TLDR:
- An rsETH collateral exploit on Aave allowed an attacker to extract approximately $250 million from the protocol
- Aave’s total value locked dropped by roughly $7 billion in a single day following the exploit and mass withdrawals
- Exchange inflows for AAVE surged to over 355,000 tokens, totaling around $32 million across all platforms
- The AAVE token dropped nearly 15% as panic selling intensified amid contributor exits and collateral risk concerns
Aave is facing mounting pressure following a series of internal and external setbacks. The decentralized lending protocol recently suffered an exploit tied to rsETH, a collateral asset accepted within its ecosystem.
The attack allowed a malicious actor to extract approximately $250 million. This event compounded existing challenges, including the departure of key contributors BGD Labs and Chaos Labs.
As a result, the protocol experienced a sharp drop in total value locked and investor confidence.
rsETH Exploit Exposes Collateral Risks on Aave
The exploit did not originate from a flaw within Aave’s core protocol. Instead, the issue was rooted in rsETH, an asset accepted as collateral on the platform.
When a collateral asset deteriorates, it can trigger cascading effects across the lending system. These effects often result in bad debt accumulating within the protocol.
Crypto analyst Darkfost noted on X that cascading risk is inherent to collateral-based lending systems. The decision to accept rsETH ultimately opened the door to this vulnerability.
Once the exploit occurred, panic spread quickly through the community. Users began pulling their funds from the protocol at a rapid pace.
The wave of withdrawals caused the platform’s total value locked to fall by approximately $7 billion. This contraction took place over the course of a single day.
Many participants chose to exit their positions rather than absorb the uncertainty. The reaction was swift and spread broadly across the ecosystem.
The timing also worsened the situation considerably. BGD Labs and Chaos Labs had already left their contributor roles before this event.
Their exits weakened the protocol’s risk management and development capacity. The exploit therefore arrived at a particularly vulnerable moment for the protocol.
AAVE Token Selloff and Exchange Inflows Surge Amid Crisis
The AAVE token fell by approximately 15% on the day the exploit became public. This correction reflected the combined weight of the attack and the loss of community trust.
Investors moved quickly, reducing their exposure to the token as uncertainty grew. The drop was among the sharpest the token had recorded in recent months.
Exchange inflows for the token surged sharply during this period. The monthly average for token inflows into exchanges sits at around 31,000.
During the crisis, more than 236,000 AAVE flowed into exchanges in a short window. That volume represented roughly $21 million at current prices.
According to Darkfost, cumulative inflows across all exchanges exceeded 355,000 AAVE in total. This translates to approximately $32 million worth of the token.
Binance absorbed the largest share of these inflows due to its deep liquidity. The concentration on Binance reflected organized and rapid selling activity.
Together, these numbers point to a broad loss of confidence in the protocol. The platform has lost key contributors and now faces questions about its collateral risk framework.
Exchange inflows and token price declines both show sustained selling pressure. Market participants are watching closely as the situation continues to develop.
The post Aave Faces Crisis: rsETH Exploit Drains $250M as TVL Plunges $7B and AAVE Token Falls 15% appeared first on Blockonomi.




A major incident has affected the ecosystem through an exploit involving rsETH used… 
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