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$290M Kelp DAO Hack: 75,700 ETH on the Move — Is DeFi Facing a New Crisis?The market just got a harsh reminder: in crypto, risk doesn’t knock before entering. The recent Kelp DAO exploit isn’t just another hack — it’s evolving, and the ripple effects are spreading fast. Let’s break it down clearly so you understand what’s really happening and what it means for us as investors. 👇 🧠 What Happened? After the initial $290 million hack, the attackers now control nearly 75,700 ETH. But here’s the real concern — they’re not sitting still. They’ve started splitting and moving funds across multiple wallets, using privacy tools like: 🔁 THORChain 🕶️ Umbra This makes tracking extremely difficult and reduces the chances of full recovery. At the same time: 🧊 Arbitrum froze ~30,766 ETH linked to the hack 💸 Hackers are actively trying to outmaneuver tracing systems This is no longer just a hack — it’s a strategic escape operation. ⚠️ Why This Matters More Than You Think This situation is bigger than Kelp DAO alone. Here’s where things get serious: 1️⃣ DeFi Contagion Risk Protocols are interconnected. When one breaks, others feel the pressure. 🏦 Aave may face losses Hackers reportedly used stolen funds as collateral to borrow This creates potential bad debt scenarios 2️⃣ Liquidity Shock Large ETH movements can: Increase volatility Trigger unexpected liquidations Disturb short-term market structure 3️⃣ Trust Damage Every major exploit weakens confidence in DeFi security — especially for new users entering the space. 📊 What Smart Traders Are Watching From experience, events like this create both risk and opportunity. Here’s what I’m personally paying attention to: 🔍 Wallet movements — follow where the ETH flows 📉 ETH price reaction — panic vs controlled correction 🧱 Aave & Arbitrum response — damage control matters 🔐 Security narratives — which projects gain trust after this? 🛡️ Lessons You Shouldn’t Ignore If you’re serious about surviving and growing in crypto, take this seriously: ❗ Don’t overexpose funds to a single protocol ❗ Avoid blindly chasing high yields ❗ Always assess smart contract risks ❗ Keep part of your portfolio in safer assets And most importantly: 👉 Not your keys, not your control 💭 My Perspective I’ve seen multiple cycles, and one thing stays constant — markets recover, but careless investors don’t. Events like this separate: Traders who react emotionally Investors who adapt strategically This isn’t the end of DeFi — but it is a stress test. 🔚 Final Thought The hackers are getting smarter. The systems are getting more complex. And the risks? Still very real. So here’s the question: 👉 Are you managing your portfolio like this can happen anytime — or are you assuming it won’t happen to you? Stay sharp. #CryptoNews #defi #Ethereum #KelpDAO #AAVE #Arbitrum #CryptoRisk #BinanceSquare

$290M Kelp DAO Hack: 75,700 ETH on the Move — Is DeFi Facing a New Crisis?

The market just got a harsh reminder: in crypto, risk doesn’t knock before entering. The recent Kelp DAO exploit isn’t just another hack — it’s evolving, and the ripple effects are spreading fast.
Let’s break it down clearly so you understand what’s really happening and what it means for us as investors. 👇
🧠 What Happened?
After the initial $290 million hack, the attackers now control nearly 75,700 ETH.
But here’s the real concern — they’re not sitting still.
They’ve started splitting and moving funds across multiple wallets, using privacy tools like:
🔁 THORChain
🕶️ Umbra
This makes tracking extremely difficult and reduces the chances of full recovery.
At the same time:
🧊 Arbitrum froze ~30,766 ETH linked to the hack
💸 Hackers are actively trying to outmaneuver tracing systems
This is no longer just a hack — it’s a strategic escape operation.
⚠️ Why This Matters More Than You Think
This situation is bigger than Kelp DAO alone.
Here’s where things get serious:
1️⃣ DeFi Contagion Risk
Protocols are interconnected. When one breaks, others feel the pressure.
🏦 Aave may face losses
Hackers reportedly used stolen funds as collateral to borrow
This creates potential bad debt scenarios
2️⃣ Liquidity Shock
Large ETH movements can:
Increase volatility
Trigger unexpected liquidations
Disturb short-term market structure
3️⃣ Trust Damage
Every major exploit weakens confidence in DeFi security — especially for new users entering the space.
📊 What Smart Traders Are Watching
From experience, events like this create both risk and opportunity.
Here’s what I’m personally paying attention to:
🔍 Wallet movements — follow where the ETH flows
📉 ETH price reaction — panic vs controlled correction
🧱 Aave & Arbitrum response — damage control matters
🔐 Security narratives — which projects gain trust after this?
🛡️ Lessons You Shouldn’t Ignore
If you’re serious about surviving and growing in crypto, take this seriously:
❗ Don’t overexpose funds to a single protocol
❗ Avoid blindly chasing high yields
❗ Always assess smart contract risks
❗ Keep part of your portfolio in safer assets
And most importantly:
👉 Not your keys, not your control
💭 My Perspective
I’ve seen multiple cycles, and one thing stays constant — markets recover, but careless investors don’t.
Events like this separate:
Traders who react emotionally
Investors who adapt strategically
This isn’t the end of DeFi — but it is a stress test.
🔚 Final Thought
The hackers are getting smarter.
The systems are getting more complex.
And the risks? Still very real.
So here’s the question:
👉 Are you managing your portfolio like this can happen anytime — or are you assuming it won’t happen to you?
Stay sharp.
#CryptoNews #defi #Ethereum #KelpDAO #AAVE #Arbitrum #CryptoRisk #BinanceSquare
Aave sees $11B TVL drop following $292M KelpDAO Hack #Aave ’s TVL plunged from $26B to $15B within days, an $11B drop triggered by the $292M #KelpDAO bridge exploit. It lost $6.2B in hours alone, down 23%. The hack caused $200M in bad debt across Aave’s rsETH markets, pushing pools to 100% utilization and trapping an estimated $5B as whales rushed to exit before rsETH turned insolvent. #Morpho , #Sky , and #JupLend  also saw heavy outflows, with total sector withdrawals reaching approximately $15B in 72 hours. Even #Solana protocols with no direct rsETH exposure were hit. $606M was stolen across 12 exploits in 18 days. #Drift ($285M on April 1st) and KelpDAO ($292M on April 18th) made up 95% of losses, with both linked to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. It marks the worst month since the Bybit hack in February 2025.
Aave sees $11B TVL drop following $292M KelpDAO Hack

#Aave ’s TVL plunged from $26B to $15B within days, an $11B drop triggered by the $292M #KelpDAO bridge exploit. It lost $6.2B in hours alone, down 23%. The hack caused $200M in bad debt across Aave’s rsETH markets, pushing pools to 100% utilization and trapping an estimated $5B as whales rushed to exit before rsETH turned insolvent.

#Morpho , #Sky , and #JupLend  also saw heavy outflows, with total sector withdrawals reaching approximately $15B in 72 hours. Even #Solana protocols with no direct rsETH exposure were hit.

$606M was stolen across 12 exploits in 18 days. #Drift ($285M on April 1st) and KelpDAO ($292M on April 18th) made up 95% of losses, with both linked to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. It marks the worst month since the Bybit hack in February 2025.
Kelp/Aave's Latest $200 Million HackThe concept of "decentralized finance" is popular in the crypt – this is when you can profitably invest your tokens using smart contracts, without unnecessary human involvement. It sounds cool, convenient and reliable – but, as usual, there is a nuance. Sometimes IT people from North Korea get involved: last weekend there was just another "incident"... Sometimes I think it's worth investing in decentralized finance protocols to make money from it. But I usually come to the conclusion "these few percent additional returns for me personally do not cover the risk that the smart contracts of these protocols will be hacked." They usually tell me, "so you just use the largest and most reliable DeFi protocols with audited contracts, and that's it!!" Here I can only shrug my shoulders. So, the other day, North Korean hackers broke another protocol. And I want to give you some context so that you can fully experience the enchanting spirit of defai! If you remember, in 2022, the Ethereum blockchain moved from the concept of Proof of Work (like bitcoin, when everyone has to mine new coins together) to Proof of Stake, when the security of the entire system is provided by dudes who have trapped their ether (ETH), and receive a small reward for it. But for cryptans, these measly 3% annual returns from staking ether are not even funny, some kind of monkey tears. Therefore, they came up with a clever way to force the ether, which has already been blocked once, to additionally "smoke" on the side, ensuring the safe functioning of other protocols (for money, of course). This nipple system is called EigenLayer. However, double returns on the same coins will not be enough for cryptans either! That's why they came up with such a thing as "liquid restaking": you bring your ETH to a special Kelp protocol, they stake it for you on Ethereum (the money starts dripping once), restake it using EigenLayer (the money drips twice), and to top it off, they also issue a special rsETH–type token, a receipt "we confirm we have a real steamed ETH here, and we are ready, if necessary, to give it to the holder of this token." Well, the final cherry on the cake: proudly holding this rsETH receipt in their hands, the cryptans went to Aave - this is one of the largest and most famous protocols for issuing loans in the crypt (secured by another crypt). So, on Aave, it was possible to leave these very rsETH tokens as collateral, and borrow some USDC stablecoins, for example, against their security. "What are we going to do with these USDC's?" – I anticipate your question. Well, are you completely without imagination, or what? Think like a cryptan: with this money, you can buy new ETH, take them to Kelp for liquid restaking, get new rsETH in return... In short, I hope you get the idea. Well, now let's get closer to the topic of hacking: the ecosystem of decentralized finance has spawned a bunch of different networks: Polygon, Arbitrum, BSC, etc. And everyone wants to be able to seamlessly transfer their tokens between these different networks. Special "bridges" are used for this purpose: they block cryptan tokens in their native network, and in return they issue a new "mirror" token already on the desired network. Yes, in fact, this is the same principle with "authentication receipts". So, last Sunday, one such bridge was hacked using LayerZero technology, which was used by the Kelp protocol. North Korean hackers have come up with a clever way to create almost $300 million of fake rsETH tokens out of thin air – that is, those that were not backed by real ETH tokens frozen in the bridge. Then they quickly transferred them to the Aave cryptobank as collateral, and took out $200 million in their pocket in the form of real ETH ether. And now there is a real howl on Twitter from all the participants in the process. Aave shouts, "our smart contracts worked as they should, it was you who allowed some counterfeit crap to be printed there at Kelp!". Kelp's response is to yell, "we have nothing to do with it, we hacked the bridge using LayerZero technology!!" LayerZero makes a muzzle with a hoe and issues a press release in the style of "our technology is infallible, it's just that the handlers from Kelp couldn't set everything up properly." But in the end, a hole of two hundred lakhs of dollars remained hanging inside the Aave balance sheet - and they are all scratching the turnip together on the subject of "whose money will have to plug it"? So everyone who came up with the idea of "securely placing their crypt to generate income in the largest DeFi protocol" decided to abruptly take it back into their pocket, just in case - because, well, how will they decide to fatten all depositors a little bit, for a common cause? As a result, approximately $8 billion was withdrawn from Aave in a day, which is a third of the entire crypt that was there. And the fact that not everyone succeeded.: in a number of pools, tokens just stupidly ran out at the moment. It turns out that the cryptans thought that they were putting money into profitable secured smart contracts with the ability to take them away at any time, but in fact it turned out "it won't work right now, alas, - well, we're also discussing with the guys whether to take part of your crypt to plug a common hole..." That's the way things are, so I'm not going to invest in deffi yet. $AAVE #Hack #KelpDAO

Kelp/Aave's Latest $200 Million Hack

The concept of "decentralized finance" is popular in the crypt – this is when you can profitably invest your tokens using smart contracts, without unnecessary human involvement. It sounds cool, convenient and reliable – but, as usual, there is a nuance.

Sometimes IT people from North Korea get involved: last weekend there was just another "incident"... Sometimes I think it's worth investing in decentralized finance protocols to make money from it. But I usually come to the conclusion "these few percent additional returns for me personally do not cover the risk that the smart contracts of these protocols will be hacked." They usually tell me, "so you just use the largest and most reliable DeFi protocols with audited contracts, and that's it!!" Here I can only shrug my shoulders.
So, the other day, North Korean hackers broke another protocol. And I want to give you some context so that you can fully experience the enchanting spirit of defai! If you remember, in 2022, the Ethereum blockchain moved from the concept of Proof of Work (like bitcoin, when everyone has to mine new coins together) to Proof of Stake, when the security of the entire system is provided by dudes who have trapped their ether (ETH), and receive a small reward for it.

But for cryptans, these measly 3% annual returns from staking ether are not even funny, some kind of monkey tears. Therefore, they came up with a clever way to force the ether, which has already been blocked once, to additionally "smoke" on the side, ensuring the safe functioning of other protocols (for money, of course). This nipple system is called EigenLayer.
However, double returns on the same coins will not be enough for cryptans either! That's why they came up with such a thing as "liquid restaking": you bring your ETH to a special Kelp protocol, they stake it for you on Ethereum (the money starts dripping once), restake it using EigenLayer (the money drips twice), and to top it off, they also issue a special rsETH–type token, a receipt "we confirm we have a real steamed ETH here, and we are ready, if necessary, to give it to the holder of this token."
Well, the final cherry on the cake: proudly holding this rsETH receipt in their hands, the cryptans went to Aave - this is one of the largest and most famous protocols for issuing loans in the crypt (secured by another crypt). So, on Aave, it was possible to leave these very rsETH tokens as collateral, and borrow some USDC stablecoins, for example, against their security.
"What are we going to do with these USDC's?" – I anticipate your question. Well, are you completely without imagination, or what? Think like a cryptan: with this money, you can buy new ETH, take them to Kelp for liquid restaking, get new rsETH in return... In short, I hope you get the idea.

Well, now let's get closer to the topic of hacking: the ecosystem of decentralized finance has spawned a bunch of different networks: Polygon, Arbitrum, BSC, etc. And everyone wants to be able to seamlessly transfer their tokens between these different networks. Special "bridges" are used for this purpose: they block cryptan tokens in their native network, and in return they issue a new "mirror" token already on the desired network. Yes, in fact, this is the same principle with "authentication receipts".
So, last Sunday, one such bridge was hacked using LayerZero technology, which was used by the Kelp protocol. North Korean hackers have come up with a clever way to create almost $300 million of fake rsETH tokens out of thin air – that is, those that were not backed by real ETH tokens frozen in the bridge. Then they quickly transferred them to the Aave cryptobank as collateral, and took out $200 million in their pocket in the form of real ETH ether.
And now there is a real howl on Twitter from all the participants in the process. Aave shouts, "our smart contracts worked as they should, it was you who allowed some counterfeit crap to be printed there at Kelp!". Kelp's response is to yell, "we have nothing to do with it, we hacked the bridge using LayerZero technology!!" LayerZero makes a muzzle with a hoe and issues a press release in the style of "our technology is infallible, it's just that the handlers from Kelp couldn't set everything up properly."
But in the end, a hole of two hundred lakhs of dollars remained hanging inside the Aave balance sheet - and they are all scratching the turnip together on the subject of "whose money will have to plug it"? So everyone who came up with the idea of "securely placing their crypt to generate income in the largest DeFi protocol" decided to abruptly take it back into their pocket, just in case - because, well, how will they decide to fatten all depositors a little bit, for a common cause?

As a result, approximately $8 billion was withdrawn from Aave in a day, which is a third of the entire crypt that was there. And the fact that not everyone succeeded.: in a number of pools, tokens just stupidly ran out at the moment. It turns out that the cryptans thought that they were putting money into profitable secured smart contracts with the ability to take them away at any time, but in fact it turned out "it won't work right now, alas, - well, we're also discussing with the guys whether to take part of your crypt to plug a common hole..."
That's the way things are, so I'm not going to invest in deffi yet.
$AAVE #Hack #KelpDAO
Something just broke in DeFi's credit market. And most people haven't noticed yet. Aave's stablecoin borrow rates just 4x'd overnight. USDT and USDC went from 3.4% to 14% in hours. That's not a market move. That's a panic signal. Here's what actually happened. Kelp DAO's rsETH got exploited on April 19. The moment word spread, liquidity providers did what they always do in a crisis: They ran. Massive withdrawals hit Aave V3 simultaneously. Utilization rates spiked. And Aave's rate algorithm did exactly what it was designed to do — it made borrowing expensive to protect the protocol. The mechanism worked. But the aftermath is the real story. 14% borrow rates means leveraged positions across DeFi are bleeding. Anyone using stablecoins as cheap fuel for yield strategies just got margin-called by the protocol itself. And the contagion risk doesn't stop at Aave. rsETH is collateral across multiple platforms. One exploit. One liquidity exodus. One rate spike. Now watch how many protocols quietly have rsETH exposure they haven't disclosed. The Kelp DAO hack wasn't just an attack on one protocol. It was a stress test for all of DeFi. And DeFi just showed its cracks. #Aave #DeFi #KelpDAO #Crypto #Stablecoins
Something just broke in DeFi's credit market. And most people haven't noticed yet.

Aave's stablecoin borrow rates just 4x'd overnight.

USDT and USDC went from 3.4% to 14% in hours.

That's not a market move. That's a panic signal.

Here's what actually happened.

Kelp DAO's rsETH got exploited on April 19.

The moment word spread, liquidity providers did what they always do in a crisis:

They ran.

Massive withdrawals hit Aave V3 simultaneously.

Utilization rates spiked.

And Aave's rate algorithm did exactly what it was designed to do — it made borrowing expensive to protect the protocol.

The mechanism worked. But the aftermath is the real story.

14% borrow rates means leveraged positions across DeFi are bleeding.

Anyone using stablecoins as cheap fuel for yield strategies just got margin-called by the protocol itself.

And the contagion risk doesn't stop at Aave.

rsETH is collateral across multiple platforms.

One exploit. One liquidity exodus. One rate spike.

Now watch how many protocols quietly have rsETH exposure they haven't disclosed.

The Kelp DAO hack wasn't just an attack on one protocol.

It was a stress test for all of DeFi.

And DeFi just showed its cracks.

#Aave #DeFi #KelpDAO #Crypto #Stablecoins
#kelpdaoexploitfreeze On April 18, 2026, KelpDAO was hit by a massive exploit. A flaw in its rsETH bridge allowed attackers to mint unbacked tokens and drain $292M in assets. ⚡ Just two days later, Arbitrum’s Security Council took an unprecedented step: freezing 30,766 ETH (~$71M) from the exploiter’s wallet. This marks the first time a Layer‑2 intervened at protocol level to lock stolen funds. 🕵️‍♂️ Investigators suspect the Lazarus Group of North Korea, infamous for targeting DeFi protocols. Law enforcement agencies are now involved, raising questions about how “decentralized” DeFi really is when centralized freezes can occur. 📉 Fallout: rsETH halted across DeFi platforms. Aave exposed to potential bad debt of $124M–$230M. Investor confidence in restaking projects shaken. ⚖️ Bigger picture: This isn’t just another hack. It’s a test of DeFi’s core values. Can we still claim “code is law” when governance councils can blacklist wallets and freeze billions? Or is this the new reality of crypto security? #WPO_REPORT #Arbitrum #KelpDAO
#kelpdaoexploitfreeze
On April 18, 2026, KelpDAO was hit by a massive exploit. A flaw in its rsETH bridge allowed attackers to mint unbacked tokens and drain $292M in assets.
⚡ Just two days later, Arbitrum’s Security Council took an unprecedented step: freezing 30,766 ETH (~$71M) from the exploiter’s wallet. This marks the first time a Layer‑2 intervened at protocol level to lock stolen funds.
🕵️‍♂️ Investigators suspect the Lazarus Group of North Korea, infamous for targeting DeFi protocols. Law enforcement agencies are now involved, raising questions about how “decentralized” DeFi really is when centralized freezes can occur.
📉 Fallout:
rsETH halted across DeFi platforms.
Aave exposed to potential bad debt of $124M–$230M.
Investor confidence in restaking projects shaken.
⚖️ Bigger picture:
This isn’t just another hack. It’s a test of DeFi’s core values. Can we still claim “code is law” when governance councils can blacklist wallets and freeze billions? Or is this the new reality of crypto security?
#WPO_REPORT #Arbitrum #KelpDAO
$KELP gets a lifeline as Arbitrum locks the hacker’s exit 🛡️ Arbitrum’s security council freezing the stolen ETH and BTC changes the whole setup: the escape route is closed, and the odds of recovery just improved. With SEAL 911 now involved and an $800M swap spike still printing, the market is showing real liquidity depth, not panic. That’s the kind of flow whales watch when a protocol starts breathing again. Not financial advice. Manage your risk and protect your capital. #Crypto #DeFi #ARBİTRUM #KelpDAO #Web3 🚀
$KELP gets a lifeline as Arbitrum locks the hacker’s exit 🛡️

Arbitrum’s security council freezing the stolen ETH and BTC changes the whole setup: the escape route is closed, and the odds of recovery just improved. With SEAL 911 now involved and an $800M swap spike still printing, the market is showing real liquidity depth, not panic. That’s the kind of flow whales watch when a protocol starts breathing again.

Not financial advice. Manage your risk and protect your capital.

#Crypto #DeFi #ARBİTRUM #KelpDAO #Web3

🚀
KelpDAO exploit turns $KELPDAO into the market’s latest bridge stress test ⚠️ Hackers used THORChain to move stolen $ETH into $BTC, and that kind of flow tells you where liquidity is still reachable and where it’s getting defensive. With $75M frozen on Arbitrum and most of the $292M loss still missing, the market may start repricing bridge risk fast as cross-chain confidence takes a hit. Not financial advice. Manage your risk and protect your capital. #DeFi #CryptoSecurity #ARBİTRUM #ThorchainSuccess #KelpDAO ◉ {future}(BTCUSDT)
KelpDAO exploit turns $KELPDAO into the market’s latest bridge stress test ⚠️

Hackers used THORChain to move stolen $ETH into $BTC, and that kind of flow tells you where liquidity is still reachable and where it’s getting defensive. With $75M frozen on Arbitrum and most of the $292M loss still missing, the market may start repricing bridge risk fast as cross-chain confidence takes a hit.

Not financial advice. Manage your risk and protect your capital.

#DeFi #CryptoSecurity #ARBİTRUM #ThorchainSuccess #KelpDAO

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Major Security Incident: DeFi protocol KelpDAO suffered a significant hack. The attacker converted stolen ETH into BTC, injecting ~$211M into the market. This caused a $15B liquidity outflow from Aave, though the founder says they've since recovered $70M . $BTC $ETH $AAVE #KelpDAO #DAO
Major Security Incident:

DeFi protocol KelpDAO suffered a significant hack. The attacker converted stolen ETH into BTC, injecting ~$211M into the market. This caused a $15B liquidity outflow from Aave, though the founder says they've since recovered $70M .
$BTC $ETH $AAVE
#KelpDAO
#DAO
#KelpDAOExploitFreeze My thoughts on This is one of the biggest DeFi exploits of 2026 so far — around $290–293 million in rs $ETH was drained through a bridge vulnerability (related to LayerZero).What’s worrying is how fast it affected the wider ecosystem. Aave had to freeze rs $ETH ETH markets, and even Arbitrum stepped in to freeze some of the stolen ETH.It again shows how dangerous bridge exploits and single-point failures can be in DeFi. One weak link and millions can disappear in minutes.On the positive side, the quick response from KelpDAO (pausing contracts) and Arbitrum (freezing funds) helped limit further damage.This incident is a strong reminder for all of us:Always be extra careful with bridges and cross-chain protocols Diversify risk Never put money you can’t afford to lose What do you guys think? Is this going to shake confidence in liquid restaking protocols like KelpDAO? Or do you see it as just another security lesson for the space?#KelpDAO #DeFi #ETH
#KelpDAOExploitFreeze
My thoughts on This is one of the biggest DeFi exploits of 2026 so far — around $290–293 million in rs $ETH was drained through a bridge vulnerability (related to LayerZero).What’s worrying is how fast it affected the wider ecosystem. Aave had to freeze rs $ETH ETH markets, and even Arbitrum stepped in to freeze some of the stolen ETH.It again shows how dangerous bridge exploits and single-point failures can be in DeFi. One weak link and millions can disappear in minutes.On the positive side, the quick response from KelpDAO (pausing contracts) and Arbitrum (freezing funds) helped limit further damage.This incident is a strong reminder for all of us:Always be extra careful with bridges and cross-chain protocols
Diversify risk
Never put money you can’t afford to lose

What do you guys think?
Is this going to shake confidence in liquid restaking protocols like KelpDAO? Or do you see it as just another security lesson for the space?#KelpDAO #DeFi #ETH
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Bullish
$1.5B didn’t disappear… it rotated. 👀 $AAVE just got hit: -2.68% TVL in 24h -39.35% in 7 days That’s not panic. That’s smart money relocating. 🚪 #KelpDAO exploit → utilization spikes → borrow rates go crazy. Big players don’t sit and pray. They move fast. And guess where it landed? $SPK ⚡ While others were bleeding… @sparkdotfi quietly pulled +6.59% TVL in the same window. No hype. No noise. Just capital choosing safety + yield. This is how winners are made in #defi : Not tweets. Not narratives. Liquidity. And right now? Liquidity is whispering #Spark . 👀 Aave still sits at $15.9B… But dominance doesn’t fall in one day. It shifts… slowly… then all at once. ⚡ Early eyes = early entries. You watching… or you rotating? 🫵 {spot}(SPKUSDT) {spot}(AAVEUSDT)
$1.5B didn’t disappear… it rotated. 👀

$AAVE just got hit: -2.68% TVL in 24h -39.35% in 7 days

That’s not panic. That’s smart money relocating. 🚪

#KelpDAO exploit → utilization spikes → borrow rates go crazy.

Big players don’t sit and pray.

They move fast.

And guess where it landed?

$SPK

While others were bleeding… @Spark Official quietly pulled +6.59% TVL in the same window.

No hype. No noise.

Just capital choosing safety + yield.

This is how winners are made in #defi :

Not tweets.
Not narratives.
Liquidity.

And right now?
Liquidity is whispering #Spark . 👀

Aave still sits at $15.9B…
But dominance doesn’t fall in one day.
It shifts… slowly… then all at once. ⚡

Early eyes = early entries.
You watching… or you rotating? 🫵
$292M GONE: THE DEFI CONTAGION 🚨 The KelpDAO exploit is officially the largest DeFi theft of 2026. Hackers are using THORChain to swap stolen $ETH for $BTC , leaving a massive trail of chaos. Arbitrum froze $75M, but the rest is disappearing into the void. This isn't just one protocol—it’s a systemic failure. Are we witnessing the "Death of Interoperability"? Be careful where you deposit your assets! #KelpDAO #DeFiHack #Security #Alert #LazarusGroup
$292M GONE: THE DEFI CONTAGION 🚨

The KelpDAO exploit is officially the largest DeFi theft of 2026. Hackers are using THORChain to swap stolen $ETH for $BTC , leaving a massive trail of chaos. Arbitrum froze $75M, but the rest is disappearing into the void.

This isn't just one protocol—it’s a systemic failure. Are we witnessing the "Death of Interoperability"? Be careful where you deposit your assets!

#KelpDAO #DeFiHack #Security #Alert #LazarusGroup
KelpDAO’s exploit lit the fuse, and DeFi felt the blast. The attack drained about $293M in rsETH, but the real damage spread fast — Aave lost roughly $15B in supplied deposits as capital rushed for the exits. This was more than a hack. It was a stress test for trust, liquidity, and DeFi risk itself. #AAVE #KelpDAO #DeFiCrisis #crypto #rsETH
KelpDAO’s exploit lit the fuse, and DeFi felt the blast.

The attack drained about $293M in rsETH, but the real damage spread fast — Aave lost roughly $15B in supplied deposits as capital rushed for the exits. This was more than a hack. It was a stress test for trust, liquidity, and DeFi risk itself.

#AAVE #KelpDAO #DeFiCrisis #crypto #rsETH
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