Everclear’s announcement of a full operational wind-down sent CLEAR sharply lower in the latest session.
Summary
- As of May 21, CLEAR declined to $0.0002332, down over 48% in 24 hours
- Everclear confirmed full shutdown of protocol and operations
- Project previously processed $500 million in monthly volume
- Team cites lack of sustainable revenue despite partnerships
Everclear, the cross chain clearing and settlement network backed by firms including Pantera Capital and Polychain, said it is winding down all operations after failing to build a sustainable business model.

In a stunning announcement posted to X, the team confirmed that the protocol has already been sunsetted and no funds remain locked.
The token is currently trading at $0.0002332, down over 48% in 24 hours.
Why did Everclear shut down its protocol?
“The protocol has been sunsetted,” Everclear stated. “To our knowledge, no funds are stuck any remaining TVL was withdrawn by users and partners.”
The project, originally launched in 2017 as Connext with early support from the Ethereum Foundation, aimed to solve liquidity fragmentation across blockchains. It later rebranded to Everclear and launched its mainnet in April 2025, positioning itself as infrastructure for cross chain settlement.
Despite technical execution, the team acknowledged that demand did not translate into revenue. “Despite reaching $500M in monthly volume, the cross chain solvers segment never developed the commercial depth we needed,” the team wrote. Users, it said, were highly price sensitive, limiting monetization.
The shutdown affects not only the protocol but also the Everclear Foundation and its research arm, effectively ending all development efforts tied to the ecosystem.
What happens to CLEAR token and remaining funds?
The immediate market reaction was severe. CLEAR dropped more than 48% to $0.0002332, according to CoinGecko data, wiping out most of its remaining market value in a single session.
Everclear said it plans to use remaining treasury funds to settle liabilities. The team also floated a potential token buyback, though it emphasized uncertainty around execution. The estimated size of any buyback ranges between $50000 and $200000, a relatively small figure compared to historical funding rounds.
The project had raised capital from major crypto investors and built integrations with industry partners. However, Everclear admitted it misjudged timelines for those partnerships to go live, which ultimately strained its financial runway.
“Several significant names signed on, but we underestimated how long it would take those partners to go live and our runway ran out before they did,” the team said.
There remains a possibility, however, that the technology could survive in another form. Everclear is exploring open sourcing its codebase, according to those familiar with the matter, allowing its DAO or external developers to continue development under new leadership. The intellectual property is currently held by the Everclear Foundation.
The collapse adds to a growing list of infrastructure projects struggling to convert usage into revenue, even as networks like Ethereum (ETH) continue to dominate settlement activity. It also highlights ongoing challenges in cross chain design, an area often positioned as critical to the broader crypto ecosystem alongside assets like Bitcoin (BTC) and scaling discussions tied to Layer 2 ecosystem growth.
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