Gravity Bridge loses $5.4 million to on-chain hackers - Coinfea

Gravity Bridge has lost about $5.4 million to hackers in a new attack in the crypto industry. The cross-chain bridge connecting Ethereum and the Cosmos ecosystem suffered an attack, which on-chain analysts suspect was a contract key compromise.

The theft, which was flagged on May 30 by blockchain security firms PeckShieldAlert and Cyvers, continues a punishing stretch for cross-chain infrastructure. Bridges have repeatedly proven to be the most lucrative targets in DeFi, and Gravity Bridge is the latest to fall. The attacker siphoned four assets from the bridge’s Ethereum-side contract: $4.3 million in USDC, 274 ETH (worth roughly $553,000), $434,000 in USDT, and 14,164 PAYG tokens valued at about $64,000, according to PeckShieldAlert.

Gravity Bridge drained of $5.4M in the latest industry attack

On-chain analyst Specter, who was also among the first to report the incident, identified the suspected attack vector as a compromise of the bridge contract key or signing path. Two Ethereum addresses, “0x7B58…a1F9” and “0x4d3c…7A47,” have been linked to the theft, according to CryptoAdventure. PeckShieldAlert reported that a portion of the stolen funds had already been moved through ChangeNow and Binance.

According to PeckShieldAlert, the attacker still held roughly 2,102 ETH (approximately $4.23 million), so the bulk of the haul remains in the exploiter’s wallet as of the time of reporting. Cyvers confirmed the $5.4 million loss figure and said the stolen assets were swapped into native ETH. Gravity Bridge has not published a postmortem or public statement on the incident. The Gravity Bridge drain comes in a month already scarred by bridge attacks.

On May 18, the Verus-Ethereum bridge lost $11.5 million after a verification bypass exploit, according to DefiLlama’s hacks database. Analysts have pointed to the Verus incident as part of a growing string of cross-chain infrastructure exploits. Cryptopolitan also previously reported on the persistent vulnerability of bridge protocols, which handle large pools of locked assets across chains and present concentrated targets for attackers.

DefiLlama data shows that bridges account for $3.2 billion of the $16.6 billion in total value hacked across crypto history, a disproportionate share given how few bridge protocols exist relative to other DeFi categories. As of reporting time, Gravity Bridge held approximately $6.2 million in total value locked, according to DefiLlama. The $5.4 million drain represents nearly a big chunk of the bridge’s TVL, effectively sending the protocol’s stored value into a nosedive.

One community member noted the scale of remaining funds came as a surprise. “I had no idea there was even that much TVL left locked in the Gravity Bridge,” wrote Ed from AirdropGlideApp, questioning why users had not migrated to newer Cosmos bridging options. For now, users with funds on the protocol have no official guidance, as the platform has yet to confirm or share any update on the exploit. The remaining 2,102 ETH sits in a known address, giving exchanges and compliance teams a window to flag or freeze the funds before further laundering occurs.

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