WETH/UNILAWB Base Pool Liquidity Vanishes From $62k Peak
An automated market maker pair for UNILAWB and Wrapped Ether experienced a total loss of real capital shortly after deployment. The event occurred in June 2026 on the Base network, leaving only negligible funds behind.
A specific trading venue for UNILAWB tokens against Wrapped Ether has effectively ceased to function as a market. The event began on June 18, 2026, when the system recorded its highest level of available capital before funds disappeared entirely.
The Event Timeline
Monitoring systems detected activity at exactly 00:45 UTC in late June. At that moment, the pool held a significant amount of value for traders to swap assets against one another. Within hours or days following this initial detection window, the available capital vanished.
The Numbers
At its peak performance, the contract address 0x1ae3b3345cab1797ac13a0a5a057d953c292bc51 held $62,413 in combined assets. This figure represented a healthy environment for users to provide liquidity or execute trades without excessive slippage. By the time the event concluded, that same pool contained only three dollars.
The drawdown from peak levels reached 100%, meaning every single dollar of real capital was removed from circulation within the smart contract. A health score calculated for this specific state is currently twenty out of one hundred, indicating a critical failure in maintaining operational reserves.
Implications For Traders
This drastic reduction means that any user attempting to swap tokens into or out of this pair now faces extreme risk. The deployer wallet 0xb15c39e8c9016ea57a1a62b1f4ec097e958f811f initiated the setup, but subsequent actions drained the funds completely.
When a pool drops from tens of thousands to single digits, it often signals that one side of the trade was removed by an external actor or internal logic. For investors watching Base chain activity, this serves as a stark reminder that new pairs can vanish rapidly regardless of initial capital size.