Mango offers a trading hub for spot markets, perpetual futures, and lending. It sources liquidity from its own pools as well as Serum, Solana’s answer to Uniswap that enjoys the backing of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried.
The sale was closed to U.S. persons, likely in an attempt to stave off the regulatory scrutiny that can hamstring similar projects – sometimes years down the line.
The DAO’s website said MNGO has three purposes: to capitalize an insurance fund; to distribute the DEX governance token, and to incentivize liquidity for market makers. Ninety percent of tokens are locked up in a governance fund, 5% in an insurance policy, and the remainder in contributor tokens.
The entirety of Wednesday’s raise will go to DAO’s insurance fund, securing a hefty backstop for Mango Protocol’s lenders if things go south, sources familiar with the raise told CoinDesk. Exploits happen in the wild west of decentralization, and Mango DAO cautioned token buyers that they could not guarantee its smart contracts would be bug-free. (The sale took place against the backdrop of Tuesday’s $600 million heists on Poly Network.)
Solana Labs, the leading firm behind the network, raised $314 million in June. Solana itself has been the blockchain of choice for Bankman-Fried, who has invested heavily in Solana-based projects.
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