VCs pour $5.1B into crypto firms while Bitcoin’s ‘Uptober’ whiffed

October closed roughly 4% down for Bitcoin, yet venture funding hit $5.1 billion in the same month, marking the second-strongest month since 2022. According to CryptoRank data, three mega-deals account for most of this funding, as October defied its own seasonal mythology.

Bitcoin fell 3.7% during a month traders have nicknamed “Uptober” for its historical winning streak, breaking a pattern that had held since 2019. Yet, venture capitalists deployed $5.1 billion into crypto startups during the same 31 days, marking the second-highest monthly total since 2022 and the best VC performance of 2025 aside from March.

The divergence between spot market weakness and venture market strength creates a puzzle. Either builders see opportunities that traders have missed, or a handful of enormous checks have distorted the overall signal.

### Concentration of Funding: The Big Three Deals

The concentration of funding tells most of the story. Three transactions account for roughly $2.8 billion of October’s total $5.1 billion:

– Intercontinental Exchange’s (ICE) strategic investment of up to $2 billion in Polymarket
– Tempo’s $500 million Series A round led by Stripe and Paradigm
– Kalshi’s $300 million Series D round

CryptoRank’s monthly data shows 180 disclosed funding rounds in October, indicating that the top three transactions account for 54% of the total capital deployed across fewer than 2% of deals. The median round size likely remains in the single-digit millions.

Removing Polymarket, Tempo, and Kalshi from the calculation would shift the narrative from the “best month in years” to a steady but unspectacular continuation of 2024’s modest pace.

The “venture rebound” narrative depends heavily on whether these strategic acquisition plays and infrastructure bets represent broader builder confidence or are simply outliers that happened to close in the same reporting window.

### Why Spot Traders Sold While VCs Wrote Checks

Bitcoin’s October weakness stemmed from profit-taking following September’s gains, macroeconomic headwinds from rising Treasury yields, and continued ETF outflows that began mid-month and accelerated through the final week.

Although Bitcoin ETFs registered nearly $3.4 billion in net inflows, Farside Investors’ daily flow data shows heavy redemptions from major spot Bitcoin products, particularly in the final ten trading days.

Venture capital operates on a different timeline. The firms deploying capital in October committed to thesis-driven positions months earlier. The actual cash transfer and announcement timing reflect legal processes and strategic coordination rather than spot market sentiment.

For example, Polymarket’s $2 billion investment from ICE doesn’t reflect a bet on Bitcoin’s November price. Instead, it reflects ICE’s view that prediction markets represent a multi-billion-dollar addressable market, where first-mover advantage and regulatory positioning matter more than token price action.

Similarly, Tempo’s $500 million round funds stablecoin and payment infrastructure aimed at enterprise adoption. These revenue-generating products’ success metrics don’t directly correlate with whether Bitcoin trades at $100,000, $60,000, or $40,000.

Kalshi’s $300 million raise operates in comparable territory. The CFTC-regulated prediction market platform competes with Polymarket and traditional derivatives venues. Its valuation has jumped to $5 billion based on transaction volume growth and a regulatory moat rather than crypto market timing.

### Infrastructure, Compliance, and Institutional Use Cases

The three largest October deals share a common thread: they target infrastructure, compliance, and institutional use cases where crypto serves as plumbing rather than speculation.

This focus explains why venture activity can surge while retail traders exit the market. VCs are placing their bets on the decade-long buildout of financial infrastructure, not the next quarter’s price movement.

### Risks in Mega-Deal Concentration

Concentration creates fragility. If Polymarket faces regulatory headwinds, or if Tempo’s enterprise pipeline develops more slowly than projected, two of October’s flagship deals could mark peak valuations rather than validated milestones.

The same concentration that inflated October’s headline number makes the sector vulnerable to downward revisions if those few large bets stumble.

### Timing and Strategic Opportunism

ICE announced its Polymarket investment days before the US mayoral elections, positioning the platform to capitalize on record prediction market volume. That timing reflects strategic opportunism, as ICE bought into heightened visibility and user growth. However, it raises questions about sustained engagement if election-driven volume returns to normal.

Kalshi’s $300 million round came amid similar election-related momentum. Both deals may prove prescient if prediction markets sustain post-election activity, or they may represent peak-hype pricing if volumes crater once binary political events resolve.

### Looking Ahead

If October’s pattern holds—with weak retail participation, rotating institutional interest, and concentrated infrastructure bets—the winners won’t be the projects that capture speculative frenzy. Instead, success will go to platforms that become utility layers institutions cannot avoid.
https://bitcoinethereumnews.com/bitcoin/vcs-pour-5-1b-into-crypto-firms-while-bitcoins-uptober-whiffed/

Finally Defeating Self-Sabotage: Virginia Republicans Embrace Early Voting

You go to war with the army you have, not the one you want. The same principle applies to elections: you vote according to existing laws, not the laws you wish existed.

With good reason and principle, Republicans generally remain skeptical of a long, drawn-out voting period—often described as “Election Month”—and the risks of ballot custody issues that can arise during mail-in voting. However, Virginia, with its Democrat-led Legislature and a tendency to vote left, presents a different dynamic. Meanwhile, Republicans are beginning to take note and adjust their strategies.

As October drew to a close, early voting in Virginia in some areas continued to favor Republican-leaning districts, a trend that was also observed through late September. Earlier this year, data from the Virginia primary elections showed higher turnout in Democrat-led areas. Yet, in the current general election, early voting in most state House districts leans toward Republicans. This trend bodes well for conservative candidates facing the typical challenges of Virginia’s off-year elections.

That said, estimates of the partisanship of early voters from The Virginia Public Access Project reveal a more nuanced picture. While likely GOP voters lead in early in-person ballots, likely Democrat voters hold a larger lead in mail-in ballots. Overall, most early ballots so far are from likely Democrat voters.

Virginia votes for governor, lieutenant governor, and attorney general in the year following a presidential election. Historically, the party opposite the president’s party often wins the Virginia Executive Mansion in Richmond.

“Republican identifiers are likely becoming more comfortable with voting in advance than they were previously, a trend we’ve seen in other states as well,” said Kyle Kondik, managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball at the University of Virginia Center for Politics, in an interview with The Daily Signal.

“Republicans have become more open to voting early, particularly early in-person. The best voting method for Republicans is likely Election Day itself, although the gap between early in-person and Election Day voting was smaller in 2024 than it was in 2021,” Kondik added.

Early voter turnout in Virginia this year is significantly higher than four years ago. As of October 30—five days before Election Day—early balloting is up nearly 25% compared to the same time last year and has already exceeded the total number of ballots cast in the 2021 Virginia gubernatorial election.

Data from the Virginia Department of Elections shows that among the top 20 state House districts for ballots cast, 12 are in GOP-led areas, six are Democrat-leaning or strongholds, and two are toss-up, competitive districts. Conversely, among the bottom 20 districts for early voting turnout so far, 14 are Democrat-leaning or Democrat strongholds, while only six are Republican-leaning or strongholds.

While this measure is not perfect, it offers some indication of voter fervor and intensity across the state.

Kondik also shared district-by-district vote totals for Virginia’s 11 federal congressional districts in 2024, sourced from The Downballot, a left-leaning election site.

“As you can see, the district that produced the most presidential votes was VA-01, which is a GOP-leaning but competitive district,” Kondik noted. “The second-highest was VA-05, the third-most Republican district in the state. The one that produced the least votes was VA-03, one of the bluest districts.”

Comparing the 2024 early voting results with turnout so far in 2025, the five congressional districts currently held by Republicans each have more early votes cast this year than their comprehensive total in 2021. Only one of the six Democrat-held districts—Congressional District 11—shows this trend.

Even though the RealClearPolitics aggregate of polls currently favors Democrat Abigail Spanberger over Republican Winsome Earle-Sears by 8.9 points in the Virginia governor’s race, the contest remains largely within the margin of error.

No matter who wins on Election Day, the continued strong turnout by conservative voters in early elections will be crucial in determining whether liberty thrives or faces setbacks in our beautiful commonwealth.

*Carrie Sheffield*, a Virginia voter, is the author of *Motorhome Prophecies: A Journey of Healing and Forgiveness* and the program manager of Healthy Faith.

*The Daily Signal* publishes a variety of perspectives. Nothing written here should be construed as representing the views of the publication.
https://www.dailysignal.com/2025/11/03/finally-defeating-self-sabotage-virginia-republicans-embrace-early-voting/

Royce James Palmer

**Royce James Palmer, 74, of Lake Cherokee, Passes Away**

CARTHAGE, TX — Royce James Palmer, 74, of Lake Cherokee, passed away on the morning of Saturday, October 25, 2025, at his home.

A time of visitation will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. on Saturday, November 1, 2025, at Jimerson-Lipsey Funeral Home Chapel.

Friends and family are invited to sign the guestbook online at [www.jimerson-lipsey.com](http://www.jimerson-lipsey.com).
https://news-journal.com/2025/10/29/royce-james-palmer/