Solana Community Splits Over Drift’s Controversial Recovery Token and Planned Q2 Comeback

  • Issuance of a recovery token at a rate of 1 unit for every 1 USD of verified loss for affected users.
  • The recovery fund starts with $3.8 million in USDT, with a goal to activate redemptions upon reaching $5 million.
  • Tether commits to matching capital deployments of up to $127 million to support solvency.

Three weeks after Tether’s initial support announcement, the Drift protocol revealed the technical mechanisms of its upcoming redemption token. According to the official timeline, the team projects resuming operations during the second quarter of 2026, following the exploit that resulted in the loss of $295 million.

The core strategy presented on May 5 consists of the proportional distribution of “recovery tokens” among affected wallets. These assets represent a direct stake in a pool of funds that will be built up progressively. According to the technical details of the proposal, the pool will be funded by a substantial portion of the revenue generated by the protocol once operational, as well as contributions from strategic partners.

Despite this progress, the reception within the Solana ecosystem remains divided. Community data suggests that the forced closure of open positions during the exploit generated discontent, as traders were forced to realize losses in markets that could have recovered their value months later. According to the platform’s report, the process for users to recover the entirety of their capital could extend over several years, depending on the volume of revenue the exchange’s new version is able to capture.

Operational changes and Solana’s new derivatives landscape

The relaunch of Drift will be accompanied by a deep restructuring of its product offering and security. Official documentation confirms that the protocol will discontinue its “Earn” product, a tool that served as a yield engine for 20 decentralized finance (DeFi) applications on the network. This decision responds to the need to simplify the architecture after the incident, which affected the continuity of external projects like Carrot.

In the security realm, the team has indicated that the new deployment will feature a community-based multi-signature (multisig) setup and a complete overhaul of its keys and operational security (OpSec) practices. This transition occurs at a time of high competitiveness for the perpetual contracts sector on the network.

While this historic player prepares its return, other competitors are gaining ground over the last 24 hours. Data from DeFiLlama reveals that GMTrade currently leads the sector in open interest and monthly volume. Simultaneously, protocols like Phoenix and Bullet are advancing through their private beta phases, while Bulk, after raising $8 million in September 2025, projects its imminent launch on the mainnet.

Now Drift’s recovery success depends on reaching the milestone of $5 million in Total Value Locked (TVL) within its recovery pool, at which point the first redemptions will be enabled for token holders. The integration of tools like Jito’s JTX terminal is expected to provide additional liquidity to the derivatives sector during this quarter.