The post Paxos $300 Trillion Minting Error Draws Regulator Attention appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) confirmed today that Paxos, the issuer of PayPal USD (PYUSD), accidentally minted $300 trillion worth of unbacked stablecoins on October 15, 2025. The regulator added that it is in contact with both Paxos and PayPal regarding the incident. The event, which momentarily expanded PYUSD’s supply beyond the size of the entire global economy, has triggered fresh scrutiny of the operational and systemic risks underpinning the stablecoin sector. Sponsored Sponsored Paxos’ $300 Trillion Minting Error Exposes Major Risks in the Stablecoin Industry According to on-chain data, the incident began as a routine transfer of $300 million between Paxos-controlled wallets. The Information reports that the NYDFS highlighted the matter, citing a fat-finger incident more concerning than Citigroup’s mistake last year. As it happened, Citigroup’s mistake saw the investment banking company mistakenly credit a client with $81 trillion before reversing the transaction. A former Salesforce engineer, Sam Ramirez, explained Paxos’ move to undo their mistake. They tried to remint the 300 million they burned back into the original wallet. However, they messed up again and accidentally minted 300 trillion. Some forensics on the the PYUSD token mint today. Its worse than I thought. Looks like Paxos tried to transfer 300M PYUSD between wallets, but accidentally burned 300M instead. So in order to undo their mistake, they tried to remint the 300M they burned back into the original… https://t.co/LGMbFM4zKR pic.twitter.com/r183LlzxtE — sam ramirez (@sram1337) October 15, 2025 Within an hour, Paxos burned the excess supply, restored all balances, and confirmed that no customer funds were affected. The company also stated that no external breach occurred. However, the sheer scale of the minting error has renewed concerns about the reliability of collateralization mechanisms. It also raises questions about manual oversight in stablecoin operations. Sponsored Sponsored Chainlink’s community… The post Paxos $300 Trillion Minting Error Draws Regulator Attention appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) confirmed today that Paxos, the issuer of PayPal USD (PYUSD), accidentally minted $300 trillion worth of unbacked stablecoins on October 15, 2025. The regulator added that it is in contact with both Paxos and PayPal regarding the incident. The event, which momentarily expanded PYUSD’s supply beyond the size of the entire global economy, has triggered fresh scrutiny of the operational and systemic risks underpinning the stablecoin sector. Sponsored Sponsored Paxos’ $300 Trillion Minting Error Exposes Major Risks in the Stablecoin Industry According to on-chain data, the incident began as a routine transfer of $300 million between Paxos-controlled wallets. The Information reports that the NYDFS highlighted the matter, citing a fat-finger incident more concerning than Citigroup’s mistake last year. As it happened, Citigroup’s mistake saw the investment banking company mistakenly credit a client with $81 trillion before reversing the transaction. A former Salesforce engineer, Sam Ramirez, explained Paxos’ move to undo their mistake. They tried to remint the 300 million they burned back into the original wallet. However, they messed up again and accidentally minted 300 trillion. Some forensics on the the PYUSD token mint today. Its worse than I thought. Looks like Paxos tried to transfer 300M PYUSD between wallets, but accidentally burned 300M instead. So in order to undo their mistake, they tried to remint the 300M they burned back into the original… https://t.co/LGMbFM4zKR pic.twitter.com/r183LlzxtE — sam ramirez (@sram1337) October 15, 2025 Within an hour, Paxos burned the excess supply, restored all balances, and confirmed that no customer funds were affected. The company also stated that no external breach occurred. However, the sheer scale of the minting error has renewed concerns about the reliability of collateralization mechanisms. It also raises questions about manual oversight in stablecoin operations. Sponsored Sponsored Chainlink’s community…

Paxos $300 Trillion Minting Error Draws Regulator Attention

2025/10/16 14:46

The New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) confirmed today that Paxos, the issuer of PayPal USD (PYUSD), accidentally minted $300 trillion worth of unbacked stablecoins on October 15, 2025. The regulator added that it is in contact with both Paxos and PayPal regarding the incident.

The event, which momentarily expanded PYUSD’s supply beyond the size of the entire global economy, has triggered fresh scrutiny of the operational and systemic risks underpinning the stablecoin sector.

Sponsored

Sponsored

Paxos’ $300 Trillion Minting Error Exposes Major Risks in the Stablecoin Industry

According to on-chain data, the incident began as a routine transfer of $300 million between Paxos-controlled wallets.

The Information reports that the NYDFS highlighted the matter, citing a fat-finger incident more concerning than Citigroup’s mistake last year. As it happened, Citigroup’s mistake saw the investment banking company mistakenly credit a client with $81 trillion before reversing the transaction.

A former Salesforce engineer, Sam Ramirez, explained Paxos’ move to undo their mistake. They tried to remint the 300 million they burned back into the original wallet. However, they messed up again and accidentally minted 300 trillion.

Within an hour, Paxos burned the excess supply, restored all balances, and confirmed that no customer funds were affected. The company also stated that no external breach occurred.

However, the sheer scale of the minting error has renewed concerns about the reliability of collateralization mechanisms. It also raises questions about manual oversight in stablecoin operations.

Sponsored

Sponsored

Chainlink’s community liaison, Zach Rynes, explained how proof of reserve (PoR) would have prevented this entire FUD.

According to Rynes, the move would have prevented the issuance of additional tokens unless Chainlink PoR had first validated that there is a sufficient amount of off-chain reserves available to maintain 100% collateralization.

Ultimately, it would have prevented infinite mint attacks, where many unbacked tokens are minted, putting at risk all the markets that list and support the token.

Rynes’ remarks ignited industry debate over whether real-time proof-of-reserves validation should become mandatory for all regulated stablecoins.

Sponsored

Sponsored

Questions of Collateral and Conduct Arise in the Face of Market and Regulatory Repercussions

Financial blog Zero Hedge quickly asked the question that many were thinking. Others also highlight the potential for deliberate misuse.

These concerns reflect the hypothetical risk that operator access, if abused, could distort markets even for short periods.

In the same tone, other DeFi researchers raised concerns about timing, saying that it raised deeper system questions.

Sponsored

Sponsored

The remark reflected a growing belief that the Paxos event may have coincided with liquidity rail transitions linking traditional finance and tokenized Treasury instruments.

Data firm Santiment reported that the event “caused significant attention as it represents an enormous and unusual amount of stablecoins being created and then quickly burned.

The stablecoin market cap approaches $310 billion. With it, the Paxos overmint is a dramatic reminder that even regulated issuers remain vulnerable to human error and weak process controls.

Total Stablecoin Market Cap. Source: DefiLlama

For regulators, the event could accelerate moves toward mandatory PoR integration, real-time issuance checks, and transparent auditing standards.

If one misplaced zero can mint $300 trillion, the stablecoin industry’s greatest risk may no longer be hackers, but its own operators.

Source: https://beincrypto.com/paxos-pyusd-minting-error-stablecoin/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.
Share Insights

You May Also Like

The Beijing Procuratorate announced a case of illegal USDT cross-border foreign exchange transactions involving over 1.1 billion yuan.

The Beijing Procuratorate announced a case of illegal USDT cross-border foreign exchange transactions involving over 1.1 billion yuan.

PANews reported on October 29th that, according to a report by 21st Century Business Herald, on October 28th, the Beijing Municipal People's Procuratorate released "Typical Cases of High-Quality and Efficient Performance of Financial Procuratorial Duties" (2024-2025). One case involved "using virtual currency to indirectly buy and sell foreign exchange, involving over 1.1 billion yuan." Between January and August 2023, Lin Jia, under the instruction of others, colluded with Lin Yi, Xia, Bao, and Chen to use multiple bank cards under their names to receive large amounts of RMB funds transferred from clients (such as Liu) connected to the "upstream" of an illegal currency exchange organization. This gang used virtual currency as a "bridge" to achieve the illegal purpose of cross-border fund transfers: Lin Jia and others converted the received RMB into USDT through multiple USDT trading platform accounts they actually controlled, and then completed the cross-border fund transfer through platform transactions, essentially engaging in disguised foreign exchange trading and profiting from it. According to the report, the total illegal business activities of the gang amounted to over 1.182 billion yuan, of which five members, including Xia and Bao, participated in activities ranging from over 149 million yuan to over 469 million yuan. On March 21, 2025, the Haidian District People's Court of Beijing issued a first-instance verdict, sentencing all five defendants to prison terms ranging from two to four years for the crime of illegal business operations, and imposing corresponding fines.
Share
2025/10/29 09:42