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StablR Stablecoin Crisis Deepens After $10 Million Exploit Panic Spreads

StablR Stablecoin Crisis Deepens After $10 Million Exploit Panic Spreads

  • ZachXBT linked StablR stablecoin contracts to suspected multimillion-dollar exploit activity.
  • Tether-backed StablR faced pressure after EURR and USDR security concerns emerged.
  • Malta-based stablecoin issuer StablR remained silent while suspicious blockchain activity continued.

Blockchain investigator ZachXBT revealed that attackers may have drained more than $10 million from contracts linked to StablR stablecoins EURR and USDR. The report immediately raised concerns across the crypto market because StablR operates as a regulated European stablecoin issuer. According to Crypto Briefing, the attacker’s wallet received funding through the Cross Chain Transfer Protocol on Noble before interacting with the affected contracts. Investigators traced suspicious movements connected to both EURR and USDR stablecoin infrastructure.


StablR is headquartered in Malta and issues EURR as a euro-backed stablecoin. Meanwhile, USDR remains pegged to the US dollar. The company previously promoted its products as compliant and transparent solutions for institutions and payment networks across Europe.


Consequently, the reported exploit created fresh concerns around the security of regulated stablecoin projects operating within the region. Several crypto users also questioned whether additional vulnerabilities could exist inside the affected contracts. So far, StablR has not publicly confirmed the exact losses connected to the suspected exploit. However, blockchain activity linked to the attacker continued circulating across social media platforms throughout Saturday.


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Tether Investment Places More Focus on StablR

The reported exploit attracted wider market interest because StablR secured major institutional backing before the incident surfaced. According to company information, StablR raised €3.3 million during a 2023 seed funding round. That funding included support from Deribit, Maven 11, Theta Capital, Folkvang, and Blocktech. Additionally, Tether announced a strategic investment in the company during 2024 as regulated stablecoins expanded across Europe.


Moreover, the exploit claims placed additional pressure on stablecoin issuers promising secure infrastructure for institutional users. At the same time, crypto traders tracked the broader market response as confidence around stablecoin security weakened again. Several users also warned that security failures involving stablecoins often trigger wider concerns across digital asset markets.


Besides, the incident emerged during a period when regulators across Europe continue tightening oversight on crypto firms and stablecoin issuers. Because of that, the reported exploit could increase scrutiny surrounding operational protections used by regulated projects. The situation remains ongoing as market participants wait for additional updates from StablR and blockchain investigators regarding the suspected exploit.


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