Chef Nomi Pulls The SUSHI Rug On SushiSwap LPs

Published: Oct 5, 2020
Written By:
Shannon Ullman
Shannon Ullman
Managing Editor

In a bizarre turn of events, Chef Nomi, the anonymous creator of SushiSwapremoved his liquidity from the SUSHI/ETH pool and liquidated it for ETH.

The anonymous creator removing a large chunk of liquidity is what many have come to meme a ‘rug pull’. The dev share contract held more than 2.5M SUSHI along with 20k ETH. After removing nearly half the liquidity from the SUSHI/ETH pool, 2.5M SUSHI was sold for 18k ETH, amounting to roughly $6M of profits at the time of sale and a $7M stash from the other half of the devshare liquidity. In total, Chef Nomi made off with roughly $13M at the time of writing.

Not an Exit Scam?

While many were quick to claim that ChefNomi has exit scammed, the lead developer has been very vocal about the sale on Twitter, claiming that he cashed out to “focus on building.”

As anyone could have guessed, the community is now up and arms, claiming that the entire project is now toast due to a loss of trust. Still, Chef Nomi is chugging on, deploying the contracts for the forthcoming SushiSwap migration set to take place tomorrow.

Following the dump, Uniswap’s TVL dropped by more than 35% as the rest of the market continues to slide for a myriad of reasons.

Proving Critics Right

The timing has left many to wonder if Chef Nomi even planned to hand over the Master Chef and devshare contracts via MultiSig wallet in the first place. Still, the conversation to hand power over to the community continues, albeit with drastically less attention.

Many well-known thought leaders were openly against the Uniswap clone from day one. With SUSHI down more than 50% on the day, it seems like a poetic ending to the community AMM which aggregated more than $1B in liquidity in under a week. Chef Nomi tried to justify the move by comparing it to what Litecoin founder, Charlie Lee, did when he sold his tokens at the peak of the 2017 bull market.

Now, a weird middle ground ensues. The migration is expected to still happen as planned, and at the time of writing SushiSwap still has nearly $900M in liquidity currently locked in it’s contracts. Whether it be due to outrageous gas prices or an underdog hope that SushiSwap can give the funding to a community-owned wallet, the next 48 hours are sure to be one of the most interest we’ve seen to date.

To stay up with SushiSwap, follow the project on Twitter.

Shannon
Shannon Ullman

Managing editor working to make crypto easier to understand. Pairing editorial integrity with crypto curiosity for content that makes readers feel like they finally “get it.”

Shannon Ullman
Shannon Ullman
Managing Editor
Managing editor working to make crypto easier to understand. Pairing editorial integrity with crypto curiosity for content that makes readers feel like they finally “get it.”