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#rsETHAttackUpdate **#rsETHAttackUpdate: DeFi United Rallies to Recover From $292M Kelp DAO Bridge Exploit
[City, Date] –** The hashtag has become the central hub for real-time developments following the April 18, 2026, exploit of Kelp DAO’s rsETH bridge. What began as a single-vector attack—netting approximately 116,500 rsETH (worth ~$292 million)—has evolved into a systemic test for DeFi’s interconnected lending and restaking ecosystem . However, as the community enters the second week of recovery, a coordinated "DeFi United" effort is successfully closing the gap.
The Anatomy of the Attack
The exploit occurred at 17:35 UTC on April 18, targeting Kelp DAO’s LayerZero V2 bridge. An attacker forged a cross-chain message, exploiting a 1-of-1 verifier configuration to mint unbacked rsETH without burning tokens on the source chain . Within 46 minutes, the attacker drained the adapter, fanning the stolen collateral across seven addresses to borrow roughly 82,650 WETH and 821 wstETH from lending protocols like Aave V3 .
Kelp DAO paused contracts at 18:21 UTC, but the damage had already triggered a cascade of frozen markets and liquidity crunches .
Rapid Response & Recovery (The Numbers)
Initial estimates placed the backing shortfall at approximately 163,183 ETH. Through a combination of on-chain forensics, governance intervention, and institutional pledges, that gap has been reduced by over 54% .
Key recovery milestones include:
· Arbitrum Security Council Freeze: In a historic move for a Stage 1 L2, the council utilized an emergency upgrade to freeze and transfer 30,766 ETH (~$71 million) directly from the hacker’s wallet on Arbitrum One on April 20 .
· KelpDAO Recovery: The protocol successfully froze 40,373 rsETH (approx. 43,168 ETH) .
· Liquidations: The hacker’s positions on Aave and Compound are expected to return an additional ~14,168 WETH to the treasury .
· Lido’s Buffer: While Lido confirmed that 9% of its EarnETH vault is exposed to rsETH, the DAO has a $3 million first-loss protection mechanism ready. Core stETH and wstETH products remain "safe and stable" .
Aave DAO’s 25K ETH Proposal
The centerpiece of the narrative is the proposed injection by the Aave DAO. On April 24, service providers proposed sending 25,000 ETH from the DAO treasury to the "DeFi United" recovery fund. This is designed to fill the remaining bad debt and restore full backing for rsETH .
This proposal is part of a larger funding stack that includes:
· Pledges: Lido, EtherFi, and individual leaders (including Stani Kulechov) have committed ~14,570 ETH .
· Credit Facility: Mantle has offered up to 30,000 ETH .
If approved, the DAO injection will cover the majority of the estimated ~75,000 ETH residual gap .
Systemic Debate: The 2008 Parallell
Beyond the numbers, has sparked intense philosophical debate regarding DeFi risk. Analysts have compared the exploit to the 2008 financial crisis, arguing that "stacking asset layers does not remove risk; it compresses and hides it" .
The controversy is further fueled by Arbitrum’s intervention. While many praised the move as necessary "surgery" to protect users, critics argue it proves L2s are not truly decentralized, referring to them as "multi-sig wallets" capable of freezing funds at will .
What Comes Next?
As the industry watches the Aave DAO vote, the primary conditions for full resolution include:
1. Restoration of the LayerZero bridge functionality
2. Reopening of withdrawals by Kelp
3. Final allocation of the frozen Arbitrum ETH
For now, the thread remains a testament to DeFi’s fragility—and its resilience. As one ecosystem contributor noted, "Recovery is not just about closing the ETH gap; it’s about proving that decentralized governance can handle a crisis of confidence."
Stay tuned for further updates as the DAO votes and final recovery figures are confirmed.