Paxos mistakenly issues US$300 trillion of PayPal stablecoin
Plenty of so-called fat-finger errors have happened in crypto before
[PORTLAND] Stablecoin issuer Paxos said that it mistakenly minted US$300 trillion of PayPal Holdings’ PYUSD stablecoin on Wednesday (Oct 15) before burning the tokens minutes later.
The transactions were visible on Etherscan, the popular block explorer and analytics platform for the Ethereum blockchain that allows users to search and view all data on the network. A representative for Paxos pointed to the company’s tweet on X about the incident. Representatives for PayPal did not immediately return a request for comment.
Plenty of so-called fat-finger errors have happened in crypto before. Many of them, such as when someone sends cryptocurrency such as Bitcoin to someone else, are irreversible. But stablecoin issuers have more control over transactions and have even been able to help law enforcement return stolen funds in the past.
The amount of the erroneous transaction on Wednesday dwarfs the size of the conventional currency market, as well as all of crypto. There are about US$2.4 trillion in US dollars in circulation. The world’s biggest stablecoin, Tether’s USDT, has a US$180.6 billion market value, and the entire crypto market is valued at about US$3.8 trillion.
On Wall Street, such a misfire would spark panic, a regulatory circuit-breaker, and a Congressional hearing. In crypto, it simply happened on-chain, was noticed by data sleuths, and quietly reversed within minutes. No funds were moved. No users harmed. Still, the incident offers a rare window into the quiet powers of stablecoin issuers: in effect, programmable central banks that can create or delete billions in synthetic US dollars at will.
Blockchain is often lauded for its transparency, but in moments like these, it also looks like a Wild West, with instant visibility and real-time danger. What prevents disaster is not human discretion but code-based constraints or vigilant observers. That makes “fat-finger” errors a recurring subplot in crypto, with stakes ranging from reputational damage to regulatory scrutiny.
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This is not the first such slip. In 2019, for example, stablecoin giant Tether mistakenly minted and quickly burned US$5 billion in USDT. In crypto, misrouted transactions have cost users millions, often permanently. But stablecoins such as PYUSD exist in a hybrid zone: blockchain-native yet issuer-controlled, regulated yet still governed by software. They are programmable liabilities, money that can vanish with a few lines of code or proliferate anew.
PayPal has framed PYUSD as an experiment in US dollar-backed innovation, offering the speed of crypto with the trust of a public company. Yet the incident reminds investors and regulators alike: trust in stablecoins depends not just on reserves, but on operational discipline and code that does not misfire. Especially when that code can, however briefly, create more money than exists on earth. BLOOMBERG
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