Three deals last February ate up nearly half of all the money raised in crypto that month. Just three. That single fact tells you more about where crypto fundingThree deals last February ate up nearly half of all the money raised in crypto that month. Just three. That single fact tells you more about where crypto funding

Crypto Funding Soars 50%, But Most Startups Are Getting Shut Out: Analysts

2026/03/10 14:00
3 min read
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Three deals last February ate up nearly half of all the money raised in crypto that month. Just three. That single fact tells you more about where crypto funding stands right now than the headline numbers do.

A Shrinking Pool Of Big Bets

According to data from research firm Messari, total crypto fundraising climbed almost 50% in the 12 months ending March 2026 compared to the year before.

But the number of individual deals fell 46% over the same period. Fewer rounds. Bigger checks. The average deal size hit $34 million — a 272% jump from a year earlier. The number of active investors dropped by about a third, down to 3,225.

Those three February standouts were Tether’s $200 million investment into online marketplace Whop, a $75 million Series B for sports prediction platform Novig led by Pantera Capital, and a $70 million Series B for ARQ, a Latin American fintech app built around stablecoins, backed by Sequoia Capital. Together, they accounted for 44% of the close to $800 million raised across the entire month.

Messari describes the pattern as capital concentration driven by late-stage and strategic mega-rounds. A handful of well-positioned companies are pulling in enormous sums while smaller players scramble for scraps.

Early-stage fundraising, reports say, remains active but scattered. Messari pointed to Interstate’s $1.5 million round, which pulled in more than 15 backers — a mix of firms like Bloccelerate VC and individual angel investors. That kind of fragmented, small-dollar activity is happening in volume. But it exists in a different world from the mega-rounds grabbing the headlines.

The VC Drought No One Is Talking About

Here is the part the headline buries. Messari CEO Eric Turner flagged a problem that goes beyond deal counts: outside of Dragonfly Capital, no major crypto venture firm has recently closed a new fund. Dragonfly closed a $650 million fund with a focus on real-world assets, but it stands largely alone. Turner put it bluntly — the industry needs fresh capital.

Crypto Investors Stay Active As New Funds Decline

That matters because venture funds have a shelf life. Firms raise a fund, deploy it over several years, then raise again. When new fund closes dry up, the money flowing into deals eventually does too.

The 50% year-over-year gain may look strong on paper, but it is being powered by existing pools that are not being replenished at the same rate.

Coinbase Ventures, QUBIC Labs, and Somnia ranked as the three most active crypto investors over the past three months, based on Messari data.

Featured image from KuCoin, chart from TradingView

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