Defying a deepening industry downturn, crypto venture powerhouse Dragonfly Capital has successfully closed its fourth fund at $650 million. The raise significantly overshot the firm’s initial $500 million target announced in September, signaling a robust appetite for blockchain investments even as competing venture firms struggle to secure capital. Managing Partner Haseeb Qureshi characterized the milestone as a “weird time to celebrate,” noting the pervasive “gloom of a bear market” currently weighing on the digital asset sector.
The fund’s debut arrives amid a staggering market contraction. Bitcoin has retreated roughly 46% from its October 2025 peak of over $126,000, contributing to a broader trend that has erased more than $1.4 trillion in total crypto market capitalization. Despite these headwinds, Qureshi maintains that Dragonfly’s history of raising capital during major crashes – including the 2018 ICO collapse and the 2022 Terra fallout – has historically resulted in the firm’s highest-performing “vintage” portfolios.
Dragonfly’s latest vehicle marks a decisive strategic shift away from speculative Web3 applications and toward “crypto-financial infrastructure.” In his Tuesday announcement, Qureshi argued that while non-financial use cases are faltering, the financial sector of crypto is “exploding.” He pointed to the rise of stablecoins, the growth of Decentralized Finance (DeFi) to levels rivaling traditional institutions, and the emergence of prediction markets as the internet’s “most trusted source of truth.”
This investment thesis is already being reflected in Dragonfly’s recent activity with companies like Polymarket, Ethena, Rain, and Mesh. The firm’s “biggest bet yet” focuses on the belief that the industry is undergoing a fundamental realignment rather than a terminal decline.
While the new $650 million fund is earmarked for early-stage projects, the firm has yet to identify specific targets for its initial deployments. This fourth fund matches the size of Dragonfly’s third vehicle, raised in May 2023 for later-stage companies, further consolidating the firm’s influence over the blockchain landscape. As the industry recalibrates, Dragonfly’s latest raise stands as a $650 million vote of confidence that the “crypto revolution” is still in its early stages of exponential growth.
