Blockchain Security Firm CertiK Raises $37M in Series B Fundraising
The round was co-led by Coatue Management and Shunwei Capital, with participation from Coinbase Ventures.

Blockchain cybersecurity startup CertiK has raised $37 million in a Series B funding round that was co-led by Coatue Management and Shunwei Capital, with participation from Coinbase Ventures.
The blockchain and smart-contract security firm has raised $48 million since 2018, with a list of backers that includes Binance, IDG Capital, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Yale University and others.
The strength of the Series B round reflects the explosive growth in decentralized finance (DeFi), which runs on automated smart-contract code and decentralized exchanges, some of which are subject to bugs and hacks.
Read more: Binance Labs Invests Millions in Blockchain Auditing Platform CertiK
Founded in 2018 by professors from Yale University and Columbia University, CertiK has provided audits and checking to DeFi-related projects like Aave, Polygon, Binance Smart Chain, Terra, Yearn and Chiliz.
In addition to auditing code, CertiK’s DeFi-focused “Skynet” analytics service scrutinizes on-chain and off-chain data like social sentiment, privileged governance controls, market volatility and suspicious transactions. To date, Skynet has monitored more than 2 million smart-contract addresses and about 2 billion on-chain transactions, the company said.
“We’re proud to advance transparency in the space by providing the tools and resources – including our official audit reports – so the community can make sense of vital security information,” Ronghui Gu, a CertiK co-founder who's a computer science professor at Columbia, said in a statement.
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The cybersecurity firm has "no concrete plans" for an IPO despite reports to the contrary last month.
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- Despite receiving requests following CEO Ronghui Gu's Davos comments, the firm has no concrete public listing plan — Gu clarified media reports were exaggerated, noting valuation frameworks for web3-native companies remain undefined.
- Gu identified private-key mismanagement, deepfake impersonations, and oracle manipulation as growing threats surpassing traditional smart contract vulnerabilities.











