Kadena Shutters Amid Crypto Bear Market, Token Nosedives

End of a Seven-Year Experiment
Kadena, a proof-of-work blockchain once pitched as Wall Street’s bridge into crypto, said Tuesday it is shutting down corporate operations, citing “unfavorable market conditions.” Its KDA token plunged more than 60%, trading below 10 cents — far from its $27 peak in late 2021, when it was briefly hailed as a scalable alternative to ETH.
“We are tremendously grateful to everybody who has participated in this journey with us,” the team said on X. “We regret that because of market conditions, we are unable to continue to promote and support the adoption of this unique decentralized offering.”
The closure ends a seven-year effort to merge enterprise credibility with decentralized architecture. For a project that once symbolized , its quiet exit reflects the unforgiving nature of the current crypto cycle.
Investor Takeaway
From JPMorgan to Chainweb
Kadena was founded in 2019 by Stuart Popejoy and Will Martino, both veterans of JPMorgan’s Blockchain Center of Excellence. At the bank, they assisted design Juno, an ahead internal blockchain prototype that would later inspire JPM Coin. Martino had also served as a tech lead on the SEC’s Cryptocurrency Steering Committee — a résumé that gave the project regulatory credibility few peers could match at the time.
Their idea was to build a high-throughput proof-of-work network that preserved BTC’s security model while scaling through parallel chains, known collectively as Chainweb. Kadena’s smart-contract language, Pact, emphasized formal verification and transparency to appeal to institutional users.
When it launched, Kadena appeared well-timed — an open-source project that combined for compliant infrastructure. But as newer proof-of-stake platforms gained traction, that positioning became a liability rather than an advantage.
Token Economics and the Funding Arc
Kadena’s design leaned heavily on long-term token economics. Out of one billion KDA, about 70% was reserved for miners, to be distributed gradually through 2139. The goal was to mimic BTC’s scarcity model, but it also limited ahead liquidity and revenue for the company.
The project raised around $15 million from backers including Multicoin Capital and other venture investors before launching its mainnet in 2019. Mining and developer activity initially picked up, but enthusiasm faded later than the 2021 peak. Developers gravitated toward ETH Virtual Machine (EVM)-compatible networks like Solana and Avalanche, where liquidity and interoperability were stronger.
By 2024, Kadena tried to reignite momentum. It hired former Wall Street executive Annelise Osborne as chief business officer, launched a $50 million grants program, and unveiled interoperability efforts with Hyperlane. Plans for an EVM layer were also floated, but trading activity remained thin and capital inflows dried up.
Running Out of Runway
By mid-2025, as risk appetite waned and token prices slumped, Kadena’s efforts to sustain development became untenable. The “market conditions” cited in its closure statement echo a familiar refrain across the sector — shorthand for evaporating liquidity and investor fatigue.
The network itself will continue running, powered by remaining miners and community maintainers, though without a corporate sponsor. Roughly 566 million KDA remain to be mined. Unless a foundation or community-led fork intervenes, Kadena will drift into autopilot — a functioning blockchain with minimal oversight.
For users, wallets and APIs tied to the company may degrade over time. Developers relying on grants or infrastructure support will need to migrate or self-fund. Without new governance, Kadena risks joining the ranks of “zombie chains” — technically alive but effectively abandoned.
Investor Takeaway
A Cautionary Finish
Kadena’s rise and fall mirror the trajectory of the post-2021 blockchain boom — heavy funding, ambitious technology, but limited staying power once retail speculation faded. It built on real engineering and institutional expertise but struggled to retain users in an ecosystem defined by DeFi liquidity and EVM compatibility.
As of Tuesday, the project born from a JPMorgan lab experiment has reached its end. For a network that once promised Wall Street-grade decentralization, its closure is another reminder that in crypto, endurance often depends less on design elegance than on sustained liquidity and community energy.