Liquid Raises $18M Seed Round to Build a Single Platform for 24/7 Cross-Asset Trading
Liquid, a trading platform targeting the convergence of crypto and traditional finance, has closed an $18 million Series Seed round co-led by Neo and Left Lane Capital. The round also drew participation from Haun Ventures, K5 Global, SV Angel, AntiFund, and Sunflower Capital, alongside existing backers Paradigm and General Catalyst — a heavyweight roster that signals serious institutional confidence in the platform’s thesis.
The core premise is straightforward: modern traders don’t stop when Wall Street closes, and their tools shouldn’t either. Liquid consolidates access to over 500 markets — spanning crypto, equities, commodities, FX, and pre-IPO assets — into a single interface available on iOS, Android, and desktop. Users can trade with up to 200x leverage without surrendering custody of their assets. The platform launched in August 2025 and has already processed over $3 billion in trading volume across 40,000 users.
Bridging Crypto and Traditional Markets
What makes Liquid notable in the crowded trading app space is its deliberate blurring of the line between crypto-native infrastructure and traditional brokerage functionality. Rather than treating crypto and equities as separate verticals — as nearly every other platform does — Liquid treats them as co-equal inputs to a unified trading experience.
Instruments like perpetual futures, long a staple of crypto derivatives exchanges, are used here to give retail traders directional exposure to commodities and alternative assets that would otherwise be difficult to access. The mechanism is crypto-native; the use case is decidedly broader.
CEO and co-founder Franklyn Wang framed the vision in explicitly democratizing terms: the goal is to equip retail traders with tools that approximate the speed and analytical depth available to professional quantitative investors, including an AI-powered assistant for market research and trade execution.
Why the Investment Thesis Holds
Left Lane Capital’s Matthew Miller pointed to a structural shift: retail traders now account for 36% of order flow, and that cohort is increasingly comfortable with directional, leveraged exposure — they just want it without the complexity of traditional derivatives infrastructure. Liquid is betting it can be the interface layer that captures that demand across asset classes.
The investor memo practically writes itself for anyone familiar with fintech history. Consumer-facing interfaces in financial services — brokerages, exchanges, wallets — have consistently captured outsized value relative to the underlying infrastructure they sit on top of. Liquid is positioning itself as that interface for a generation that moves fluidly between Bitcoin, S&P futures, and pre-IPO secondaries without thinking twice about the category distinctions.
What to Watch
The crypto angle here is real but secondary. Liquid is not pitching itself as a crypto exchange — it’s pitching itself as the trading platform for people who happen to also trade crypto. That’s a meaningfully different product and go-to-market, and it puts the company in competition not just with Coinbase or Kraken but with Robinhood, Interactive Brokers, and the broader retail brokerage space.
With $18 million in seed capital and a credible early traction story, the next question is regulatory: operating a platform that touches crypto, equities, leveraged derivatives, and pre-IPO assets simultaneously across jurisdictions is a compliance challenge of considerable complexity. How Liquid navigates that will determine whether the unified-platform vision scales or gets fragmented by regulatory reality.