
Standard Chartered’s venture arm is preparing to launch a $250 million cryptocurrency investment fund in 2026, signaling growing institutional appetite for digital assets.
Standard Chartered’s SC Ventures plans to raise $250 million worth of capital to open an investment fund focused on digital assets in the financial services sector, Bloomberg reported Monday, citing operating partner Gautam Jain.
Set to launch in 2026, the fund will be backed by investors in the Middle East, with a focus on global investment opportunities, Jain told Bloomberg.
SC Ventures’ plan follows a wave of corporate treasury firms building long-term accumulation strategies, adding to expectations that more institutional inflows could enter the crypto market over the next several years.
Cointelegraph reached out to SC Ventures for comment on which cryptocurrencies it plans to include in the fund but did not receive an immediate response.
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SC Ventures to launch $100 million Africa investment fund
Separate from the $250 million digital asset fund, SV Ventures also plans to launch a $100 million fund for Africa investments, while also considering its first venture debt fund, according to Jain.
However, he didn’t specify whether those funds would include or focus on cryptocurrencies and financial technology.
The news comes shortly after Standard Chartered raised concerns over the falling market net asset value (mNAV) of digital asset treasury (DAT) firms, which measures the ratio of a company’s enterprise value to the value of its cryptocurrency holdings.
Standard Chartered warned that numerous high-profile treasury firms have recently slipped below the critical one mNAV level, which signals that it is becoming harder for firms to issue new shares and accumulate cryptocurrencies, Cointelegraph reported on Monday.
“The recent collapse in DAT mNAVs will likely drive differentiation and market consolidation,” Standard Chartered said. “Differentiation will favour the largest in breed, cheapest funders and those with staking yield,” flashing an optimistic sign for large firms like Strategy and Bitmine, who can still raise capital through issuing low-cost debt.
Related: SEC chair promises notice before enforcement for crypto businesses: FT
The $250 million fund is the latest signal of growing corporate appetite for cryptocurrencies beyond Bitcoin (BTC).
On Monday, Nasdaq-listed Helius Medical Technologies announced the launch of a $500 million corporate treasury reserve with the Solana (SOL) token as the main reserve asset.
The firm pledged to “significantly scale” its Solana holdings over the next 12 to 24 months, signaling more institutional capital flowing into altcoins.
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