Crypto Industry Moves Toward Regulation, Favoring Licensed Incumbents Over Newcomers

July 5, 2026
Crypto Industry Moves Toward Regulation, Favoring Licensed Incumbents Over Newcomers
  • The crypto industry is maturing toward incumbency, with higher barriers protecting consumers and institutions but potentially limiting new entrants unless founders secure capital and licenses.

  • This maturation mirrors traditional finance and tech, raising concerns that founders without capital or institutional ties will face steeper hurdles, possibly narrowing exploratory, consumer-focused crypto projects but fostering more stable, regulated infrastructure.

  • Overall, regulation and institutional participation bring safeguards, yet the shift risks consolidating around licensed incumbents and reducing openness for newcomers.

  • In the early era, rapid, low-cost token projects proliferated, funded by public ICOs, but widespread fraud and investor losses drew regulatory scrutiny.

  • Mergers and acquisitions have become a primary growth channel, with Coinbase’s acquisition of Deribit and Ripple’s purchase of Hidden Road illustrating how licenses and distribution networks are valuable assets.

  • M&A is now a core path to scale, enabling regulated capabilities and trusted distribution rather than building from scratch.

  • Launching in the US with multi-state ambitions can cost $750,000 to $1.2 million over three years, and ongoing compliance may exceed $2 million annually at scale, with MiCA imposing heavy capital, governance, reporting, and staffing requirements.

  • By 2026, crypto firms in major markets face costly licensing, AML programs, banking partnerships, and heavy ongoing compliance, mirroring the described upfront and recurring costs.

  • Post-Terra and post-FTX, venture funding retrenched and rebalanced toward later-stage and seed rounds, creating a barbell pattern and reduced middle-stage activity in crypto VC.

  • Overall VC dynamics show capital concentration among a few large firms, with funding shifting toward late-stage and seed rounds while mid-stage activity declines.

  • Market dynamics now reward firms with banking relationships, licenses, and enterprise customers over pure technology merit, driving consolidation and a shift from innovation-driven growth to regulation-driven scalability.

  • The crypto startup landscape has evolved from a low-regulation, low-capital era to a regulated, capital-intensive regime by 2026, favoring licensed incumbents and institutional networks.

Summary based on 2 sources


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Sources


The death of the crypto startup: RIP 2017 – 2026

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