Mantra says one particular exchange may have caused OM collapse
The team behind real-world tokenized asset blockchain Mantra says its native tokenās sudden 90% plunge was caused by exchanges forcibly closing positions without notice, with one currently unnamed exchange potentially to blame.Ā
On April 13, Mantra (OM) price dropped from $6.30 to below $0.50, rapidly shedding over 90% of its $6 billion market cap.
āWe have determined that the OM market movements were triggered by reckless forced closures initiated by centralized exchanges on OM account holders,ā Mantra co-founder John Mullin wrote in an April 13 statement on X.
āThe timing and depth of the crash suggest that a very sudden closure of account positions was initiated without sufficient warning or notice,ā he added.Ā
Source: John Mullin
āThat this happened during low-liquidity hours on a Sunday evening UTC, early morning Asia time, points to a degree of negligence at best, or possibly intentional market positioning taken by centralized exchanges.ā
Mullin told an X user they believe one exchange āin particularā was to blame but said they were still āfiguring out the details.ā He told others that the centralized exchange in question wasnāt Binance.Ā
Mantra has an upcoming community connect on X, where Mullin says the team would share more information.
Source: John Mullin
Some traders allege the token collapse was a rug pull, while others are speculating the Mantra team had used their tokens as collateral to take out a massive loan from a centralized exchange and the team fell prey to a loan risk parameter change, then a margin call.
Mullin denied these theories in follow-up X posts, saying, āThe team did not have a loan outstandingā and haven't orchestrated a rug pull.Ā Ā
āTokens remain locked and subject to the published vesting periods. OMās tokenomics remain intact, as shared last week in our latest token report. Our token wallet addresses are online and visible,ā Mullin said.
Source: John Mullin
The price of OM staged a minor recovery in the aftermath of the price collapse, briefly returning above $1, but it is back down and currently trading around $0.7894, according to CoinGecko.
The token hit an all-time high of just under $9 on Feb. 23 and is now down over 91% from that figure.
Source: Star Xu
Millions of Mantra tokens moved in the week prior to collapseĀ
Blockchain analytics platform Spot On Chain said in an April 14 post to X that some OM whales moved 14.27 million tokens to the crypto exchange OKX three days before the crash. In March, the same whales picked up 84.15 million OM for $564.7 million.
āNow, after a brutal 90% drop, their remaining 69.08 million OM is worth just $62.2 million, putting their total estimated loss at a staggering $406.3 million,ā Spot On Chain said.
āHowever, they may have hedged the position elsewhere, and itās possible they contributed to the sharp drop.ā
Source: Spot On Chain
At the same time, blockchain analytics platform Lookonchain said that since April 7, at least 17 wallets deposited 43.6 million OM into crypto exchanges, representing 4.5% of the circulating supply.Ā
In January 2025, Mantra and investment conglomerate DAMAC signed a $1 billion deal to tokenize the investment conglomerateās various assets.Ā
Meanwhile, Mantra announced on Feb. 19 that it had received a virtual asset service provider license from Dubaiās Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority.
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