
Partner Haseeb Qureshi says speaking openly in a hype-driven space has been the firm’s greatest superpower.
Dragonfly Capital has officially closed its fourth fund at $650 million. The crypto-focused venture firm made the announcement even as the broader blockchain investment sector faces serious headwinds.
The firm continues to focus on financial infrastructure, including stablecoins, onchain finance, and tokenized real-world assets.
This latest raise cements Dragonfly’s place among the top crypto venture firms globally competing with Andreessen Horowitz and Paradigm.
The firm’s strategy has shifted noticeably toward Wall Street-style financial products built on blockchain rails. General partner Rob Hadick, who joined in April 2022 from hedge fund GoldenTree, has been central to that repositioning.
He arrived just as the Terra Luna collapse rocked the market and stayed through the FTX implosion shortly after. Recalling that turbulent period, Hadick said, ”
One early product of that vision was Ethena, a synthetic dollar project that most investors rejected following the Terra Luna fallout. Dragonfly led Ethena’s $6 million seed round during the bear market of 2023.
Ethena founder Guy Young recalled that most investors told him, ”
Dragonfly, however, took a different view. Young credited the firm’s ability to ” as the reason they moved forward.
Today, Ethena’s flagship stablecoin carries a market cap of roughly $6.3 billion. Franklin Templeton and Fidelity’s venture arm joined a subsequent $100 million round, further validating Dragonfly’s early conviction.
The bet stands as one of the clearest examples of the firm’s contrarian approach during a difficult market period.
A broader shift is now visible across the entire crypto venture space. Partner Tom Schmidt noted that fewer funds are chasing native protocol tokens and more are backing assets tied to real-world instruments.
” Schmidt said. Hadick added,
Dragonfly’s current leadership includes four partners with distinct, complementary roles. Haseeb Qureshi serves as the firm’s most visible voice, known for his Chopping Block podcast and direct commentary on Crypto Twitter.
He once nearly secured Polymarket’s seed round in 2020 but passed on matching a competing term sheet. Reflecting on it, Qureshi said plainly, The firm eventually invested at the Series B stage.
The firm has also navigated serious internal and external turbulence. A Department of Justice inquiry surfaced in 2025, tied to Dragonfly’s investment in privacy protocol Tornado Cash.
Prosecutors briefly suggested Schmidt could face criminal charges before the DOJ reversed course. Qureshi maintained that and the episode ultimately became a point of credibility within the broader crypto community.
Dragonfly restructured significantly after co-founder Alex Pack departed around 2020. Pack himself acknowledged that he and Feng were ” adding that he spent ” before the two parted ways.
The firm also relocated its Asia operations from Beijing to Singapore amid China’s sweeping crypto crackdown, though Schmidt confirmed it still maintains a meaningful regional presence.
With $650 million now secured, Dragonfly enters the next cycle as one of the sector’s most established players. Qureshi said.
He added that the firm’s willingness to speak directly has been a key differentiator:
The firm is now positioned to shape how blockchain technology continues merging with mainstream financial systems.

