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Cardano targets Bitcoin liquidity with $80 million fund

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The Cardano community has officially approved the first tranche of the Orion Fund, a venture-style initiative designed to bridge Bitcoin liquidity into its decentralized finance (DeFi) ecosystem.

The governance vote unlocks 50 million ADA from the network’s treasury, marking a pivotal shift in how Cardano funds its long-term economic expansion.

The approval, which cleared required thresholds from both delegated representatives (DReps) and the Constitutional Committee, takes effect at epoch 624.

It initiates a $15 million deployment, which is the first phase of an $80 million total target, managed by blockchain venture firm Draper Dragon, with Draper University acting as an acceleration partner.

Unlike the network’s existing Project Catalyst, which relies on a grant-based model, the Orion Fund represents Cardano’s first foray into taking direct equity and token positions in ecosystem startups.

Bridging a $3 billion gap

The fund is the centerpiece of Cardano’s ambitious roadmap to cultivate a $3 billion on-chain economy by 2030.

With the network’s total value locked (TVL) at around $137 million, the blockchain network developers and community members have acknowledged that purely organic, internal growth is no longer sufficient.

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Instead, the strategy pivots to “scale asymmetry” by targeting the largest pool of dormant capital in the digital asset space: Bitcoin.

A March 2025 report from Binance Research estimated that only about 0.79% of Bitcoin is currently utilized in DeFi applications.

Yet, the addressable market for “BTCFi” is massive, potentially reaching $31.9 billion if adoption mirrors the historical trajectory of wrapped assets. So, even a single-digit penetration rate of Bitcoin’s idle supply could drive billions in inflows.

For Cardano, capturing just 0.01% of Bitcoin’s total market value would roughly equal the network’s entire current TVL. The Orion Fund is structured to hunt for this specific slice of liquidity by backing revenue-capable projects across real-world assets (RWAs), payments, stablecoins, and institutional DeFi.

A key advantage in this cross-chain pitch is technical alignment. Both Bitcoin and Cardano utilize the Unspent Transaction Output (UTXO) accounting model.

Orion aims to leverage this shared architecture to convince self-custodied Bitcoin holders, who might be wary of account-based blockchains like Ethereum, that Cardano is a secure, familiar environment for generating yield and utilizing sophisticated financial applications.

The rails are starting to take shape

For a 2030 target to remain credible, the foundational market infrastructure must be established well in advance. Recent weeks have shown material progress on this front, according to network data.

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In late February, the stablecoin USDCx went live on the Cardano mainnet, utilizing Circle’s xReserve model. Input Output, a major development firm behind Cardano, reported that more than 15 million USDCx was minted within the first seven days.

During that stretch, Cardano’s TVL rose from $127 million to $142 million, with liquidity rapidly appearing on decentralized exchanges such as Liqwid, Minswap and SundaeSwap.

The successful deployment of a dollar-pegged stablecoin is a crucial prerequisite. Analysts note that a blockchain unable to retain dollar liquidity is highly unlikely to become a credible home for Bitcoin collateral or cross-chain trading.

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