Andreessen Horowitz launches $2.2 billion crypto fund
Venture Capital firm Andreessen Horowitz is launching a new, $2.2 billion fund to invest in cryptocurrency, stating that they are "radically optimistic about crypto's potential."

The firm, founded by Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz, is known for being an early investor in companies such as Facebook and Instagram. It now plans on investing in cryptocurrency, which it sees as the future of finance and a highly influential technology.
"We believe that the next wave of computing innovation will be driven by crypto," firm partners Katie Haun, Ali Yahoo, and Chris Dixon wrote in a blog post.
The post outlines the firm's reasoning for investing in cryptocurrency, and names new experts it has brought on board to help determine where best to invest the funds. Among the names is Rachael Horwitz, Coinbase's former Vice President of Communications.
Bitcoin reached an all-time high of $60,000 in April before losing nearly half its value in the following months. Yet, Andreessen Horowitz remains optimistic.
"We've been investing in crypto assets since 2013 and are more excited today about what comes next than ever before," the blog post continues. "The history of crypto shows that asset prices may fluctuate but innovation continues to increase through each cycle."
While Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies saw widespread adoption in 2020 and 2021, cryptocurrency markets have been especially volatile in recent months.
In May, Tesla stopped accepting BitCoin as a method of payment and was believed to drop the market as much as 15%.
The Chinese government continues to crack down on crypto as well, banning cryptocurrency from institutional use in mid-May of 2021.
The U.S. government has also begun taking steps to mitigate potential problems relating to cryptocurrency, announcing plans to tighten regulations on cryptocurrency markets and holders.
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The firm, founded by Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz, is known for being an early investor in companies such as Facebook and Instagram. It now plans on investing in cryptocurrency, which it sees as the future of finance and a highly influential technology.
"We believe that the next wave of computing innovation will be driven by crypto," firm partners Katie Haun, Ali Yahoo, and Chris Dixon wrote in a blog post.
The post outlines the firm's reasoning for investing in cryptocurrency, and names new experts it has brought on board to help determine where best to invest the funds. Among the names is Rachael Horwitz, Coinbase's former Vice President of Communications.
Bitcoin reached an all-time high of $60,000 in April before losing nearly half its value in the following months. Yet, Andreessen Horowitz remains optimistic.
"We've been investing in crypto assets since 2013 and are more excited today about what comes next than ever before," the blog post continues. "The history of crypto shows that asset prices may fluctuate but innovation continues to increase through each cycle."
While Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies saw widespread adoption in 2020 and 2021, cryptocurrency markets have been especially volatile in recent months.
In May, Tesla stopped accepting BitCoin as a method of payment and was believed to drop the market as much as 15%.
The Chinese government continues to crack down on crypto as well, banning cryptocurrency from institutional use in mid-May of 2021.
The U.S. government has also begun taking steps to mitigate potential problems relating to cryptocurrency, announcing plans to tighten regulations on cryptocurrency markets and holders.
Keep up with everything Apple in the weekly AppleInsider Podcast -- and get a fast news update from AppleInsider Daily. Just say, "Hey, Siri," to your HomePod mini and ask for these podcasts, and our latest HomeKit Insider episode too.If you want an ad-free main AppleInsider Podcast experience, you can support the AppleInsider podcast by subscribing for $5 per month through Apple's Podcasts app, or via Patreon if you prefer any other podcast player.

Comments
There is currency and then there is money.
Hard assets like gold and silver are money. The US Dollar is currency.
The only reason a Dollar is accepted is because of law and broad social acceptance. It is nothing but a piece of paper. The same is true of the Euro and other paper currencies.
Hard assets have intrinsic value.
Bitcoin is has no intrinsic value and is not backed by any government as a fiat currency.
https://www.coindesk.com/founders-of-south-african-crypto-investment-firm-along-with-3-6b-in-bitcoin-are-missing
Suckers!
I tend to think of something like Bitcoin as uber or meta currency. It's a layer above other forms of currency which has both utility and a bet-hedging aspect. (Note, I have very little so I'm not saying this because I want to maintain its value, etc.).
A form of the utility can be seen with what Adam Curry is doing with Podcasting 2.0 ( PodcastIndex.org ). They are using Lightning Networks' 'ledger' type system to get around the high transaction cost, but enabling a direct funding (with splits) direct from consumer to producer. It could apply to nearly anything, not just podcasting. Think of it as an ultimate form of crowd-sourcing / Patreon, with the added benefit of being nearly impossible to censor or deplatform.
And, while governments can certainly make it tough via regulations, this stuff rides on a layer above their control. Someone can pay me or I can pay them regardless of what the powers that be want. Gold and silver have that to some extent, but aren't as utilitarian.
Oh yeah, it's complex and risky... but you're still thinking in terms of a stable world. That won't be around much longer, I fear.
The first Zeitgeist film presents a view of what currency is and what the primary function of national banks are (i.e. to issue currency), that challenges most laymen’s understanding of these institutions.
Spoiler: Currency is not about assets (that is: your assets) but a representation of your debt! (and so: assets belonging to the other guys).
The US Dollar was uncoupled from the gold reserves a long time ago—was it during the Reagan administration?—and thus no longer holds any intrinsic value.
The Zeitgeist-view is unsettling and I will now revert to the default drone-state: oblivious to the economic realities and concern myself only with what I should buy next! 🤭
Wikipedia: Zeitgeist
But, yeah, the USD is essentially propped up by the US military. If that support crumbles, so will the USD, and it won't be pretty.