Ethena v2 Returns $210M in Oversubscribed Funds Rather Than Raising Cap
The team's decision to refund rather than accept an expanded raise has been met with praise from long-time holders and mild irritation from market-making desks.

Ethena Labs on Tuesday returned approximately $210 million in oversubscribed funds from its Ethena v2 token sale rather than lift the $150 million hard cap. The decision has been met with notable warmth from existing Ethena holders, and — more unusually — with mild irritation from market-making desks that had been positioning around an expected cap expansion.
The specific math
Ethena's v2 sale had a declared hard cap of $150 million, targeting a roughly 8% dilution on an implied fully diluted valuation of $1.9 billion. Subscriptions closed at $360 million on Monday evening. The team's announcement on Tuesday morning confirmed that all oversubscribed amounts would be refunded pro rata, with approximately 58% of each subscription returned.
"The cap was chosen because the protocol needs $150 million of additional runway, not because we wanted to anchor a round. Raising more would have been a different decision with different consequences." — Guy Young, Ethena founder, in a statement
Why market makers are annoyed
Several liquidity providers had been accumulating inventory on the assumption that an expanded cap was likely. The refund mechanics mean that those desks are now holding less position than they would have preferred. The irritation is mild — no one is making a serious argument that the refund was improper — but it illustrates a structural feature of the post-2024 token sale environment: significant flows enter the secondary market on the expectation that primary market caps will be expanded to meet demand, and a team that refuses to expand disrupts those flows in ways that are not always visible until after the fact.
The broader pattern
Ethena's decision is not the first of its kind this cycle. Two other high-profile sales — one on Berachain and one on Hyperliquid — have refused to expand caps despite oversubscription. The emerging pattern reads, to some observers, as a deliberate distancing from the 2017 ICO template, in which hard caps were frequently treated as floors.
- 2026 notable refusals to expand: Ethena ($210M refunded), Berachain project ($95M), Hyperliquid project ($140M)
- All three cited the same rationale: runway need, not round size
- All three have outperformed expanded-cap peers in the secondary market
The last point is the one that will shape future behavior. If the market rewards teams that refuse to expand — through lower initial dilution and less sell pressure from oversized treasuries — the incentive structure around cap discipline tilts in a way that has not been present in prior cycles. Whether the pattern persists when market conditions normalize is a question no one can yet answer.
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