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From Crypto Gold Rush to AI Mania: Why Venture Capital Left Web3, What It Still Funds, and What Comes Next

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For a few brief years, crypto was the place where venture capital wanted to look early, brave, and slightly dangerous. Every major fund needed a Web3 thesis. Every generalist investor wanted access to token networks, DeFi infrastructure, NFT platforms, crypto gaming, Layer 1 chains, wallets, custodians, exchanges, and the mysterious possibility that the internet itself was being rebuilt with ownership baked in. Then the center of gravity shifted. After the collapse of Terra, Three Arrows Capital, FTX, BlockFi, Celsius, and the speculative excess around NFTs and token launches, venture capital did not disappear. It rotated. The new obsession became artificial intelligence.

The popular version of the story is simple: VCs used to fund crypto, then they abandoned it for AI. That story is directionally true, but incomplete. Venture capital did not fully leave crypto. It became more selective, more institutional, more infrastructure-focused, and less willing to underwrite abstract token narratives. At the same time, AI absorbed the oxygen in the room. The biggest checks, the best media narratives, the strongest founder migration, and the most aggressive limited partner enthusiasm moved toward AI. Crypto went from being the frontier trade to being a more mature, more scrutinized, and more cyclical sector.

The result is not a dead crypto VC market. It is a different one.

The Crypto Venture Boom Was Real

To understand the migration, it is worth remembering how large the crypto boom actually became. In 2021 and 2022, venture capital treated crypto as a generational platform shift. Funds were not merely investing in companies that happened to use blockchains. They were buying into an entire architecture of the future: decentralized finance, tokenized communities, metaverse economies, decentralized social networks, DAOs, NFT marketplaces, gaming economies, scaling networks, bridges, wallets, analytics platforms, staking infrastructure, and custody providers.

Crypto venture fundraising itself exploded. Galaxy’s institutional crypto venture data showed that global crypto and blockchain venture funds raised $20.55 billion in 2021 and then a record $37.7 billion in 2022 across 262 funds. That was extraordinary not only in absolute terms but as a share of global venture fundraising. Crypto funds represented roughly 12.62% of global venture fundraising in 2022, a peak that now looks like the high-water mark of the last cycle.

The deal environment was just as aggressive. At the height of the boom, crypto companies could raise on narratives that assumed mass adoption was near. Layer 1 protocols raised huge rounds. NFT marketplaces were valued like the future of culture. Play-to-earn gaming studios pitched tokenized economies as the next frontier of consumer internet. Infrastructure projects raised before product-market fit because investors believed the picks-and-shovels layer would capture value once the next billion users arrived.

The logic was not irrational. Crypto had created real markets. Bitcoin and Ethereum were liquid, global, and large. DeFi had demonstrated permissionless financial primitives. Stablecoins were becoming one of the first blockchain use cases with obvious global utility. NFTs had broken into mainstream culture, however briefly. Coinbase had gone public in 2021. Venture investors saw the possibility of a new technology platform with financial rails built in.

But the boom also had deep flaws. Too much capital chased too many similar ideas. Token incentives disguised weak retention. Some companies raised at valuations that assumed permanent bull-market liquidity. The distinction between community, speculation, and genuine demand became blurry. In hindsight, the crypto VC cycle of 2021–2022 was not just a funding boom. It was a narrative bubble.

The Crash Changed the Investor Psychology

The rotation away from crypto was not caused by one event. It was caused by a sequence of shocks that destroyed confidence at exactly the moment macro conditions became hostile to venture capital in general.

The Terra collapse damaged faith in algorithmic stablecoin design and wiped out enormous amounts of paper wealth. Three Arrows Capital showed how interconnected and leveraged crypto balance sheets had become. Celsius, BlockFi, Voyager, and other lenders exposed the fragility of centralized yield platforms that had marketed themselves as safe gateways into crypto returns. Then FTX collapsed, turning one of the industry’s most visible venture-backed companies into a symbol of governance failure.

This mattered enormously for venture capital because crypto investing depends on trust at several layers. Investors must trust the founders, the code, the custody setup, the token design, the market structure, and often the broader ecosystem in which the startup operates. After 2022, limited partners looked at crypto allocations with far more caution. A sector that had promised transparency had produced some of the most spectacular opacity in modern finance.

The data shows the damage. Crypto venture fundraising fell from $37.7 billion in 2022 to $5.75 billion in 2023 across 58 funds, according to Galaxy’s institutional crypto venture report. That was not a mild cooling. It was a collapse in allocator appetite. At the same time, global venture fundraising also contracted sharply, so crypto was hit by both sector-specific reputational damage and a broader venture downturn.

The macro backdrop made everything worse. Higher interest rates lowered the appeal of long-duration, speculative assets. Venture funds across sectors became more disciplined. Late-stage growth rounds slowed. IPO markets largely shut. Token markets recovered faster than private crypto valuations, but that did not automatically revive VC enthusiasm. Investors who had been burned by high-priced private rounds became reluctant to assume that rising Bitcoin prices would lift every Web3 startup.

That distinction is crucial. Bitcoin’s recovery did not mean crypto venture immediately recovered. Public tokens can reprice quickly. Private companies cannot. A VC-backed crypto startup that raised at a 2021 valuation still had to prove revenue, users, retention, and defensibility in a much tougher funding environment.

AI Became the New Center of Gravity

While crypto was digesting its failures, AI offered venture capital something it badly needed: a new platform story with immediate product pull.

The release of ChatGPT in late 2022 changed the market’s imagination. Suddenly, AI was not an abstract enterprise technology or a back-office automation tool. It was a consumer product, a developer platform, a productivity layer, and a possible operating system for knowledge work. Founders, engineers, enterprises, consumers, and investors all saw the shift at the same time.

For venture capital, AI had several advantages over crypto. It was easier to explain to limited partners. It had obvious enterprise demand. It could be deployed inside existing workflows. It did not require users to understand wallets, gas fees, bridges, custody, seed phrases, or tokenomics. It also had massive strategic buyers and partners: Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Meta, Nvidia, Salesforce, Oracle, ServiceNow, Adobe, Apple, and every cloud or enterprise software company with a balance sheet.

The funding numbers became enormous. CB Insights reported that AI represented 37% of global venture funding in 2024 and 17% of global venture deals, both all-time highs. Crunchbase data showed that AI captured close to 50% of all global venture funding in 2025, with roughly $202.3 billion invested in the sector, up more than 75% from about $114 billion in 2024. Foundation model companies alone raised around $80 billion in 2025, representing roughly 40% of global AI funding.

This is the kind of capital gravity crypto cannot currently match. In 2025, crypto and blockchain startups saw more than $20 billion in venture investment, according to Galaxy Research. That was a meaningful rebound and the strongest year since 2022. But AI was operating at a different scale. The comparison is not close: crypto recovered; AI dominated.

Did VCs Really Migrate From Crypto to AI?

The answer is yes, but not in the simplistic sense that venture capital packed up one office and moved to another.

Some crypto-native funds stayed crypto-native. They continued investing through the bear market, often in infrastructure, custody, compliance, stablecoins, scaling, security, and DeFi. Some even benefited from less crowded rounds. Meanwhile, many generalist funds that had aggressively entered crypto during the boom reduced their exposure, slowed deployment, or moved crypto from a core thesis to an opportunistic one.

The bigger migration happened at the margin. New founder attention moved toward AI. New analyst time moved toward AI. New LP curiosity moved toward AI. The prestige trade moved toward AI. The fastest fundraising stories moved toward AI. The largest late-stage rounds moved toward AI. A partner at a generalist fund who might have spent 2021 studying Layer 1 ecosystems or NFT marketplaces was, by 2024, more likely to be mapping foundation models, AI agents, infrastructure tooling, data pipelines, inference optimization, enterprise copilots, or vertical AI applications.

Galaxy itself noted in its 2025 crypto venture analysis that increased interest in artificial intelligence had diverted some attention from crypto investing. That sentence captures the phenomenon well. AI did not eliminate crypto venture. It competed for the same pool of risk capital, founder talent, media attention, and LP excitement.

The migration was also emotional. Crypto’s last boom ended in scandal and disappointment. AI’s boom began with product wonder. That contrast matters in venture capital, where conviction is often built around stories about the future. After 2022, crypto’s story became defensive: prove that the infrastructure matters, prove that the users are real, prove that the token is necessary, prove that the business can survive regulation. AI’s story was expansive: everything can be automated, every workflow can be rebuilt, every employee can be augmented, every software category can be reimagined.

Investors follow possibility. In 2023 and 2024, possibility wore an AI label.

The New Crypto VC Market Is Smaller, But More Serious

Although the boom-era euphoria is gone, crypto venture has not disappeared. In fact, the market has been rebuilding.

Galaxy Research reported that VCs invested $11.5 billion into crypto and blockchain startups across 2,153 deals in 2024. In 2025, that figure rose to more than $20 billion across 1,660 deals, the largest annual amount since 2022 and more than double 2023’s level. Q4 2025 alone saw $8.5 billion invested across 425 deals, the strongest quarterly capital deployment since Q2 2022.

But the composition of that funding changed. In 2024, early-stage deals still captured the majority of capital, while stablecoins, infrastructure, Web3, DeFi, and related categories attracted meaningful investment. By 2025, later-stage companies captured a record share of capital. Galaxy noted that 57% of crypto VC capital in 2025 went to later-stage companies, the largest share it had observed. That means investors are increasingly backing proven businesses rather than speculative early ecosystems.

The categories have also shifted. Trading, exchange, investing, and lending businesses attracted major capital in 2025, led by large rounds involving established firms such as Revolut and Kraken. Stablecoin companies became a major focus. Infrastructure remained important. Crypto AI appeared as a crossover theme, though it has been volatile and sometimes more narrative-driven than revenue-driven.

This is a much more mature pattern than the 2021 cycle. Instead of funding dozens of new Layer 1s, metaverse worlds, and NFT social platforms, VCs are asking harder questions: Where is the revenue? Where is the regulatory path? Where is the distribution? Does the token create real economic coordination, or is it just a fundraising device? Is this product better because it is on-chain, or merely more complicated?

That scrutiny is healthy. It also makes fundraising harder for founders who are selling ideology rather than traction.

Why Bitcoin’s Bull Market Did Not Fully Reignite Crypto VC

One of the most interesting features of the current cycle is the weakened relationship between liquid crypto prices and private crypto venture funding.

In earlier cycles, rising Bitcoin and Ethereum prices tended to generate more venture enthusiasm. Token wealth created new angel investors. Crypto funds raised more easily. Founders launched more projects. Retail attention spilled into startup narratives. The public market and private market moved together.

That relationship has been weaker since 2023. Bitcoin recovered sharply, spot Bitcoin ETFs brought major institutional legitimacy, and public crypto market capitalization improved. Yet private crypto venture activity lagged for much of the period. Galaxy’s 2024 research noted that the multi-year correlation between Bitcoin price and crypto VC investment had struggled to recover. Its 2025 research again described a weaker relationship, even though some correlation remained.

There are several reasons.

First, the current bull market has been highly Bitcoin-centric. Spot ETFs channeled institutional demand into Bitcoin itself, not necessarily into private crypto startups. A pension fund or wealth manager that wants crypto exposure can now buy a regulated ETF rather than commit to a ten-year illiquid venture fund.

Second, crypto treasury companies and public-market vehicles competed for institutional capital. Investors who wanted beta to the asset class had more liquid options than early-stage venture.

Third, many of the hottest 2021 categories did not recover in the same way. NFTs, metaverse land, play-to-earn gaming, and many DAO experiments lost credibility. That removed a large part of the venture imagination from the last cycle.

Fourth, the exit environment remains challenging. Crypto has produced public companies and acquisitions, but not enough predictable exits to satisfy all LPs. Venture capital needs distributions. A token listing can create liquidity, but regulatory uncertainty and changing market norms have made token-based exits less straightforward than during the boom.

Finally, AI became the better LP conversation. Even when crypto prices were strong, AI was where the largest private companies, biggest rounds, and clearest enterprise adoption stories were happening.

What VCs Fund in Crypto Now

Today’s crypto VC market is not funding “Web3” as a broad slogan. It is funding narrower, more defensible themes.

Stablecoins are one of the strongest categories. They are arguably crypto’s clearest product-market fit after Bitcoin. Dollar-backed tokens move value globally, operate around the clock, and are increasingly integrated into payments, remittances, trading, treasury management, and emerging-market finance. Venture investors like stablecoins because they combine crypto rails with familiar financial demand. They also have clearer revenue models than many tokenized consumer apps.

Infrastructure remains a core theme. This includes custody, wallets, security, data indexing, compliance tooling, developer platforms, institutional trading infrastructure, staking services, restaking systems, interoperability, and scaling technology. These businesses are less glamorous than consumer crypto, but they often serve real customers and can generate revenue regardless of retail hype.

Tokenization is another major area. Funds, treasuries, private credit, real estate, and other real-world assets are increasingly being explored on-chain. The thesis is that blockchains can improve settlement, transparency, transferability, and composability for financial assets. This area appeals to institutions because it looks less like speculative crypto culture and more like financial infrastructure modernization.

DeFi is still funded, but with more skepticism. Investors want protocols that solve specific liquidity, risk, trading, lending, or settlement problems. The era of funding yet another yield farm is over. The more interesting DeFi opportunities are in intent-based execution, derivatives, structured products, lending against real assets, stablecoin liquidity, and institutional-grade market infrastructure.

Consumer crypto remains difficult. Social, gaming, NFTs, creator economies, and decentralized identity still attract founders, but many VCs are cautious. The lesson from the last cycle is that token incentives can create activity without durable demand. A consumer crypto startup now needs to prove retention, not just transaction volume.

Crypto AI sits at the intersection of the two biggest narratives, which makes it attractive but dangerous. Some projects are genuinely useful: decentralized compute markets, AI agent payments, data provenance, model verification, autonomous wallets, and machine-to-machine settlement. Others simply attach an AI story to a token. VCs are interested, but increasingly aware that “AI plus crypto” is not automatically a business.

Privacy is also re-emerging as a category. As AI improves surveillance and blockchain analytics becomes more powerful, private transactions, confidential computing, and selective disclosure may become more important. This remains a regulatory-sensitive area, but the strategic need is real.

Why AI Attracts the Mega-Rounds

AI’s funding dominance is not just about hype. The capital requirements are structurally different.

Foundation model companies need extraordinary amounts of money for compute, talent, data, and infrastructure. Training and serving frontier models is expensive. This creates a market where companies can raise billions and still plausibly argue they need more. OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, Mistral, Cohere, and other model companies are not raising like normal software startups. They are raising more like strategic infrastructure projects.

That changes the venture landscape. A few AI companies can absorb huge amounts of global capital. Crunchbase reported that OpenAI and Anthropic alone captured a significant share of global venture investment in 2025. This concentration makes AI’s funding numbers look massive, but it also means much of the money is flowing into a small number of companies.

Crypto does not currently have an equivalent. A blockchain infrastructure startup may need significant capital, but most do not require tens of billions in training compute. The biggest crypto rounds tend to involve exchanges, trading platforms, stablecoin issuers, or later-stage financial businesses rather than frontier research labs.

AI also benefits from strategic corporate participation. Cloud providers, chip companies, enterprise software giants, and large technology platforms have direct reasons to fund AI companies. They want cloud workloads, model access, strategic optionality, talent, and defensive positioning. Crypto has strategic investors too, but the corporate demand is narrower and often more regulated.

This is why AI can dominate venture even if many AI startups later fail. The largest players are seen as critical infrastructure for the next technology platform. That is the kind of story that unlocks huge checks.

Is AI Becoming the New Bubble?

The uncomfortable answer is probably yes, at least in parts of the market.

The parallels to crypto are obvious. There is a platform-shift narrative. There is intense founder migration. There are inflated valuations. There are companies raising before durable business models are proven. There is a wave of startups using the label to attract capital. There is fear of missing out among investors who do not want to explain to LPs why they missed the defining technology cycle of the decade.

But there is also an important difference. AI has already shown broad utility across coding, writing, customer support, design, research, sales, data analysis, cybersecurity, drug discovery, robotics, and enterprise workflow automation. Crypto’s strongest use cases are real, but narrower: store of value, stablecoin transfer, decentralized exchange, custody, settlement, token issuance, and financial experimentation. AI feels immediately useful to a much larger number of businesses.

That does not mean AI valuations are justified. Many AI application startups may be crushed by model providers, incumbents, open-source alternatives, or declining margins. Some model companies may never produce returns proportional to their capital consumption. The infrastructure buildout could overshoot. The same investors who overpaid for crypto networks in 2021 may now be overpaying for AI copilots in 2025.

The more precise point is that venture capital does not rotate away from bubbles because it dislikes them. Venture capital often needs bubbles. Bubbles create talent formation, infrastructure buildout, public attention, and risk appetite. The question is not whether AI has speculative excess. It does. The question is whether enough enduring companies will emerge from that excess. Investors believe the answer is yes.

What Crypto Can Learn From the AI Rotation

Crypto should not respond to the AI boom by trying to imitate its language. Slapping “AI” onto token projects will not fix the sector’s credibility problem. The better lesson is that users and investors reward obvious utility.

AI adoption exploded because people could try the product and immediately understand the value. Crypto still often asks users to endure complexity in exchange for ideological or financial upside. That is not enough for mainstream adoption.

The next generation of crypto startups must hide complexity. Wallets need to feel like normal accounts. Stablecoin payments need to feel cheaper and faster than bank transfers. Tokenization needs to make settlement better for institutions. DeFi needs to offer liquidity and transparency without exposing users to avoidable risk. On-chain identity and privacy need to solve real problems without becoming compliance nightmares.

VCs are still willing to fund crypto, but they are less willing to fund abstractions. The most attractive crypto companies now look more like infrastructure businesses, financial networks, compliance-aware platforms, payment rails, or developer tools. The least attractive ones look like recycled token narratives from the last cycle.

What Happens Next

The likely future is not a simple return to 2021. Crypto VC will recover, but it will not look like the last boom.

Funding should continue flowing into stablecoins, institutional infrastructure, tokenization, custody, compliance, security, scaling, and wallet UX. The strongest early-stage founders will still raise, especially if they can show why blockchains are necessary rather than decorative. Later-stage funding may remain concentrated in companies with revenue, regulatory positioning, and strategic importance.

Generalist funds will come back more aggressively if exits improve. That means more IPOs, acquisitions, token liquidity events with clearer compliance, and visible distributions to LPs. Venture is ultimately a returns business. If crypto can produce liquid winners again, capital will follow.

AI will remain the dominant VC theme for the near future. It has too much momentum, too much enterprise demand, and too much strategic capital behind it. But AI’s dominance may eventually help crypto rather than simply crowd it out. AI agents may need wallets. Autonomous software may need payment rails. Machine-to-machine transactions may use stablecoins. Provenance and verification may require blockchains. Decentralized compute and data markets may become more relevant if centralized AI infrastructure becomes too expensive or too concentrated.

The most interesting long-term opportunity may be the convergence of AI and crypto, but only where the combination is functional. AI does not need a token for every workflow. Crypto does not need AI for every protocol. But agents that transact, negotiate, pay, verify, and coordinate across digital systems may need open financial rails. That is where crypto can become infrastructure for the AI economy rather than a rival narrative.

Verdict: The Migration Was Real, But Crypto Is Not Over

The claim that venture capital moved from crypto to AI is broadly true. The data supports it. Crypto venture fundraising collapsed after the 2022 peak. AI captured a record share of global venture funding in 2024 and nearly half of global funding in 2025. Founder attention, LP excitement, mega-rounds, and generalist VC energy clearly shifted toward AI.

But the stronger interpretation is that crypto matured under pressure while AI entered its expansionary boom. Crypto is no longer the default frontier for risk capital. It has to compete on fundamentals. That is painful for weaker projects and healthy for the sector.

In the last cycle, crypto raised like a revolution. Today, it raises more like financial infrastructure. That may sound less exciting, but it is probably more sustainable.

VCs have not stopped investing in crypto. They have stopped funding every crypto story equally. The new money wants stablecoins, infrastructure, tokenization, custody, security, institutional access, real users, and revenue. It wants fewer white papers and more distribution. It wants fewer token games and more durable networks.

AI is now the brightest object in venture capital. Crypto used to be. One day, AI will also face its own correction, and investors will separate the enduring companies from the narrative passengers. Crypto has already gone through that humiliation. The sector that remains is smaller in ego, stronger in infrastructure, and more focused on use cases that actually matter.

The next crypto boom may not be driven by JPEGs, metaverse land, or another Layer 1 arms race. It may be driven by stablecoin settlement, tokenized assets, programmable finance, AI-agent payments, privacy, and institutional rails. If that happens, venture capital will not need to rediscover crypto as a fantasy of the future. It will fund it as part of the financial and computational infrastructure of the present.

Bitcoin

Strategy’s 411 BTC Coinbase Move Tests the Market’s Faith in Michael Saylor’s “Never Sell” Myth

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For years, Strategy has been the cleanest Bitcoin story in public markets: buy, hold, raise capital, buy more, repeat. Michael Saylor turned a fading enterprise software company into a leveraged Bitcoin proxy and trained the market to treat every financing maneuver as another step toward a larger treasury. That is why a 411.48 BTC transfer to Coinbase Prime has attracted so much attention. By itself, the movement is not proof of a sale. But in a market already watching Strategy’s balance sheet, preferred-stock obligations, tax accounting and Bitcoin price exposure, even a small transfer to a prime brokerage account can shake one of crypto’s most powerful assumptions: that Strategy does not sell.

A Small Transfer With a Large Symbolic Weight

Blockchain analytics account Lookonchain reported that Strategy deposited 411.48 BTC, worth roughly $30.3 million at the time, into Coinbase Prime. That number is tiny compared with Strategy’s total Bitcoin stack, but symbolism matters in markets built on narratives. Strategy has spent years telling investors that Bitcoin is its treasury reserve asset, its corporate identity and its long-term capital strategy. When coins move toward Coinbase Prime, traders naturally ask whether those coins are being prepared for custody management, collateral use, liquidity operations or sale.

Prediction-market odds have also become part of the story. Polymarket’s market on whether Strategy sells Bitcoin before December 31, 2026 recently showed very high odds for a “Yes” outcome, with traders treating the possibility of any sale as increasingly plausible. The market rules focus on whether Strategy sells any Bitcoin by the deadline, not whether it liquidates a meaningful share of its treasury.

That is important because the market is not asking whether Strategy abandons Bitcoin. It is asking whether Strategy sells any Bitcoin at all. A tax-loss harvest, a small liquidity transaction, a structured financing maneuver or a treasury optimization sale could all matter, even if the company remains a net accumulator.

Coinbase Prime Does Not Automatically Mean Selling

The first thing to understand is that a transfer to Coinbase Prime is not the same as an exchange dump. Coinbase Prime is used by institutions for custody, trading, financing and execution. A company can move Bitcoin there for many reasons. It may be preparing collateral, consolidating custody, testing settlement operations, enabling liquidity access or positioning for a future transaction that never actually occurs.

Still, traders pay attention because assets rarely move to prime brokerage infrastructure for no reason. Strategy’s Bitcoin has enormous public significance. Every movement is interpreted through the company’s financing model and Saylor’s public messaging. A wallet transfer that would be routine for another corporate treasury becomes a referendum on Strategy’s discipline.

The market’s sensitivity is understandable. Strategy is not just another Bitcoin holder. It is the largest corporate Bitcoin treasury in the world and a key psychological anchor for institutional Bitcoin adoption. When Strategy buys, Bitcoin bulls treat it as validation. If Strategy sells, even a small amount, the event would challenge the one-way accumulation myth that has surrounded the company since 2020.

Strategy Has Sold Before, But the Context Was Different

The idea that Strategy has “never sold” is not perfectly accurate. In December 2022, the company sold 704 BTC and then repurchased 810 BTC shortly afterward, a move widely understood as tax-loss harvesting. That transaction did not break the broader accumulation thesis because Strategy ended with more Bitcoin than before. It allowed the company to realize losses for tax purposes while maintaining long-term exposure.

That precedent matters now. Recent reporting around Strategy’s 2026 financing posture has already revived the possibility of limited Bitcoin sales, not as a rejection of Bitcoin but as a balance-sheet tool. Strategy has continued to purchase Bitcoin aggressively, but public commentary around the company increasingly focuses on the conditions under which selling a small amount could be rational if it improves shareholder outcomes.

The key distinction is between ideological refusal and treasury management. Strategy’s image has long been built around the former. Public-company obligations may eventually require the latter.

The Real Issue Is Strategy’s Capital Machine

Strategy’s Bitcoin accumulation model depends on access to capital markets. The company raises money through common equity, convertible debt and preferred-stock instruments, then uses proceeds to buy Bitcoin. When the model works, it creates a flywheel: Bitcoin rises, MSTR trades at a premium to its underlying Bitcoin value, Strategy issues securities, buys more Bitcoin and increases Bitcoin per share.

The risk is that the flywheel becomes harder to maintain when Bitcoin weakens, MSTR’s premium compresses, debt costs rise or preferred-stock dividend obligations become more expensive to service. Those obligations create real cash demands, even if the company’s Bitcoin thesis remains unchanged.

This is why a 411 BTC move can become a market event. The question is not whether Strategy needs to abandon Bitcoin. The question is whether the company’s capital structure occasionally requires monetizing a tiny slice of Bitcoin to preserve the larger strategy.

Why Prediction Markets Are Pricing a Sale So Aggressively

Prediction markets are not perfect truth machines, but they are useful sentiment indicators. The current market pricing suggests traders believe Strategy is likely to sell at least some Bitcoin before the end of 2026. That does not mean traders expect a catastrophic liquidation. It likely reflects a narrower judgment: given Strategy’s financing complexity, accounting treatment and prior tax-loss harvesting precedent, at least one sale before the deadline is plausible.

The market is also reacting to language. Saylor and Strategy executives have historically cultivated a maximalist image around accumulation. Any public acknowledgment that selling could be rational under certain conditions changes the probability distribution. Once “never sell” becomes “sell if it improves Bitcoin per share,” traders can price the practical version of the strategy rather than the meme version.

There is another layer. A binary prediction market does not care whether Strategy sells 1 BTC or 100,000 BTC. It does not care whether the sale is immediately followed by a larger repurchase. It asks only whether any sale occurs. That makes the “Yes” side easier to justify than a more dramatic prediction about Strategy reducing its long-term Bitcoin position.

The Market Should Separate Signal From Noise

The danger now is overinterpretation. A Coinbase Prime deposit is a signal, but not a completed sale. The absence of an official statement means the market does not yet know the reason for the transfer. Strategy could be preparing for operational activity that has nothing to do with a directional sale. It could be moving coins between custody arrangements. It could be testing prime services. It could be positioning collateral. It could also be preparing for a sale.

The only honest interpretation is that the movement increases attention and uncertainty, not that it proves liquidation.

That uncertainty matters because Strategy’s financing model is highly sensitive to both Bitcoin price and MSTR equity demand. If Bitcoin weakens further, the company’s flexibility becomes more important. If MSTR’s premium remains under pressure, issuing equity may become less attractive. If preferred obligations continue to weigh on cash planning, management may have to choose between ideological purity and financial optimization.

What a Sale Would Actually Mean

A Strategy Bitcoin sale would be psychologically powerful, but it would not automatically be bearish in the way critics assume. The meaning would depend on size, timing, explanation and follow-up action.

A small tax or treasury-management sale followed by repurchases would reinforce Strategy’s claim that it is optimizing around Bitcoin per share, not exiting the asset. A sale used to meet preferred-stock obligations could be read as evidence that the capital structure is becoming more demanding. A larger sale during market stress would be far more damaging because it would suggest that Strategy’s balance sheet is being forced to liquidate the asset it was built to accumulate.

The most likely scenario, if a sale happens, is not capitulation. It is a controlled, technical transaction designed to preserve the broader accumulation model. That would still be newsworthy because it would end the market’s simplified “never sell” story. But it would not necessarily end Strategy’s Bitcoin thesis.

Why This Matters Beyond Strategy

Strategy has become a template. Other companies, miners, funds and treasury firms have watched its playbook closely. The company proved that a public equity vehicle could become a Bitcoin accumulation machine. It also showed that investors would pay a premium for corporate Bitcoin exposure when the structure was marketed aggressively and transparently.

If Strategy sells even a small amount, other Bitcoin treasury companies may feel more comfortable treating Bitcoin as an active balance-sheet asset rather than a sacred reserve. That could mature the sector. It could also weaken the cultural narrative that corporate Bitcoin holders are structurally different from traders.

The broader Bitcoin market has always had a tension between ideology and financial engineering. Strategy sits at the center of that tension. Saylor speaks the language of permanent conviction, but Strategy operates in the language of securities issuance, debt, dividends, tax treatment and shareholder math. The Coinbase Prime movement brings that contradiction into view.

The Bottom Line

Strategy’s 411.48 BTC transfer to Coinbase Prime does not prove that the company is selling Bitcoin. It does, however, arrive at a moment when the market is already prepared to believe that a sale is likely. Prediction-market odds have moved sharply higher, Strategy executives have left room for mathematically justified sales, and the company’s increasingly complex capital structure gives investors a reason to watch every coin movement closely.

The real story is not that Michael Saylor has suddenly turned bearish on Bitcoin. There is no evidence of that. The real story is that Strategy’s Bitcoin strategy has matured from a simple accumulation meme into a complicated public-market machine. That machine may still buy far more Bitcoin than it ever sells. But the market is beginning to accept that “never sell” was always less important than “increase Bitcoin per share.”

If Strategy does sell, the first sale will be less about the number of coins and more about the myth it punctures. Bitcoin investors can live with treasury management. What they are really testing now is whether Strategy can remain the market’s ultimate Bitcoin bull while behaving like a company that still has bills to pay.

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Blockchain & DeFi

DeFi Users After the ATH: Why the Next Boom Will Look Nothing Like 2021

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DeFi users are no longer the same crowd that chased triple-digit yields through Ethereum in 2021. The market has survived Terra, FTX, bridge hacks, toxic token emissions, regulatory pressure, and the slow death of the “number go up” liquidity-mining era. Yet DeFi has not disappeared. It has changed shape. The current DeFi user is less likely to be a yield farmer rotating through food-themed tokens and more likely to be a stablecoin mover, onchain trader, lending borrower, points hunter, restaking participant, perp trader, or institution testing tokenized assets. The sector’s all-time highs tell one story. The user behavior underneath tells another.

DeFi’s First ATH Was About Liquidity, Not Mainstream Adoption

The first great DeFi all-time high came in 2021, when total value locked became the industry’s favorite scoreboard. In November 2021, DeFi reached roughly $220 billion in total value locked, while the broader dapp industry hit a then-record of around 2 million daily active wallets. That was the moment when DeFi looked like it might become crypto’s first mass-market financial application. In reality, it was still a capital-heavy but user-light ecosystem. A relatively small group of sophisticated users moved large amounts of money across lending markets, automated market makers, derivatives protocols and liquidity farms.

The 2021 user was highly motivated by yield. Protocols paid users in native tokens to deposit liquidity, borrow assets, stake LP tokens, bridge to new chains and bootstrap ecosystems. The model worked as a growth hack, but it was expensive. Many protocols bought activity with emissions rather than earning loyalty through product-market fit. When token prices fell, yields collapsed, and much of the user base vanished with them.

That does not mean 2021 was fake. It proved that smart contracts could coordinate trading, lending, collateral, liquidations and market making at global scale. But it also showed that “TVL” could be misleading. TVL measured assets sitting in contracts, not necessarily healthy demand, active users, retained revenue or durable financial utility.

The Second ATH Was Stranger: More Users, More Chains, Less Euphoria

By 2024 and 2025, DeFi had entered a different phase. The sector was no longer the only growth engine in crypto. Gaming, AI dapps, social apps, NFTs, memecoins, restaking and infrastructure competed for attention. Yet user activity across the broader dapp industry reached levels that made 2021 look small. DappRadar reported that the dapp industry averaged 24.6 million daily unique active wallets in 2024, while DeFi activity grew sharply and ended the year with about 7 million daily unique active wallets and 32% market dominance.

That was a major shift. DeFi no longer lived almost entirely on Ethereum mainnet. Users had moved to Solana, Base, Arbitrum, BNB Chain, Optimism, Avalanche, Polygon, Sui, Aptos, and newer app-specific environments. Fees were lower, wallets were easier, stablecoins were more liquid, and trading interfaces were less intimidating than in the early Uniswap and Compound era.

But the mood was different from 2021. The market was more cynical. Users had learned that high yields often came with hidden risk. Airdrop farming became a dominant behavior. Many wallets were active not because users loved the product, but because they expected future token rewards. This made raw active-wallet data harder to interpret. A single human could control many wallets. A bot could mimic users. A points campaign could create activity that disappeared after the snapshot.

The result was a paradox: DeFi had more users than ever, but less innocence.

The 2025 Capital ATH Showed DeFi’s Maturity and Its Weakness

The most important recent milestone came in Q3 2025, when DappRadar reported that DeFi TVL hit a record $237 billion across blockchains and protocols. At the same time, the broader dapp industry’s daily unique active wallets fell 22.4% quarter-over-quarter to 18.7 million. In other words, capital was rising while user activity was cooling.

That divergence matters. It suggests DeFi was becoming more institutional and capital-efficient, but not necessarily more consumer-driven. Bigger pools, lending markets and tokenized assets can push TVL higher even if fewer humans are clicking through dapps every day. A market maker, fund, DAO treasury or stablecoin issuer can move more value than thousands of small wallets.

By October 2025, DappRadar reported that DeFi TVL had fallen to $221 billion, down 6.3% month-over-month, while the broader dapp industry averaged 16 million daily active wallets. The direction was clear: the sector was no longer in a simple expansion phase. It was rotating, correcting and becoming more selective.

That is the current DeFi reality. The sector can set records in capital, volume or users, but not always at the same time. The old bull-market assumption that everything rises together no longer holds.

The Current Situation: Smaller TVL, Stronger Infrastructure

As of late May 2026, DeFiLlama’s dashboard showed roughly $79.7 billion in DeFi TVL, a much lower snapshot than the highs reported during 2025. Methodologies vary across data providers, and TVL can shift sharply depending on whether liquid staking, restaking, synthetic assets, bridged assets and double-counted collateral are included. Still, the direction is useful: DeFi has cooled from the 2025 peak, and the market is now more focused on real usage than headline TVL.

Stablecoins are the clearest sign that onchain finance is not dead. DeFiLlama showed total stablecoin market capitalization at about $320.8 billion, with USDT holding roughly 58.8% dominance. Stablecoins are no longer just casino chips for crypto traders. They are becoming settlement assets, dollar access tools, exchange collateral, DeFi liquidity, and cross-border payment rails.

This matters for DeFi users because stablecoins are the sector’s base layer. When users borrow on Aave, provide liquidity on Curve, trade on Uniswap, move funds across chains, or settle perpetual positions, stablecoins are often involved. The rise of stablecoins makes DeFi more useful even when speculative farming is weak.

The lending market also shows a more mature user profile. Aave remains one of the most important DeFi protocols, with DeFiLlama showing active loans above $10 billion in its current dashboard data, while separate Token Terminal reporting said Aave’s average active loans in March 2026 were $16.55 billion, up more than 47% year-over-year. That gap reflects different snapshots and reporting windows, but the broader signal is consistent: lending is still one of DeFi’s strongest product categories.

The New DeFi User Is a Trader First

The strongest user trend is the rise of onchain trading, especially perpetual futures. In 2021, DeFi’s flagship activity was spot swaps and lending. By 2025, perps had become one of the sector’s biggest growth engines. DefiLlama data cited by Cointelegraph showed onchain perp DEX volume reaching $1.36 trillion in October 2025 before falling to $699 billion in March 2026 after five straight monthly declines.

That decline sounds bearish, but the scale is still remarkable. Even after cooling, onchain perpetual exchanges were processing volumes that would have been unimaginable for DeFi a few years earlier. Hyperliquid’s current DeFiLlama page shows cumulative perp volume above $4.5 trillion and open interest above $9.5 billion, placing it at the center of the new onchain trading economy.

This changes the identity of the DeFi user. The most active user is increasingly not a passive liquidity provider. It is a trader using leverage, chasing execution, comparing fees, managing margin, and moving between centralized and decentralized venues. That user cares about speed, liquidity, funding rates, liquidation engines and mobile access. They are less ideological and more performance-driven.

Spot DEXs Are Becoming Financial Infrastructure

Uniswap remains the symbol of spot DeFi. DeFiLlama shows Uniswap cumulative DEX volume above $3.68 trillion, with 24-hour volume around $1.4 billion in the current snapshot. That makes Uniswap less like a speculative experiment and more like standing market infrastructure.

The user experience has also changed. In the early DeFi era, swapping onchain meant paying high Ethereum gas fees, approving tokens manually, worrying about slippage and hoping the transaction would not fail. Now many users interact through aggregators, mobile wallets, chain-specific front ends, intent-based systems and low-fee networks. The complexity has not disappeared, but it has been abstracted.

The next phase will likely be even less visible. Users may not know they are using DeFi at all. A wallet, neobank, trading app or AI agent may route liquidity through decentralized venues in the background. In that future, DeFi user growth will not necessarily look like more people visiting protocol websites. It may look like more financial apps silently using DeFi rails.

RWAs Are Bringing a Different Kind of User

Real-world assets are one of the most important trends for DeFi’s next cycle. RWA.xyz currently shows tokenized U.S. Treasuries at about $10 billion in total value, with nearly 59,000 holders. This is not a retail degen market. It is a yield, collateral and treasury-management market that appeals to institutions, fintechs, DAOs and sophisticated crypto users seeking onchain exposure to traditional assets.

RWAs may not produce the same daily-active-wallet explosion as memecoins or airdrop farms, but they can deepen DeFi’s capital base. Tokenized Treasuries can become collateral in lending markets, backing assets for stablecoins, settlement instruments for institutions, or cash-management tools for crypto-native funds.

The risk is liquidity. Tokenizing an asset does not automatically make it trade actively. Academic research on RWAs has warned that many tokenized assets still suffer from limited secondary markets, regulatory gating, whitelisting and low transfer activity. That means RWA growth is real, but it should not be confused with fully open, liquid, permissionless DeFi.

The Security Problem Has Improved, But It Has Not Gone Away

DeFi users have become more security-aware, but the ecosystem remains dangerous. Immunefi reported that industry-wide DeFi protocol losses fell about 80% from the 2022 peak of $2.62 billion to $534 million in 2024, before rebounding to $680 million in 2025 because of a small number of large incidents. The median loss per incident fell from $6 million in 2022 to $1.5 million in 2025.

That is meaningful progress. Audits, bug bounties, formal verification, monitoring systems, circuit breakers and better risk teams have helped. But DeFi’s composability remains a double-edged sword. Protocols depend on oracles, bridges, collateral assets, liquidity pools, governance systems and external integrations. A failure in one component can move through the stack.

Research has also challenged how DeFi measures itself. Some academic analyses have found that TVL calculations are not always easy to verify and often rely on non-standard methods. Other research has argued that TVL can be inflated through double-counting, wrapping and leverage. This is important for users because a large TVL number can create false confidence.

Where DeFi Users Go Next

The next DeFi cycle will not be defined by one user type. It will split into several layers.

At the retail edge, DeFi will look like mobile trading, memecoin speculation, perp markets, social finance, stablecoin payments and airdrop hunting. These users will care less about decentralization as a philosophy and more about speed, rewards, entertainment and access.

At the professional edge, DeFi will look like structured lending, delta-neutral strategies, market making, collateralized stablecoin loops, basis trades, tokenized Treasuries and onchain derivatives. These users will care about risk engines, liquidity depth, capital efficiency and regulatory clarity.

At the institutional edge, DeFi may become a backend rather than a destination. Banks, fintechs, asset managers and payment companies may use stablecoins, tokenized funds and public-chain settlement while shielding end users from wallets, seed phrases and gas fees.

The most likely prediction is that DeFi user numbers will grow, but the definition of “user” will become harder to measure. Wallet counts will remain noisy. TVL will remain incomplete. Volume will be increasingly dominated by bots, market makers and professional traders. The more meaningful metrics will be retained users, real fees, net protocol revenue, stablecoin settlement, active borrowers, open interest, collateral quality and integrations into mainstream financial apps.

Prediction: DeFi’s Next ATH Will Be Less Loud, But More Important

The next DeFi ATH probably will not feel like 2021. It may not be driven by retail users discovering yield farms on Twitter. It is more likely to arrive through a combination of stablecoin expansion, onchain derivatives, tokenized assets, institutional collateral, better wallets and invisible routing through consumer apps.

TVL can return to and exceed the 2025 highs if crypto asset prices recover, stablecoin supply continues growing, and tokenized assets become more deeply integrated into lending and trading markets. But the healthier sign would be not just a higher TVL number. It would be more real borrowers, more organic trading, more stablecoin settlement, more sustainable protocol revenue and fewer hacks relative to assets secured.

The future DeFi user may not describe themselves as a DeFi user. They may be a trader opening a perp position from a mobile app, a freelancer receiving stablecoins, a fund parking cash in tokenized Treasuries, a borrower using tokenized collateral, or an AI agent executing payments through smart contracts. That is the real direction of the market.

DeFi’s first era was about proving that decentralized financial applications could exist. Its second era was about scaling users across chains. The next era will be about hiding the complexity so effectively that DeFi becomes infrastructure. When that happens, the sector’s most important all-time high may not be TVL. It may be the moment users stop noticing they are using DeFi at all.

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World’s $65 Million WLD Sale Exposes the Tension at the Heart of Sam Altman’s Identity Network

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World has always sold a bigger story than crypto. The project formerly known as Worldcoin wants to build proof of personhood for the AI age, a system that lets people prove they are real humans without handing over their full identity every time they log in, transact, vote, play, date or interact online. But the market is now focused on something much less philosophical: liquidity. After World Foundation’s token-issuing subsidiary sold $65 million worth of WLD through over-the-counter deals while the token traded near historic lows, investors are asking whether this was routine operational financing, a distress signal, or a preview of the token pressure still ahead.

The Sale That Changed the Conversation

World Assets, Ltd., a subsidiary connected to World Foundation, completed a series of OTC token sales totaling $65 million with four counterparties in late March 2026. The average sale price was reported at roughly $0.2719 per WLD, implying that about 239 million tokens changed hands. The foundation said part of the sold tokens, worth $25 million, is subject to a six-month lockup, while the proceeds are intended to fund core operations, research and development, Orb manufacturing, ecosystem development and related activities.

That explanation is straightforward on paper. World needs money to build hardware, expand operations and support an ambitious global identity network. Unlike a pure software protocol, World is not just deploying smart contracts and waiting for developers to arrive. It has physical devices, human operators, compliance costs, partnerships, market education and a controversial biometric onboarding model. In that sense, the need for funding is not surprising.

The timing is what made the sale so sensitive. WLD was already under pressure, and the OTC placement happened close to the token’s lows. As of May 29, 2026, WLD was trading around $0.295, far below its 2024 peak and still in the zone where every new token movement is interpreted through the lens of supply stress.

What an OTC Sale Really Means

An over-the-counter sale is not the same as dumping tokens directly into an exchange order book. OTC deals are usually arranged privately between large buyers and sellers, often to avoid immediate market disruption. For a project foundation, this can be a cleaner way to raise capital than selling into public liquidity minute by minute.

But OTC does not make supply disappear. It simply changes the path by which supply enters the market. If the buyers are strategic long-term holders, the sale can be interpreted as project financing. If the buyers are trading firms or funds seeking a discount, the market may assume some portion of the position will eventually be hedged, sold or used in basis trades.

That distinction matters because the optics of “four counterparties” are neutral without knowing who they are, why they bought, what discounts they received and how much of the allocation is restricted. The lockup on $25 million worth of WLD offers some temporary protection, but the remaining portion does not appear to carry the same restriction. For traders, that means the transaction may not have caused immediate exchange selling, but it still widened the overhang around WLD’s float.

This is why the phrase “quiet liquidity” captures the moment well. Nothing exploded on-chain in one dramatic public sale. There was no obvious exchange cascade triggered by a foundation wallet. Instead, supply moved in a more institutional format, and the market reacted to the implication: the project still needs capital, and WLD remains the asset most available to fund that need.

Why World Needs So Much Capital

World is not a normal token project. Its core product is World ID, a proof-of-human system designed to distinguish real people from bots and AI agents. To obtain the highest level of verification, users typically interact with the Orb, a spherical biometric device that scans a person’s iris and confirms uniqueness. World rebranded from Worldcoin to World Network in October 2024 and introduced a new Orb as part of an effort to scale iris-based verification, while continuing to face scrutiny over data collection and privacy concerns.

That model is capital intensive. Orbs have to be designed, manufactured, distributed, maintained and placed where users can access them. Operators have to be trained. Retail and partner locations have to be coordinated. Regulators have to be engaged. The company has to persuade users that biometric verification is safe, useful and worth doing.

This is very different from a meme coin or a DeFi protocol where the primary cost is developer labor and liquidity incentives. World’s ambition is closer to infrastructure: a global identity rail for the AI era. Infrastructure is expensive long before it is profitable.

The strategic logic is easy to understand. As AI agents, deepfakes, bot farms and synthetic accounts become more convincing, online platforms may need better ways to know whether a user is human. World wants to be one of the default systems for that verification layer. If it succeeds, World ID could become useful across social platforms, games, financial apps, dating services, marketplaces and AI-agent systems.

The problem is that crypto markets rarely reward long infrastructure timelines when token supply is expanding and price action is weak. WLD holders are being asked to believe in a global identity network while absorbing the financial reality of a project that still needs substantial capital.

The Tokenomics Problem

The latest controversy is not only about one $65 million sale. It is about WLD’s broader supply structure. World Foundation published an April 2026 tokenomics update saying that as of April 10, 2026, 4.9 billion WLD tokens, or 49% of the 10 billion total supply, were unlocked, with 3.3 billion in circulation. The foundation also said WLD tokens continue unlocking daily in a linear fashion, with no unlock cliff, and that the overall unlock rate will decrease by 43% on July 24, 2026.

That official clarification is important because market commentary has often framed July 2026 as a major unlock event. The more precise picture is that WLD’s supply is already moving through daily unlock schedules, and the daily rate is set to fall, not rise, after July 24. Still, the market’s concern is understandable. When a token has billions of units unlocked or unlocking, investors naturally focus on who controls them, how they may be used, and whether demand can absorb supply.

WLD’s challenge is that the token must do two jobs at once. It is supposed to support a network economy around World ID, World App and World Chain. At the same time, it is also a funding tool for expansion. Those roles can conflict. A foundation may need to monetize tokens to build the network, while market participants may punish that monetization because it increases perceived sell pressure.

This is the basic tension behind many large crypto projects, but World’s case is sharper because the project’s non-crypto ambitions are so large. The more World wants to become a real-world identity layer, the more capital it may need. The more capital it raises through WLD, the more token holders worry about dilution and supply absorption.

The Market Is Asking a Simple Question

The central question is not whether World is interesting. It clearly is. The question is whether WLD captures enough value from that interest to justify the token’s supply profile.

A user can understand World ID as a verification credential. A platform can understand it as a way to filter bots. A government or enterprise partner might understand it as identity infrastructure. But WLD holders need a more specific thesis: why should the token appreciate if World ID adoption grows?

That is where the debate gets more difficult. If WLD becomes deeply integrated into World App, payments, incentives, governance, gas economics or ecosystem rewards, then adoption could translate into stronger token demand. If World ID becomes widely used but WLD remains mostly an incentive and financing asset, the network could grow while the token continues to struggle.

Crypto history is full of projects where product traction and token performance diverged. A useful network does not automatically create a strong token. The token needs durable demand, controlled emissions, clear utility and market confidence that insiders or foundations will not repeatedly sell into weak liquidity.

World’s $65 million OTC sale therefore forces investors to examine not just the project’s mission, but the token’s role in that mission.

Privacy Remains the Other Overhang

World’s financial pressure is unfolding alongside a long-running privacy debate. The project’s pitch is that World ID can prove humanness while preserving anonymity, using privacy-preserving cryptography rather than exposing personal identity. But the public image of the project is still dominated by the Orb and the idea of iris scanning.

Privacy campaigners have criticized the project over the collection, storage and use of personal data, while regulators in several jurisdictions have examined the network or taken temporary action against aspects of its operations. This matters for WLD because regulatory uncertainty can limit adoption, slow expansion and reduce exchange or institutional appetite.

Even if World’s technology is more privacy-preserving than critics assume, perception matters. Biometric identity is emotionally and politically sensitive. People may accept fingerprint or face scans on their phones because Apple and Google have spent years normalizing those behaviors inside consumer devices. Asking people to visit an Orb for a crypto-linked identity credential is a much harder trust exercise.

The rise of AI makes World’s mission more relevant, but it does not automatically make users comfortable. The project has to win two arguments at once: that proof of personhood is becoming necessary, and that World’s method is the right way to provide it.

Why the AI Narrative Still Helps

Despite the market weakness, World remains attached to one of the strongest long-term narratives in technology: the collision between AI and identity. As generative AI improves, the internet will face more synthetic accounts, fake reviews, automated social activity, deepfake media and AI agents acting on behalf of users. In that environment, proving personhood without exposing full identity could become valuable infrastructure.

This is where Sam Altman’s association matters. Altman is not only linked to World as a co-founder; he is also the public face of OpenAI, the company most associated with the AI boom. That connection gives World a powerful narrative bridge. The same AI wave that makes online identity harder also makes World’s mission easier to explain.

But narrative is not enough in a bear market for a token. Investors no longer reward AI-adjacent branding automatically. They want evidence of adoption, revenue, partner usage, token utility and disciplined supply management. World has the story. The question is whether it can turn that story into economics that support WLD.

What the Latest Updates Signal

The latest updates around World point in two directions. On the product side, the project is still building. The Orb rollout, World ID integrations, World App activity and broader rebrand from Worldcoin to World suggest a team trying to move beyond crypto speculation into identity infrastructure. On the market side, the $65 million OTC sale shows that the network still depends on token liquidity to finance its expansion.

Those two realities can coexist, but they create a difficult message. World is telling users and partners that it is building a long-term human verification network. The market is hearing that the foundation is selling hundreds of millions of WLD near the lows.

That does not necessarily mean the project is failing. Many infrastructure businesses raise capital during difficult periods. But crypto tokens are not conventional equity. When a foundation sells tokens, holders experience it less like a private financing round and more like supply pressure on the asset they already own.

The Road Ahead for WLD

For WLD to recover confidence, World needs more than a rebound in the broader altcoin market. It needs to show that token supply can be absorbed by real demand, not just by discounted OTC buyers. That means clearer evidence that World ID usage is growing in meaningful contexts, that World App and World Chain can create durable activity, and that WLD has a role beyond incentives and treasury financing.

The July 2026 tokenomics milestone will also matter. World says the daily unlock rate will decrease by 43% on July 24, which may help reduce future issuance pressure. But a lower unlock rate does not erase the already unlocked supply or the market’s concern about future monetization. Investors will watch foundation wallets, OTC disclosures, exchange flows and ecosystem incentives closely.

The more bullish case is that World is enduring the painful early economics of building a massive identity network. In that version of the story, the token is weak because the network is still immature, not because the idea is broken. The bearish case is that World’s vision may be compelling while WLD remains structurally burdened by supply, regulatory risk and unclear value capture.

The Bottom Line

World’s $65 million WLD sale is not just another token financing headline. It is a stress test for one of crypto’s most ambitious AI-era projects. The foundation needs capital to build a global proof-of-human network, but the token market is increasingly skeptical of projects that fund expansion by selling into weak liquidity.

That is the uncomfortable trade-off at the center of World. The product is trying to solve a real problem that may become more urgent as AI agents and synthetic identities spread across the internet. But the token is living in the present, where price, float, unlock schedules and sell pressure matter more than distant infrastructure dreams.

World may still become an important identity layer for the AI age. WLD, however, has to prove something more specific: that the value of that network can flow back to the token faster than supply can dilute investor confidence. Until then, every sale will be read not only as financing, but as a signal.

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