Andre Cronje, one of DeFi’s most recognizable builders, has stepped down from Sonic Labs’ board alongside fellow founding members Michael Kong and David Richardson. The S token dropped roughly 5% on the news, landing at about $0.031.
That 5% dip barely registers against the broader picture. The S token has fallen approximately 97% from its all-time high, turning what was once a billion-dollar-plus ecosystem into something considerably more modest.
New leadership, familiar problems
Sonic Labs announced the departures on June 20, simultaneously naming Matt Visser as the new CEO and Kosta Kourkoumelis as COO.
This isn’t even the first leadership shakeup this year. Former CEO Mitchell Demeter resigned back in February 2026, meaning Sonic has now cycled through its entire C-suite in under five months.
Cronje confirmed his exit on X, noting that he plans to focus on Flying Tulip, his newer project. All three departing board members reportedly retain their financial stakes in the project. They simply won’t be involved in business decisions going forward.
The numbers tell a rough story
Sonic’s total value locked has cratered to roughly $20 million. That figure once exceeded $1 billion.
The market capitalization of the Sonic ecosystem now sits somewhere between $85 million and $117 million. For a Layer-1 blockchain that markets itself as purpose-built for high throughput and instant finality in DeFi and Web3, those are sobering figures.
The project’s journey from its previous incarnation as the Fantom Foundation to its current Sonic branding was supposed to represent a fresh start.
What this means for investors
Cronje’s exit comes against a backdrop of a 97% decline in token value, TVL that has evaporated from over $1 billion to $20 million, and a revolving door in the executive suite. His pivot to Flying Tulip suggests he sees greener pastures elsewhere.
The medium-term question is whether Visser’s team can stem the TVL bleeding. In DeFi, liquidity begets liquidity. When TVL drops below a critical threshold, protocols enter a vicious cycle: fewer users mean worse yields, worse yields mean fewer users. At $20 million in TVL, Sonic is deep in that territory.
Until on-chain metrics start moving in the right direction, the 97% drawdown from the all-time high serves as the most relevant data point.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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