The Receipt
Brett Harrison is back in the arena. The former FTX US President, who resigned weeks before the exchange’s catastrophic collapse, has officially launched Architect Financial Technologies. The venture secured $5 million in pre-product financing, a figure confirmed in the official announcement, correcting earlier rumors of larger raises.
The round drew capital from industry heavyweights that survived the 2022 contagion, including Coinbase Ventures and Circle Ventures. Other participants include Motivate VC and SV Angel.
The Discrepancy: Infrastructure, Not Casino
Contrary to reports classifying the venture as a “new exchange,” Architect is building the plumbing, not the pool. The firm is developing an institutional-grade order management system (OMS) and connectivity layer. The goal? Allow sophisticated traders to access regulated derivatives markets, like the CME and Eurex, alongside crypto venues from a single interface.
The distinction is critical. Harrison is not building a custodian or a venue that holds user funds. He is building the software to route them. This sidesteps the regulatory minefield that destroyed his previous employer.
“Whatever my role was at FTX US, I did not have a role in the fraud that was committed,” Harrison previously wrote in a public defense of his tenure.
Institutional Context
The raise signals a specific market thesis: Trust in offshore, opaque venues is dead. Capital is pivoting to regulated, onshore infrastructure. By backing Harrison, Coinbase and Circle are betting that the next cycle’s volume will flow through pipes that connect traditional finance (TradFi) with digital assets, rather than walled gardens.
Harrison’s return tests the industry’s forgiveness threshold. While he wasn’t implicated in the FTX fraud, the proximity remains a reputational hurdle. The caliber of the cap table suggests that for institutional investors, the code, and the compliance, matters more than the association.