Tether’s $127.5M Drift Recovery Plan After $270M Exploit
Tether is proposed to back a Drift Protocol recovery plan with $127.5 million after an early-April exploit that Drift now says left more than $295 million in outstanding user losses. The proposal is one of the largest post-hack support packages announced in DeFi this year, but it still falls short of the hole Drift disclosed on April 16.
WHAT TO KNOW
- Drift’s April 16 recovery update says Tether is proposed to contribute up to $127.5 million and other partners another $20 million.
- The same update says Drift still faced $295,706,374.93 in outstanding user losses and that relaunch depends on two independent audits and a USDC-to-USDT migration.
How the proposed rescue package is structured
In its April 16 incident update, Drift said fresh support was being assembled after the April 1 exploit. The venue said the plan includes $20 million from other partners alongside a $100 million revenue-linked credit facility, an ecosystem grant, and loans to market makers.
Tether said in an official statement on X that it is leading an up to $150 million recovery plan with the Solana Foundation to support user recovery and relaunch Drift. Drift’s own table still lists $295,706,374.93 in outstanding user losses, so the proposal does not yet close the gap on its own.
With $295,706,374.93 in outstanding user losses, the main caveat is that neither Drift nor Tether has disclosed a completed transfer. The official language still describes the support as proposed or up to those amounts rather than finalized funding.
Why the loss estimate is higher than the headline figure
Chainalysis wrote that attackers used valid admin signatures to whitelist fake CVT collateral, deposited 500 million CVT, and withdrew about $285 million in USDC, SOL, and ETH. That is why early coverage centered on a $270 million-plus exploit even though Drift’s later accounting moved higher.
By April 16, Drift said the remaining hole had risen above the earlier withdrawal estimate and now exceeded the protocol’s current Solana TVL of $242,266,251. The same protocol page shows TVL near $550,131,101 on April 1, underscoring how sharply liquidity fell after the breach.
The incident also fits the broader exploit wave described in Web3 losses of $482.6 million in Q1 2026, where phishing and smart-contract attacks continued to outpace recoveries. Against that $482.6 million quarterly loss backdrop, Drift’s proposed package still looks incomplete relative to its disclosed liabilities.
Relaunch terms and the Bitcoin read-through
Drift said the relaunch is contingent on two independent audits and a migration from USDC to USDT as the settlement layer. That gives Tether a role in Drift’s post-hack market structure, not just its interim financing.
For Bitcoin readers, the more useful signal is how weak risk appetite remains away from the network’s own balance sheet. The combination of a Fear & Greed reading of 23 and Q1 exploit losses of $482.6 million shows why confidence in altcoin venues is being rebuilt with hard capital and outside audits rather than token incentives alone.
What the response could mean for market confidence
The DRIFT token rose 19.66% over the past 24 hours to roughly $0.0486, leaving the project with a market value near $29.9 million as traders reacted to the recovery headline. That $29.9 million valuation remains small relative to Drift’s disclosed $295,706,374.93 liability pool.
OtterSec noted on X that it is supporting Drift’s path to recovery through the Solana Incident Response Network, while Drift said any recovered assets would be added to the recovery pool and that it has been working with law enforcement and third-party forensics firms. The recovery case therefore hinges less on a headline announcement than on audits, asset recovery, and whether the proposed financing actually settles.
The wider risk backdrop is still selective across speculative internet markets, from competition for high-value crypto betting users to earnings pressure ahead of an August 1 launch and a $310 million net loss at Flutter. With the Fear & Greed reading still at 23, users are likely to focus on final audits and actual funding transfers rather than the initial announcement alone.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
