- Zcash, a privacy-focused cryptocurrency founded in 2016, is up 1,140% over the past year and ~50% in the past month, while bitcoin has dropped 24% year-over-year.
- The Winklevoss twins invested $50M to launch Cypherpunk Technologies, a Zcash treasury company that has stockpiled 300,000+ tokens; Digital Currency Group made Zcash one of its largest holdings.
- The SEC closed a probe into Zcash earlier this year, reducing regulatory overhang and helping supercharge the rally; Grayscale plans to convert its Zcash trust into an ETF.
- Privacy coin skeptics warn that Zcash’s anonymity features could attract illicit use, and tiny cryptocurrencies have a long history of surging — and then collapsing.
What Happened?
A cohort of bitcoin’s earliest and most prominent believers is pivoting to Zcash, a decade-old privacy cryptocurrency that lets users shield transaction details using zero-knowledge proofs. The Winklevoss twins, Barry Silbert’s Digital Currency Group, and Multicoin Capital’s Tushar Jain are among those building significant positions. The rally has been turbocharged by two catalysts: the SEC closing a probe into Zcash in early 2025, clearing regulatory overhang, and Grayscale’s announcement that it plans to convert its Zcash trust into an ETF — making the token more accessible to retail investors. Zcash now has a market cap of $8.9 billion, still a fraction of bitcoin’s $1.59 trillion, but momentum is accelerating fast.
Why It Matters?
The Zcash surge reflects a deepening ideological split inside crypto. Bitcoin’s early adopters were motivated by privacy and financial freedom from surveillance — values they feel have eroded as bitcoin goes mainstream, politicians embrace it, and blockchain analytics firms make transactions increasingly traceable. Zcash offers optional “shielded addresses” that hide the sender, receiver, and amount, while still allowing users to generate viewing keys for regulators or auditors. Proponents see massive commercial potential — businesses protecting payroll data, dissidents evading authoritarian surveillance — while critics, including some regulators, worry about illicit finance. The coin’s founders include researchers from MIT and Johns Hopkins, giving it more institutional credibility than most privacy coins.
What’s Next?
The Grayscale ETF conversion, if approved, would be the next major catalyst, bringing Zcash into the same accessible wrapper that turbocharged bitcoin adoption. But risks are real: privacy coins have a history of explosive rallies followed by steep crashes, and regulatory attitudes could shift if law enforcement pushes back on anonymous transactions. Bitcoin’s slumping price relative to Zcash also means the rotation trade could reverse quickly if bitcoin finds a new catalyst. For now, the cypherpunk faithful are betting that privacy — not price — is the next frontier in digital assets.
Source: The Wall Street Journal













