Solana’s Drift Floats Airdrop After $285 Million Hack, Faces Backlash
Solana-based perpetual futures exchange Drift Protocol is facing mounting scrutiny following the catastrophic $285 million exploit it suffered this week.
The backlash is being driven by a highly speculative recovery strategy and suspicious post-hack token movements.
Drift Team Linked Wallet Shifts Over $2 Million Tokens
On April 4, blockchain analysis platform Onchain Lens reported that a wallet linked to the Drift team deposited 56.25 million DRIFT tokens into centralized exchanges Bybit and Gate after the hacking incident. The tokens were valued at $2.44 million.
A wallet linked to the Drift Protocol Team deposited 56.25M $DRIFT worth $2.44M into #Bybit and #Gate since the hack. pic.twitter.com/lt9rocKTfi
— Onchain Lens (@OnchainLens) April 4, 2026
Transfers to exchanges are typically interpreted as a sign of potential selling activity. The timing has added to the concern, with the token falling to an all-time low of $0.03343 over the past 24 hours.
The move has drawn significant scrutiny from the community because it comes while the project is still dealing with the fallout from the hack.
That has made the transfer of internal funds to secondary markets during a severe liquidity crisis especially contentious. It has also raised fresh concerns about possible asset flight and complicated efforts to rebuild user trust.
On April 1, North Korean attackers hacked Drift Protocol, draining around $280 million. This slashed the platform’s total value locked from $550 million to about $230 million as of press time.
The April 1 attack ranks as the largest decentralized finance hack of 2026 so far. The fallout has continued to spread, with reports indicating that the number of affected projects has now risen to 20.
The breach also stands as the second-largest hack in Solana’s history, behind only the $326 million Wormhole exploit in 2022.
Solana Co-Founder Proposed Recovery Strategy
Amid the ongoing crisis, Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko publicly suggested that Drift could survive by executing an “airdrop” of IOU tokens.
how the @DriftProtocol evenly socialized losses during 10/10 without adl queue prioritization hacks was part of the inspiration to work on percolator and try to formally prove fairness. it’s really sad to see this happen to a team that’s been iterating hard on the core protocol.…
— toly 🇺🇸 (@toly) April 3, 2026
This mirrors the strategy employed by the centralized exchange Bitfinex following its $72 million hack in 2016.
Yakovenko said a core engineering team could rebuild the platform and use the IOU tokens to eventually make affected users whole.
Market analysts, however, point to major structural differences between the two cases.
Bitfinex benefited from a dominant position in centralized trading and recurring fee revenue during a historic crypto bull market. This allowed the exchange to gradually buy back its debt tokens at a 1:1 ratio.
Drift, by contrast, operates as a decentralized exchange in a highly competitive and fragmented market. With user confidence damaged and liquidity cut roughly in half, the protocol lacks the predictable revenue base needed to support an unsecured debt instrument.
Analysts have also argued that describing such an issuance as an “airdrop” risks obscuring the core issue. Without a solvent protocol and a viable path to repayment, the tokens would carry no intrinsic value beyond speculation on a future recovery.
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