C1 Fund Inc. does not spray capital. It places it. Quietly. Precisely. Like a fund built by people who have already watched cycles eat loud operators for breakfast. Palo Alto address. Maryland incorporation. NYSE ticker CFND. Public in August 2025 with $60 million raised and a mandate that reads like infrastructure or nothing, a posture that stands out in today’s startup ecosystem. Dr. Najamul Hasan Kidwai and Michael Lempres did not build a vibe fund. They built a wiring diagram for where digital finance actually clears.

By October, the money started moving. Not all at once. In sequence. Figment first. Then Ripple. Then Chainalysis. Then Kraken. Four companies that sit in four different pressure points of the same system. Staking, settlement, compliance, liquidity. This was not a shopping spree. This was chess. Secondary equity only. No headlines chasing rounds. Just buying exposure where the pipes matter across the startup ecosystem.

Ripple brings the rails. Brad Garlinghouse running operations. Chris Larsen as Executive Chairman keeping the long view tight. Ninety five billion dollars moved. A billion dollar stablecoin. Forty billion valuation inked weeks after C1 stepped in. If money moves faster than regulation, Ripple is where they negotiate, a central dynamic shaping the startup ecosystem around payments and blockchain.

Kraken brings the exchange layer with scars and discipline. Dave Ripley and Arjun Sethi sharing the CEO seat. Jesse Landry Powell watching from the chair. Two hundred seven billion dollars traded in a single quarter. Thirteen million users. This is not retail noise. This is infrastructure that survived winters and still bought NinjaTrader for $1.5 billion to widen the lane, reinforcing its role in the startup ecosystem’s financial backbone.

Chainalysis brings the flashlight. Jonathan Levin stepped into the CEO role after a decade of building the map. Governments use it. Corporations are buying it faster. Trillions screened. Billions recovered. Compliance is not a feature. It is gravity. Ignore it and everything falls.

Figment brings yield without custody games. Lorien Gabel, Matt Harrop, Andrew Cronk built staking that institutions can actually touch. Seventeen billion staked. Seven hundred clients. Fifty protocols. Boring in the way power plants are boring until they shut off.

Inside C1 Fund, Elliot Han is placing the bets. Michael Lempres is keeping regulators comfortable. Board members are buying stock in the open market while the fund trades below NAV. That is not theater. That is posture, and a signal the startup ecosystem knows how to read.

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