The Good Tech Companies - Running a Crypto Fund Requires More Than Just Trading Tokens
Episode Date: December 23, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/running-a-crypto-fund-requires-more-than-just-trading-tokens. Strong trading isn’t enough.... Why crypto funds fail institutional scrutiny without proper infrastructure, governance, custody, and compliance. Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #crypto-fund, #cv5-capital, #fintech, #crypto-fund-infrastructure, #crypto-fund-governance, #digital-asset-custody, #institutional-crypto-funds, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @zexprwire. Learn more about this writer by checking @zexprwire's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Crypto funds don’t fail because of bad trades but because weak infrastructure, custody, governance, and compliance collapse under institutional scrutiny.
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Running a crypto fund requires more than just trading tokens by XEX Media.
In crypto, it is easy to believe that running a fund starts and ends with trading.
If the strategy works, capital follows.
If returns are strong, structure can come later.
This mindset is understandable in an industry that grew out of open source code,
permissionless markets, and fast experimentation.
It is also the reason many crypto funds struggled to scale, fail institutional due diligence,
are quietly shut down despite having a real edge.
Trading is only one layer of a crypto fund.
The rest of the stack is infrastructure, governance, and operational plumbing.
Most fund managers underestimate this until it becomes the bottleneck.
Strategy is visible.
Infrastructure is invisible until it breaks.
When a crypto fund launches, the strategy is usually the most developed component.
The code is live. The models have been tested. Exchange connections are in place. Execution works. What is often
missing is everything around it? Who controls the private keys? How are assets custodied? What happens when
funds move between cold storage and exchanges? How is nav calculated? How are investors onboarded and
screened? Who signs off on governance decisions? How do regulators see the structure? How will an auditor
verify balances across wallet sand venues? None of this affects daily PNL.
until it suddenly does. Custody is not just a wallet choice. Many fund managers treat custody as a
technical preference rather than a risk framework. Hot wallets, cold wallets, MPC, exchanges, self-custody.
All of the Sear tools, not solutions. From an institutional perspective, custody answers much
deeper questions. Area sets segregated? Who has the authority to move them? What controls exist
to prevent unilateral action? What happens if a service provider fails? Our assets,
protected in an insolvency scenario? For funds that trade actively, assets inevitably sit on
exchanges. That introduces exchange counterparty risk. In many cases, those assets are no longer covered
by cold storage protections or insurance while deployed for trading. That is not a flaw,
but it is a risk that must be understood, disclosed, and governed. Fund managers often discover
during due diligence that investors care less about where the alpha comes from and more about
where the assets sleep at night. Nav and reporting are not trivial in crypto. Traditional funds rely
on administrators to calculate NAV using well-established pricing feeds and settlement conventions.
Crypto funds operate across fragmented markets, decentralized venues, and wallets that do not
fit needly into legacy systems. Pricing sources vary. Liquidity varies. Asets may be staked,
locked, bridged, or subject to protocol rules. Corporate actions look like forks and airdrops,
dividends and splits. A fund that cannot produce a consistent, auditable NAV will struggle to raise
institutional capital regardless of performance. The infrastructure to support valuation,
reconciliation, and reporting needs to exist from day one, not after the first allocation.
Governance is not optional at scale. Early stage crypto funds often operate informally.
Decisions are made quickly. Controls are light. That flexibility can be an advantage when
capital is small and the team is tight. It becomes a lot.
liability as assets grow. Investors expect boards. They expect independent oversight. They expect
conflicts to be documented and managed. They expect clear delegation between the investment manager,
the operators and the service providers. Regulators expect the same. Governance is not about
slowing innovation. It is about ensuring that when something goes wrong, there is a framework to
respond without destroying trust. Compliance is part of the product, not a tax on it. AML KYC,
screening, F-A-T-C-R-S. These are not exciting topics for fund managers who want to build and
trade, but they are non-negotiable for funds that want to interact with real capital.
Many crypto-native managers assume compliance can be bolted on later O-Rout sourced cheaply.
In reality, compliance is embedded in onboarding flows, investor communications, reporting
cycles, and governance processes. A fund that gets compliance wrong does not just face regulatory
risk. It faces banking risk, counterparty risk, and reputational risk. Institutional capital does not fund
experiments. There is a persistent belief in crypto that institutions will eventually relax their
standards as the asset class matures. The opposite is happening. Institutional allocators are
applying more scrutiny, not less. They are comparing crypto funds to traditional hedge funds and asking
why standards should be lower, not higher. They are comfortable with volatility. They are not comfortable
with operational ambiguity. The CV5 platform model exists for a reason. This is why many of the most
successful crypto fund managers no longer build everything themselves. They launch within established
platforms that provide custody frameworks, governance, compliance, administration, and regulatory
alignment out of the box. The platform absorbs the operational complexity so the manager can
focus on strategy and execution. Investors get consistency, managers get credibility, growth becomes possible,
At CV5 Capital, this pattern repeats itself. The funds that scale fastest are not always the ones with the most aggressive strategies. They are the ones who treat infrastructure as seriously as alpha. Crypto funds are becoming financial institutions, whether fund managers like it or not, running a crypto fund increasingly resembles running a financial institution. The tools are different. The markets are new, but the expectations around risk management, governance, compliance, and transparency are converging fast.
Trading tokens is the visible part of the job.
The infrastructure underneath IT determines whether the fund survives success.
Fund managers who understand this early build funds that last,
those who do not often learn the lesson the hard way.
Written by CV5 Capital, a Cayman-based platform supporting institutional crypto funds
with governance, custody, and operational infrastructure.
This story was published under Hackernoon's business blogging program.
Thank you for listening to this Hackernoon story, read by Artificial Intellectual.
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