Lattice Capital Founder: Crypto VC, Believing is Seeing

marsbit2026-04-23 tarihinde yayınlandı2026-04-23 tarihinde güncellendi

Özet

In the face of a significant contraction in crypto VC funding, industry observers debate whether this signals a decline in crypto's appeal or a sign of market maturation. While some investors are leaving crypto entirely or diversifying into other high-growth sectors like AI, Lattice Capital co-founder Regan Bozman argues for staying the course. He expresses skepticism about crypto funds successfully pivoting to AI or deep tech, citing intense competition and lack of inherent advantage. Bozman believes the current crypto downturn, with fewer founders and less capital, actually presents a prime investment opportunity for those who are truly committed. He contends that the crypto financial infrastructure is only 5% built, with massive growth potential remaining in areas like non-USD stablecoins and crypto-based financial applications in global markets. The key is to focus on early-stage, specialized opportunities that larger funds may overlook.

Author: Regan Bozman, Co-founder of Lattice Capital

Compiled by: Hu Tao, ChainCatcher

This week's "hot topic" on Crypto Twitter seems to be widespread concern: whether the shrinking available funds mean that cryptocurrency is no longer as attractive. The scale of crypto venture capital is clearly contracting—this is indisputable.

As for why this is happening and what it means, there is more debate. Rob Hadick's view is that crypto venture capital is concentrating towards the best founders and the best funds, which is precisely a sign of the industry's maturity. Meanwhile, Meltem believes that the reasons for the contraction are (a) a lack of high-quality early-stage founders, and (b) compared to other high-growth industries, the scalable surface area of cryptocurrency is too small.

I don't have much to add to this specific debate. Clearly, there are still outstanding founders building projects in the crypto space. But compared to 2021, there are far fewer founders starting businesses in crypto now, while significantly more are venturing into other areas like AI. Is this due to a capital shortage, or has this gap led to a capital shortage? Both are likely true.

Undoubtedly, the job is also much harder than before. As capital flooded in, returns were compressed. Tokens also face more challenges structurally than they did from 2017 to 2021. Since the AI boom, there have been far fewer allocators willing to invest in crypto venture funds. If you aren't truly passionate about crypto VC, now is a great time to do something else.

Last week, I went to El Segundo (Translator's note: a city in California) for Disciplus's Demo Day, which focused on industrial tech. I was surprised to find many crypto investors there. It felt like running into another married friend at a bar—neither of us should have been there. Industrial tech isn't a focus for Lattice (I am a personal investor in Disciplus), but I wanted to better understand the dynamics of the non-crypto venture market.

Understanding how crypto investors are responding to the current market environment is the most interesting question, as it directly affects the future landscape of crypto capital markets. Clearly, some are heading to "Gundo" (nickname for El Segundo). But not everyone is doing so.

I currently see three main ways crypto investors are responding: The first is to leave entirely and do something completely different. This could mean taking an operational role in crypto or work entirely outside of crypto. As many zero-interest-era funds continue to die off, departures from established funds are becoming more common across the venture industry. Yes, the mega-funds are growing in assets under management, but they are unlikely to expand their team sizes fast enough to offset the number of funds that are dying.

Some crypto fund managers have done well enough that they can now invest in whatever they want, no longer bound by their fund's mandate. Kyle Samani is the most public example. Samani reminds us that while underperformance might push someone down this path, there are also clearly some exceptionally performing investors who simply find more interesting problems to solve elsewhere.

The second is to continue doing venture capital within their fund but broaden the investment scope. This is easier for some than for others. Not all funds active in crypto are explicitly crypto-only. My sense is that Meltem's investment scope was always broader than crypto, so teams like Crucible can directly shift their focus to other areas.

Paradigm was very clear at its founding about positioning itself as a crypto fund—now they do "frontier tech." Many funds (including ours) have explicit mandates to invest in digital assets and related businesses. Fund documents often write definitions broadly, but I think for most crypto fund managers, there is a very clear understanding with their LPs (Limited Partners): they represent "crypto exposure."

Therefore, these peer managers either amend their LPA (Limited Partnership Agreement) to do non-crypto business, get verbal agreement from LPs, or do it sneakily. This is clearly a spectrum—you could argue that all AI businesses will eventually use stablecoins, so it counts as "crypto business." I'm not saying that view is correct, just that the lines can be blurry.

The third option is to stick to the core business. If you believe the industry will grow another 100x in the future, with less competition and lower valuations, now is a great time to invest. This is the path we have chosen.

Which Door Hides the Wealth?

I understand the appeal of the second option, but I am skeptical. Venture capital is both an extremely competitive industry and follows a power law. There's a reason Y Combinator captures around 90% of accelerator returns globally. Top venture capital funds tend to get access to the best deals, which drive most of the returns. This means that unless you are the best, participating is pointless; and becoming the best is really, really hard.

The most common derivative area from cryptocurrency is artificial intelligence. AI is huge, growing rapidly, and will change the world. It is almost certainly the most competitive venture capital market of the past two decades. More and more money is pouring into companies with higher valuations (yet these companies have many questions about their business models). You are competing against AI-focused funds, all generalist venture capital funds, and almost every source of venture capital on the planet. Therefore, I highly doubt that most crypto funds actually have any competitive advantage. Sure, there will be exceptions, and some crypto fund managers have seriously considered AI investment strategies. But I think most crypto funds will fade into obscurity.

Areas like deep/industrial tech, such as El Segundo , might be less competitive, but they are not without challenges. You are leaving the historically most capital-efficient industry (open-source protocols) to enter a highly capital-intensive one. Moreover, these industries also require specific technical skills for analysis.

Remaining Opportunities in Crypto

This brings us back to the crypto space, which in some ways reflects... the current broader venture capital market trend, where a minority of companies raise a larger proportion of available funds. The market is polarizing. There used to be many crypto funds in the $100 million to $200 million range. Now it's mainly divided into early-stage specialized funds below $70 million and large platform funds. The main difference between crypto venture capital and traditional venture capital is that crypto venture capital is shrinking, while traditional venture capital is growing at an astonishing rate.

Our focus remains on seeding. Opportunities in industries or categories that large institutional enterprises have not yet realized. "The current crypto market obviously faces many challenges, but I think with a little attention, one can find just as many opportunities. In many markets around the world, crypto-based financial applications are flourishing. The circulation of non-USD stablecoins is still minimal. We might have only completed 5% of upgrading the financial system—therefore, there are still many opportunities waiting to be discovered in the future."

İlgili Sorular

QWhat are the three main ways crypto investors are responding to the current market environment, according to the article?

AThe three main ways are: 1) Leaving the space entirely for different roles, 2) Continuing to do venture capital but expanding their investment scope beyond crypto, and 3) Staying the course and continuing to invest in crypto.

QWhy does the author, Regan Bozman, express skepticism about crypto funds expanding into AI investments?

AHe is skeptical because AI is an extremely competitive market, and he doubts most crypto funds possess any competitive advantage. They would be competing against dedicated AI funds, all generalist VCs, and nearly every other source of venture capital.

QWhat is the author's and Lattice Capital's chosen strategy for navigating the current crypto market?

ATheir chosen strategy is the third option: to stay the course and continue investing in crypto, believing the industry will grow 100x from here with less competition and lower valuations.

QWhat does the author identify as a key difference between the crypto VC landscape and the broader traditional VC market?

AThe key difference is that the crypto VC market is shrinking, whereas the traditional VC market is growing at a staggering rate.

QDespite the challenges, what areas of opportunity in crypto does the author point to?

AThe author points to opportunities in seed-stage investments, crypto-based financial applications thriving in global markets, the nascent state of non-USD stablecoins, and the belief that only about 5% of the work to upgrade the financial system has been done.

İlgili Okumalar

Warsh's First Conundrum: Rate Cuts, Inflation, and a Fractured Fed

Walsh's First Dilemma: Rate Cuts, Inflation, and a Divided Fed Kevin Warsh officially assumed the Fed Chairmanship on May 15th, inheriting a central bank deeply divided over inflation. Contrary to market expectations of a dovish stance due to his appointment by President Trump, Warsh's historical record shows early and consistent hawkish concerns about inflation. The Fed he leads is fractured, with three FOMC members recently dissenting against even hinting at future rate cuts. The immediate challenge is surging inflation. While the Iran-related oil shock is a temporary factor, core CPI and services inflation are accelerating, showing signs of becoming entrenched—echoing the Fed's 2022 "transitory" misstep. Warsh faces the task of building consensus within a committee where several members believe policy may not be restrictive enough, especially if the neutral interest rate (r-star) is higher than currently estimated. Politically, Warsh is caught between Trump's desire for rate cuts and the economic reality of persistent price pressures. Any move perceived as bowing to political pressure could undermine Fed independence. Market implications are significant. Long-term Treasury yields (e.g., 30-year at 5.19%) could rise further, especially if the June FOMC statement hints at possible tightening. Tech stocks face continued valuation pressure from higher rates. The key variable is progress in Iran negotiations; a breakthrough before the June meeting could temporarily ease oil-driven inflation, but stubborn services inflation would remain. All eyes are on Warsh's first post-FOMC press conference on June 17th. His wording on inflation and policy will reveal how much the market has mispriced his stance and the Fed's likely path forward.

marsbit20 dk önce

Warsh's First Conundrum: Rate Cuts, Inflation, and a Fractured Fed

marsbit20 dk önce

Harvard and Others Exit, Six Core Talents Depart in a Month: What's Happening to Ethereum?

Ethereum faces significant internal and external pressures, marked by a wave of high-profile departures from its core development team and a loss of confidence from major institutional investors. Within four months, at least seven key figures—including researchers, protocol leads, and a former executive director—have left the Ethereum Foundation. This exodus, partly triggered by controversy over a new "mission statement" requiring employee sign-off, risks derailing critical roadmap upgrades like PeerDAS and Verkle trees, and has already contributed to delays in the planned Glamsterdam upgrade. Compounding the internal instability, major institutions are reducing their exposure. Goldman Sachs slashed its iShares Ethereum Trust holdings by approximately 70%, and Harvard's endowment fund completely exited its $87 million Ethereum ETF position. Concurrently, the Ethereum Foundation itself has been unstaking and selling ETH for "treasury rebalancing," further unsettling the market. These challenges emerge as Ethereum's competitive dominance erodes. Its share of the total DeFi market has fallen to around 54%, with rivals like Solana and Base gaining ground. In fee revenue, it was recently outpaced by newer chains like Hyperliquid. Furthermore, a trend of institutions exploring proprietary or hybrid blockchains (exemplified by Circle's Arc) threatens Ethereum's position as the premier settlement layer for institutional assets. While founder Vitalik Buterin's vision for Ethereum as a secure, decentralized "technical sanctuary" and "world computer" remains clear, its realization is threatened by the concurrent loss of execution capability, institutional patience, and market share during a critical competitive phase.

链捕手1 saat önce

Harvard and Others Exit, Six Core Talents Depart in a Month: What's Happening to Ethereum?

链捕手1 saat önce

IOSG | After the Halving of Developer Count: Crypto Isn't Dead, It's Just Handing Over Talent to AI

IOSG Report: Crypto's Developer Exodus Masks a "Talent Deleveraging" and Migration to AI The number of monthly active crypto developers on GitHub has roughly halved from its 2022 peak to around 23,000. This decline is not a sign of industry collapse but a "talent deleveraging." The exodus consists largely of newcomers who entered during the bull market, while the cohort of established developers (2+ years of experience) has grown to a record high, now contributing about 70% of the code. These core builders are consolidating in ecosystems with real users and activity, like Bitcoin and Solana. The crypto industry has forged a unique skill set: building operational, trusted systems from scratch in environments with no external authority, near-zero tolerance for error, and missing rules. This involves creating trust through pure code/mechanisms and making judgments under profound technical and economic uncertainty. This capability is finding new, high-value applications in the AI era, which faces structurally similar problems: trust in opaque autonomous systems, a lack of governance frameworks, and coordination among self-interested AI agents. Key migration patterns include: 1. **Direct Hardware/Infrastructure Translation:** Projects like CoreWeave pivoted from GPU mining to AI compute supply. 2. **Mechanism Design & Trust Engineering:** Crypto's experience in decentralized coordination and incentive design (e.g., via tokenomics, staking/slashing) is being applied to critical AI challenges: * **Compute Aggregation & Verification:** Solving trust and efficiency problems in decentralized GPU networks (e.g., Hyperbolic). * **AI Agent Governance:** Using cryptoeconomic mechanisms to align the behavior of multiple autonomous AI agents (e.g., EigenLayer's approach). * **Autonomous Agent Payments:** Leveraging stablecoins and programmable money for fast, permissionless micro-transactions between AI agents (e.g., x402 protocol). The builder's role is evolving from "writing smart contracts" to "designing trust mechanisms for autonomous AI systems." This convergence is reflected in hiring trends at major firms and significant capital allocation from top venture funds like Paradigm and a16z into the crypto-AI intersection. While regional approaches differ—with the US focusing more on foundational protocol innovation and Asia on application-layer integration—the core thesis remains: the systemic skills honed in crypto's trustless environments are becoming a scarce and critical asset for scaling AI.

marsbit1 saat önce

IOSG | After the Halving of Developer Count: Crypto Isn't Dead, It's Just Handing Over Talent to AI

marsbit1 saat önce

İşlemler

Spot
Futures
活动图片