January 26, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

Majority of $550 Million Stolen NEM Already Laundered: Report

Majority of $550 million stolen nem already laundered: report

Majority of $550 Million Stolen NEM Already Laundered: Report

Nem coincheck
Advertisement

Join our community of 10 000 traders on Hacked.com for just $39 per month.

The hacker(s) behind the $550 million theft of 500 million NEM tokens from Japanese cryptocurrency exchange Coincheck are reportedly close to cashing out their ill-gotten gains completely.

An analysis of online transactions records related to the stolen NEM by a Tokyo cybersecurity firm sees nearly all of the funds laundered through dark web channels, according to a Nikkei report. As of Thursday evening, last week, a dark web portal selling the stolen NEM funds was showing zero balance, Tokyo-based security firm L Plus confirmed. This particular dark web website was initially set up on February 7 by an operator offering to exchange the stolen NEM into other cryptocurrencies.

In the immediate aftermath of the January 26th heist, some of the stolen NEM was transferred to a third-party digital wallet unrelated to the heist, the cybersecurity firm revealed in its analysis. As reported previously in mid-March, hackers had already laundered 40% of the 500 million tokens despite being tagged by Singapore-based NEM Foundation at the time.

“The decentralised NEM protocol’s flexibility allows transactions to be traced in real-time, which aids exchanges to identify wallets attached to malicious activity,” the non-profit foundation said in February. “This helps make stolen XEM tokens effectively unusable, because they cannot be deposited without being flagged by NEM. “

For reasons unknown, that automated tagging system was disabled last week by the NEM Foundation. The move, according to the Tokyo-based cybersecurity firm, has effectively fast-tracked the laundering swap into other coins in multiple wallets. This, despite the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department reportedly assigning over 100 police officers to look into the theft.

As things stand, the money launderers are expected to cash out their coins – already swapped from NEM to other cryptocurrencies like bitcoin – in overseas exchanges that do not adhere to stringent know-your-customer (KYC) or ID norms. The stolen NEM now exists in other swapped coins spread across a number of virtual wallets including multiple addresses that each contain several hundred million yen’s worth of bitcoins exchanged from the stolen NEM, the report revealed citing a source close to the investigation.

Meanwhile, Tokyo-based Coincheck has kept its promise to refund NEM holders impacted by the breach by beginning to distributing reparations in Japanese Yen on March 12.

Featured image from Shutterstock.

Follow us on Telegram.
Advertisement

Published at Tue, 27 Mar 2018 07:53:58 +0000

Altcoin News

Previous Article

Op Ed: Lower Highs and Lower Lows, Bears Still Dominate Crypto Markets

Next Article

ERC20 Tokens Surge Ahead of New Coinbase Listings

You might be interested in …

Bitcoin Core 0.17.0 Released

bitcoin Core 0.17.0 Released bitcoin Core version 0.17.0 is now available for download containing many new features as well as bug fixes and other improvements. For a complete list of changes, please see the release […]

The Ether Review #70 – CoinList Battens down the Hatches with Watertight Token Launch Compliance

Juan Benet and Jesse Clayburgh of Protocol Labs, and Ryan Zurrer of Polychain Capital, discuss CoinList, a platform for token-backed networks to raise money through pre-launch token sales.

While planning the Filecoin token sale, the team at Protocol Labs developed a method of accreditation for US investors in order to comply with securities law. Realising the importance of such a system for the whole ecosystem, they partnered with AngelList to develop this into a platform on which other projects can host their token pre-sales. The end result, CoinList, streamlines the complicated token launch process for developers and investors alike.

By supporting a wide variety of sale mechanics, contracts, and pricing schemes within a standard set of requirements, the platform allows developers to focus on optimising their projects instead of spending time on convoluted compliance processes. Its focus on simplifying due diligence reduces complications for developers while ?’?œfiltering out the signal from the noise?’.

With the ability to clear transactions simultaneously across fiat and cryptocurrencies, and the aim of hosting high-quality and high-integrity projects, CoinList opens up the token ecosystem to an influx of capital from a range of new investors. It gives these investors visibility into the progress of a sale, a clear quality checklist for each token, and a record of their previous investments and the requisite legal agreements.

The significant institutional capital still pushing into the cryptocurrency space highlights the demand for such a versatile yet user-friendly platform at this time. With its solutions to regulatory uncertainty, costly compliance and the current knowledge barrier to investing, CoinList is well-placed to bring in the era of Web 3.0

coinlist.cotwitter.com/coinlist

angel.cotwitter.com/angellist

protocol.aitwitter.com/protocollabstwitter.com/juanbenettwitter.com/jesseclayburgh

polychain.capitalangel.co/polychain-capitaltwitter.com/ryanzurrer

consensys.netconsensysmedia.netetherreview.infoitunes.apple.com//podcast/the-eth?’id899090462?mt=2