Why Did Fomo’s Series B Draw Attention?
Consumer crypto trading app Fomo has raised $75 million in a Series B round led by Index Ventures, valuing the startup at $550 million as it looks to expand its team and consider potential acquisitions.
Union Square Ventures also participated in the round, joined by angel investors including Zynga co-founder Mark Pincus, Discord CEO Humam Sakhnini, and Eventbrite co-founder Kevin Hartz. The financing brings Fomo’s total disclosed funding to roughly $94 million, following a $17 million Series A in November 2025.
The size of the round is notable because consumer crypto trading has remained a difficult category since the last retail cycle. Many apps have struggled to balance simple user experience, regulatory obligations, asset coverage, and retention after speculative demand cooled. Fomo’s valuation suggests investors still see room for a new consumer gateway if the product can reduce onboarding friction and make multi-chain trading feel less complex.
The company was founded in 2025 by Paul Erlanger, Se Yong Park, and Prashan Dharmasena, all former employees of crypto derivatives platform dYdX. That background places the startup closer to crypto-native trading infrastructure than to a traditional brokerage model, even though the product is aimed at mainstream users.
What Is Fomo Trying to Build?
Fomo is designed to compress crypto onboarding to about 30 seconds, regardless of a user’s familiarity with digital assets. The app includes social trading features such as trader leaderboards and a trade feed, giving users a way to follow market activity without relying only on price charts or separate community channels.
The platform also supports more assets than Coinbase across multiple blockchains, while removing the need for users to manage bridges or gas fees directly. That design targets one of the biggest pain points in consumer crypto: users may want exposure to new assets, but they often do not want to handle wallets, network fees, cross-chain transfers, or fragmented liquidity.
Fomo’s model is non-custodial, meaning the company does not hold customer funds. The structure may give the startup more flexibility than custodial trading platforms, though the company’s co-founders have said compliance remains a priority. That distinction will matter as regulators continue to examine how consumer-facing crypto apps handle risk, disclosures, execution, and user protection.
The app listed perpetual futures contracts in June and is onboarding about 3,500 new users per day. With only 17 employees, the company is still operating as a small team relative to the scale implied by its latest valuation and growth targets.
Investor Takeaway
Fomo’s funding round shows renewed investor appetite for consumer crypto distribution, but the company’s challenge is execution. The app must prove that fast onboarding, broad asset access, and social trading features can create durable user activity rather than short-term speculative traffic.
Why Does Index Ventures Matter Here?
Index Ventures’ participation carries weight because the firm is not a dedicated crypto investor. Its portfolio spans technology companies such as Figma and Scale AI, while its previous crypto-related exposure includes backing stablecoin startup Bridge, which Stripe acquired for $1.1 billion in 2025.
That context makes the investment more than a sector-specific crypto bet. Index is backing Fomo as part of a broader view that consumer blockchain trading could become a larger market as more assets move onchain. Union Square Ventures also brings crypto experience through earlier investments in Polygon and Matter Labs.
For Fomo, the investor base gives the company capital and credibility as it competes with larger trading platforms. Coinbase remains the dominant U.S. consumer crypto brand, while Robinhood has pushed deeper into crypto and derivatives. Newer apps must therefore compete on speed, product design, asset access, and social engagement rather than brand trust alone.
The funding may also support acquisitions. That could help Fomo add technology, licenses, talent, or user bases more quickly than organic growth alone. But acquisitions can also increase operational complexity, especially for a young company working in a regulated and fast-changing market.
Can Fomo Move Beyond Crypto Trading?
Fomo’s co-founders have described a longer-term ambition that extends beyond cryptocurrency. The company wants to become a gateway to tokenized stocks, derivatives, and other onchain assets as those markets develop.
That strategy reflects a wider shift in digital asset markets. The next phase of consumer trading may not be limited to bitcoin, ether, or speculative tokens. If tokenized equities, real-world assets, and onchain derivatives gain wider regulatory acceptance, apps that already own the consumer interface could benefit from new product categories.
The risk is that the market may develop more slowly than venture investors expect. Tokenized securities remain legally complex, derivatives face strict oversight, and consumer trading products can attract regulatory scrutiny when leverage or high-risk assets are involved. Fomo’s non-custodial structure may help with some issues, but it does not remove the need for careful compliance as the product expands.
The Series B gives Fomo room to hire, build, and pursue deals. It also raises expectations. At a $550 million valuation, the startup now needs to show that consumer crypto trading can support lasting engagement in a market where user interest often rises and falls with asset prices.

