Polygon’s reputation as a reliable DeFi settlement layer is under renewed scrutiny after on-chain investigator ZachXBT flagged an apparent exploit of the Polymarket UMA CTF Adapter contract, the mechanism that resolves prediction market outcomes.
This latest hack on the most prominent prediction market platform has led to POL dropping nearly -1% in the past hour, with the token trading at around $0.091. However, depending on how deep the losses go, POL could still drop further.
The compounding incidents raise a harder structural question about Polygon’s positioning as the default settlement chain for high-profile prediction and derivatives platforms, and whether the network’s ongoing development roadmap is moving fast enough to maintain that status.
Warning: #Polymarket‘s contract appears to be exploited, and the attacker is stealing funds.
So far, more than $660K has already been stolen.
Source: @zachxbthttps://t.co/WXvRwtWEFs pic.twitter.com/sIa0FWEEzo
— Lookonchain (@lookonchain) May 22, 2026
ZachXBT Reacts to Polymarket Hack: What is the Damage?
The attacker’s address, 0x8F98075db5d6C620e8D420A8c516E2F2059d9B91, has since dispersed proceeds across 15 separate wallets, a pattern consistent with early-stage laundering. What the final damage figure looks like and whether POL absorbs the reputational hit remain the questions traders are watching.
According to ZachXBT’s public alert, attackers were draining approximately 5,000 POL every 30 seconds at the time of the warning, with confirmed losses reaching at least $520,000 and climbing toward $600,000. The exploit targets the UMA CTF Adapter specifically, not Polymarket’s core Polygon-based contracts, the platform has indicated, though that distinction may offer cold comfort to affected users.
This incident does not exist in isolation: Polymarket has separately confirmed account breaches tied to a third-party authentication provider, widely understood to be Magic Labs, leaving a trail of drained USDC wallets across its user base. May has already recorded 19 DeFi hacks, with cumulative losses of roughly $38.2M, according to DeFiLlama data, a context that frames this as a sector-wide stress test, not merely a Polymarket problem.
ZachXBT: Suspected Attack on Polymarket, the World’s Largest Prediction Market
According to a ZachXBT community alert, Polymarket’s UMA CTF Adapter contract on the Polygon chain is suspected of being attacked. The incident has resulted in losses exceeding $520k.
The… pic.twitter.com/CUw6qtWK8U
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) May 22, 2026
Can POL Price Hold Ground After the Polymarket Fallout?
What the on-chain evidence does support is a qualitative read: exploit news of this scale, draining hundreds of thousands of dollars from a flagship Polygon application, historically produces short-term sell pressure on the host chain’s native token, followed by recovery contingent on how quickly the protocol responds.
Polygon’s underlying infrastructure is not standing still. The network’s recent Giugliano hard fork targeted faster finality, a meaningful upgrade given that settlement speed is central to prediction market reliability. That catalyst may provide a technical floor for POL if sentiment stabilizes.
Three scenarios appear plausible from here. In the bull case, Polymarket’s $5M Cantina bug bounty program, covering critical smart-contract vulnerabilities, moves quickly to identify and remediate the adapter flaw, restoring confidence and allowing POL to recover losses within days.
Polymarket’s UMA CTF Adapter is being exploited on Polygon — attacker draining 5,000 $POL every 30 seconds, $520K+ stolen so far (Santiment MCP + Claude):
⚖️ $UMA price reaction: $0.477 (07:00 UTC) → $0.462 (09:00 UTC), -3.3% as the exploit unfolded.
📊 $POL price over the same… pic.twitter.com/KhcaeEK4BD— Santiment Intelligence (@SantimentData) May 22, 2026
The base case sees Polygon trading sideways while the investigation continues, with institutional participants watching reimbursement commitments before re-engaging. The bear case (and invalidation level for any near-term recovery thesis) is straightforward: if total losses exceed disclosed figures, or if additional contracts prove vulnerable, renewed selling pressure becomes the path of least resistance.
It is also worth asking whether a platform that reportedly left some user accounts with balances as low as $0.01 after unauthorized access can credibly claim its non-custodial design is intact. Polymarket has faced regulatory and legal scrutiny before — this security episode adds a fresh operational layer to that pressure.
Bitcoin Hyper Targets Early Mover Upside as Polygon Tests Credibility

(SOURCE: Bitcoin Hyper)
Exploit fatigue is real. When a leading DeFi chain’s flagship application suffers back-to-back security incidents, smart-contract drains, and authentication breaches in the same cycle, some capital inevitably rotates toward infrastructure plays perceived as less exposed. That rotation has historically benefited early-stage projects building at the protocol layer rather than the application layer.
Bitcoin Hyper ($HYPER) is positioning itself at exactly that intersection: a Bitcoin Layer 2 integrating the Solana Virtual Machine, designed to bring fast smart-contract execution to Bitcoin’s security base without the custodial trade-offs that appear to haunt Polymarket’s architecture.
The presale has raised $32,726,397.59 at a current token price of $0.0136804, with staking rewards available to early participants. The SVM integration is the headline technical claim; sub-second finality atop Bitcoin’s trust model is the pitch. For investors researching infrastructure-layer exposure ahead of a potential Bitcoin ecosystem cycle, the project warrants examination.
Visit the Bitcoin Hyper Presale Website Here.
next
Disclaimer: Coinspeaker is committed to providing unbiased and transparent reporting. This article aims to deliver accurate and timely information but should not be taken as financial or investment advice. Since market conditions can change rapidly, we encourage you to verify information on your own and consult with a professional before making any decisions based on this content.

Daniel Frances is a technical writer and Web3 educator specializing in macroeconomics and DeFi mechanics. A crypto native since 2017, Daniel leverages his background in on-chain analytics to author evidence-based reports and deep-dive guides. He holds certifications from The Blockchain Council, and is dedicated to providing “information gain” that cuts through market hype to find real-world blockchain utility.

