Tech Investors Bet on AI, Leave Crypto Behind

Silicon Valley venture capitalists are racing to get into artificial intelligence companies — including investors who once bet big on crypto.

In the most recent quarter, VCs spent less on crypto and digital asset companies than at any point since 2020, according to data from the research firm PitchBook. At the same time, the total global value of investments in AI for the April-June period was higher than crypto even at its peak.

The numbers reflect the recent tendency of many tech investors — even those who once backed crypto — to move away from the scandal-plagued digital asset industry toward the latest advances in AI, said Robert Le, a crypto analyst at PitchBook.

New developments in AI have made it highly attractive to investors, at the same time as a barrage of scandals, new regulations, and tumbling prices have made crypto toxic. Joe Zhao, Millennia Capital's managing partner, said he’s ready to leave digital assets behind. Zhao and Millennia once backed crypto companies like Blockstream and Lumida; now they’re diving further into artificial intelligence. Millennia has already invested in closely watched startups including Stability AI.

“AI is offering so many more use cases than blockchain,” Zhao said.

Some crypto investors have come under fire for kindling an interest in AI. Paradigm, the high-profile crypto VC firm started by Coinbase Global Inc. co-founder Fred Ehrsam and former Sequoia Capital partner Matt Huang, removed crypto mentions from its website and played up its interest in AI instead, crypto news outlet The Block reported in May. Huang tweeted this month that the website update had been “a mistake” and directed users to a new version of the company’s homepage that includes moving neon green and black banners emblazoned with the word “CRYPTO.”