Resolv warns: stop trading USR as forged tokens mix

Resolv Labs has urged users not to trade or buy USR on the secondary market while the incident response and asset recovery are ongoing. On-chain data shows that USR minted illegally by hackers has been mixed and circulated across many addresses together with legitimate USR minted before the attack. Resolv says the forged USR has no redemption rights, and any trading now could expose users to illegal tokens and make later recovery, settlement, and cleanup harder. The team is working with affected protocols to develop solutions and assess possible compensation for harmed holders, but compensation may be constrained if trading of USR continues. The core takeaway for traders: treat current USR flow as potentially contaminated and avoid new positions until the token status is clarified.
Bearish
This is a direct “asset safety” warning for USR. When a team publicly states that hacked/forged USR is mixed with legitimate USR and has no redemption rights, it usually triggers an immediate liquidity and pricing de-risking cycle: traders reduce exposure, exchanges/market makers may widen spreads, and demand can drop because the market cannot reliably distinguish valid USR from tainted tokens. In the short term, we’d expect higher volatility around USR, potential sell pressure, and cautious behavior from liquidity providers until token-migration/verification guidance is issued. In the longer term, outcomes depend on whether affected protocols successfully implement a clean resolution (burn/removal of forged supply, eligibility checks, and credible compensation). If resolution is slow or compensation is limited—especially under ongoing trading—confidence can remain impaired for weeks. This pattern resembles past token-hack episodes where mixed supply (without redemption) led to price drag until the community established verifiable token status and operational fixes.