The broad enthusiasm for crypto infrastructure outlasts a single corporate pullback. Zerohash, a back-end provider that lets fintechs and exchanges plug into digital asset trading and custody, is on the hunt for fresh funding at a valuation above $1.5 billion. The raise is moving forward even after Mastercard, which had been considering an investment, walked away from the table. According to the original report by CoinDesk, institutional investors remain receptive to the firm’s pitch.
Zerohash operates as a regulated middleware layer. Its APIs handle everything from trade execution to settlement and post-trade reporting for clients that include neobanks, payments apps, and brokerage platforms. That positioning means the company sits in a sweet spot: it benefits from rising trading volumes and new product launches without having to acquire retail customers directly. It’s the kind of behind-the-scenes utility that gets more valuable as crypto becomes embedded in conventional finance.
The fundraising attempt arrives at a time when banks and asset managers are deepening their crypto footprints. Bullish, the exchange operator, just bought Equiniti for $4.2 billion, while tokenized Treasury settlements moved from proof-of-concept to live transactions. As real-world asset tokenization surpassed $20 billion on-chain , the need for reliable infrastructure providers like Zerohash becomes more acute.
Why Mastercard Walked Away
Mastercard’s decision to drop its investment hasn’t been publicly detailed, leaving room for interpretation. Large payment networks have shown consistent interest in blockchain settlement and stablecoin rails, but they often move deliberately through controlled pilots rather than equity positions in unlisted startups. A direct investment in Zerohash might have clashed with internal governance or with the company’s desire to work with multiple partners simultaneously. For a company that processes trillions in payments each year, backing an infrastructure startup directly rather than partnering on a product could have sent unintended signals to regulators and global banking partners.
Regulatory noise may have also influenced the timing. A major U.S. crypto bill was being lobbied heavily by banking groups just days before a Senate vote, and big financial institutions were pushing for last-minute amendments . For a company like Mastercard, the uncertain legislative environment could have worked against a direct equity bet in terms of risk-reward calculus. The pullback also highlights a growing divide between cautious corporate venture arms and dedicated crypto funds that are comfortable with multi-year lockups and regulatory fog.
Infrastructure Plays Defy Selective Pullbacks
Venture and growth-equity investors have been quiet cheerleaders for crypto rails. Funding into blockchain infrastructure held up better than retail-facing applications during the 2022-2023 winter, and that trend hasn’t reversed. Early-stage conversations around Zerohash’s new round suggest that institutional allocators still view picks-and-shovels plays as one of the safer ways to get exposure without betting on token prices.
That appetite is fueled by real usage. Earlier this month, Sui’s token rallied 18% on news of institutional staking and a major fintech integration . When publicly listed firms start staking tokens and payment apps plug into layer-1 networks, the back-end providers that make those connections seamless see direct volume increases. Zerohash’s client base benefits from exactly that kind of activity, reinforcing the case for a $1.5-billion-plus valuation.
What Remains Unsettled
Valuation is still a moving target. The absence of a marquee corporate backer like Mastercard could give some investors pause, potentially compressing the round’s final pricing. Yet the same market environment that cools some corporate interest is also driving more traditional institutions toward certified infrastructure partners, which tightens the competitive set and may protect Zerohash’s premium.
Competition is stiffening. Several infrastructure firms are expanding custody, settlement, and API services, and a few are exploring secondary sales at similar valuations. Whether Zerohash’s differentiation—its early regulatory approvals and broad integration network—translates into a closed round at the targeted number will depend on how investors weigh execution risk against the accelerating institutional adoption curve. For now, the signal is clear: a Mastercard walkout didn’t kill the deal. It barely changed the asking price.
