edgeX promises affected users refunds in denial of role in EDGE collapse

- edgeX has pledged to compensate users affected by the 70% collapse of its EDGE token, with refunds capped at 100,000 USDC per user.
- The exchange maintains that the crash was caused by deliberate market manipulation from external actors and says no hack, exploit, or security breach occurred.
- EDGE plunged from about $1.14 to $0.37, triggering more than $2.8 million in liquidations before partially recovering to around $0.69.
Following the crash of its EDGE token, decentralized derivatives exchange edgeX, has shared an update stating that it will compensate users affected by the 70% crash.
The exchange debunked the allegations that the crash came as a result of insider manipulation, maintaining that the price collapse resulted from external actors.
edgeX posted what appears to be a refund commitment on X on June 3, following two earlier statements in which it blamed “deliberate” market-price manipulation by external actors for the sell-off, according to the project’s official account.
However, blockchain investigator ZachXBT did not buy the exchange’s explanation, stating that concentrated insider ownership and a thin float better explain the collapse.
What happened to EDGE?
EDGE dropped from roughly $1.14 to a low of $0.366 during the June 1 session, a peak-to-trough decline of about 70%, according to CoinMarketCap data.
edgeX’s own account of the timeline puts the sharpest move in the early hours of June 2 UTC, with EDGE falling from around $1.12 to approximately $0.32 within a single hour before stabilizing between $0.63 and $0.71.
The crash triggered more than $2.81 million in liquidations within that window, with long positions accounting for $1.96 million and shorts roughly $849,000, per Cryptopolitan’s earlier reporting.
As of June 3, EDGE was trading near $0.69 with a market capitalization of about $242 million and a circulating supply of 350 million tokens out of a 1 billion maximum, according to CoinMarketCap.
What is edgeX’s response?
In the early hours of June 2, edgeX ruled out any hack, exploit, or security breach while attributing the sell-off to deliberate manipulation by outside participants.
edgeX also addressed community concerns about a smart contract address that users had flagged as suspicious, stating that it belonged to the exchange and was used solely for user deposits and withdrawals.
On June 3, the exchange followed up with a refund announcement for affected users, calling it a goodwill payment that matches their actual losses. It stated that eligible users will receive the refund seven days after verification.
However, it added that the refund is capped at a maximum of 100,000 USDC per individual user.
What was ZachXBT and the community’s reaction to the initial token crash?
ZachXBT responded to edgeX’s explanation on X by stating that “EDGE supply was being controlled by a few insiders with a low float,” and called on the project to name “the counterparties / MM agreements which lead to these events.”
ZachXBT has a track record of flagging similar collapses. In April, ZachXBT investigated the RAVE token, where addresses linked to the initial distribution controlled around 95% of the supply before a crash exceeding 95% from peak.
He connected that playbook to several other tokens, including RIVER, SIREN, MYX, and SKYAI. Analytics firm BubbleMaps also flagged SIREN’s concentrated ownership weeks before its market cap fell from $1.52 billion to $320 million.
Community sentiment on edgeX’s posts was far from welcoming, with the initial post getting responses from users, with many accusing the team of involvement in the crash.
edgeX has promised to share its core conclusions from the incident. ZachXBT has made clear he expects it to include names of counterparties and market-maker agreements, while EDGE holders and traders who took losses in the crash will be watching both the report and the refund mechanics closely.
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FAQs
How far did the EDGE token fall during the June 1 crash?
EDGE dropped from around $1.14 to a low of $0.366, a decline of roughly 70%, and triggered over $2.81 million in liquidations within a single hour, according to CoinMarketCap data and Cryptopolitan's reporting.
Did edgeX get hacked?
edgeX stated on June 2 that its protocol was not compromised and that no hack, exploit, or security breach caused the price drop, attributing the crash instead to deliberate market manipulation by external participants.
Why does ZachXBT dispute edgeX's explanation?
ZachXBT said EDGE supply was controlled by a small number of insiders with a low float, and demanded that edgeX name the counterparties and market-maker agreements involved, consistent with his investigations into similar token collapses including RAVE and SIREN.
Disclaimer. The information provided is not trading advice. Cryptopolitan.com holds no liability for any investments made based on the information provided on this page. We strongly recommend independent research and/or consultation with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions.

Hannah Collymore
Hannah is a writer and editor with nearly a decade of blog writing and event reporting experience in the crypto space. At Cryptopolitan, Hannah contributes to the news page, reporting and analyzing the latest developments in DeFi, RWA, crypto regulation, AI and frontier tech industries. She graduated from Arcadia university with a degree in Business Administration.
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