Balancer Labs, the corporate entity behind the Balancer decentralized exchange protocol, is winding down operations following a devastating $110 million exploit in November 2025 and a prolonged collapse in total value locked that left the company without a viable path forward.
Co-founder Fernando Martinelli announced the decision on March 24, 2026, in a governance post to the Balancer DAO. The protocol itself will continue operating under a leaner DAO, foundation, and service-provider structure, but the corporate entity that built it is done.
How the Hack and Falling TVL Pushed Balancer Labs to the Breaking Point
The November 2025 exploit drained between $110 million and $128 million from Balancer V2 stable pools across six blockchains in roughly 30 minutes. The root cause was a pricing and rounding error in the V2 stable pool swap logic, specifically a precision loss in the upscale array function. It was the third known security breach in Balancer’s history.
Hack Impact
$110M–$128M
Drained from Balancer V2 stable pools across six blockchains in approximately 30 minutes, November 2025.
Before the hack, Balancer held roughly $800 million in TVL. Within two weeks of the exploit, approximately $500 million fled the protocol. The bleeding never stopped.
By March 2026, Balancer’s TVL sits at approximately $157 million, a 95% decline from its 2021 peak of $3.5 billion. That collapse mirrors the kind of sustained confidence erosion seen across DeFi when protocols suffer repeated security failures, similar to the broader pressure on established crypto narratives during periods of market stress.
TVL Collapse
−95%
Balancer’s TVL fell from a ~$3.5B peak (2021) to ~$157M, with the post-hack exodus accelerating a decline already years in the making.
Martinelli framed the decision bluntly: “BLabs, as a corporate entity, has become a liability rather than an asset to the protocol’s future and is just not sustainable as is without any sources of revenue.”
What Shuts Down vs. What Stays Live
The distinction matters: Balancer Labs, the company, is shutting down. The Balancer protocol, the on-chain smart contracts and liquidity pools, remains live and operational.
Under the restructuring plan, key staff may transition to a new entity called Balancer OpCo, pending a DAO governance vote. The protocol’s product scope will narrow to five areas: reCLAMM pools, liquidity bootstrapping pools, stablecoin and LST pools, weighted pools, and non-EVM chain expansion.
Governance is being overhauled. BAL token emissions will be cut to zero, and the veBAL governance model will be wound down entirely. The DAO treasury will capture 100% of protocol fees, up from 17.5% previously. A BAL buyback is planned to offer tokenholders a fair exit, though terms and timing remain subject to a DAO vote.
Martinelli has said he will hold no formal role in the restructured protocol but has offered to serve as an advisor. The hack created what he described as “real and ongoing legal exposure” for the corporate entity, a factor that increasingly pushes DeFi projects toward DAO-first structures to limit institutional liability.
What BAL Holders and Liquidity Providers Should Know
BAL is trading at approximately $0.16, down 88% from its all-time high, with a market cap of roughly $10 million and 24-hour volume of $1.6 million. The token saw a modest 2.96% uptick in the 24 hours around the announcement, possibly reflecting relief that a concrete plan now exists.
For liquidity providers with active positions in Balancer pools, the smart contracts remain functional. However, with TVL at $157 million and falling, liquidity depth is thin. The elimination of BAL emissions removes the primary incentive that kept LPs in the protocol, which could accelerate further outflows.
Competitively, Balancer’s decline has already reshuffled the AMM landscape. Rivals like Uniswap, Curve, and Aerodrome have absorbed much of the liquidity that left Balancer over the past year. The protocol’s niche in weighted pools and liquidity bootstrapping, once a differentiator, has been partially replicated by competitors who avoided comparable security incidents.
As one DeFi analyst noted in reporting by Decrypt, “Older DeFi models built on token incentives and emissions are being phased out. The transition to DAO governance could help isolate legal risk, reduce fixed operational overhead, and shift governance and accountability more directly to the community.” That framing echoes broader questions about DeFi sustainability, not unlike the extreme pain signals that surface when legacy protocols lose market confidence.
The Balancer DAO governance vote on the OpCo transition and BAL buyback terms will determine whether the protocol stabilizes in its leaner form or continues its decline. No timeline for the vote has been confirmed.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.



