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Maker’s Spark and USDC Capture the $10B Aave Exodus - Crypto Economy
TL;DR:
Following the exploit of approximately $292 million that broke rsETH’s cross-chain backing, over $10 billion fled Aave in a disorderly exodus that had no single or organized destination.
According to data from DeFiLlama, the protocol’s total value locked fell around 40%, affected by market freezes, interrupted liquidations and forced deleveraging that pushed users to close positions and withdraw funds.

Spark, Maker’s New Safe Haven
The clearest beneficiary of the exodus was Spark, the protocol linked to Maker, whose TVL grew close to 10% thanks to the rotation of users who migrated toward an infrastructure backed by Sky‘s stablecoin reserves, valued at $6.5 billion. The preference for Spark stems from a search for stricter risk controls compared to open lending markets with exposure to complex collateral mechanisms.
Meanwhile, major liquid staking providers such as Lido maintained relative stability. Their level of resilience shows that users are not abandoning ETH exposure, but rather eliminating the risk layers associated with restaking, rehypothecation and cross-chain bridges — structures that the Kelp DAO exploit laid bare.

Other Destinations for Aave’s Capital
A third destination emerged in real-world asset protocols such as Centrifuge and Spiko, which offer exposure to tokenized instruments such as bonds and Treasury bills. This flow toward offchain yields signals that the market is prioritizing simplicity and predictability over high returns with structural risk.
However, not all the money that left Aave represents an active rotation of capital. Part of the decline is explained by loans that were canceled and positions that were closed, which mechanically reduces TVL without generating a new recordable destination. At the same time, a considerable portion of funds took shelter in USDC and other stablecoins, as some users prefer to wait on the sidelines before redeploying capital.
The result is a fragmented market that found no clear successor to Aave, but instead distributed lost confidence across simplicity, risk control and cash liquidity.