
Range closed an $8.3M Series A backed by fintech and crypto funds. Its platform covers $30B in assets and tracks 99.41% of stablecoin payments globally.
Alpha Score of 45 reflects weak overall profile with moderate momentum, weak value, weak quality. Based on 3 of 4 signals – score is capped at 90 until remaining data ingests.
Range, a stablecoin data and compliance platform, closed an $8.3 million Series A round backed by a mix of traditional fintech and crypto-native funds. The round brings the company's total funding to $11 million.
The startup's platform now covers over $30 billion in on-chain assets and tracks 99.41% of all stablecoin payments globally, according to the company. Its client list includes Circle, the Solana Foundation, Stellar, Squads and Jupiter, with more than 10,000 active integrations.
The raise comes as stablecoin issuance has surged past $230 billion in total market cap, driven by demand for dollar-denominated digital assets outside traditional banking rails. Regulators in the U.S. and Europe have also stepped up scrutiny of stablecoin issuers, creating a compliance market that Range's data layer serves directly.
Range's pitch to clients is straightforward: instead of building in-house monitoring for every stablecoin on every chain, firms plug into Range's API for a single view of supply, velocity, and counterparty risk. The company says its coverage spans 14 blockchains and captures transaction-level data for USDT, USDC, DAI, and smaller issuers.
The Series A was led by a group that includes existing backers and new institutional investors. Range did not disclose the valuation.
For the crypto market, the funding signals that infrastructure plays – data, compliance, and analytics – are drawing capital even as retail-facing tokens see volatile flows. Range's growth also reflects a shift: stablecoins are no longer just a trading pair on exchanges. They are becoming settlement rails for payments, remittances, and institutional treasury operations. That expansion creates demand for the kind of transparency Range sells.
The company plans to use the new capital to expand its engineering team and add support for additional blockchains and stablecoin protocols.
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