- Upbit hacked, $32 million Solana tokens stolen.
- CEO promises full reimbursement to affected users.
- Arbitrage stoppage causes local price surges.
Upbit, a major South Korean crypto exchange, suffered a $32 million hack affecting Solana ecosystem tokens, prompting a freeze on deposits and withdrawals.
The hack impacts market dynamics by halting arbitrage, leading to inflated local token prices, while maintaining Solana’s stability and institutional interest.
The hack on Upbit led to a loss of approximately $32 million in Solana ecosystem tokens. Trading activity included SOL, ORCA, MET2, RAY, with significant effects on global markets.
Oh Kyung-seok, Upbit’s CEO, pledged to cover all user losses from the hack using company reserves. Upbit froze deposits and withdrawals and secured assets by moving to cold storage.
Price discrepancies emerged as Korean retail traders faced halted arbitrage services. This led to notable price premiums for Solana tokens on Upbit compared to global markets.
The halted arbitrage led to local premiums with ORCA soaring up to 95%, while MET2 increased by 94%. The incident affected retail trading dynamics on the Upbit platform.
Immediate security measures included thorough reviews of Upbit’s systems, aiming for enhanced safety. The hack continued a pattern reminiscent of historical exchange breaches.
Institutional confidence in Solana appears intact. Franklin Templeton’s ETF filing hints at robust interest. Experts believe Solana’s protocol remains fundamentally unscathed by the hack, showing ongoing institutional support.
“Customers will face no losses and a comprehensive security review of the entire deposit and withdrawal system is underway” – Oh Kyung-seok, CEO, Upbit






