MANTRA Acquired by Inveniam After 90% Token Collapse in April

What You Need to Know
- Inveniam Capital Partners acquiring MANTRA, Dubai-licensed RWA blockchain, closing by June 30, 2026.
- MANTRA’s native token collapsed 90% in April 2025 after Inveniam’s $20 million investment in August.
- RWA tokenization market estimated at $34 billion with explosive growth projections from major consulting firms.
- MANTRA’s VASP license from Dubai’s VARA covering exchange and investment services is material acquisition asset.
Inveniam Capital Partners is acquiring MANTRA, the Dubai-licensed RWA-focused Layer 1 blockchain, with the deal expected to close by June 30, 2026. The financial terms were not disclosed.
The acquisition follows a $20 million strategic investment Inveniam made in MANTRA in August 2025, which arrived at a precarious moment: MANTRA’s native token had collapsed roughly 90% in April 2025, wiping out leveraged positions and triggering what CEO John Patrick Mullin later called the most challenging year the project had faced. That Inveniam moved from investor to acquirer within roughly a year is less surprising than it might appear. The RWA tokenization market, currently estimated at $34 billion by rwa.xyz, has attracted projections of explosive growth from BCG, Standard Chartered, and McKinsey, and firms with existing data infrastructure are racing to own the rails rather than just ride them. Inveniam already operates a platform that has credentialed over $200 billion in private market assets, so absorbing a compliant, EVM-compatible chain rather than building one from scratch is a straightforward capital allocation decision.
The existing NVNM Chain, a Layer 2 built on MANTRA and launched May 13, is the cleaner tell here: the acquisition was already functionally underway before it was announced.
The deal preserves the MANTRA brand, token, stablecoin (mantraUSD), and team intact, which matters for a project that has already shed staff through a restructuring this year. MANTRA holds a VASP license from Dubai’s VARA covering exchange, broker-dealer, management, and investment services, and that regulatory footprint is likely a material part of what Inveniam is buying. Institutional RWA infrastructure without a compliance layer is a harder sell to asset owners and market operators, particularly in jurisdictions where tokenized assets are beginning to attract real regulatory scrutiny. The VARA license provides a shortcut that would take years to replicate.
The $MANTRA token was trading at roughly $0.008 at the time of the announcement, up about 12% over the prior week. At that price, the token remains a fraction of its pre-crash levels, which means retail holders who survived the April 2025 collapse are still deeply underwater regardless of the corporate news. Whether an acquisition by a private markets data firm changes the token’s long-term trajectory depends almost entirely on whether institutional RWA volume actually materializes on the chain, not on the deal structure itself.
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