openhuman/WETH Pool on Base Loses All Liquidity
A liquidity pool pairing openhuman and WETH on the Base network experienced a total loss of capital shortly after its inception. The event marks a rapid transition from active trading conditions to an empty state within hours.
A specific liquidity pool designed for swapping openhuman tokens against WETH on the Base blockchain has effectively ceased operations. The event was first detected by monitoring systems at 11:32 UTC on June 14, 2026. At that moment, the contract address 0x86f17a3abb206d739fa4ebd5edf5cdb89570e5cb, deployed by wallet 0xc403753ec1d44a7a1e360100ce43ce923fe32361, held a total value of just $3. This figure represents the entire remaining capital in the system, indicating that nearly all funds have been removed.
The Numbers Behind the Drop
Before this sudden change occurred, the pool was holding significantly more assets for traders to use. Historical data shows the liquidity reached a peak value of $59,087 before vanishing almost entirely. This represents a drawdown from the maximum level that exceeded 100% relative to the current state. In practical terms, this metric means the remaining pool size is smaller than even one single unit of the previous total volume.
Current Health Status
The automated health score assigned to this contract has fallen to a rating of 20 out of 100. While on-chain risk flags currently show as okay, such low scores typically indicate that the pool is no longer viable for standard trading activities. A healthy liquidity provider would not deposit funds into an environment where the total value drops from nearly $60k to single digits so quickly.
What This Means For Users
- The swap function is likely broken or unusable due to insufficient reserves.
- Liquidity providers have lost access to their deposited assets via this specific contract interface.
This event highlights the volatility inherent in newly launched pools on Layer 2 networks. When a pool goes from having nearly $60k in capital to holding only three dollars, it suggests an external force drained the funds or a severe technical failure occurred that rendered the liquidity inaccessible for normal market participants.