- MANTRA’s OM token crashed by over 90% on April 13, wiping out more than US$6B in market value.
- The team blamed “reckless liquidations” by a large investor, but the community remains skeptical, pointing to insider control and past legal issues.
- The collapse comes amid MANTRA’s high-profile deals, including a US$1B tokenisation partnership with DAMAC and a new crypto license from Dubai’s VARA.
Another day, another billion-dollar crypto wipeout that puts this industry’s reputation at stake, I guess.
MANTRA’s native token, OM, cratered more than 90% within 24 hours on April 13, plummeting from US$6.3 (AU$10) to under US$0.50 (AU$0.80) and erasing over US$6B (AU$9.6B) in market value, according to data from CoinMarketCap.
The collapse sent shockwaves across the crypto space, with several community members labeling it the biggest rug-pull since the infamous LUNA and FTX disasters.
At press time, the token is… well, you just have to look at the chart:
‘Totally Not Us’
In a pinned message in the project’s Telegram group (which has since been locked to new members), community lead Dustin McDaniel told users the team is “aware of concerns” and is actively investigating the situation.
Moments later, MANTRA’s official X account posted a statement blaming “reckless liquidations”, not project-related wrongdoing (wink):
MANTRA community – we want to assure you that MANTRA is fundamentally strong. Today’s activity was triggered by reckless liquidations, not anything to do with the project. One thing we want to be clear on: this was not our team. We are looking into it and will share more details about what happened as soon as we can.


Related: Crypto ETFs: Avalanche and Solana Filings; Ether Staking Coming Soon, Say Experts
Co-founder John Patrick Mullin added that the chaos stemmed from a “massive forced liquidation from a large OM investor on a CEX”, though he didn’t name the exchange. Truly a classic.
Not Buying It
But traders, investors, and many community members are sceptical of the “reckless liquidation” narrative, citing the suspiciously fast and deep plunge, as well as the token’s thin liquidity. Others have demanded a full post-mortem to determine whether the drop was caused by poor risk management, internal selling, or another orchestrated dump.
Yet, too soon to know if there’s a recovery plan. There is not even a detailed post-mortem and no confirmed timeline for… well, anything. Until then, it looks like MANTRA’s OM joins the very long list of tokens buried in the crypto cemetery.
Moreover, the project has faced allegations over insiders holding a disproportionate control over the token’s circulating supply. Concerns started spreading when crypto user Anon Vee on X (formerly Twitter) shared that MANTRA’s team controls 90% of circulating supply.
Mullin dismissed those concerns in a post on X, stating that OM has been in circulation since August 2020, “longer than most of these people have been in crypto”, he added.
It doesn’t stop there. A Hong Kong court ordered six MANTRA DAO members to disclose financial records amid accusations of misappropriating DAO assets back in August 2024, according to reports.
It’s also quite an insane moment for this to happen to MANTRA. Earlier this year, MANTRA signed a US$1B (AU$1.60B) tokenisation deal with DAMAC, the Dubai-based investment giant, to bring real estate, data centers, and other physical assets onto its blockchain.
Related: Aussies Reject Pension Titans, Turn to Crypto and Self-Managed Super Funds
A month later, the project secured a virtual asset service provider license from Dubai’s VARA, opening the door to a range of regulated services in the UAE.