Original Author: Ben Weiss
Original Compilation: Deep Tide TechFlow
Guide: Fortune reporters obtained a batch of previously undisclosed financial disclosure documents from the SEC for crypto VCs. The data shows that the Assets Under Management (AUM) of top firms like Paradigm, Pantera, a16z crypto, and Multicoin shrank across the board in 2025. However, the shrinkage isn't all bad news—a16z crypto returned money to LPs at the market peak, with its first fund's DPI reaching 5.4x. The only firm that bucked the trend was Haun Ventures, which capitalized on the stablecoin sector through BVNK's acquisition by Mastercard.
The leading players in crypto VC couldn't escape the market crash of 2025.
Fortune reporter Ben Weiss obtained a set of previously undisclosed investment advisor financial disclosure documents from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The data is straightforward: the AUM of top firms like Paradigm and Pantera Capital collectively shrunk in 2025.
But the 2025 downturn pushed it back down. From 2024 to 2025, Multicoin's AUM was more than halved, dropping to approximately $2.7 billion. Since BTC began its plunge in October 2025, crypto assets have retreated across the board, and a structure like Multicoin's, which operates both hedge funds and VC funds, was hit particularly hard.
Additional context: Multicoin co-founder Kyle Samani left the company in February of this year to focus on other areas of technology investment.
Pantera: Five Portfolio Companies IPO, Capital Returned to LPs
Pantera Capital's AUM also shrank, but similar to a16z, part of the reason was主动 distributions back to LPs.
This institution, founded by former a16z crypto partner Katie Haun, saw its AUM increase by over 30% year-over-year, approaching $2.5 billion. On one hand, it was due to betting on the right sector—its investment in the stablecoin company BVNK was acquired by Mastercard for up to $1.8 billion. On the other hand, Haun Ventures itself also raised a new $1 billion fund in 2025.
Although AUM has shrunk, leading institutions have not stopped:
Paradigm is raising a new fund of up to $1.5 billion. a16z crypto is raising up to $2 billion. Dragonfly just closed its fourth fund of $650 million. Post-publication correction from Fortune: A Dragonfly spokesperson actually responded, confirming the data is "accurate" and stating "we are actively deploying capital".
Spokespersons for Paradigm, Pantera, a16z crypto, Multicoin, and Haun Ventures all declined to comment.
The Cyclical Destiny of Crypto VCs
The original article ends here, but a few background points are worth adding.
Crypto VCs are fundamentally different from traditional tech VCs. Traditional VCs invest in equity, with exits via IPO or M&A. Many crypto startups have their own tokens, exposing the VC's holdings directly to token price volatility.
According to Pantera Capital's outlook report earlier this year, the total crypto market cap excluding BTC (and excluding ETH and stablecoins) fell by about 44% from its late 2024 high. But following historical patterns, bear markets are also windows of opportunity for buying the dip. The密集 fund-raising by several leading institutions at this moment is a bet on the next cycle.
According to a previous Fortune exclusive, a16z crypto's fifth fund is planned to complete fundraising in the first half of 2026, led by Chris Dixon, and will continue to fully bet on the blockchain direction. Paradigm's new fund, according to The Wall Street Journal, will expand into AI and robotics technology. The divergence in the two strategies is clear: a16z continues all-in on crypto, while Paradigm chooses to hedge across sectors.






