openhuman/WETH Liquidity Vanishes on Base
A trading pair for openhuman and WETH on the Base network experienced a total loss of its funds. The pool peaked at nearly $55k before dropping to just $3 in available liquidity.
The trading pair for openhuman and WETH on the Base network has effectively ceased operation after a complete loss of its funds. The pool once supported significant volume but now holds only three dollars in liquidity against a recent peak value.
What happened
This specific event occurred within the broader ecosystem of decentralized finance, where pools are expected to maintain sufficient depth for trades. In this instance, the available capital evaporated almost entirely from its highest recorded level. The data indicates that by June 20, 2026, the contract at address 0xbbe5e33a0289e9ed85cc17dcac86af94a09cc340 was no longer functional for standard trading purposes.
The numbers
To understand the scale of this event, one must look at the magnitude of the drawdown. The pool reached a high point where it held $54,952 in total value locked. From that maximum level, the liquidity dropped by 100%. A drop of this percentage signifies that every single dollar previously available to traders was removed or drained from the smart contract.
- Peak Value: $54,952
- Current Liquidity: $3
- Total Drawdown: 100%
The impact on users
A liquidity pool with a health score of only 20 out of 100 suggests the contract is in poor condition. When a metric like this reaches zero or near-zero, it means that any attempt to execute a trade would fail because there are no funds left to facilitate an exchange. The deployer wallet associated with this event holds address 0x570c10b96434dd7bb639fc9a776c320fb1efd66d, but the current state of the pool renders it useless for its intended purpose.
What to watch
Investors and traders should monitor such metrics closely. A sudden shift from a healthy score down to 20, combined with a total loss of funds, indicates that the asset is no longer viable on this specific chain. The presence of risk flags marked as 'ok' does not negate the reality that the pool itself has been emptied.