Crypto VC funding surging again sounds like a rally, until you trace where the money actually lands


Dragonfly Capital closed its fourth fund at $650 million this week, the same size as its 2022 vehicle, raised into a venture market Fortune calls a “mass extinction event.”

The headline reads like a vote of confidence: institutional capital returning, crypto winter thawing, alt season loading. But peel back one layer and the picture warps.

Dragonfly’s partners describe a pivot toward fintech rails and tokenized real-world assets, with the expectation of fewer “native app tokens.”

This isn’t a blanket “alts to the moon” signal. It’s a bet that value accrues to businesses that don’t need tokens at all, or to tokens that trade like asset wrappers rather than reflexive beta plays.

The contrarian read: VC money flooding back can reproduce the exact playbook that broke in 2025.

More private capital, deployed into the same low-float launch structures that trained markets to front-run unlock calendars, creates more scheduled sell walls instead of spot-buying firepower.

Manufactured scarcity, scheduled dilution

The dominant token launch design of the last cycle worked like engineered hype.

Teams launched with tiny circulating supply, often single-digit percentages of total issuance, pushing prices skyward at Token Generation Events while locking most allocation behind multi-year vesting schedules.

Binance Research tracked 2024 launches and found a median market-cap-to-fully diluted valuation ratio of 12.3%, indicating that buyers purchased into structures in which 87.7% of the supply was locked.

Launch structure in 2024
Binance Research chart shows 2024 token launches averaged 12.3% circulating supply at TGE, with 87.7% remaining locked for future dilution.

The math was challenging: to keep prices stable during that supply flow, the report estimated the cohort would need approximately $80 billion of incremental demand-side liquidity.

Without it, every unlock became a known dilution event.

Keyrock analyzed more than 16,000 token unlock events and documented a recurring pattern. Drawdowns build across the 30 days before the unlock, accelerate into the final week, then stabilize roughly 14 days after.

Animoca Brands Research quantified the effect: for unlocks exceeding 1% of the circulating supply, prices decline by an average of 0.3% in the week before and by another 0.3% in the week after.

The unlock calendar becomes a permanent short thesis baked into the token’s forward curve.

Unlock overhangUnlock overhang
Token prices decline an average 0.3% weekly before unlocks and 0.3% after, with drawdowns starting 30 days prior and stabilizing 14 days post-event.

Memento Research’s 2025 launch tracker makes the verdict empirical: of 118 tokens that went live last year, 84.7% now trade below their TGE valuation, with a median drawdown of 71.1% on a fully diluted basis and 66.8% on a market cap basis.

High FDV launches underperformed the equal-weight basket. The bigger the hype, the steeper the fall.

Why “crypto VC funding is back” doesn’t mean spot buying

Dragonfly’s $650 million doesn’t translate into $650 million in market purchases that would lift token prices today.

Venture funding flows into private allocations: equity stakes, Simple Agreements for Future Tokens at discounted rates, and early-stage rounds that give insiders supply before public listings.

The price support arrives later, often structured as the unlock mechanism itself.

Binance Research explicitly connects the rise of low-float, high-FDV structures to inflows of private capital and aggressive pre-launch valuations.

The same input of more VC money can reproduce the same output: more dilution overhang, more front-runnable unlock calendars. Dragonfly’s own thesis reinforces this.

Fortune quotes partner Tom Schmidt describing crypto’s “financial era,” where native protocol tokens give way to tokenized stocks and fintech rails. That’s bullish for certain businesses, but it implies a world where upside accrues to equity or regulated products, not to freely floating alts.

Take this week’s example. On Feb. 20, LayerZero unlocks approximately $46 million in ZRO tokens, representing 5.98% of the circulating supply and concentrated in insider allocations.

Tokenomist flags it as a near-term overhang in thin liquidity. This is what “bullish VC” looks like in practice: a public unlock calendar that provides sophisticated participants with a known exit window and retail holders with a predictable drawdown.

The scale problem

Tokenomist’s 2025 review tallies $97.43 billion of tokens released across the year, split into $18.77 billion from insider unlocks and $78.66 billion from non-insider allocations.

For the week of Feb. 16-22 alone, scheduled releases exceed $700 million. This isn’t background noise, but a structural sell-side flow that dwarfs organic demand in all but the most liquid assets.

Keyrock’s data confirms recipient type matters, with team and investor unlocks proving more damaging than ecosystem allocations, likely because insiders face fewer coordination costs and clearer profit incentives.

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