If the crypto funding craze of 2021 may be outlined with one investor title, that may be Andreessen Horowitz — or a16z for brief. The well-known VC agency has raised over $7.6 billion for its crypto funds.
And but, crypto isn’t doing so effectively this yr. As Ztoog’s Jacquelyn Melinek wrote earlier this summer time, crypto funding dropped for the fifth consecutive quarter. That’s why we invited a16z General Partner Arianna Simpson at Ztoog Disrupt to take the heartbeat of the crypto ecosystem.
“I’ve been in crypto for over 10 years,” Simpson mentioned. “What we’ve seen is that there are very repetitive cycles. And this is by the way not unique to crypto or web3, it happens in the history of technology and continues to happen any time there’s a new form of technology. There’s a lot of kind of boom-and-bust moments. And you can’t expect a space to continue with the same sort of capital investment across all quarters.”
In different phrases, funding and funding rounds will choose up once more in some unspecified time in the future within the close to future. But it doesn’t imply that founders ought to wait for crypto to be again in trend once more.
“What we’ve seen is that the pace of technology development and innovation is not correlated with the amount of capital that’s flowing in at a given moment,” she mentioned. “And so you might see a period of a lot of capital entering the space, as obviously we saw in 2021. But then, the subsequent years, when you’re not actually seeing as many funding rounds happen, is when a lot of the actual development work and innovation is actually being created.”
a16z itself hasn’t deployed all its capital in at some point. The cause why the VC agency has raised a lot cash for its crypto funds is that it believes the chance is huge. But a16z has deployed lower than half of its crypto fund to this point.
Earlier this yr, a16z introduced its first worldwide workplace in London. Many noticed it as an indication that the regulatory surroundings was too unpredictable within the U.S. and that a16z was trying for one other market with a extra secure regulatory framework.
“I think the U.S. has — you know, we’re still very much here as well — but we think the U.S. has some work to do to create a regulatory framework that makes founders feel comfortable and like they’re able to actually build great technology products here without worrying about possible repercussions,” Simpson mentioned.
“The lack of specific guidance here in the U.S. is actually pushing legitimate companies offshore, because they actually want to be compliant,” she added later within the dialog.
Given that the general tech dialog has principally shifted from crypto to AI, it makes you marvel how opportunistic VC companies like a16z really feel about this pattern. “Yeah, well, I’m definitely not pivoting to AI,” Simpson mentioned.
“AI is very much by nature a centralizing force. You need a lot of capital, you need a lot of data, and that kind of naturally gravitates towards a more centralized model. Crypto is by nature decentralized, and I think it can really provide a strong counterbalance to some of the centralizing forces of AI,” she added.
“The founders that have been the most successful in web3 or honestly in any space is the founders that ignore the market cycles and remain really focused on the core technology.”