Dragonfly Still Holds ZEC After Bug Fix; Qureshi Invests in ZODL as Shielded Pool Jitters Ease
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When a privacy coin discovers a counterfeiting bug, the marketâs reflex is to expect a bank run. That didnât happen for Zcash. Dragonfly partner Haseeb Qureshi told the market that the recently patched Zcash vulnerability barely moved the shielded pool, and that Dragonfly itself is still a ZEC holder. He also disclosed a personal stake in ZODL, a Zcash community token, according to the original report.
Qureshiâs commentary matters because it pulls back the curtain on how liquidity structure insulates Zcash from supply shocks that would gut a transparent-by-default chain. The bug would have affected shielded ZEC holders specifically, allowing an attacker to mint counterfeit shielded coins. Yet almost all ZEC liquidity sits in transparent pools on exchanges. Counterfeit shielded ZEC would be difficult to offload without triggering compliance flags. That structural friction, not just the fast patch, is what kept the market calm.
Shielded Pool Remains Sticky
The numbers back the narrative. Over the 48 hours following the disclosure, the shielded poolâs share of total ZEC supply slipped from 31% to 30%. That is not a mass exit. It is barely a flinch. For a privacy network whose core value proposition depends on shielded transactions, a 1-percentage-point shift signals that holders are not fleeing as a bloc. The Zcash team plans to introduce a new turnstile and a fresh shielded pool to cryptographically confirm the old pool was never inflated. That audit-style approach moves the conversation from fear to verification.
Still, the margin is thin. Even a 1% drop in shielded supply over two days translates to real ZEC leaving the anonymity set. The question is whether that pace accelerates once the on-chain remediation begins. Traders who understand zero-knowledge proofs might see the plan as rigorous. Less technical holders might see it as admitting the possibility of undetected inflation. Qureshiâs insistence that no exploit occurred before the fix will be tested by the audit result.
Institutional Fingers on the Scale
Dragonflyâs continued ZEC position matters for more than optics. The firm is one of cryptoâs most visible venture and liquid strategy investors. Its decision to hold through a bug fix signals a bet that privacy infrastructure can survive security scares without permanent reputational damage. Qureshi said he is personally an investor in ZODL, which ties his own outlook to the networkâs broader community ecosystem. The combination of venture-level conviction and personal alignment is rare in a sector that often sees funds rotate quickly after bad headlines.
ZEC had already been drawing attention as a short-term momentum play. It ranked among the top weekly gainers alongside TON and SIREN, surging over 58% in a single week. Anyone buying into that price swing without understanding the liquidity structure underneath was taking a risk that became visible only when the bug emerged. The fact that those gains held, more or less, suggests that the market is pricing Zcash on transparent liquidity depth, not shielded pool purity.
Privacy Coins Face a Structural Headwind
Every privacy protocol now operates under a legislative microscope. US lawmakers continue to push bills that would effectively squeeze out anonymous transactions at the exchange layer, a dynamic that is already threatening landmark crypto legislation. For Zcash, the bug episode lands at an uncomfortable time because it hands critics a ready-made argument: shielded pools are too opaque for anyone to trust, even the protocolâs own supporters. Qureshiâs transparency about his holdings and the ZODL position is partly a rebuttal to that narrative, but it also underscores the awkward position privacy coin backers find themselves in when they need to prove nothing happened.
The market will now watch the implementation of the new turnstile. If it goes smoothly, Zcash might emerge with a stronger institutional story: a chain that caught a critical vulnerability, patched it fast, and verified supply integrity on-chain. If execution is shaky or if any inflated coin supply is retroactively discovered, the selling pressure could finally test the transparent poolâs ability to absorb it. The shielded pool share number, at 30% and barely moving, remains the only real-time sentiment gauge. For now, it says the market is nervous but not panicking.
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