Andreessen Horowitz's crypto-focused investment arm has secured $2.2 billion for a new fund, according to recent reporting. This is the fund size we're working with—a genuinely massive amount of capital that, depending on your perspective, either represents unflinching conviction or the kind of capital allocation that venture boards will study in failure case seminars fifteen years from now. The announcement arrives at a moment when, as the sources note, some of the biggest venture capitalists in the space are actively reconsidering their thesis and pivoting toward AI, the industry's current religion.
What makes this move particularly instructive is the timing: we're told crypto is cooling. Not thriving. Not recovering. Cooling. The implicit admission here—buried in the headline itself—is that the asset class has cooled enough that other institutional investors are now treating it as a sinking ship worth abandoning, yet a16z crypto has concluded that $2.2 billion more capital is precisely what the moment demands. This is the venture equivalent of noticing your neighbors are selling their flood-zone homes and deciding to buy a larger one, adding a basement.
a16z has been one of the most aggressive institutional backers of crypto since the firm began making meaningful bets in 2013. The partnership has funded countless blockchain startups, many of which have either evaporated or turned into extended experiments in how long a company can survive on venture capital while generating negative unit economics. Marc Andreessen and Chris Dixon have maintained a public posture of patient, long-term conviction in the space, even as the market cycles and regulatory pressure mounts. Staying the course, in their framing, is a virtue. In ours, it is a choice that history will judge.
The press materials surely emphasize a differentiated thesis—the belief that despite current headwinds, the next generation of blockchain infrastructure and application development remains underfunded. Translation: we still believe in the narrative, and we have enough capital and limited partners patient enough to wait for the next bull run without asking difficult questions about burn rates or product-market fit metrics. The firm is signaling that it sees what others don't, which is what venture capitalists always say right before they don't.
Consider the downside scenarios. Crypto may cool further. Regulatory action could accelerate. The global macro environment could make LPs less patient with multi-year thesis plays. Alternatively, AI will continue absorbing the lion's share of venture attention and capital, starving crypto-focused funds of deal flow and making the task of deploying $2.2 billion into sufficiently large, sufficiently interesting opportunities vastly harder than it was five years ago. If the best crypto startups are now pivoting their pitch decks toward language models and large language model infrastructure, a16z crypto's capital becomes capital looking for a thesis that already lost.
This deal encapsulates the current state of institutional venture capital: some firms pivot toward momentum, others double down on conviction, and a fund size of $2.2 billion is large enough that everyone can claim vindication if even a handful of bets compound into unicorns. The rest of the portfolio, the quiet zeros and modest returns, will be discussed only in limited partner quarterly calls no one really wants to attend.
Staying the course is indeed a captain's prerogative—until it becomes a graveyard.
"Staying the Course"
As the industry pivots to AI, Andreessen Horowitz doubles down on the asset class it helped crash.
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Read more →DumbCapital covers venture capital and M&A in North America with the skepticism these markets have long deserved and rarely received. We are not impressed by large numbers. We are not moved by press releases. All articles are satirical commentary based on real, publicly reported deals. Nothing here is financial advice.