Balancer Labs Shuts Down, Citing Liability From $128M Hack
Balancer Labs, the company that incubated the Balancer decentralized exchange, announced on March 30, 2026, that it is winding down all operations. The shutdown is a direct consequence of a November 2025 exploit where an attacker drained approximately $128 million from the protocol's V2 vaults. Co-founder Fernando Martinelli stated the corporate entity had become a "liability rather than an asset to the protocol's future," citing the "real and ongoing legal exposure" from the incident. The sophisticated attack manipulated precision rounding errors in the protocol's code, allowing the perpetrator to withdraw far more value than they deposited, shattering the platform's reputation for security.
TVL Collapses 95% as Trust Evaporates
The market's reaction to the breach and subsequent uncertainty has been severe. The protocol's total value locked (TVL), a key metric for DeFi health, has collapsed by 95% from its peak of nearly $3.5 billion in late 2021 to just $157 million today. The platform’s native BAL token crashed over 60% following the exploit, trading near all-time lows. This dramatic decline reflects a total erosion of confidence in a protocol once considered a "blue-chip" DeFi primitive, audited by top-tier security firms. The fallout demonstrates that even for established projects, trust is the most critical and fragile asset.
DAO Plans Zero Emissions and BAL Buyback to Survive
Despite closing the corporate entity, the Balancer protocol aims to continue under a leaner, decentralized structure led by its DAO and a new service provider, Balancer OpCo. Martinelli has proposed an aggressive restructuring plan to make the protocol sustainable. The proposal includes cutting all BAL token emissions to zero, which he described as a "circular bribe economy that costs more than it generates." The plan also calls for winding down the veBAL governance model and redirecting 100% of protocol fees to the DAO treasury. To provide tokenholders an opportunity to leave, the DAO is proposing a BAL buyback to offer a "fair exit." The protocol's ability to generate over $1 million in fees in the last three months provides the financial rationale for this leaner continuation path.



