The silence has not quieted the speculation — it has amplified it.
When a group built to bridge two worlds takes one of its most important international stages, it will do so with one voice missing. Manon, the Swiss member of KATSEYE, remains on hiatus for health reasons and will not perform with her group at Coachella — an absence that arrives at precisely the moment the project was designed to shine. HYBE and Geffen Records have said little beyond confirming the hiatus, but the silence itself has become a kind of statement, leaving fans and observers to read the space between the words.
- KATSEYE will perform at Coachella without Manon — one of the most globally visible stages the group has ever been given, and she will not be on it.
- Fans noticed Manon quietly removed KATSEYE from her social media profile, a small act that sent a large signal through a fandom trained to read exactly these kinds of changes.
- She also appears nowhere in the promotional materials for Pinky Up, the group's upcoming single set to debut live at Coachella — absence layered upon absence.
- HYBE and Geffen Records have held a careful, narrow line: she is on hiatus for her health, and nothing more — a non-answer that has only accelerated speculation about a permanent exit.
- The question of whether this is a pause or a farewell remains genuinely open, held in a silence that the agencies show no sign of breaking.
When KATSEYE takes the Coachella stage, five members will stand in the lights where six once stood. Manon, the group's Swiss member, will not be there — and for fans watching closely, her absence at this particular moment feels weighted with meaning.
KATSEYE was formed in 2024 through a partnership between HYBE and Geffen Records, deliberately constructed as a bridge between K-pop and Western pop markets. A Coachella performance is precisely the kind of international moment the project was built for, which makes Manon's absence from it all the more conspicuous. HYBE confirmed she remains on hiatus for health reasons, having stepped back in February with no return date given then or since.
The silence has not quieted speculation — it has fed it. Fans noticed Manon removed KATSEYE's name from her social media profile, a gesture that in K-pop adjacent fandoms rarely goes unread. Combined with her absence from all promotional materials for the group's upcoming single Pinky Up — which will debut live at Coachella — the pattern has led many to wonder whether a departure is quietly underway.
HYBE has neither confirmed a departure nor offered reassurance that she is returning. That open space between two unspoken positions is where the uncertainty lives. Coachella will come and go, Pinky Up will be released, and KATSEYE will continue building toward the international foothold the project was designed to claim. Whether Manon is part of that future remains a question only those inside the two labels can answer — and for now, they are not.
When KATSEYE takes the stage at Coachella this year, there will be five members standing in the lights instead of six. Manon, the Swiss member of the multinational girl group, will not be there — and for fans who have been watching closely, her absence feels like it might be telling them something.
KATSEYE was formed in 2024 through a partnership between HYBE, the South Korean entertainment giant, and Geffen Records, the American label. The group was built deliberately as a bridge between K-pop and Western pop markets, and a Coachella performance represents exactly the kind of international moment the project was designed for. That makes Manon's absence from it all the more conspicuous.
HYBE confirmed to The Korea Herald that Manon remains on hiatus and will not take part in the group's current activities. She stepped back in February, when both HYBE and Geffen Records announced she was prioritizing her health and well-being. No return date was given at the time, and none has been offered since. The agencies have kept their statements narrow and consistent: she is on hiatus, and that is all they are saying.
But the silence has not quieted the speculation — it has amplified it. Earlier this month, fans noticed that Manon had removed KATSEYE's name from her social media profile. In the world of K-pop and its adjacent fandoms, where group affiliations are worn publicly and their removal is rarely accidental, that kind of change reads as a signal. The rumor that she may be preparing to leave the group spread quickly, and HYBE's refusal to address it directly has done nothing to slow it down.
There is also the matter of Pinky Up, the group's upcoming single. Manon does not appear in any of the concept images or promotional teasers released ahead of the track. Artists on medical leave routinely miss promotional cycles, and that alone would not be remarkable. But stacked against the social media change, the two-month absence, and the agency's careful non-answers, it adds another layer to a picture that fans are increasingly reading as a farewell.
KATSEYE is expected to debut Pinky Up live during the Coachella performance, which gives the moment added weight. It will be the first time a global audience hears the song, and it will be heard without one of the group's founding members present. Among the five who will perform is Lara Raj, who is of Indian origin and has drawn her own dedicated following to the group.
What remains genuinely unclear is whether Manon's hiatus is a pause or an ending. HYBE has not confirmed any departure, and nothing in their statements suggests one is imminent — but they have also not offered any reassurance that she is coming back. The space between those two positions is where the uncertainty lives, and for now, that space is wide open.
Coachella will come and go. Pinky Up will be released. KATSEYE will continue building toward the international foothold the project was designed to claim. Whether Manon is part of that future is a question that, as of now, only the people inside those two record labels can answer — and they are not answering it.
Citas Notables
Manon remains on hiatus and will not participate in current activities.— HYBE, as reported to The Korea Herald
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Why does it matter so much that she removed the group's name from her profile?
In these fandoms, social media is treated almost like an official record. Removing a group tag isn't a casual thing — it's read as a statement, even if nothing is said out loud.
But couldn't it just be a personal choice during a difficult time?
It could be. And that's exactly what makes it so hard to read. The ambiguity is the story.
HYBE keeps saying she's on hiatus. Why won't they just say more?
Labels in this space tend to manage these situations very carefully. Saying too much can accelerate a departure. Saying nothing keeps options open — for everyone.
What does Coachella actually mean for a group like KATSEYE?
It's a legitimacy marker in Western pop. For a group built to straddle K-pop and American markets, performing there is the kind of moment that says: we're not a niche act, we're a real crossover.
So missing it is significant for Manon too, not just the group?
Exactly. If she's still a member, she's missing a career-defining performance. That's not a small thing to sit out.
Is there any precedent for this kind of slow, unannounced exit in K-pop?
It happens. Sometimes members drift out through extended absences rather than formal announcements. The industry has its own grammar for endings that aren't quite said aloud.
What would actually resolve this?
Either a return — she shows up at a future event, she's in the next single — or an official statement. Until one of those happens, the question just stays open.