didn't have the resources/time/capability to build their own investment teams, so they gave money to GPs hoping for good deal access.

But they later found this reason unstable. When the market was good, GPs themselves had insufficient allocation, and LPs struggled to get real access. When the market was bad, competition wasn't fierce; if you were willing to reach out, getting allocation wasn't that hard.

For traditional LPs, access had another meaning: they knew nothing initially but hoped to enter the ecosystem and gain insider information by investing in crypto-native GPs. It was a form of strategic investment when there was no clear strategic target. Now the situation has changed. Many traditional LPs have either left for hotter fields like AI, or have developed their own internal teams. AI and cheap analysts have narrowed the knowledge gap. New learners still exist, but they learn faster and have more paths. Investing in the primary market with ultra-long lock-ups is not necessarily the optimal choice for them anymore.

3. Invest for superior judgment

This is the trickiest part. In a rapidly evolving market, unless a GP can continuously self-iterate, the judgment premium disappears quickly. The rules change every cycle, but people don't change easily (is this another form of "old habits die hard").

We must face a harsh reality: Most GPs did not prove to LPs they had superior judgment in the last cycle.

For traditional LPs, part of the reason for investing in crypto-native GPs was to educate themselves and learn the industry through the GP's judgment. This typically applied to two types: companies wanting to strategically enter Web3 (like internet giants, etc.), and sophisticated TradFi investors (like traditional GPs or family offices) who wanted to later do their own direct Web3 investments. The learning phase is over. Only a few GPs who have truly proven superior judgment remain on their investment lists.
For crypto LPs, they found it better to lose money themselves than to bet on a GP's judgment. Losing money yourself at least has emotional value, and you don't pay management fees.

4. Invest for deal-making ability

From an investment return perspective, deal-making ability primarily manifests as whether it can achieve good final exits for projects. Ideally, it's best to help projects achieve healthy growth for good secondary market returns. Failing that, the ability to organize the next round of financing is also important (essentially, the difference between relying on retail or large investors to take over).

However, as a form of financial innovation, Crypto sometimes resembles a large-scale capital game. Sometimes, investment is just a form of interest exchange, ensuring aligned interests to make money together relatively safely.

5. Invest for reputation

For some large LPs, money invested in a single VC might only be 1% of their overall portfolio, insignificant. Sometimes they invest in a GP just to be cool (like investing in A16Z). But most GPs aren't in this category.

Who can still stay at the primary table

From a pure capital source perspective, the players most likely to remain at the primary table are:

Funds large enough to enter the mandate of endowments/other similar long-term patient capital. These institutions buy crypto VC as lottery tickets without short-term funding pressure.

FOs, companies, and HNW individuals investing proprietary capital in primary crypto investments. FOs/HNWs are more likely to run accelerator-like, very early-stage funds; companies are more likely to make direct strategic investments/acquisitions.

The few funds that struck gold/bought BTC this cycle and genuinely delivered excess returns to LPs. LPs believe they can win next time.

Funds with clear deal-making ability, possessing ecosystem resources to exchange interests with LPs.

For other players, if trust is lost, it might be better to restart mentally and rebuild trust. Re-prove the ability to generate excess returns for investors in a niche, or provide some specific service/value, then scale based on that.

Preguntas relacionadas

QAccording to the article, why must crypto GPs shift from selling visions to selling products with PMF?

ABecause LPs have lost patience and trust. They no longer want to buy distant 'future visions' or 'next cycle' stories, especially after many failed to achieve outsized returns in the last cycle. LPs now demand immediate, relatively certain opportunities to make money. Therefore, GPs must offer concrete products with Product-Market Fit (PMF) to survive.

QWhat are the three broad categories of crypto fundraising products mentioned in the article?

AThe three broad categories are: 1) Primary (e.g., VC blind pools, funds with clear pipelines, primary and secondary deals), 2) Liquid (e.g., funds focused on alpha/beta, directional/market-neutral strategies), and 3) CeFi / DeFi Native Yield (e.g., staking, lending, airdrop farming, protocol incentives).

QWhy is the 'CeFi/DeFi Native Yield' category discussed separately from Primary and Liquid markets?

AIt's discussed separately for two main reasons. First, from a TradFi perspective, these yields (like staking) are often analogized to fixed income, but crypto has unique mechanics (like airdrop farming) not fully present in traditional finance. Second, for Crypto Native investors, these were their first entry points into finance, so they view them through a crypto-native lens of protocol incentives and on-chain risks, not just as traditional yield products.

QWhat are two reasons mentioned for why LPs' original motivations for investing in crypto VC funds have weakened?

ATwo key reasons are: 1) **Invest to Capture Industry Beta**: This is less valid now as traditional LPs have many easier alternatives for crypto exposure (like BTC/ETH ETFs, ETPs, SMA) without the long lock-ups of VC funds. 2) **Invest for Accessibility/Judgement**: LPs found that during bull markets, good deal access wasn't guaranteed, and during bear markets, it's easier to get. Furthermore, most GPs failed to demonstrate superior investment judgement in the last cycle, and LPs can now build internal teams or learn faster using AI, reducing their reliance on GPs for access and insight.

QBased on the article, which types of players are most likely to remain active in the crypto primary (VC) market?

AThe players most likely to remain are: 1) Large funds that can secure mandates from endowments or other long-term patient capital, treating crypto VC as a lottery ticket. 2) Family offices (FOs), high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs), or companies investing their own capital, often in very early-stage or strategic investments. 3) The few funds that delivered outsized returns in this cycle (e.g., by betting on successful projects like Bitcoin), thus maintaining LP trust. 4) Funds with clear ecosystem resources and deal-making ('攒局') capabilities that can offer value exchange to LPs.

Lecturas Relacionadas

Las ventas de las TPU de Google se revisan al alza en un 50%

Recientemente, los ajustes en las expectativas de envíos de las Unidades de Procesamiento Tensor (TPU) de Google han generado un repunte clave en el sector de la capacidad computacional para IA. Varias instituciones han revisado al alza las previsiones, situando los envíos potenciales para 2027 en 15 millones de unidades, un aumento del 50% respecto a estimaciones anteriores de 10 millones. Este crecimiento impulsará la demanda en toda la cadena de suministro, beneficiando especialmente a sectores como motores ópticos NPO (con una relación 1:1 con las TPU), módulos ópticos 1.6T, conmutadores ópticos OCS, fuentes de alimentación para servidores, fibra óptica & MPO y refrigeración líquida. La refrigeración líquida emerge como un área de cambio significativo y potencial de alto rendimiento. El aumento en el consumo energético de las nuevas TPU hace indispensable esta tecnología, con 2026 marcado como el año de su despliegue masivo en los clústeres de Google. Las limitaciones de capacidad y tecnología de los proveedores tradicionales están creando una ventana de oportunidad para que los fabricantes chinos, con ventajas en velocidad de iteración, capacidad de entrega y disponibilidad de producción, se integren en la cadena de suministro central. El sector de la fibra óptica también ve reforzada su lógica de crecimiento. La demanda explosiva de los centros de datos de IA, unida a los largos ciclos de ampliación de capacidad (18-24 meses para la preforma), está generando un desajuste estructural entre oferta y demanda. Se prevé que las exportaciones chinas de fibra alcancen 200-300 millones de kilómetros de núcleo en 2026. Los acuerdos de compra a largo plazo con los principales proveedores de nube están estabilizando el sector. En conjunto, el aumento en las expectativas de envíos de las TPU de Google está trasladando el foco de inversión en IA desde la mera capacidad del chip hacia la infraestructura de soporte, consolidando la visibilidad de los ingresos para los próximos años en toda la cadena de suministro de computación.

marsbitHace 1 hora(s)

Las ventas de las TPU de Google se revisan al alza en un 50%

marsbitHace 1 hora(s)

Tras la recesión de las historias del ecosistema de las criptomonedas, ¿qué es lo que realmente quiere Wall Street?

El título sugiere un cambio: después de la fiebre de las criptomonedas, Wall Street busca algo distinto. El artículo detalla esta evolución. En 2008, el colapso de Lehman Brothers coincidió con el nacimiento del Bitcoin, una crítica al sistema financiero tradicional. Diecisiete años después, Wall Street ha adoptado la tecnología blockchain, pero no para especular con criptomonedas. Su objetivo es crear una infraestructura financiera controlada, rentable y regulada sobre registros distribuidos. Un ejemplo clave es el fondo BUIDL de BlackRock, que ofrece bonos del Tesoro estadounidense tokenizados. Es accesible solo para grandes inversores, está totalmente respaldado por activos seguros y permite transferencias instantáneas las 24 horas a través de Securitize. Esta empresa, valorada en 12.500 millones de dólares, pronto cotizará en la Bolsa de Nueva York (NYSE), la cual planea un sistema de liquidación de acciones en cadena con Securitize como agente de transferencia. Nasdaq también avanza en esta dirección. Para hacer el Bitcoin atractivo para fondos de pensiones, BlackRock lanzará el ETF BITA. En lugar de buscar ganancias por la revalorización, vende opciones de compra sobre su propio ETF de Bitcoin (IBIT) para generar ingresos por primas, transformando la volatilidad en un pago de intereses mensual predecible. Las stablecoins están siendo redefinidas como herramientas de pago, no de inversión. Empresas como Stripe las usan para pagos transfronterizos instantáneos, y Mastercard integra stablecoins como USDC para liquidaciones de tarjetas fuera del horario laboral. Incluso SWIFT explora un libro mayor compartido para bancos. La ley GENIUS de 2025 consolida este enfoque: prohíbe que las stablecoins paguen intereses y las somete a estrictas normas contra el lavado de dinero, convirtiéndolas en una extensión del sistema del dólar. En resumen, Wall Street está construyendo en la blockchain un espejo de su sistema tradicional: fondos de bonos, estrategias de opciones generadoras de ingresos y redes de pago reguladas. No se trata de reemplazar el sistema centralizado, sino de modernizarlo utilizando la tecnología de la cadena de bloques, integrándolo firmemente con el crédito soberano del dólar.

marsbitHace 1 hora(s)

Tras la recesión de las historias del ecosistema de las criptomonedas, ¿qué es lo que realmente quiere Wall Street?

marsbitHace 1 hora(s)

Trading

Spot
Futuros

Artículos destacados

Cómo comprar CHECK

¡Bienvenido a HTX.com! Hemos hecho que comprar Checkmate (CHECK) sea simple y conveniente. Sigue nuestra guía paso a paso para iniciar tu viaje de criptos.Paso 1: crea tu cuenta HTXUtiliza tu correo electrónico o número de teléfono para registrarte y obtener una cuenta gratuita en HTX. Experimenta un proceso de registro sin complicaciones y desbloquea todas las funciones.Obtener mi cuentaPaso 2: ve a Comprar cripto y elige tu método de pagoTarjeta de crédito/débito: usa tu Visa o Mastercard para comprar Checkmate (CHECK) al instante.Saldo: utiliza fondos del saldo de tu cuenta HTX para tradear sin problemas.Terceros: hemos agregado métodos de pago populares como Google Pay y Apple Pay para mejorar la comodidad.P2P: tradear directamente con otros usuarios en HTX.Over-the-Counter (OTC): ofrecemos servicios personalizados y tipos de cambio competitivos para los traders.Paso 3: guarda tu Checkmate (CHECK)Después de comprar tu Checkmate (CHECK), guárdalo en tu cuenta HTX. Alternativamente, puedes enviarlo a otro lugar mediante transferencia blockchain o utilizarlo para tradear otras criptomonedas.Paso 4: tradear Checkmate (CHECK)Tradear fácilmente con Checkmate (CHECK) en HTX's mercado spot. Simplemente accede a tu cuenta, selecciona tu par de trading, ejecuta tus trades y monitorea en tiempo real. Ofrecemos una experiencia fácil de usar tanto para principiantes como para traders experimentados.

814 Vistas totalesPublicado en 2026.01.19Actualizado en 2026.06.02

Cómo comprar CHECK

Discusiones

Bienvenido a la comunidad de HTX. Aquí puedes mantenerte informado sobre los últimos desarrollos de la plataforma y acceder a análisis profesionales del mercado. A continuación se presentan las opiniones de los usuarios sobre el precio de CHECK (CHECK).

活动图片