In a new Twitter post dated Dec. 12, Du Jun, co-founder of cryptocurrency exchange Huobi Global, shared new insight on his experience of running ABCDE Capital, a $400 million Web 3.0 venture capital (VC) fund, in June this year. According to Jun, the idea for ABCDE Capital came in March, and by April, it was already registered in Singapore. However, amidst the $40 billion Terra Luna implosion in May, Jun said that "old money has all but fled" after the incident.
We chose to start @ABCDECapital at the most difficult time of the market. Hope to bring a glimmer of light to builders and bring more fairness, innovation and strength to crypto industry. https://t.co/GmxFFsG7qL
Undeterred, Jun continued that in August, the VC fund was fully operational, with "a few partners pooling tens of millions of dollars to invest." While an initial report early November revealed "very good" results, Jun said that the subsequent collapse of FTX was "far beyond expectations" for the industry:
With regard to decentralized finance, or DeFi, Jun attributed last summer's boom to quantitative easing (QE) measures of the U.S. Federal Reserve. Tying it to regulation, Jun said that DeFi growth took place largely due to companies such as Coinbase, Circle, Grayscale, and Paxos "actively embraced regulation" and allowed large institutional investors to enter the space against the backdrop of QE.
Jun also revealed that since ABCDE Capital began investing in August, the firm has since amassed seven companies in its portfolio in the security, data, social, zero knowledge, and nonfungible tokens sectors. "ABCDE only invests in 15-20 firms per year; a good firm is not afraid of the bear market, referrals are welcome, let's continue!" wrote the co-founder.
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