Midas raises $50M
Crypto protocol Midas announced a $50M raise to accelerate product expansion and go‑to‑market, giving it sizable runway for growth. (x.com)
Midas, a Berlin-based startup that turns traditional investment products into blockchain-based tokens, closed a $50 million Series A funding round led by RRE Ventures and Creandum on March 30, 2026. (Cointelegraph.com) The round included a mix of crypto and institutional investors — Franklin Templeton, Coinbase Ventures, Framework Ventures, HV Capital, Ledger Cathay, Anchorage Digital, M1 Capital, GSR and others — and follows an $8.75 million seed raise in 2024, bringing Midas’s total disclosed funding to about $58.75 million. (CathayCapital.com) The company said it will use the capital to roll out “Midas Staked Liquidity,” which Midas describes as a dedicated liquidity facility that holds pre‑allocated capital to pay investors who want to exit tokenized positions immediately rather than waiting for the underlying assets to be sold. (TheBlock.co) Midas’s on‑chain products — branded as mTokens, or tokenized versions of funds and other investments — have already minted roughly $1.7 billion of assets and show more than $500 million in value locked on existing integrations, with the company saying it has distributed over $37 million in yield to more than 20,000 holders. (CoinMarketCap.com) To increase transparency, Midas also launched an “Attestation Engine” that publishes verifiable, on‑chain checkpoints for proof of reserves and net asset value so third parties can independently confirm the state of each tokenized product; the engine’s documentation notes integrations with Chainlink and other oracle and risk providers. (Docs.Midas.app) Under the setup Midas outlined, the liquidity facility will initially deploy up to $40 million of capacity to fulfill redemptions “atomically” — meaning the token transfer and the payout happen in a single, on‑chain operation — which the company says avoids settlement delays and the need to unwind underlying positions at short notice. (TheBlock.co)