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Haun Ventures raises $1B for crypto and AI agent funds after stablecoin exits deliver for LPs
Katie Haun has raised $1 billion for two new venture funds at Haun Ventures, split evenly between early and later-stage vehicles to be deployed over the next two to three years. The capital will go into crypto and blockchain companies, which have been the firm's focus since Haun left Andreessen Horowitz in 2022 to launch her own shop. But the more revealing shift is not in the fund size, which is smaller than the $1.5 billion she raised in her debut. It is in the thesis. Haun is expanding into AI agents and financial infrastructure, betting that the next generation of autonomous software will need financial plumbing before it needs better models, and that the firms best positioned to build that plumbing are the ones that already understand how regulated money moves. Haun draws a deliberate boundary. "We're not pivoting to be an AI fund," she told Bloomberg. "We want to do AI that is in our lane." The lane is financial services. Haun Ventures is looking at startups developing AI agents and infrastructure that help consumers and businesses access financial products at any time, eliminating what Haun considers outdated constraints like deadlines for wiring money. The framing is specific: not general-purpose AI, not foundation models, not the application layer that has captivated the rest of Silicon Valley, but the intersection where autonomous software meets regulated finance. The firm has already started deploying behind this thesis. Haun Ventures is one of the largest investors in Erebor, a digital bank founded by Anduril Industries founder Palmer Luckey and backed by Peter Thiel's Founders Fund. Erebor, which received FDIC deposit insurance approval in late 2025 and raised $350 million at a $4.35 billion valuation, is designed to serve technology companies working with digital assets, artificial intelligence, defence, and manufacturing. It is the kind of institution that did not exist two years ago: a federally regulated bank built from the ground up for the companies building AI agents, not the consumers using them. The infrastructure for AI agents to operate within the financial system is being built in earnest. Stripe has launched a machine payments preview integrating stablecoin settlement for agent-to-agent transactions. Mastercard launched its Agent Pay programme. PayPal and Google announced a joint Agent Payments Protocol. Visa is developing tokenisation infrastructure for autonomous purchasing. The common thread is that every major payments company has concluded that AI agents will need their own financial rails, and that the companies building those rails will capture a layer of value that the AI labs themselves will not. Haun's credibility for this expansion rests on returns from her first fund. The headline exits are in stablecoins: Stripe acquired Bridge for $1.1 billion, a significant uptick from the $100 million valuation at which Haun Ventures invested. About a year later, Mastercard acquired BVNK for $1.8 billion, making it the largest stablecoin acquisition to date. Haun Ventures first invested in BVNK at a $678 million valuation. Both exits validated the same thesis: that stablecoin infrastructure would become essential financial plumbing, and that the acquirers would be the incumbent payments companies, not other crypto firms. Not all bets worked. Haun Ventures invested in OpenSea in a round that valued the NFT marketplace at $13.3 billion. A top investor later marked the company down to $1.4 billion. But the firm also bought distressed crypto assets at discounts during the FTX-era downturn and sold them at peak prices in 2025, returning capital to limited partners. Accolade Partners founder Joelle Kayden, a limited partner in the fund, pointed to the staking strategy and token trading as key contributors to investor returns. The new fund is slightly smaller than the debut because the team expects less dramatic swings in liquid token prices, a sign that the crypto-native part of the strategy is maturing even as the AI-adjacent part is expanding. Haun is not the only crypto-native investor broadening scope. Paradigm, one of the largest crypto-focused venture firms, raised $1.5 billion in February for a new fund that will invest in AI and robotics alongside its core blockchain portfolio. Matt Huang, Paradigm's co-founder, said "developments in AI are too interesting to ignore," though the firm intends to focus on the intersection of AI and crypto rather than competing for general-purpose AI deals. Sequoia raised $7 billion for its biggest-ever late-stage fund, Thrive Capital raised $10 billion, and Andreessen Horowitz has raised $15 billion. In that context, Haun's $1 billion is modest. But the fund is not competing for the same deals. It is competing for the deals that sit in the gap between pure AI funds and pure crypto funds, a category that barely existed two years ago and now has two of the most credible crypto investors in the world racing to define it. Venture firms that made early bets across AI and alternative assets are delivering extraordinary returns, and the firms that survived the crypto winter with their reputations intact are now in a position to capture allocations from limited partners who want exposure to both sectors without doubling their manager count. Haun's pitch to LPs is that Haun Ventures can be that single allocation: a firm that understands tokenised assets, stablecoin infrastructure, and regulatory risk, and can apply that understanding to the financial plumbing that AI agents will require. Haun's differentiator is Washington. Before venture capital, she spent a decade as a federal prosecutor at the Department of Justice, including serving as what she describes as the first digital currency coordinator at the US Attorney's office in San Francisco. Her first task was prosecuting crypto-using criminals. A decade later, that network spans both coasts: she hosted a West Coast Digital Currency Summit in 2015 with guests from Peter Thiel's Mithril Capital and the Securities and Exchange Commission. Today, Chuck Schumer has sat in her conference room, and so has the Senate banking chair. "The East Coast and the West Coast, they need translation between them," said Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, an investor in Haun's funds. The venture landscape is shifting from software to regulated, capital-intensive sectors where government relationships matter as much as technical insight: defence, energy, financial infrastructure, and now the regulatory framework that will govern AI agents operating in financial markets. Haun's argument is that the same regulatory expertise that helped her navigate crypto's journey from prosecution target to federally chartered banking infrastructure will be equally valuable as AI agents begin executing financial transactions autonomously. The question is whether the intersection Haun is targeting, AI agents that operate within regulated financial systems, will be large enough and distinct enough to justify a dedicated fund, or whether it will be absorbed into the broader AI investment thesis that every major venture firm is now pursuing. Small, focused venture firms can outperform generalists when they own a category that the larger funds underestimate. Haun is betting that AI-native financial infrastructure is that category, and that the firms that understand both the technology and the regulation will build it. A billion dollars is a substantial bet. The returns on the first fund suggest she knows where to place it.
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Haun Ventures Raises $1 Billion Fund for the Intersection of Crypto and AI Agents - Decrypt
Haun's previous fund scored wins with Bridge's $1.1 billion Stripe exit and BVNK's $1.8 billion acquisition by Mastercard. Haun Ventures announced Monday that it has raised $1 billion in new capital, a significant bet that the foundational plumbing of global finance is on the verge of a structural overhaul driven by digital assets and artificial intelligence. The firm, led by Katie Haun -- a former Justice Department prosecutor who later served as an independent director at Coinbase and general partner at Andreessen Horowitz -- outlined three areas it plans to prioritize with the new funds: next-generation financial infrastructure, tokenized assets and new markets, and the agentic economy, in which AI systems increasingly transact on behalf of humans. "I've been following the flow of assets my entire career, and this is the most dynamic period in technology and finance I've ever witnessed," Haun wrote. "The founders rethinking financial assets and markets have always had to be bold. They operate in spaces where the rules are unsettled, incomplete, or simply unwritten -- in short, they shape the frontier. That means they need partners who understand both the technology and the regulatory terrain around it." The announcement comes as digital assets have grown into a multi-trillion dollar asset class and stablecoin transaction volumes surged into the double-digit trillions in 2025, a figure the firm said is approaching the combined volume of Visa and Mastercard. Haun Ventures argues that the convergence of crypto, AI, and loosening regulatory headwinds has created an unusually fertile moment for founders building in financial services. The firm pointed to the tokenization of real-world assets -- currencies, securities, commodities like gold and oil -- as a trend poised to unlock global liquidity pools unconstrained by regional infrastructure. The firm also flagged the emerging agentic economy as a long-term structural shift. As AI agents take on a growing share of tasks, they will need native financial rails -- payment systems, credit, identity verification, and fraud prevention -- designed specifically for how machines transact rather than humans. Haun told Bloomberg that her firm isn't going all-in on AI, but rather wants to focus on the intersection of crypto infrastructure and AI agent technology. "We want to do AI that is in our lane," she said.
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Haun Ventures Raises $1B to Fund Crypto, AI Startups
Haun Ventures has raised $1 billion to back early- and late-stage crypto startups, while expanding into artificial intelligence for the first time. The funds will focus on three areas: crypto financial infrastructure, tokenization and AI agents. The firm's founder, Katie Haun, called these areas the "new economy." "I've been following the flow of assets my entire career, and this is the most dynamic period in technology and finance I've ever witnessed," said Haun, a former US government prosecutor turned crypto executive, in a blog post on Monday. "The foundations of capital, commerce and trust are undergoing meaningful structural changes," she added. "The founders who can see across all of it, and build accordingly, will be defining entrepreneurs of this era." It's a significant shift for Haun Ventures, as it is the first time the crypto-focused firm has looked to invest in AI startups, joining a rush of venture firms that are moving into the growing industry. Crunchbase reported in April that AI firms received a record $242 billion in venture funding in the first quarter of 2026, capturing 80% of the total global venture funding over the quarter, which hit an all-time record of $300 billion. Haun said that AI agents, software that autonomously performs tasks, will "increasingly begin to conduct economic activity on our behalf," and new products and services would need to be "developed for a world in which computers are the customers." AI agents currently make a small number of payments, around $1.6 million worth over a 30-day period as of early March, according to Andreessen Horowitz partner Noah Levine, a number that the Boston Consulting Group expects to rise to $2.4 trillion a year by 2029. "Every supporting layer will need to be rearchitected for this world: fraud prevention, credit, insurance, identity, privacy, provenance, reputation, and verification all require native versions designed for how agents transact, and cryptographic tools will be important here," she added. Related: DTCC eyes October tokenized securities launch with 50 DeFi and TradFi giants Meanwhile, Haun said that "the core plumbing of global finance" was being shifted to accommodate an always-on digital world, and noted tokenization as a technology that allowed traditional assets such as gold and oil to be "borderless, always on, and programmable." She told Bloomberg on Monday that her company wants to focus on the cross-section of AI agents and crypto infrastructure, wanting to invest in "AI that is in our lane."
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Katie Haun's venture firm has raised $1 billion split between early and later-stage funds, expanding beyond crypto into AI agents and financial infrastructure. The move follows successful exits from Bridge's $1.1 billion Stripe acquisition and BVNK's $1.8 billion Mastercard deal. Haun targets the intersection where autonomous software meets regulated finance, betting AI agents will need financial plumbing before better models.
Katie Haun has closed a $1 billion fund for Haun Ventures, split evenly between early and later-stage venture funds to be deployed over the next two to three years
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. The capital will continue supporting crypto and blockchain companies while expanding into AI agents and financial infrastructure, marking a strategic shift for the firm founded after Haun left Andreessen Horowitz in 20221
. The fund size is smaller than the $1.5 billion she raised in her debut, but the thesis has evolved to capture what Haun calls "the most dynamic period in technology and finance" she has witnessed2
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Source: Decrypt
Haun draws a clear boundary around her investment strategy. "We're not pivoting to be an AI fund," she told Bloomberg. "We want to do AI that is in our lane"
1
. That lane is financial services, specifically the intersection of crypto and AI where autonomous software meets regulated finance3
. Haun Ventures is looking at startups developing AI agents and infrastructure that help consumers and businesses access financial products at any time, eliminating outdated constraints like deadlines for wiring money1
. The firm announced three priority areas: next-generation crypto financial infrastructure, tokenized assets and new markets, and the agentic economy where AI systems increasingly transact on behalf of humans2
.
Source: Cointelegraph
Haun's credibility for this expansion rests on returns from her first fund, particularly in stablecoins. Stripe acquired Bridge for $1.1 billion, a significant uptick from the $100 million valuation at which Haun Ventures invested
1
. About a year later, Mastercard acquired BVNK for $1.8 billion, making it the largest stablecoin acquisition to date, with Haun Ventures first investing at a $678 million valuation2
. Both exits validated the thesis that stablecoin infrastructure would become essential financial plumbing, with acquirers being incumbent payment systems companies rather than other crypto firms1
. The firm also bought distressed crypto assets at discounts during the FTX-era downturn and sold them at peak prices in 2025, returning capital to LPs.The infrastructure for AI agents to operate within the financial system is being built in earnest across major players. Stripe has launched a machine payments preview integrating stablecoin settlement for agent-to-agent transactions, while Mastercard launched its Agent Pay programme and PayPal and Google announced a joint Agent Payments Protocol
1
. Visa is developing tokenization infrastructure for autonomous purchasing1
. Every major payments company has concluded that AI agents will need their own financial rails, and the companies building those rails will capture a layer of value that AI labs themselves will not1
. AI agents currently make around $1.6 million worth of payments over a 30-day period as of early March, a number that Boston Consulting Group expects to rise to $2.4 trillion a year by 20293
.Related Stories
Haun Ventures has already started deploying behind this thesis. The firm is one of the largest investors in Erebor, a digital bank founded by Anduril Industries founder Palmer Luckey and backed by Peter Thiel's Founders Fund
1
. Erebor received FDIC deposit insurance approval in late 2025 and raised $350 million at a $4.35 billion valuation, designed to serve technology companies working with digital assets, artificial intelligence, defence, and manufacturing1
. Haun noted that tokenization allows traditional assets such as gold and oil to become "borderless, always on, and programmable"3
. Stablecoin transaction volumes surged into the double-digit trillions in 2025, approaching the combined volume of Visa and Mastercard2
. As AI agents take on a growing share of tasks, they will need native financial rails including payment systems, credit, identity verification, and fraud prevention designed specifically for how machines transact rather than humans2
.Haun is not the only crypto-native investor broadening scope. Paradigm, one of the largest crypto-focused venture firms, raised $1.5 billion in February for a new fund that will invest in AI and robotics alongside its core blockchain portfolio
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. AI firms received a record $242 billion in venture funding in the first quarter of 2026, capturing 80% of total global venture funding over the quarter, which hit an all-time record of $300 billion3
. In that context, Haun's $1 billion fund is competing for deals that sit in the gap between pure AI funds and pure crypto funds, a category that barely existed two years ago1
. Haun, a former Justice Department prosecutor who served as an independent director at Coinbase before joining Andreessen Horowitz, brings both technology and regulatory expertise to founders operating where rules are "unsettled, incomplete, or simply unwritten"2
. The new fund is slightly smaller than the debut because the team expects less dramatic swings in liquid token prices, signaling that the crypto-native part of the strategy is maturing even as the AI-adjacent part expands1
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