KelpDAO Exploit Triggers Aave Liquidity Crisis – Whales Offload $6M in AAVE As Contagion Fears Rise

The Decentralized Finance sector is feeling the aftereffects of the KelpDAO hack that resulted in massive volatility in the lending markets. Aave, the largest liquidity protocol, has begun to be pressured by bad debt resulting from the Kelp-linked collateral price collapse, with AAVE currently down almost 18% after just one trading session.

As investigations of the hack continue, traders using Wang are liquidating positions out of concern for contagion spreading due to the restaking ecosystem on Ethereum, which may create larger systemic risks and significant anxiety for both traders and institutional participants.

The KelpDAO Breach and the “Bad Debt” Dilemma

A vulnerability in the KelpDAO smart contracts allowed participants to manipulate either the price or supply of its restaking tokens, which are widely used as collateral on lending platforms such as Aave. As a result, the sudden decline in price led to the creation of bad debt across these platforms, as the value of the collateral dropped below required thresholds.

This occurs when the value of the collateral falls below the level of the debt borrowed by a user. As a result, the protocol’s liquidation engine is unable to liquidate the position quickly enough to cover the difference.

Whale Capitulation – $6 Million in AAVE Dumped

According to Lookonchain, there was a massive amount of capitulation from significant AAVE holders. Three different whale-type accounts sold off huge amounts of AAVE within the first few hours after the news broke about the exploit, representing over 60,000 AAVE tokens or a cumulative amount of nearly $6M of additional sell pressure created by those accounts.

The reaction of the market due to several significant holders exiting with high conviction was exacerbated today. Smaugvision sold 20,015 AAVE for USDC at an average price of $103 per token for a total value of just over $2.06M. Another whale, 0xFC56, sold 20,000 AAVE tokens at a similar price to $103 each to get back $2.05M worth of USDC in total value. Whale 0xA2E4 exited its position at an average price of $99 per AAVE token, totaling 19,666 AAVE, or approximately $1.94M. In addition, the entity sold 505.65 ETH, valued at around $1.18M, and 10.11 WBTC, worth approximately $765,000, rather than relying solely on stablecoins.

The coordinated exits by wealthy individuals imply a fundamental lack of confidence in Aave’s ability to successfully mitigate KelpDAO related losses in a way that will not dilute the utility/value of the AAVE token.

The Broader Impact on Liquid Restaking

The KelpDAO incident illustrates the risk Lego blocks of DeFi pose to the overall structure of DeFi. If a foundational layer such as a restaking protocol fails, all other applications using that layer or the tokens generated by it will be affected.

Aave’s Safety Module is being closely watched by industry experts as they consider the possibility of requiring AAVE tokens to be auctioned in order to cover a shortage. This move could lead to further dilution of existing holders and potentially place downward pressure on the price in the short term.

Conclusion

The KelpDAO incident was an example of the fact that there is no such thing as free yield in DeFi, all yield comes with risk. While Aave continues to deal with liquidation issues and whales are trying to find safety in stablecoins and blue-chip assets like Bitcoin and Ethereum, it is important that the Aave governance demonstrates its ability to sustain itself through this challenging period. The focus now shifts away from restaking gains and toward protocol security for all investors who will be looking to see whether the bad debts can be eliminated before any additional contagion occurs.

AAVE-6.12%
ETH-2.9%
USDC-0.01%
WBTC-1.19%
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