USDR Crashes 37% After $10M Hack-Holders Are Panicking Like Bertie Wooster at a Tax Audit

The bally farce surrounding European issuer StablR has escalated to a degree that would make even the most addled of Bertie Wooster’s scheming aunts blush with embarrassment. At the time of scribbling these lines, the USD stablecoin USDR has nosedived a full 37% to a woeful $0.63, while its euro counterpart EURR is lolloping a full 22% behind the parity mark, looking for all the world like a dog that’s just been told it can’t have a second helping of crumpets at Aunt Dahlia’s garden party.

While the markets are still picking their jaws up off the floor after digesting the technical nitty-gritty of the recent $10 million caper, on-chain data has thrown up a precedent so daft it would have Jeeves sighing so hard his monocle would fall into his soup: the hacker couldn’t even be bothered to flog a third of the freshly minted nonsense, but the project’s exchange pools were so emptier than a biscuit tin at a children’s party after a visit from the Young and Entitled that investor confidence went up in smoke faster than a cigar after a night on the town with Gussie Fink-Nottle and his newts.

The StablR lot were eventually forced to break a silence longer than the one Jeeves maintains when Bertie has just suggested wearing a spats-and-plus-fours combo to a black-tie event, taking to X to confirm the exploit and mutter half-hearted promises about mopping up the mess. Unsurprisingly, this move only sent the panic into overdrive, exposing a prolonged operational crisis at the startup that would make even the most slapdash member of the Drones Club look like a paragon of military precision and fiscal responsibility.

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Prior to this emergency update that’s about as welcome as a wasp at a vicarage tea party, the issuer’s official account had been quieter than a mouse in a library during a book burning, with nary a peep since March 12. The latest verified reserve audit data, meanwhile, is still stuck at the fourth quarter of 2025, looking for all the world like a forgotten umbrella in a hallstand that no one’s bothered to move for months on end, even when it’s raining cats and dogs.

The team’s official statement, posted with all the urgency of a man who’s just remembered he left the kettle on the stove and his cat is alone with a full tin of sardines, reads thus:

Security update: We have identified an exploit affecting StablR and are actively working to contain it and minimize impact.

Protecting our users and your funds is our top priority.

We’ll share verified details and next steps as soon as possible.

– StablR (@StablREuro) May 24, 2026

This prolonged stagnation in public chit-chat and governance that would put a sloth on a bank holiday to shame explains precisely why the team paid about as much attention to basic Web3 cyber hygiene as Bertie does to Jeeves’s frequent and very sensible advice about not wearing lurid, clashing socks to a formal dinner. They built their entire architectural edifice not around pesky code bugs, but around a fatal human factor so glaring it would make even the most dim-witted of the Drones Club members stop mid-pint and go ‘I say, that’s a bit thick, what?’

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As the sharp-eyed analysts at Blockaid and PeckShield were quick to confirm, the Ethereum contract was being managed through a ‘one of three’ scheme so daft it would have Jeeves muttering ‘Very ill-advised, sir’ under his breath for a full week, and possibly writing a strongly worded letter to the Times about it. Under this arrangement, any one of the three administrators could sign transactions all on their lonesome, no need for a second opinion, a cup of tea, or a quick chat with the butler about the wisdom of the move. By compromising just a single key-easier than nicking a scone from a high tea platter when no one’s looking-the hacker added his own address to the owner list, gave the legitimate participants the old heave-ho, and locked the team out entirely, becoming the sole master of the money printer with all the unbridled glee of a small boy who’s just found an unlocked sweet shop and no grown-ups in sight.

The main market oddity popped up immediately after the hacker minted 8.35 million USDR and 4.5 million EURR out of thin air, no muss, no fuss, like a conjurer pulling a rabbit out of a hat, except the rabbit is worth about ten million dollars and everyone’s very cross about it. According to the latest reports, StablR had been bragging about flawless fiat backing to anyone who would listen: 11,199,552 EUR in reserves against 11,053,276 EURR tokens, and 7,198,751 USD against 7,018,281 USDR tokens. All very above board, very tidy, very much the sort of financial statement you’d expect a respectable stablecoin issuer to have sorted, one would have thought, before the whole thing went pear-shaped faster than a soufflé dropped by a clumsy footman.

But apparently, these millions existed only on paper, the kind of paper that’s about as useful as a chocolate teapot when you’re thirsty for actual, spendable liquidity. The issuer had forgotten to provide any native liquidity on decentralized exchanges, an oversight so boneheaded it would make even the most careless of the Drones Club members, fresh off a night of port and bad bets, go ‘I say, that’s a bit of a bungle, what?’ The hacker’s attempt to dump the entire freshly minted volume into the empty, neglected pools caused market slippage so severe it would make a professional racing tipster blush and hide his face in his racing paper.

The nominal $10.4 million value of the minted tokens evaporated faster than a gin and tonic left out in the August sun at a country house garden party, leaving the attacker with a mere 1,115 ETH, or about $2.8 million in net profit. Not exactly the glittering jackpot he was no doubt daydreaming about while he was busy fiddling with the keys, but his aggressive market dump did the trick anyway, completely destroying what little liquidity there was and sending the stablecoins into their current nosedive with all the grace of a drunkard tripping over a garden gnome at midnight after a very good dinner.

The situation continues to develop in real time, and amid the complete absence of fresh audits for the whole of 2026 so far, holders of the remaining assets are firmly advised to close any available positions post haste, unless they’re particularly keen on watching their funds vanish faster than a plate of salmon sandwiches at a vicarage tea party the second the curate walks in the door.

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2026-05-24 17:41