Full Post-Mortem of the KelpDAO Incident: Why Did Aave, Which Was Not Compromised, End Up in Crisis Situation?
Original Title: The Kelp DAO Exploit on rsETH Has Put Aave to Its 'Moment of Truth'
Original Author: Gianmarco Marzotto
Translation: Peggy, BlockBeats
Editor's Note: On April 18, a transaction involving approximately 116,500 rsETH tokens sent shockwaves through the entire DeFi ecosystem, presenting an unexpected stress test. The stolen assets quickly flowed into Aave V3, where they were used as collateral to borrow a significant amount of WETH. This sudden influx disrupted the previously stable lending system, pushing the ETH pool utilization to 100% and bringing the potential default amount close to $200 million. Within hours, funds were massively withdrawn, leading to a liquidity crisis.
Superficially, this may seem like another cross-chain bridge attack; however, the deeper issue lies in the fact that it did not occur within Aave's own code but rather infiltrated through an "ostensibly secure" external collateral asset. The failure of rsETH in the bridging, re-collateralization, and governance process rendered it economically non-redeemable, yet this change was inadequately reflected in the lending system, ultimately resulting in a direct impact on the protocol's solvency.
In this article's perspective, the risk structure of DeFi is undergoing a transformation. The question of protocol security is no longer just about "contract vulnerability" but rather about "the reliability of the entire technical and governance chain behind the accepted collateral." As liquidity provisioning, re-collateralization, and cross-chain infrastructure stack on top of each other, the failure of any link could magnify into a systemic shock through the collateral chain.
In hindsight, this was a typical case of "yield backfiring": what was once considered nearly risk-free re-collateralization yield transformed overnight into liquidity depletion and default exposure. For Aave, this was a true test of governance and risk management; for the entire DeFi ecosystem, it may serve as a clearer reminder that in a highly composable system, risk has never disappeared but rather been redistributed and delayed.
The following is the original article:
Introduction: The Day rsETH Was No Longer 'Risk-Free'
On April 18, 2026, DeFi experienced a moment that completely distanced "theory" from "reality": the Kelp DAO's rsETH cross-chain bridge was exploited, with approximately 116,500 rsETH tokens (roughly $2.92 billion to $2.93 billion) being attacked, marking the largest DeFi hack of the year to date.
These stolen tokens did not stay put but were swiftly moved to Aave v3 as collateral and borrowed WETH. This action directly triggered a liquidity crisis, resulting in a bad debt of over $170 million to $200 million in the protocol.
In contrast to many past attack events, this was not due to a vulnerability in Aave's own code. The issue stemmed from an "external" source—a collateral price feed that was originally considered reliable but lost credibility in a short period of time.
This article will outline the specific evolution of this event, explain why it resembled more of a liquidity crisis than a security vulnerability at the Aave level, and further discuss what this event means for risk management in an increasingly interconnected DeFi ecosystem.
What are Kelp DAO and rsETH (and Why They Caught Aave's Eye)
Kelp DAO is a liquid restaking protocol that allows users to convert ETH and various liquidity staked tokens (such as stETH, cbETH, etc.) into a liquidity token called rsETH, which is pegged to the underlying asset restaked on the EigenLayer.
As such, rsETH's value is derived from a basket of underlying assets locked in the restaking system. While these underlying assets themselves have limited liquidity, rsETH as a token can still freely circulate throughout the DeFi ecosystem, being used as collateral or participating in various yield farming strategies.
From the perspective of a lending protocol like Aave (a money market), rsETH is "theoretically" almost an ideal collateral: it has strong collateral support, additional revenue sources, and is embedded in a "blue-chip" ecosystem like EigenLayer. It is for this reason that rsETH was listed on the Aave v3 and v4 markets, allowing users to use it as collateral to borrow more liquid assets (such as WETH).
However, this integration also brought about a shift in the risk paradigm: Aave's ability to repay on the ETH side now depends not only on its own protocol's design and security but also on external components—including the secure operation of cross-chain bridges and the entire restaking technology stack supporting rsETH.
Attack Path: From Kelp's Cross-Chain Bridge to Aave v3
According to on-chain preliminary analysis and reports from multiple crypto media, the incident originated from the Kelp DAO's LayerZero-based rsETH cross-chain bridge.
The attacker exploited a vulnerability in the bridge's cross-chain message mechanism (lzReceive in EndpointV2) to withdraw approximately 116,500 rsETH from the adapter/bridge, corresponding to a scale of around $2.92 billion to $2.93 billion at the time of the attack.
After obtaining these tokens, the attack strategy was highly "rational" in economic terms:
· Deposit rsETH into Aave v3 as collateral
· Borrow as much WETH as possible against this position (utilizing the fact that rsETH was still fully recognized by the protocol as a valid collateral asset at that time)
· Move or cash out the borrowed WETH to extract real liquidity value
· Leave the risk within the Aave ecosystem, waiting for the collateral's value to collapse subsequently
Upon detecting the anomaly, Kelp DAO promptly announced the suspension of the rsETH contracts on the mainnet and several L2s to investigate the attack, essentially freezing the normal circulation and redemption paths of rsETH.
Simultaneously, Aave also urgently paused the rsETH and wrsETH markets on v3 and v4, emphasizing that its smart contracts themselves were not breached, and the issue was limited to that particular asset.
However, the core issue is this: the rsETH serving as collateral has now "failed" on an economic level.
The bridge was drained, the redemption path is uncertain, and the price discovery mechanism is in disarray—while the previously borrowed WETH based on the collateral still physically exists.
Liquidity Crisis on Aave: Peak Utilization and a "Nine-Digit" Default
The freeze of rsETH by Kelp DAO has rendered positions collateralized with this token unable to be liquidated in an orderly manner. Specifically, the WETH borrowings associated with these collaterals can no longer be recovered with sufficient value through the disposal of rsETH, causing the protocol's mechanism as the "lender of last resort" to fail on these positions.
Preliminary estimates indicate:
· Approximately 116,500 rsETH was stolen and deposited into Aave v3
· The scale of WETH borrowings directly related to these positions is estimated to be between $177 million and $236 million
· Considering the cascading exposures to other protocols, the potential default scale could reach up to around $200 million
·Aave's ETH pool utilization rate briefly reached 100%, with almost no available liquidity for users to withdraw (unless they front-run)
A panic ensued, with over $5.4 billion being rapidly withdrawn from Aave in a matter of hours, including over $150 million from Justin Sun, a key whale in the protocol.
Aave's Total Value Locked (TVL) plummeted from around $45.8 billion to $35.7 billion in a very short period, while its token AAVE fell approximately 17% to nearly 20% in a single day.
An ironic outcome was that for users lending stablecoins or other assets, the yield soared — due to the shortage of lendable funds, the APY for stablecoin deposits surged to around 13%-14%, a typical signal of the market entering "crisis mode."
Insights into On-Chain Risk Management from this Event
The rsETH–Kelp DAO–Aave event was not just a typical attack but rather a prime example revealing how risk propagates from one protocol to another in a highly composable DeFi financial system.
Several key takeaways include:
Lending protocols do not exist in isolation
Even if Aave's smart contracts were not breached directly, accepting rsETH as collateral meant being directly exposed to external risks — including the security of cross-chain bridges and the re-collateralization system behind it.
When "redeemability" breaks down, oracle pricing is insufficient
Even if on-chain prices technically remain "valid," once an asset loses redeemability or liquidity (e.g., due to a pause, attack, or freeze), it ceases to be economically viable collateral. Risk management needs to encompass infrastructure integrity and governance factors, not just the price dimension.
An emergency pause mechanism is a double-edged sword
The Kelp DAO froze the rsETH contract, a reasonable move from the perspective of controlling the attack, but it exacerbated the issue for Aave: collateral became illiquid, making liquidation more challenging.
"Distributed collateral" may evolve into systemic risk concentration
Each new LRT, LST, or complex derivative asset introduces new risk vectors. Once these assets are accepted as collateral by multiple protocols (such as Aave, Compound, Euler, etc.), a single cross-chain bridge attack could trigger a cascading effect across the entire ecosystem.
For on-chain risk managers, this event has essentially become a "template": so-called "collateral whitelisting" is no longer just about assessing price fluctuations, but now requires measuring the complexity and vulnerability of the entire technical supply chain supporting the asset.
Outlook: How Aave (and DeFi) May Change Post-rsETH Incident
Within hours of the attack, the Aave team and Guardian reassured that the liquidity pool was still functioning normally, with the incident only affecting rsETH-related assets. They are collaborating with Kelp, LayerZero, and other stakeholders to minimize the impact.
But the real work is just beginning: how to handle bad debt, whether to activate the Safety Module/Umbrella mechanism, and how to update asset listing strategies will all be critical governance stress tests.
Several directions that this event may accelerate include:
· Adopting more conservative onboarding parameters for LRT/cross-chain assets: lower LTV, stricter limits, and multi-layered audit requirements, with specialized stress tests for cross-chain attack scenarios.
· Building a quantification framework to measure "bridge risk" and "restaking stack risk," akin to current modeling of price volatility and asset correlation.
· Placing greater emphasis on collateral concentration issues: setting limits not only by individual asset but also by "risk category" (e.g., derivative assets from the same LRT provider or messaging infrastructure).
· Driving the evolution of the Safety Module role: including AAVE staking, an insurance fund, and a backstop liquidity pool, transitioning from the "last line of defense" to part of daily systemic risk management.
For users, this event also sends a clear signal: using complex composite tokens as collateral can indeed boost returns, but it also means exposing oneself to a series of often overlooked risks—including cross-chain bridge vulnerabilities, restaking governance issues, and upstream protocol emergency shutdown mechanisms.
A Reminder About the Nature of DeFi Yield
The attack on rsETH did not breach Aave's code, but it did reveal a crucial issue: when collateral is built on complex liquidity pledging, restaking, and cross-chain bridge structures, the sensitivity of lending protocols to external shocks significantly increases.
What seemed like “risk-free” returns in the past few months turned into a liquidity crisis with over $10 billion in outflows in just one day, as well as potential defaults of up to around $200 million.
If there is one key lesson to be learned, it is this: in DeFi, yield is always priced with risk — it's just that this risk is often underestimated before the first systemic event occurs.
You may also like

ZachXBT: Humanity private key leak and abnormal surge in H token should be viewed separately
On June 9, according to related disclosures, on-chain investigator ZachXBT posted an update on Humanity’s roughly $31 million security incident, saying that after further analyzing fund flows, he currently tends to believe the project team was not involved in an “inside job” or a self-staged attack. According to him, the official explanation about the private key leak was broadly accurate, but before the token unlock, the price of H had been artificially pushed higher, and the hacker later took advantage of that market environment; therefore, the private key leak and the earlier abnormal price pumping should be regarded as two separate and independent events. This reframing has shifted the market’s understanding of the nature of the incident. Earlier discussion around Humanity had focused on whether the team directly participated in the attack or used the security incident to cover up internal operations. ZachXBT’s latest remarks shift the focus from “whether it was self-theft” to “whether there were pre-unlock market structure issues.” He also questioned whether the team may have.

Morning Report | OpenAI has submitted an S-1 registration statement draft to the U.S. SEC; Morpho completes $175 million financing

Morning Report | BitMine increased its holdings by 126,971 ETH last week; trader Eugene announced his exit from the crypto market

Wang Chuan: How can one not feel anxious after the neighbor Old Wang made thirty times profit by investing in storage stocks? (Seven) - A quarter-century cycle

Cryptocurrency CEXs are flocking to sell US stocks, and traditional brokerages are facing an "uninvited guest."

$75 billion in foreign capital has fled, and South Korean retail investors have absorbed it all using leverage

Japan’s Three Megabanks Plan Joint Stablecoin Issuance in Fiscal 2026
MUFG, SMBC, and Mizuho reportedly plan to jointly issue fiat-pegged stablecoins in fiscal 2026, signaling Japan’s growing push into bank-led digital payment infrastructure.

Humanity Discloses H Token Dual-Chain Attack Details, With Losses on Ethereum and BSC Exceeding $36 Million
Humanity said the H token attack across Ethereum and BSC caused more than $36 million in losses after leaked ProxyAdmin keys enabled malicious contract upgrades and token minting.

White House Discusses CLARITY Act With Law Enforcement Ahead of Senate Vote
The White House discussed the CLARITY Act with law enforcement ahead of a Senate vote, focusing on illicit finance risks and developer protections.

Bitcoin Trading Guide 2026: Strategies for Experienced Traders

What Is XAUT and PAXG? Why Tokenized Gold Is Booming in 2026

Will the SpaceX IPO Hurt Bitcoin? Here's What Traders Are Watching

Foreign selling in the South Korean stock market accelerates, with cumulative net sales reportedly reaching $75 billion this year
On June 9, The Kobeissi Letter, citing Goldman Sachs data, reported that global investors are selling South Korean stocks at an unusually rapid pace. In the latest trading session, foreign investors sold about $801 million worth of Kospi constituent stocks again; total foreign outflows last week reached about $10 billion, and the market has been in net foreign selling on nearly every trading day over the past month. According to the data cited in the report, foreign investors have sold about $75 billion worth of South Korean stocks so far this year. Meanwhile, South Korean retail and institutional investors together recorded roughly $69 billion in net buying over the same period, suggesting that the market’s main buying support has come from domestic capital rather than returning overseas funds. The information currently disclosed still mainly comes from The Kobeissi Letter’s retelling and Goldman Sachs data summaries, while public details on the statistical period and the specific definition of “selling” remain relatively limited.

Fortune Warns of Strategy’s Financing Structure Risks as Bitcoin Premium Narrows
Fortune warned that Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury model faces growing financing risks as MSTR’s net asset premium narrows and preferred stock dividend pressure increases.

Ferrari Challenge Le Mans: Carl Moon to Dominate in WEEX Livery

Sahara AI Responds to SAHARA’s Sharp Drop: No Contract or Product Security Issues Found, Internal Investigation Underway
Sahara AI responded to SAHARA’s 60% price drop, saying no token contract or product security issues have been found and an internal investigation is underway.

WEEX Deposit/Withdrawal Dynamic Island: Your Asset Status, Always in Sight

Scaling Crypto Derivatives: The Digital Asset Infrastructure Behind High-Volume Trading
In the fast-moving digital asset ecosystem, derivatives platforms face an extreme architectural test. High-leverage futures markets demand more than just standard security—they require absolute operational precision, zero-latency matching engines, and ironclad structural scalability, all while navigating intense market volatility.
As global platforms scale to meet these demands, the industry is shifting away from rigid, monolithic setups toward a more agile, "decoupled" infrastructure philosophy.
The Blueprint for High-Volume Copy TradingFor elite global exchanges like WEEX (founded in 2018), this architectural choice becomes critical when scaling high-volume retail features like social copy trading. When thousands of users automatically mirror the real-time strategies of elite traders simultaneously, it triggers sudden, monumental spikes in concurrent transactional volume.
To prevent execution latency or settlement bottlenecks during these peak volatility events, a platform's primary engine must remain entirely dedicated to risk management, copy-trade synchronization, and order matching.
The Architectural Rule: New-generation platforms must separate front-end user execution engines from heavy backend infrastructural overhead to eliminate operational friction.
By separating these layers, platforms can maintain complete sovereignty over their trading environments and user experiences while strategically aligning with institutional-grade infrastructure ecosystems. This strategic framework allows modern exchanges to leverage advanced Digital Asset Custody infrastructure such as Cobo’s behind the scenes, ensuring that backend wallet management scales elastically alongside trading spikes.
Capitalizing on Market Momentum and 400× LeverageIn a derivatives arena where platforms offer up to 400× leverage on perpetual contracts, capital efficiency and market agility are core business metrics. To capture market momentum, an exchange needs the ability to rapidly expand its asset offerings, supporting everything from legacy crypto assets to sudden, trending altcoins across a massive library of trading pairs.
Adopting a flexible, scalable Wallet-as-a-Service (WaaS) solution such as Cobo’s could completely rewrite the development timeline for high-growth exchanges. Instead of spending months of engineering capital building out custom backend wallet architectures for every new blockchain network, platforms can deploy localized infrastructure in days.
This agility allows platforms to instantly scale their listings to over a thousand trading pairs without compromising security or delaying time-to-market. It mirrors the exact operational advantages seen during high-velocity market events, similar to how advanced wallet infrastructure empowers platforms during sudden asset surges; allowing exchanges to pass that speed and liquidity directly to their global user base.
A Mature Foundation for GrowthThe synergy between trusted infrastructure ecosystems and global trading platforms represents the natural evolution of a maturing crypto market. As WEEX continues to scale its global spot and derivatives offerings for over 6 million users, adopting robust backend paradigms proves that platforms no longer have to compromise between cutting-edge trading velocity and uncompromised structural security.
ZachXBT: Humanity private key leak and abnormal surge in H token should be viewed separately
On June 9, according to related disclosures, on-chain investigator ZachXBT posted an update on Humanity’s roughly $31 million security incident, saying that after further analyzing fund flows, he currently tends to believe the project team was not involved in an “inside job” or a self-staged attack. According to him, the official explanation about the private key leak was broadly accurate, but before the token unlock, the price of H had been artificially pushed higher, and the hacker later took advantage of that market environment; therefore, the private key leak and the earlier abnormal price pumping should be regarded as two separate and independent events. This reframing has shifted the market’s understanding of the nature of the incident. Earlier discussion around Humanity had focused on whether the team directly participated in the attack or used the security incident to cover up internal operations. ZachXBT’s latest remarks shift the focus from “whether it was self-theft” to “whether there were pre-unlock market structure issues.” He also questioned whether the team may have.

