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Zcash Plunges Below $400 as Core Developers Abandon Ship - What’s Next for Privacy Crypto?

Zcash Plunges Below $400 as Core Developers Abandon Ship - What’s Next for Privacy Crypto?

Published:
2026-01-08 13:22:16
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Zcash just hit a wall—and it's not a privacy feature. The cryptocurrency dropped below the $400 psychological barrier after multiple core developers announced their departure from the project.

The Exodus Hits Hard

When the architects start leaving the building, you know there's trouble. Core developers—the cryptographic wizards who built Zcash's privacy protocols—are walking away. No sugar-coating it: that's a red flag the size of a mining rig. These aren't junior coders; they're the brains behind the zero-knowledge proofs that made Zcash special.

Privacy at a Price

Zcash promised financial privacy in a transparent blockchain world. But maintaining that edge requires constant innovation—and the talent to execute it. With key developers exiting, questions mount about who'll drive the next protocol upgrades. The market's voting with its wallet: that sub-$400 price screams 'crisis of confidence.'

The Institutional Cold Shoulder

Remember when every hedge fund wanted privacy exposure? That narrative's fading faster than a weak private key. Regulatory scrutiny's intensifying, and institutions are prioritizing compliance over anonymity. Zcash's value proposition suddenly looks less compelling to the big money—the kind that actually moves markets.

Rebound or Relic?

Here's the brutal truth: in crypto, developer exoduses often precede irrelevance. But Zcash still has dedicated community nodes and functional privacy tech. The question isn't whether privacy matters—it's whether this particular implementation can survive its brain drain. Some projects thrive after founder departures; others become cautionary tales in whitepapers.

Watch the GitHub commits. Monitor the new hire announcements. And maybe—just maybe—remember that in finance, 'privacy' often translates to 'what you tell the taxman versus what you actually own.' The market's delivering its verdict in real-time: under $400 and searching for a lifeline.

When did the Zcash team exit the project?

Swihart revealed that on January 7, the whole ECC team left. He described the exit as a “constructive discharge” by ZCAM.

“In short, the terms of our employment were changed in ways that made it impossible for us to perform our duties effectively and with integrity,” he wrote before declaring plans to found a new company.

Of course, he quickly reassured readers that the founding company will have the same team and that the mission to build “unstoppable private money” remains unchanged.

According to him, the Zcash protocol was not affected by this development, and the decision was made to protect the team’s work from malicious governance actions that have made it impossible to stay true to ECC’s original mission.

He ended the post by implying there is an investigation going on and that there WOULD be more updates soon. Until then, he urged community members to “hang tight.”

Why did the Zcash team leave?

In response to the announcement of the “constructive discharge,” community members piled into the comments section demanding to know more about what caused the discharge.

An old screenshot of a conversation between someone and one of those Swihart named in his post, Zaki Manian, who goes by “zmanian” on X, and runs the Bootstrap Foundation, which owns the ECC that ousted the Core team, has surfaced, calling into question his credibility as a team player.

In the conversation, Zaki boasted about his history of “burning down billion dollar blockchains” while the other person, later identified as the community manager of a project in the Cosmos ecosystem, seemed to be trying to convince him to find a better way to address an issue.

The person who posted it had been warning projects that were linked to Zaki in any way to distance themselves from him because of how toxic he seemed to be.

That was in December 2024, but the screenshot is now making the rounds on X, further damaging Zaki’s credibility as more people wondered how many other projects he is linked to in the Cosmos ecosystem that could suddenly “burn down.”

What will happen to Zcash now?

Despite Swihart’s reassurances, the bottom appears to have fallen out for ZEC. At the time of writing, it is now trading at $397.43 with a market cap of $6.54 billion.

Zcash falls below $400 as dev team abandons project over board dispute.

ZEC price chart. Source: CoinMarketCap

Observers predict more dumps could follow as traders and long-term holders price in increased “governance risk,” a premium for the uncertainty surrounding the project’s leadership and its future.

The updates that Swihart promised will need to come soon to reassure panicked holders despite the vacuum left behind by the CORE team’s exit.

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