Share this article

Swiss Equity Firm Makes First Crypto Investment With SPiCE VC Stake

Swiss private equity firm VIVA Investment Partners AG is leaning into crypto funding through a new stake in blockchain venture capital firm SPiCE VC.

SPiCE VC founder Tal Elyashiv (CoinDesk archives)
SPiCE VC founder Tal Elyashiv (CoinDesk archives)

Swiss private equity firm VIVA Investment Partners AG is leaning into crypto funding through a new stake in blockchain venture capital firm SPiCE VC.

jwp-player-placeholder
STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

Announced Tuesday, SPiCE said the Swiss firm acquired an equity position in SPiCE’s management company and its fund. The release also said one of the equity firm’s co-founders, Rene Eichenberger, would join the board of the venture capital company.

“Together with VIVA Investment Partners, SPiCE VC will further strengthen its leadership position in this rapidly growing market,” said Tal Elyashiv, co-founder of SPiCE VC.

Elyashiv said SPiCE would focus on services including custody, marketplaces, compliance, rating, payments or banking-related tokenization, among others.

Read more: Securitize’s Japan Subsidiary Becomes First International Firm to Join Self-Regulatory Group

VIVA CEO Julie Meyer said the partnership represents the shared belief that a fundamental shift is happening in the securities industry.

“We all see the emergence of a new market sector akin to when music went digital or when Tesla emerged,” she said. “We intend to make SPICE VC the leading investor in this ecosystem.”

The partnership with SPiCE VC is the Swiss private equity firm’s first investment in the crypto space. VIVA previously invested in firms including UK-based DRIVE Software Solutions, Swiss battery technology company IQ International and a Milan-based AI firm.

Picture of CoinDesk author Jaspreet Kalra

More For You

Multisig Failures Dominate as $2B Is Lost in Web3 Hacks in the First Half

Alt

A wave of multisig-related hacks and operational misconfiguration led to catastrophic losses in the first half of 2025.

What to know:

  • Over $2 billion was lost to Web3 hacks in the first half of the year, with the first quarter alone surpassing 2024’s total.
  • Multisig wallet mismanagement and UI tampering caused the majority of major exploits.
  • Hacken urges real-time monitoring and automated controls to prevent operational failures.
(
)