- OKX identifies suspicious account activity related to MANTRA (OM) price manipulation.
- Legal proceedings initiated with regulators and law enforcement involvement.
- Concerns raised over OM token concentration and potential systemic risks.
OKX identified several accounts using large OM token holdings to borrow USDT, artificial price spikes ensued, leading to significant losses and regulatory scrutiny.
The incident raises concerns over token concentration risks and market stability, with legal investigations possible, affecting confidence in cryptocurrency exchanges and the overall digital asset ecosystem.
OKX stated it identified multiple related accounts involved in using large OM quantities as collateral to borrow USDT. This activity artificially inflated OM’s price before a significant downturn in April 2025.
The exchange detected collusion among accounts, took control to limit exposure, and liquidated a portion of OM. Losses were absorbed by its Security Fund. Legal actions and regulatory notifications are currently in progress.
JP Mullin, MANTRA’s CEO, raised concerns over OKX’s migration timeline announcements, urging users to withdraw OM immediately. OKX has announced changes in its services, including a halt in OM borrowing by December 2025.
The OM crash saw the token lose more than 90% of its value in a single day, massively impacting its market cap. These events raised alarms about the systemic risks from concentrated token amounts.
The April 2025 crash echoed previous incidents like cross-exchange liquidations observed in other markets. Analysts attributed the collapse to excessive margin borrowing, amplifying both the surge and subsequent price drop.
Experts anticipate regulatory scrutiny over collateral manipulation practices could increase. Historical precedents suggest more stringent checks may be imposed on margin borrowing practices. Experts suggest closer monitoring of such activities to avoid future manipulation.
JP Mullin, CEO of MANTRA, accused OKX of publishing misleading OM migration dates and claimed there has been no communication since the April 2025 crash: “Users need to withdraw their OM from OKX, and we demand they disclose their holdings clearly separating user-owned from balance sheet tokens.”






