Angels from Citadel, Jane Street, JPMorgan back $20M raise for Theo network

Date:

Share post:

Angels from Citadel, Jane Street, JPMorgan back $20M raise for Theo network

Theo, a provider of onchain trading infrastructure, has raised $20 million from 17 investors to enhance its institutional-grade trading platform aimed at retail investors.

The funding round was co-led by Hack VC and Anthos Capital, with additional participation from venture capital firms Manifold Trading, Miranda Ventures, Flowdesk, MEXC and Amber Group, Theo disclosed on April 24. 

Citadel, Jane Street, IMC and JPMorgan were listed as angel investors in the deal.

Created by former quant traders, Theo gives retail investors access to advanced strategies like high-frequency trading and market making, which are tools typically used by professional trading firms.

Theo’s infrastructure can be used across centralized exchanges and decentralized financing protocols, the company said. 

The Theo network secures nearly $29 million in total value locked as of April 23, according to industry data. 

Angels from Citadel, Jane Street, JPMorgan back $20M raise for Theo network
Theo’s total value locked is down from its peak in February. Source: DefiLlama

Theo is part of a wave of blockchain protocols attempting to bridge the gap between institutional finance and retail. Companies like Polygon, Fireblocks, Ondo Finance, Lido, and BloFin have all played active roles in advancing this space.

Related: Institutions break up with Ethereum but keep ETH on the hook

Institutions are also coming onchain

While companies like Theo are working to bring Wall Street-level sophistication to crypto-native users, there’s strong evidence that influence is flowing in the opposite direction, too.

After years of speculation, institutional involvement in digital assets is now a reality, driven by the launch of Bitcoin exchange-traded funds, the rise of real-world asset tokenization, the lure of onchain lending, and the growing dominance of stablecoins as a preferred funding method.

According to credit rating agency Moody’s, secondary markets built on the blockchain can streamline the investing process by removing inefficiencies and lowering barriers to asset ownership. 

These trends are a major reason why the majority of institutional investors say they plan to increase their crypto allocations this year, according to a recent survey by Coinbase and EY-Parthenon.

The survey also determined that three-quarters of institutions could be active DeFi users within two years.

Magazine: Altcoin season to hit in Q2? Mantra’s plan to win trust: Hodler’s Digest, April 13 – 19

Leave a reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

spot_img

Related articles

NFT Sales Plummet 18% as Polygon Outshines Ethereum

NFT sales fell 18.43% to $116.9M, per CryptoSlam data. Polygon outpaced Ethereum with $23.3M in NFT sales. Courtyard on Polygon...

Nakamoto Holdings Raises $51.5M for Bitcoin Reserve Expansion

Nakamoto Holdings raises $51.5M for Bitcoin treasury expansion. Funds will support BTC acquisitions and corporate operations. Total capital for the...

Fartcoin Faces 11% Drop Testing 200 EMA Support

Fartcoin’s price falls 9.14% to $0.8335, nearing the critical 200 EMA support level. MACD reflects intense bearish momentum, driving...

ZachXBT Exposes Bitcoin Bridge Garden Finance Hack

Claims connect platform to $1.4B Bybit and WazirX breaches. Garden Finance’s decentralization claim faces scrutiny.  Investigation highlights crypto’s “crime supercycle”...