Is Crypto VC Back? How to Read Rounds and Not Get Crushed by Unlocks
Disclaimer: this material is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
A familiar line is back in crypto media: venture is awake again. The reason is straightforward: according to Galaxy, in Q4 2025 VC funds invested $8.5bn into crypto and blockchain companies (+84% QoQ) across 425 deals, and total 2025 investment was around $20bn.
When big money returns, retail often has the same reflex: alts are about to fly. Sometimes that happens. More often, funding rounds create a different reality: high FDV, slow token release, and scheduled selling.
What “VC Is Back” Actually Means
“Project raised a round” does not mean the token will go up tomorrow. It means the project has resources: a team, runway, marketing, listings, partnerships, liquidity. That improves survival odds, but it does not guarantee price appreciation.
The more important part: the VC model is almost always about an exit. And that exit rarely happens with a single click. It tends to arrive as a sequence:
- vesting unlocks
- transfers to exchanges
- growth in liquidity and volume
- a “window” for partial profit-taking
If you treat rounds as a pure bullish signal, you miss the second half of the story: when, and on what path, tokens will actually hit the market.
3 Reasons Why VC Activity Often Hurts Altcoins
1) FDV grows faster than real demand
FDV (fully diluted valuation) is what a project would be worth if all tokens were in circulation. In practice, it’s the price tag on future supply. It’s popular because it’s simple, but it often misleads: a token can look “cheap” on current market cap while already looking expensive on FDV.
What it means for you: upside is capped not only by demand, but by how much supply is scheduled to arrive later.
2) Unlocks aren’t an event — they’re a calendar
Token unlocks are planned releases baked into tokenomics: team, investors, funds, ecosystem, incentives.
Unlocks don’t have to dump the price, but they add supply pressure. Especially when:
- liquidity is thin,
- the narrative is already overheated,
- the token has been pumped on expectations.
3) “The round” and “the token” are different markets
VC can invest in a company (equity) while retail buys the token. These assets have different economics, different rights, and different time horizons. So “funds invested in the company” doesn’t always translate to “the token should go up”.
A quick breakdown: how funds typically exit a token
A common sequence looks like this:
- The project raises a round during a hot sector narrative.
- The token rallies on expectations (including “funds are in” rumours).
- A liquidity window appears: listing, market making, campaigns, higher volume.
- Unlocks begin (cliff/linear vesting) and partial selling follows.
- The market asks: “Why isn’t the token going up if the news is good?”
No moral here. Just market mechanics.
A Checklist: How to Read a Round Without FOMO
1) What exactly was raised: equity, tokens, or a mix?
If the announcement doesn’t say, assume you don’t know the most important thing: what the round was economically tied to.
2) Valuation and stage: early or late?
Galaxy notes that in Q4 2025 a meaningful share of capital went to later-stage deals, and a few large transactions contributed most of the volume.
Later stage often means the business is more mature, but expectations (and valuation) are higher too.
3) FDV versus current market cap
If FDV is multiples of market cap, the market is already pricing in big future supply. This isn’t a “don’t buy” rule. It’s a reminder: price will have to fight unlocks.
4) Unlocks: next date, size, recipient
Look at three things: when the next unlock is, how large it is versus circulating supply, who receives it (investors/team/ecosystem).
5) Where the liquidity sits — and whether it’s real
Volume can look great while order-book depth is not. In thin markets, price moves easily, but exits are painful.
6) Does the project have a product and users — or only a story?
This is the best filter against “VC coins built for the storefront”.
How Not to Live from Round to Round
When smart money noise is everywhere, it’s easier to stick to a plan if part of your capital runs in a predictable mode and doesn’t require guessing market direction every day. In Hexn, that’s what Hodl is for — fixed-yield deposits up to 20% APY with weekly payouts. It helps keep a calmer portfolio base while you selectively analyse alts, unlocks and valuations.
Conclusion
Venture activity in crypto has genuinely picked up — and it affects the market: higher valuations, renewed competition for deals, and fresh narratives for altcoins.
But for retail, the main risk here isn’t bad funds. The main risk is buying a token without checking FDV, vesting, and the unlock schedule. Rounds are fuel for the project. Token price is the result of demand colliding with supply.
