Limitations of Token Models and Liquidity Depletion: An Analysis of Crypto Project Shutdowns in Q1 2026
In April 2026, the Decentralized Finance (DeFi) ecosystem is facing an unprecedented crisis with $13 billion in outflows and a series of major project shutdowns. As the vulnerabilities of token models reliant on speculative demand are exposed, the market has entered a full-scale 'separating the wheat from the chaff' phase.
As of April 28, 2026, the Decentralized Finance (DeFi) ecosystem is experiencing its most volatile month ever. This month alone, $13 billion in Total Value Locked (TVL) has flowed out, and more than 20 major projects have announced their closure. What began as isolated failures in early Q1 has now spread into a system-wide 'wash-out,' clearly exposing the fragility of token models that relied solely on speculative demand rather than sustainable utility.
More projects will follow. Most have realized there are no repercussions for shutting down, and there is no more profit left to be made. There is no reason to maintain a meaningless protocol that no one uses.
The crisis of April 2026, dubbed 'Black April,' has maximized market fear. Approximately $606 million in assets vanished through hacks and exploits in a single month, leading to a collapse in investor confidence and a sharp $13 billion drop in TVL. This situation is particularly serious because it goes beyond simple technical errors; the economic structures underpinning the protocols themselves failed to withstand market pressure.
Q1 2026: A Record of Project Liquidations
Throughout the first quarter of 2026, crypto projects in various sectors, including wallet services, exchanges, and NFT platforms, announced their closures. These chain shutdowns signify a loss of momentum to maintain protocols as user bases erode and capital outflows accelerate. Market analysts view this as a process of removing the bubble formed during the previous bull market.
- ZeroLend: Announced closure in mid-February due to worsening ecosystem conditions and declining liquidity.
- Step Finance: A Solana ecosystem project that ceased operations following a $40 million hack.
- Bit.com: A derivatives exchange that closed due to market contraction and a lack of users.
- Nifty Gateway: Operations ended due to declining interest from investors and the community.
- MilkyWay: Liquidated due to weakening token funding and a fragmented structure.
Experts analyze this event as a process of separating speculation from actual utility. Projects that sprouted during the previous bull market focused solely on fundraising through token issuance without clear revenue models. However, as market liquidity began to dry up, projects with fragmented structures collapsed without finding options for restructuring or recovery. This is a typical collapse phenomenon that occurs when tokenomics are not linked to real demand.
High-value asset theft cases dealt a final blow to already weakened token models. In particular, the $292 million loss at Kelp DAO and the $285 million hack of Drift completely changed the market's risk profile. While smart contract bugs were the primary threat in the past, failures in access control and vulnerabilities in off-chain verification layers have now emerged as major targets, rapidly eroding protocol trust.
The cases of ZeroLend and Step Finance illustrate typical patterns of protocol collapse. While ZeroLend slowly withered due to external factors like the depletion of ecosystem-wide liquidity, Step Finance met an immediate end due to a single major security incident. These cases suggest that survival is impossible in the current DeFi environment if either economic sustainability or security is lacking.
Institutional Movements and Strengthening Regulations
While speculative projects are disappearing, institutional financial institutions are actively embracing tokenization technology. State Street announced plans to launch a tokenized fund service in Luxembourg by the end of 2026, and Visa is expanding its payment network in collaboration with WeFi, led by the former Tether CEO. This shows that the market's focus is shifting from simple speculation to practical financial infrastructure.
Regulatory authorities are also tightening their grip. The Japanese government has ordered strengthened Anti-Money Laundering (AML) checks related to real estate transactions using cryptocurrency, and the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has introduced an AI-powered crypto registration screening system in response to staff reductions. These changes in the regulatory environment are further narrowing the space for projects with opaque models, and calls for market transparency are growing.
Ultimately, the current market contraction is evaluated as an inevitable process of removing unnecessary bubbles. Capital is now showing a 'flight to quality' phenomenon, concentrating on Bitcoin and stablecoins instead of unverified new protocols. This painful cleanup in the first half of 2026 will serve as a catalyst for the long-term reorganization of the cryptocurrency ecosystem around sound economic models.
| Project Name | Sector | Primary Reason for Shutdown |
|---|---|---|
| ZeroLend | DeFi Lending | Worsening ecosystem conditions and declining liquidity |
| Step Finance | Solana Ecosystem | $40 million hack/exploit |
| Bit.com | Derivatives Exchange | Market contraction and lack of user base |
| Nifty Gateway | NFT Platform | Erosion of investor and community interest |
| MilkyWay | Liquid Staking/DeFi | Weakening token funding and fragmented structure |
A summary of notable protocols and platforms that ceased operations in the first three months of 2026.
Concentrated damage across leading DeFi protocols during the 'Black April' period.




This content is for information and commentary only and is not investment advice.
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