Paradigm's New Arithmetic: When Crypto Can't Hold 12.7 Billion, AI Becomes the Answer
Let's start with an arithmetic problem.
A VC manages $12.7 billion in assets. Its previous fund raised $850 million. The fund before that was $2.5 billion.
The direction is the opposite.
The scale is shrinking, not because it can't raise money, but because there aren't enough worthy projects to invest in. Now, this company wants to reverse this trend; where does it need to look for the next sufficiently large pool?
On February 28, 2026, The Wall Street Journal provided the answer: cryptocurrency investment firm Paradigm is raising a new fund of up to $1.5 billion, expanding its investment focus to artificial intelligence, robotics, and other cutting-edge technologies.
This is not a sudden decision. It is an arithmetic problem that has been calculated for a long time, with the answer only revealed today.
Let's lay out the numbers
In 2025, the total global VC investment in cryptocurrency reached $49.8 billion. It sounds like good news. But if we only look at this one number, we might misjudge something.
In the same year, the number of crypto VC deals plummeted by about 60% year-on-year, from approximately 2,900 deals to 1,200 deals. Money is increasing, but projects are decreasing. The funds flowing into the crypto space are increasingly concentrated in a few large transactions rather than being spread across hundreds of early-stage projects.
For the vast majority of small and medium-sized funds, this might not be a problem. But for Paradigm, it is a structural issue. Paradigm manages $12.7 billion in assets and is one of the largest dedicated crypto VCs in the world. Its problem is not a lack of projects, but a lack of enough, sufficiently large, and early-stage projects that can deploy this level of capital while maintaining its expected returns.
In 2021, Paradigm raised the largest cryptocurrency fund in history, totaling $2.5 billion. In 2024, it announced its third fund, which raised $850 million, only one-third of the previous fund.
This contraction is not a sign of weakness; it is a proactive adaptation to a narrower market. But it also indicates one thing: relying solely on crypto, Paradigm has found it increasingly difficult to find a way forward for its scale.
After FTX, Paradigm began to ask a question
To understand today's $1.5 billion, we must first go back to November 2022.
That month, FTX collapsed. Sam Bankman-Fried's empire turned to ashes in a matter of days, taking countless institutional funds with it. Paradigm had a book investment of $278 million in FTX. Ultimately, it went to zero.
For a top-tier institution known for being "research-driven" and priding itself on its technical vision, this was not just a bad debt. It was a public judgment error that needed to be explained to LPs, to the market, and to itself.
What happened next seemed quite strange at the time. In 2023, someone noticed that Paradigm's official website had quietly changed: all mentions of "crypto" and "Web3" were removed and replaced with the more neutral term "technology investment."
This change had no official announcement but was quickly discovered by the community, sparking intense discussion. The biggest concern was: Is Paradigm trying to run away?
Co-founder Matt Huang had to come out to extinguish the flames. He tweeted that Paradigm "has never been more excited about crypto than now," adding, "The developments in AI are too remarkable to ignore. Framing AI and crypto as zero-sum competition is a popular but incorrect narrative. We do not agree. Both are interesting and will have a lot of overlap."
This was a public relations clarification, but it also revealed a real truth: Paradigm was already seriously considering AI internally.
After FTX, the question that had to be answered was: What to bet on for the next decade?
Matt Huang has already been working on the answer
If we only look at Paradigm's official announcements, the company's transformation seems to have just begun today. But if we look at Matt Huang's actual actions over the past two years, we find that he has long been more than just a crypto investor.
In 2024, Paradigm invested $50 million in Nous Research, an AI infrastructure company focused on the research and development of open-source large language models. This is not a small "exploratory" investment; $50 million is a serious bet for Paradigm's scale.
In February of this year, Paradigm also co-released EVMbench with OpenAI, a benchmarking tool for assessing the ability of different AI models to detect and fix smart contract security vulnerabilities. The core infrastructure of cryptocurrency meets AI capability assessment, bringing these two matters to the same table.
At the same time, Matt Huang is also building another company: Tempo. This is a stablecoin payment infrastructure company, and Matt Huang is a co-founder, with his board membership at Stripe aligning closely with this direction. In 2025, Stripe established a strategic partnership with Paradigm, and that year, Stripe also launched a stablecoin payment product.
Putting all this together, Matt Huang is not "going to invest in AI"; he has been living in the intersection of AI and crypto for at least two years.
What he is betting on is not AI or crypto, but that these two things will collide at some point. When AI agents start needing to execute transactions on-chain and when robots require a programmable currency system, that collision point will be Paradigm's next main battlefield.
Why AI×Crypto, and not a transformation to AI
Paradigm's entry into AI does not mean it is competing with a16z or Sequoia for the same batch of projects.
There is a narrative error that is easy to make here: understanding Paradigm's new fund as "another VC turning to AI." But if it were just that, it would have no advantage; the general AI space is already crowded with traditional VC giants that have deeper backgrounds and stronger resources.
The real logic of Paradigm is: it does not intend to fight for a piece of the general AI pie; it wants to bet on the intersection that others have not yet fully recognized.
AI agents are one of the hottest concepts today. These intelligent agents that can autonomously execute tasks have begun to replace human labor in various scenarios: searching, coding, analyzing data, managing processes. But there is one thing they have not solved: money.
When an AI agent needs to make payments, receive payments, or transfer funds between different services, what does it use? PayPal? Bank accounts? These systems are designed for humans, requiring identity verification and manual authorization, which are incompatible with the logic of machine autonomy.
But stablecoins can. Smart contracts can. Programmable money can.
This is why Matt Huang is simultaneously working on Tempo (stablecoin payments) and investing in Nous Research (AI infrastructure): he believes these two lines will eventually converge, and Paradigm has the ability to bet on both sides simultaneously and capture the maximum return at the moment of convergence.
This is not a transformation; it is an expansion. An expansion into a space he believes others have not fully understood yet.
LPs need a new story
There is also a practical aspect that must be clarified.
Paradigm's LPs, those institutions and individuals who entrusted their money to it for management, saw the ambition of raising $2.5 billion in 2021 and then witnessed a contraction to $850 million in 2024.
The disparity in fund sizes between the two rounds requires an explanation. More importantly, it needs a persuasive narrative for the next fund.
"Continue investing in early-stage crypto projects," this story has become difficult to sustain the $1.5 billion fundraising target in 2024. But "leveraging crypto's technological advantages to cut into cutting-edge technology in the hottest era of AI and robotics" can.
In 2025, 61% of the total global VC investment flowed into the AI space, totaling approximately $258.7 billion. This is the largest pool in today's venture capital field. The $1.5 billion that Paradigm is raising this time is to draw from this pool, rather than continue to guard a shrinking lake. For LPs, this is a bigger story and a more credible growth logic.
Now we can return to 2023. That year, when Matt Huang was forced to clarify the website revision incident, he said this: "AI and crypto are not zero-sum competition."
At that time, this statement felt more like a defense. It was meant to soothe the community, prevent LP panic, and leave space for himself to explore AI. But if we read it again in today's context, it feels more like a premonition.
Paradigm took three years to emerge from the ruins of FTX. It did not choose the simplest path of scaling down, focusing on crypto, and waiting for the next bull market. It chose a more challenging but more expansive path: betting on the fusion of AI and crypto, establishing positions in both tracks, and then waiting for the moment they meet.
Today's $1.5 billion fund is a milestone on that path.
Matt Huang has not publicly responded to today's Wall Street Journal report. But his Tempo is still being built, Nous Research is still running, and EVMbench has already been released.
He doesn't need to explain anymore. Those actions have already spoken clearer than any statement.
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