If you landed here from a spelling question — the correct spelling is C-R-Y-P-T-O, short for cryptocurrency. It comes from the Greek kryptos, meaning hidden. Now, if you’re here about the SPELL token — the DeFi governance coin for Abracadabra.money — scroll down. The full analysis follows.
The SPELL token hit its all-time low of approximately $0.0001657 on February 6, 2026.
That happened roughly four years after the token launched in August 2021. In November 2021, SPELL was at $0.035. At the February 2026 all-time low, it had declined 99.5% from that peak — to a price below where it traded in its first weeks of existence.
What made this particularly striking: the all-time low arrived during a period when Ethereum and DeFi were not in complete collapse. The broader market was recovering. Other DeFi tokens were bouncing. SPELL just kept making new lows.
The reasons are specific, documented, and worth understanding before any price prediction analysis has any meaning.
Abracadabra.money launched in May 2021 with a concept that was genuinely innovative for its time: use interest-bearing tokens as collateral to borrow a USD-pegged stablecoin.
The specific problem it solved: if you held yield-generating assets — Yearn Finance vault tokens, Convex LP positions, GMX liquidity tokens — that capital was locked in yield. You couldn’t spend it without selling and exiting the position. Abracadabra let you post those yield-bearing tokens as collateral and borrow MIM (Magic Internet Money), the protocol’s USD-pegged stablecoin, against them. Your yield continues accruing; you get spendable stablecoins.
The core loop: deposit yield-bearing collateral → borrow MIM → use MIM for DeFi activities, stablecoin swaps, or additional yield farming → pay borrowing interest over time → reclaim collateral when done.
SPELL is the protocol’s governance and rewards token. Stake SPELL to receive sSPELL — staked SPELL that grants voting rights on protocol governance (fee settings, collateral types, risk parameters) and entitles holders to a share of protocol fees. Specifically: 75% of interest fees collected by Abracadabra are used to purchase SPELL tokens, which are then distributed to sSPELL stakers.
In theory, this creates a demand flywheel: protocol growth → more borrowing fees → more SPELL purchased from the market → price appreciation → more people staking SPELL. In practice, the flywheel only works if protocol activity is substantial enough to generate meaningful fee revenue.
The problem: as of May 2026, Abracadabra generates approximately $1.32 per day in protocol revenue.
Annual fee distribution to sSPELL stakers: approximately $482. Against a $29–$47 million market cap, the staking yield is essentially zero.
Before the tokenomics problem and the inflation math, there’s a security history that has defined Abracadabra’s 2024–2026 period.
Hack One — January 30, 2024 ($6.49 million): An attacker exploited Cauldron V3 and V4 contracts on Ethereum, using a precision loss vulnerability to desynchronise Abracadabra’s internal debt tracking variables (the elastic and base counters). The exploit bypassed insolvency checks, allowing the attacker to borrow far more MIM than their collateral permitted. MIM briefly depegged, touching approximately $0.97 before the DAO treasury intervened with buybacks. Total loss: $6.49 million.
Hack Two — March 25, 2025 ($13 million — the largest): The protocol’s biggest breach. An attacker executed a seven-step flash loan attack against Abracadabra’s GMX-linked liquidity pools on Arbitrum — specifically targeting a flaw in the collateral accounting mechanism of the GmxV2 CauldronV4 contracts. The vulnerability allowed the attacker to manipulate failed orders to bypass solvency checks. 6,260 ETH (approximately $13 million) were drained, bridged to Ethereum, and laundered via Tornado Cash. GMX confirmed its own contracts were not at fault. The team offered the hacker a 20% bounty to return the remaining funds. Total loss: $13 million.
Hack Three — October 4, 2025 ($1.79 million): The third exploit targeted a deprecated CauldronV4 smart contract that had been deployed on February 18, 2023 — and left accessible on-chain for 961 days without being formally paused. An attacker exploited a logical flaw in the cook() function, bundling a borrow action with action ID 0 to bypass the final insolvency check and extract 1,793,755 MIM. The DAO treasury purchased the stolen MIM from the open market to stabilise the peg. Total loss: $1.79 million.
Combined total: over $21 million in exploits across three separate incidents in under two years.
Each hack shared a common thread: the cook() function’s complexity and the legacy of deprecated-but-live contracts that weren’t formally paused. The pattern is relevant for assessing future risk: a protocol that has been exploited three times through its core smart contract architecture is demonstrably difficult to secure comprehensively.
The broader DeFi security landscape in 2026 continues to show that protocol-level smart contract risk is the primary driver of capital allocation decisions. After three exploits, institutional DeFi allocators have largely removed Abracadabra from consideration — which directly explains the TVL decline from $6.42 billion at peak (January 2022) to approximately $11.72 million in stablecoins as of May 2026. That’s a 99.8% TVL decline.
If the hacks were the story of Abracadabra’s security problems, the inflation rate is the story of SPELL’s price problems.
CoinCodex data for May 2026: SPELL’s current yearly supply inflation rate is 59.68%, meaning approximately 64.1 billion new SPELL tokens were created in the last year.
To understand why this is devastating, compare it to what the protocol does with that emission. SPELL tokens are distributed through:
These emissions were designed when the protocol had $6 billion in TVL, hundreds of millions in annual borrowing volume, and genuine demand for MIM as a DeFi stablecoin. They were designed for a world where the demand for SPELL was growing faster than the supply.
In May 2026, the demand side of that equation has collapsed alongside TVL. The maximum supply is 210 billion SPELL (after a burn reduced it from the original 420 billion). Circulating supply is already approximately 171.5 billion — 81.7% of the maximum already in circulation. At the current inflation rate, the full max supply will be reached within the next year.
When supply grows by 59.68% annually and demand doesn’t grow proportionally, price declines. That’s not a prediction — it’s arithmetic.
The comparison to how sustainable DeFi protocols structure token emissions is instructive: the protocols that have maintained value post-2022 either have fee switch mechanisms burning tokens (like UNI post-UNIfication), vesting schedules that have concluded, or emission rates that are overwhelmed by buy pressure from genuine protocol revenue. SPELL has none of these conditions currently.
MIM (Magic Internet Money) is interesting because it has technically survived events that should have destroyed it — three depegs, three hacks, a 99.8% TVL collapse — and maintained its $1 USD peg in May 2026.
At peak, MIM had over $3 billion in circulation. In May 2026, MIM circulating supply is approximately 44 million tokens. The contraction represents a 98.6% reduction in supply. MIM is no longer a meaningfully sized stablecoin — it’s a small CDP (collateralised debt position) stablecoin that has retained its peg integrity but lost the scale that made Abracadabra relevant.
The survival of the MIM peg is a genuine credit to the DAO’s treasury management — specifically the pattern of buying back stolen MIM after each hack to restore peg stability. It demonstrates protocol resilience. It doesn’t restore protocol competitiveness.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Current Price | ~$0.000170–$0.000275 (volatile, varies by exchange) |
| All-Time High | ~$0.03506–$0.03551 (November 2, 2021) |
| All-Time Low | ~$0.0001535–$0.0001657 (February 6, 2026) |
| Distance from ATH | ~99.5% below |
| 1-Month Return | ~-18.53% |
| Market Cap | ~$29–$47 million |
| Circulating Supply | ~170–172 billion SPELL |
| Max Supply (post-burn) | 210 billion SPELL |
| % of max in circulation | ~81.7% |
| Total Supply | ~196 billion SPELL |
| Annual inflation | 59.68% (~64.1B new SPELL/year) |
| FDV | ~$36.8 million |
| 24h Trading Volume | ~$6.7–$33 million |
| CMC Rank | ~#592 |
| CoinGecko Rank | ~#700+ |
| Blockchain | Ethereum (primary), Arbitrum, Avalanche, Fantom |
| Token standard | ERC-20 |
| Launched | August 17, 2021 |
| Protocol | Abracadabra.money |
| Key use | Governance + staking rewards (sSPELL) |
| Fee distribution | 75% of protocol fees → SPELL buyback → sSPELL stakers |
| Daily protocol revenue | ~$1.32 (CoinGecko, May 2026) |
| Annual fee to stakers | ~$482 (on $29–47M market cap) |
| MIM circulating | ~44 million (down from $3B+ at peak) |
| Abracadabra TVL | ~$11.72M stablecoins (from ~$6.42B peak in Jan 2022) |
| Hack 1 | January 30, 2024 — $6.49M (precision loss, Ethereum) |
| Hack 2 | March 25, 2025 — $13M (flash loan, Arbitrum/GMX) |
| Hack 3 | October 4, 2025 — $1.79M (cook() function, deprecated Cauldron) |
| Total hacked | >$21 million |
| X account | Silent since September 9, 2025 |
| Key support | ~$0.000155–$0.000165 (ATL zone) |
| Key resistance | ~$0.000200, then $0.000300 |
Sources: CoinMarketCap — SPELL; CoinGecko — SPELL; CoinCodex; DefiLlama
One of the most specific bearish data points for SPELL in 2026 has nothing to do with price charts.
The official Abracadabra/SPELL X (formerly Twitter) account has been silent since approximately September 9, 2025 — the date of the last public post. In the weeks before and after the October 2025 hack, communication came through the DAO contributor known as “0xMerlin” rather than the official channel.
For a DeFi protocol that relies on community engagement, developer updates, and governance participation, extended social media silence at the official level raises legitimate questions about team engagement and development momentum.
This doesn’t mean the protocol is abandoned — governance continues on Snapshot, and the hack buybacks demonstrate active DAO treasury management. But the silence creates a specific information vacuum that speculative retail interest typically fills with either extreme bearishness or unfounded bullishness.
Blockchainreporter’s previous SPELL analysis covered the honest conditions needed for SPELL recovery in detail. The bull case hasn’t materially improved since then, but it exists:
Bull argument 1 — MIM survived. Three depegs and the peg held. That’s evidence of DAO competency in treasury management that many failed DeFi stablecoins never demonstrated.
Bull argument 2 — The protocol concept is still valid. Using interest-bearing assets as collateral for stablecoin borrowing is a real use case that Pendle, Morpho, and other protocols continue to develop. If Abracadabra introduces a new collateral type that drives borrowing demand — particularly if it integrates with 2026’s tokenised real-world assets — MIM supply and protocol revenue could recover.
Bull argument 3 — The inflation problem is self-limiting. At 81.7% of maximum supply already in circulation, the emission rate will necessarily decrease as the protocol approaches its 210 billion cap. Lower ongoing emissions means less constant sell pressure from farmers liquidating rewards.
Bull argument 4 — Price at ATL zone. At $0.000170–$0.000275, SPELL is trading near its all-time low. The downside from these levels is constrained by how much cheaper something can get. Speculative upside at these prices requires smaller capital inputs to produce significant percentage moves.
These arguments are real. They’re also overwhelmed by the counterarguments in the current environment. Three hacks in under two years. $1.32/day protocol revenue. 59.68% annual inflation. Social media silence. MIM down to 44 million from $3 billion. No new major DeFi protocol integrations visible.
The 2026 price trajectory for SPELL depends almost entirely on external factors — specifically whether any catalyst returns attention and capital to the Abracadabra ecosystem.
Status quo scenario: Without new protocol features, new collateral types, or renewed community activity, SPELL continues trading near its ATL zone ($0.000155–$0.000220). The 59.68% inflation continues depressing price regardless of market conditions. This is the most likely scenario because it requires nothing to happen.
Moderate recovery scenario: If Abracadabra announces meaningful new development — a v5 upgrade, a new collateral market with a RWA asset, a security audit that restores user confidence — and if the broader DeFi market experiences a genuine recovery cycle, SPELL could move back to the $0.000300–$0.000500 range. This represents 2–3x from the ATL but is still down more than 98% from the ATH.
Bull scenario: A genuine DeFi summer-style rotation in H2 2026, where capital flows back into yield-bearing DeFi protocols and MIM demand grows alongside new collateral markets. In this scenario, $0.000500–$0.001000 is achievable. This requires specific protocol catalysts, not just macro improvement.
| Scenario | 2026 Range | Driver |
|---|---|---|
| Bear | $0.000100–$0.000180 | ATL retested or broken, no catalysts |
| Base | $0.000170–$0.000300 | Sideways, inflation continues suppressing |
| Moderate bull | $0.000300–$0.000600 | DeFi recovery + new Abracadabra features |
| Bull | $0.000600–$0.001500 | Genuine DeFi summer + protocol revival |
| Extreme | $0.001500–$0.004000 | Rare — requires full narrative and protocol rebuild |
The 2030 scenario for SPELL requires accepting that the token’s recovery is essentially a three-variable function:
The RWA tokenisation boom driving DeFi TVL in 2026 is the most plausible positive catalyst for Abracadabra specifically — because tokenised treasuries, equities, and real-world yield-bearing assets are exactly the collateral type that Abracadabra’s model was designed for. If RWA tokenisation reaches $100 billion TVL in DeFi by 2028, and Abracadabra launches a credible RWA cauldron, MIM demand could return at scale.
That scenario is plausible but not probable given current trajectory. The probability narrows further with each hack that erodes security credibility.
The contrast with protocols like Uniswap — which activated a fee switch creating deflationary burn mechanics tied to genuine protocol revenue — illustrates exactly what SPELL lacks: a structural mechanism connecting token scarcity to protocol usage.
| Scenario | 2027 | 2028 | 2030 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bear | $0.000080–$0.000200 | $0.000050–$0.000200 | Near zero or negligible |
| Conservative | $0.000200–$0.000500 | $0.000300–$0.000800 | $0.000500–$0.001500 |
| Moderate bull | $0.000600–$0.002000 | $0.001000–$0.005000 | $0.002000–$0.010000 |
| Bull (DeFi revival + protocol rebuild) | $0.002000–$0.008000 | $0.005000–$0.020000 | $0.010000–$0.050000 |
The prior ATH of $0.035 by 2030 would require approximately 200x from the current $0.000170 level. For perspective: that would imply a market cap of approximately $6 billion at current circulating supply — larger than Uniswap’s current market cap. Possible only in an extreme DeFi supercycle with complete Abracadabra operational rehabilitation. It is a theoretical upper bound, not a realistic central case.
At approximately $0.000170–$0.000275, SPELL is near its all-time low. The mathematical downside from these levels is more limited than it was at $0.001 or $0.003. That’s the only unambiguous point in the bull case.
Everything else about the current picture argues for extreme caution. The protocol has been hacked three times. Daily revenue is $1.32. The inflation rate dilutes any price appreciation with constant new supply. The X account has been silent since September 2025. The TVL has declined from $6.42 billion to approximately $11.72 million — a 99.8% reduction over four years.
The pattern of DeFi tokens at extreme cycle lows sometimes produces extraordinary short-term returns from speculative positioning — but the difference between SPELL and a meme coin at all-time lows is that SPELL has specific, structural reasons for being here. A meme coin’s ATL can be reversed by a single tweet. SPELL’s structural problems require operational changes that take quarters or years to demonstrate.
Position sizing should treat SPELL as a lottery ticket with very long odds. The prize — a 100x from the ATL — would still leave SPELL 95% below its 2021 high. That’s the honest framing for anyone considering a position.


