Drift Secures $148 Million in Funding from Tether and Partners to Recover from Exploit

Following a significant exploit that resulted in the loss of over $270 million in client assets, Drift Protocol has announced plans to relaunch with Tether's USDT as its settlement layer, thanks to a proposed funding package of up to $147.5 million from Tether and its partners. The deal comprises up to $127.5 million from Tether and $20 million from other partners, and is structured to support user recovery and reboot the platform as a USDT-based perpetual futures exchange on Solana. Previously, the platform utilized Circle's USDC as its settlement layer. The rescue package includes a revenue-linked credit facility, ecosystem grants, and loans to market makers, with a portion of trading revenue and committed capital directed towards a recovery pool aimed at covering roughly $295 million in user losses over time. The funding comes after a North Korea-linked group infiltrated Drift Protocol, posing as a quantitative trading firm for approximately six months before carrying out the exploit on April 1. Drift's governance token, DRIFT, has lost around 70% of its value since the exploit. The incident led to criticism of Circle for its perceived reluctance to halt the money transfer after the exploit, with the attacker moving approximately $232 million in USDC from Solana to Ethereum using Circle's cross-chain transfer protocol. In response to the criticism, Circle's CEO, Jeremy Allaire, stated that the company only freezes USDC wallets when directed by law enforcement or courts, not in real-time during hacks, due to legal risks. In contrast, USDT has demonstrated a greater ability to freeze funds linked to hacks or illicit activities. As the largest decentralized perpetual futures exchange on Solana, with over 175,000 users and approximately $150 billion in cumulative trading volume, Drift's transition to USDT is expected to have significant implications for the stablecoin market. The competition in stablecoins is intensifying, with exchanges, fintechs, and traditional financial institutions vying for control of the on-ramps, liquidity, and settlement layers that underpin digital asset markets. While USDT still maintains a significant lead, Circle's USDC has been gaining ground, with its transaction volume outpacing Tether's in recent months. The new funding package will also enable Tether to fund fee reductions and user incentives tied to Drift's transition to USDT, while providing liquidity support to designated market makers to bolster trading depth at relaunch.