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.
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.
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.
Meanwhile, interoperability has also seen a recent overhaul. Cardano’s integration with LayerZero, described in the materials as the broadest cross-chain connectivity expansion in the network’s history, now links Cardano to more than 150 other blockchains.
While connectivity does not guarantee immediate capital deposits, it dramatically expands the addressable market for potential capital flows.
A more specific proof-of-concept for the Bitcoin strategy arrived on March 26. The Cardano Foundation highlighted that the platform FluidTokens completed the first native Bitcoin-Cardano atomic swap on the mainnet.
The transaction exchanged native Bitcoin for native ADA, Cardano’s cryptocurrency, without relying on third-party custodians, vulnerable cross-chain bridges or wrapped assets.
Furthermore, institutional market infrastructure is taking shape. In February, CME Group launched Cardano futures and recorded its first trades shortly after, establishing a clearer path for institutional pricing and hedging support.
Will Cardano win?
The ultimate test for Cardano is turning these new infrastructural building blocks into durable, repeatable on-chain usage.
The near-term challenge will likely involve securing sticky dollar liquidity before attempting to attract sticky Bitcoin.
If the network can push its stablecoin liquidity materially above the current baseline, retain the TVL gains made post-launch, and demonstrate visible, sustained Bitcoin-specific usage through atomic swaps and collateral, the Orion thesis will gain significant credibility.
However, if it fails to generate real-world traction, the Orion Fund risks being seen as evidence that Cardano’s current DeFi economy remains too small to support the ambitions it advertises.
The $80 million initiative is an acknowledgment that internal ecosystem spending is no longer sufficient.
By pivoting to the massive liquidity pools of Bitcoin and giving itself a multi-year runway to 2030, Cardano has laid out an ambitious roadmap. The execution of that roadmap will dictate whether the network can evolve into a $3 billion financial hub by the end of the decade.
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