Mantra Ceo Issues Urgent Warning: “Withdraw Your Om From Okx Now”
- OKX also said it would suspend futures, margin trading, and related services ahead of the migration.
- Mullin disputed nearly every part of OKX’s timeline.
- He said the exchange had published dates that were “technically impossible.
- He added that official governance documents state the migration can only begin after the ERC-20 OM token is fully deprecated on January 15, 2026.
What Happened
The conflict surfaced on Monday after OKX released an announcement outlining its support for the OM migration, including a detailed schedule that placed the conversion window between December 22 and December 25, 2025.
He described the exchange’s timeline as “arbitrary,” noting that no final launch date has been announced because it depends on a pending technical review.
The CEO said the publication of what he called “demonstrably false information” raises concerns about negligence or possible malicious intent.
Meanwhile, Binance temporarily suspended OM deposits and withdrawals during network upgrades before relisting the redenominated MANTRA token.
Market Context
OKX also said it would suspend futures, margin trading, and related services ahead of the migration.
He added that OKX has not communicated with Mantra since April 13, the date of OM’s extreme market collapse that saw the token fall more than 90% in a single day.
He argued that the communication breakdown has now resulted in market confusion during a period in which other exchanges have coordinated closely with Mantra on migration details.
The April collapse, which erased more than $6 billion from OM’s market capitalization within 24 hours, continues to cast a long shadow over the project.
Some traders described the crash as a rug pull, though Mantra denied wrongdoing and blamed the event on sudden liquidations during low-liquidity weekend trading.
Other platforms paused trading as part of broader migration adjustments.
Why It Matters
A later post-mortem attributed the crash partly to aggressive leverage policies on centralized exchanges and said the incident exposed wider structural risks in the industry.
Details
Tensions between blockchain platform Mantra and the crypto exchange OKX escalated sharply this week after Mantra CEO John Patrick Mullin accused the exchange of publishing “incorrect and misleading” information about the project’s upcoming token migration.
In a strongly worded statement posted on X, Mullin urged OM holders on the exchange to withdraw their tokens immediately and complete migration independently through official Mantra channels.
Mantra Accuses OKX of Publishing “False” OM Migration Dates
The exchange said it planned to delist OM spot pairs, halt deposits and withdrawals, conduct an account snapshot, and process the conversion at a 1:4 ratio in line with what it described as Mantra’s Proposal 17 and Proposal 26.
Mullin disputed nearly every part of OKX’s timeline. He said the exchange had published dates that were “technically impossible.
He added that official governance documents state the migration can only begin after the ERC-20 OM token is fully deprecated on January 15, 2026.
According to him, this makes any December 2025 migration window unworkable.
He also argued that the exchange had rearranged the intended process by placing the token split ahead of deprecation, reversing the sequence outlined in Proposal 26.
After $6B Collapse, OM Holders Face New Uncertainty Amid Exchange Frictions
In its response at the time, the project pledged more transparency, reduced internal validator control, and a 150 million OM token burn by Mullin himself.
Since then, several exchanges have taken action around the token. INDODAX delisted OM during the initial shift away from ERC-20.
In the same period, OKX removed multiple unrelated assets, such as BAL, PERP, FLM, PSTAKE, CLV, and RACA, because of low activity or listing-criteria issues, a trend that has raised wider questions about the exchange’s handling of assets undergoing structural changes.
The current dispute has left many OM holders trying to determine the safest migration path.