As crypto prices soar to all-time highs, venture investors are pouring capital into a red-hot corner of the blockchain industry: infrastructure for stablecoins, which are cryptocurrencies designed to hold a fixed 1:1 peg to fiat currencies like the U.S. dollar.
This climate has helped BVNK, a U.K.-based stablecoin infrastructure company, raise a $50 million, all-equity Series B funding round led by the crypto-focused megafund Haun Ventures, with participation from Coinbase Ventures and existing investor Tiger Global. The round values BVNK at around $750 million, according to a source familiar with the deal. A spokesperson for BVNK declined to comment on the valuation.
The investment comes on the heels of the highest-value acquisition in the crypto industry’s history, which saw payments giant Stripe acquire stablecoin infrastructure startup Bridge in October for $1.1 billion. The deal turned the heads of many generalist investors and fintech operators who had dismissed blockchain companies after the sector’s tumultuous past two years. Bridge had announced a $58 million funding round from Haun Ventures, as well as the more generalist firms Sequoia, Ribbit, and Index, just two months before.
In an interview with Fortune, BVNK cofounder and CEO Jesse Hemson-Struthers described his company as the “global leader” in the stablecoin infrastructure vertical, saying that the Bridge acquisition offered “validation,” though BVNK has operated since 2021. “Every competitor of Stripe is coming to us saying, ‘Stripe’s done this, how can we get involved in the space now?’” Hemson-Struthers told Fortune.
The early promise of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin was to create a new global peer-to-peer payment system that didn’t need intermediaries like banks or governments. While Bitcoin and a slew of other cryptocurrencies have exploded in popularity, users have mostly turned to them for speculation and stores of value, with the assets too volatile and costly to use as a means of payment.
The exception has been stablecoins, where the largely unregulated Tether is the clear leader with a market cap of around $140 billion, followed by the Circle and Coinbase-backed USDC, which has a market cap of around $42 billion. Because of their (ostensible) peg to the U.S. dollar, offerings like Tether and USDC serve as a more stable holding for crypto investors and some everyday people without access to the dollar. Still, the prohibitive cost and difficulty of moving between fiat currencies and stablecoins have made them an imperfect payment system.