Blockchain Capital

American venture capital company

Blockchain Capital
Company typePrivate
IndustryVenture capital
Founded2013
FounderP. Bart Stephens, W. Bradford Stephens
HeadquartersSan Francisco, CA, United States
ProductsVenture capital funds
AUM$2B
Websitewww.blockchain.capital

Blockchain Capital (formerly Crypto Currency Partners) is a venture capital company founded in 2013 by brothers Paul Bartlett Stephens and William Bradford Stephens. As the first, dedicated venture capital firm exclusively focused on investing across the blockchain ecosystem, Blockchain Capital is one of the most active and experienced venture investors in blockchain technology.

History

In 2013, Blockchain Capital became the first venture capital fund dedicated to crypto builders. The company also pioneered the world's first tokenized investment fund and the blockchain industry's first security token, the BCAP, which was sold through a security token offering in April 2017. Blockchain Capital held this initial coin offering (ICO) as an experiment, which helped the company to raise $10 million in just six hours. [1][2][3]

As an industry pioneer, Blockchain Capital's Funds provide broad-based exposure across the entire sector, from Web3 to decentralized finance (DeFi) to Infrastructure and beyond.

The company invested in several notable category leaders, including Opensea, Kraken, Ethereum, and Coinbase.[4]

Today, Blockchain Capital has $2B in assets under management across five fully invested funds and two current investment funds, focuses solely on venture investing (no trading, shorting or hedging), and has backed over 170+ founders since inception. They now have offices in both San Francisco and NYC.

Founding Team

Blockchain Capital was founded in October 2013 by Bart Stephens and Brad Stephens.

Bart Stephens is a three-time founder whose career has focused on emerging technologies. Bart has founded an internet company, a hedge fund, and a venture capital firm. Prior to Blockchain Capital, Bart was managing partner and a founder of Stephens Investment Management (SIM), a hedge fund firm that in 2002 invented the term and pioneered the strategy "Nanocap" investing – venture capital style investing in the public markets focused on sub-micro-cap equities. Prior to founding SIM, Bart was executive vice president, venture capital, for Ivanhoe Capital Corporation (ICC), an international investment firm.

Bart earned a B.A. in politics from Princeton University, where his academic work focused on information warfare and national security topics.

Before joining ICC, Bart was a co-founder and head of corporate qnd business development for Oncology.com. Oncology.com grew to become the internet's largest network of cancer-related websites before being sold to Pharmacia (now Pfizer) in 2001. Bart started his career at fintech pioneer E*TRADE, where he worked in corporate development and in the advanced products group.

Brad Stephens is the founder and managing partner. Prior to Blockchain Capital, Brad was managing partner of Stephens Investment Management LLC (SIM), which he founded in 2002. His diverse background in domestic and international finance includes sell-side securities analysis, hedge fund management, venture capital, and family office management.Prior to co-founding SIM, Brad worked as the senior analyst at Fidelity Ventures, the venture capital arm of Fidelity Investments. At Fidelity, Brad focused on the areas of Internet Security and New Media, and also founded Fidelity's Biometric Consortium, a cutting-edge collaboration of all Fidelity's business units designed to explore, pilot, and implement biometric security systems within Fidelity and eventually its consumer clients.

Brad holds a B.A. in economics from Duke University.

Brad also worked as a research analyst in CSFB's Technology Group, specializing in Internet Security and Internet Infrastructure Software. While at CSFB, Brad helped raise over $1.3 billion for companies under coverage. Prior to working at CSFB, Brad worked as a research analyst at Furman Selz (later acquired by ING Barings), where he co-founded their Internet Research Group and co-authored the first financial industry piece on Internet Security.

Recovery

Blockchain Capital does not directly finance seizure and recovery operations; instead, law enforcement agencies and regulatory organizations use the blockchain technology that underpins cryptocurrencies to track down and retrieve assets that have been obtained illegally, particularly those associated with illicit activities. Blockchain analytics companies provide services and tools that make it easier to keep an eye on transactions on open blockchains and help find and recover assets linked to illegal activity.[5]

References

  1. ^ "Openfinance opens up US trading of third-party digital assets". TechCrunch. May 16, 2019. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  2. ^ Kastelein, Richard (March 24, 2017). "What Initial Coin Offerings Are, and Why VC Firms Care". Harvard Business Review. ISSN 0017-8012. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  3. ^ Griffith, Erin (November 9, 2017). "Cryptocurrency Mania Fuels Hype and Fear at Venture Firms". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  4. ^ Levy, Ari (October 17, 2017). "Crypto venture firm Blockchain Capital is raising $150 million for two funds". CNBC. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
  5. ^ "Crypto crime investigations". March 19, 2024.

External links

  • Official website
  • crypto news