Crypto World
Balancer Labs Closes Operations Following Devastating $110M Hack
Key Takeaways
- The corporate entity Balancer Labs is ceasing operations following a November 2025 security breach that cost $110 million
- The protocol’s total value locked has plummeted 95% from its 2021 high of $3.5 billion to approximately $157 million
- BAL token emissions will cease entirely under a comprehensive restructuring initiative
- Protocol operations will transition to the Balancer Foundation and DAO, with all fees flowing to the treasury
- Token holders will have access to a buyback program offering fair exit opportunities
The corporate force behind one of decentralized finance’s prominent trading platforms is calling it quits.
Balancer Labs co-founder Fernando Martinelli revealed this week that the company responsible for developing and supporting the Balancer decentralized exchange is discontinuing operations. This decision comes in the wake of a November 2025 security incident that resulted in approximately $110 million in stolen digital assets — marking the third major security compromise in the platform’s operational history.
According to Martinelli, the security breach “introduced significant and persistent legal risks,” rendering continued operations untenable. In a governance forum post, he stated that Balancer Labs had transformed into “more of a burden than a benefit to the protocol’s long-term viability.”
CEO Marcus Hardt explained that the organization’s expenditures to incentivize liquidity far exceeded generated revenues. This imbalanced spending model was simultaneously eroding value for Balancer token stakeholders.
Balancer’s Dramatic Decline
During its zenith in late 2021, Balancer commanded nearly $3.5 billion in total value locked, positioning it as a foundational component of DeFi infrastructure alongside platforms like Aave, Uniswap, and Curve.
Today, that figure stands at just $157 million — representing a catastrophic 95% reduction. The project’s market capitalization has contracted to $10 million, with the token currently trading around $0.16, dramatically below its historical peak.
The November security incident accelerated this downward trajectory. Total value locked contracted by an additional $500 million during the two-week period immediately following the exploit.
Neverthstanding these setbacks, Martinelli noted the protocol continues generating over $1 million in fees across the most recent three-month period. While insufficient for current operational requirements, this revenue stream could sustain a more streamlined organization.
Proposed Restructuring Framework
Balancer Labs leadership has outlined a comprehensive transformation plan. BAL token emissions would be eliminated entirely, dismantling what Martinelli characterized as a “self-perpetuating incentive system that depletes more value than it creates.”
The existing veBAL governance framework would also be discontinued. Martinelli argued it had been “dominated” by meta-governance entities, compromising representative decision-making.
Protocol fee distribution would be restructured to channel 100% of revenue to the DAO treasury, up from the current 17.5% allocation. The v3 protocol share would decrease to 25% to encourage more sustainable liquidity provision.
A BAL token buyback initiative would provide holders with exit liquidity at reasonable valuations.
Key personnel from Balancer Labs would transition to a newly formed organization designated Balancer OpCo, contingent on governance approval. Martinelli plans to withdraw from any official capacity while remaining available for advisory support.
The product roadmap will consolidate around five core pool categories: reCLAMM pools, liquidity bootstrapping pools, stablecoin pools, weighted pools, and expansion to non-EVM blockchain networks.
The Balancer DAO has been presented with two governance proposals addressing the restructuring plan and tokenomics modifications.
BAL was trading at $0.72 on Tuesday morning.
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