Artificial intelligence startup Anthropic has made history with the close of a $30 billion funding round, capturing the attention of both the business world and global financial markets. The firm’s valuation has soared to $380 billion as a result of this latest investment, cementing Anthropic’s reputation as a major contender—and direct rival—to OpenAI. This significant capital influx signals not only confidence in the company, but also in the disruptive influence AI is having across industries.
Investment Surge and Relentless Growth
Leading investment firms GIC and Coatue championed the funding round, joined by prominent backers such as Founders Fund, Sequoia, BlackRock, Temasek, Microsoft, and NVIDIA. Anthropic’s financial performance has been remarkable, with revenues growing more than tenfold over the past three years. The company’s annual revenues have reached $14 billion and are projected to hit nearly $18 billion in the near term. Its AI assistant Claude has gained significant traction in the enterprise market, with eight of the Fortune 10 companies now relying on the tool. Notably, the number of clients spending over $1 million per year with Anthropic has surged from just 12 to more than 500.
AI Pressures Echo Across Software Industry
Anthropic’s meteoric ascent is sending shockwaves throughout the software sector. Data shared by Bloomberg suggests that the company’s new automation tools have triggered an estimated $285 billion drop in software firms’ collective market value. This impact is especially pronounced for businesses specializing in Software-as-a-Service (SaaS), whose revenue models face mounting risks as general-purpose AI becomes commonplace. Increasingly, organizations are opting to streamline their operations through all-in-one AI assistants rather than juggling dozens of separate software subscriptions.
Crypto and Software Stocks: An Unlikely Connection
This mounting pressure in the software market is now spreading to the cryptocurrency arena. Bitcoin’s price movements are showing high correlation with the performance of technology and software stocks. The private credit market, now clocking in at $3 trillion, plays a pivotal role in this dynamic—around 17 percent of private credit deals involve software companies. This intersection signals deeper ties between the software, crypto, and broader technology ecosystem than ever before.
From mid-2025 onwards, capital conditions have tightened significantly. Restrictions in lending have amplified selling pressures on riskier assets, including cryptocurrencies. UBS advisors project that if market conditions worsen, default rates in the U.S. private credit sector could soar to 13 percent, illustrating the fragility and interconnectedness of global finance.
Analyst Jim Bianco highlighted the synchronized movement between Bitcoin and software equities:
“Software stocks are struggling again today, with the iShares Software ETF dropping back to last week’s panic levels. It’s worth noting there’s another type of software—’programmable money,’ or crypto. Bitcoin and software indices are moving almost in lockstep,” Jim Bianco stated.
Advancements in AI are placing stress not just on traditional software sectors but also on the crypto ecosystem. The competition intensifies in areas such as quantum security, spotlighting how disruptive AI can be for sectoral dynamics. Additionally, the accelerating flow of funding and credit between sectors raises fresh concerns about systemic risks faced by cryptocurrency markets.
Anthropic’s rapid ascent exemplifies the turbulence sweeping through the broader AI industry. The wide-ranging ramifications of this growth for crypto and technology markets continue to be closely monitored, reflecting the profound shifts underway at the intersection of AI, finance, and digital assets.




