Decentralized finance protocol Morpho has announced the completion of a 175 million dollar funding round, aiming to scale its blockchain-based lending infrastructure and expand institutional lending capacity. With this new investment, the protocol has reportedly reached a valuation of around 2 billion dollars. This development comes at a time when financial institutions are showing growing interest in more transparent and programmable credit solutions.
Major investment funds join the round
According to details shared by the Morpho Association on Tuesday, heavyweight investors Paradigm, a16z crypto, and Ribbit Capital jointly led the funding round. Apollo Funds, Circle Ventures, VanEck, Ledger Cathay, Variant, Wintermute Ventures, and HashKey also took part as backers. SBI Group, Bpifrance, IOSG, Mirana, Prelude, and NJJ Capital rounded out the roster of participants.
Founded in 2021, Morpho has now secured its fourth significant round of institutional capital. Recognized as a protocol for decentralized borrowing and lending infrastructure, Morpho’s investment deal structured purchases of the MORPHO token at a monthly average market price. This meant investors’ actual acquisition costs varied depending on when they entered during the funding window.
Paul Frambot, co-founder of Morpho, underlined the project’s mission to bridge global financing needs with idle capital. He observed that, due to fragmentation and intermediary costs, the current financial system continues to limit credit markets worldwide.
Token rallies after funding announcement
Following news of the investment round, the MORPHO token soared more than 10 percent in market trading. Morpho, however, stressed that the fresh capital is intended not as a quick boost for the market, but as fuel for infrastructure growth. The company stated that the resources would be deployed for technical integrations, strategic partnerships, and the expansion of credit products.
Mini glossary: Programmable credit refers to a financial model in which loan terms and collateral structures are managed automatically via smart contracts. This enables transparency on the blockchain and allows credit pools to be tailored to different risk preferences.
Open infrastructure for institutional borrowers
Morpho provides a lending framework designed with flexible risk parameters, giving users the ability to set up customized credit pools and enabling companies to develop tailored lending solutions without the rigid boundaries of traditional protocols. This flexible setup empowers banks, crypto exchanges, digital wallet providers, asset managers, and fintech firms to operate according to their own market rules.
According to the latest data shared by the protocol, total deposits have surpassed 11 billion dollars. Among the platform’s most prominent institutional users are Coinbase, Binance, Kraken, Bitwise, Galaxy, and Anchorage Digital. Additionally, Ledger, Trezor, and Bitpanda are named as adopted partners on the platform.
Aiming to become a major infrastructure player in credit markets
Credit is considered one of the highest-revenue segments in financial services, but traditional lending systems are said to suffer from inefficient processes, closed networks, and limited transparency. Morpho’s vision centers on rebuilding this foundation using accessible blockchain technology.
Frankie of Paradigm commented that future banks, asset managers, and pension funds are likely to seek blockchain-based lending opportunities. Guy Wuollet, a partner at a16z crypto, highlighted that Morpho already delivers a simple and secure technology stack for major financial institutions. Gabe Mennesson, partner at Ribbit Capital, described Morpho as an ambitious initiative rethinking the credit infrastructure from the ground up.
The newly acquired capital is expected to strengthen Morpho’s integration partnerships and bolster the platform’s programmable credit infrastructure. Morpho emphasized that its goal is not to replace existing financial institutions, but to provide them with a shared, operational backbone for modern lending.




