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$4.2 Billion Withdrawn from AAVE’s Money Market Protocol

source-logo  blockworks.co 29 October 2021 19:12, UTC

Concerns over the Cream Finance exploit that drained $130 million dollars from the DeFi protocol have spilled over to the number one blue-chip protocol, Aave. On Friday, a significant percentage of the assets deposited into Aave’s V2 money market protocol were withdrawn. 

Ethereum transaction logs indicate the wallets responsible are associated with Justin Sun, the founder of the Tron network, who removed billions of dollars worth of ETH, WBTC, USDC, USDT and TUSD. Collectively these funds represent about 18% of the protocol’s Total Value Locked (TVL), which now stands at $16.2 billion according to DefiLlama. Aave has now fallen to number three in the TVL rankings behind Curve Finance and MakerDAO.

Justin Sun did not immediately return Blockworks’ request for comment, but discussion of the sudden withdrawal has been rampant on the Aave Discord chat group, where members of the community voiced concerns over the safety of the protocol in the wake of the Cream Finance exploit.

According to Aave’s official Twitter feed, the concern stems from the use of xSUSHI (representing staked Shushi governance tokens) as collateral in Aave, which may be subject to a similar price manipulation exploit that befell Cream Finance. According to Gauntlet Network, a major holder of DeFi governance tokens including AAVE, the any potential vulnerability cannot be profitably exploited, which should come as some relief to concerned depositers.

In an effort to address the community concerns, Gauntlet put forward an Aave governance proposal, “to disable borrowing of $xSUSHI, $DPI, and the LP tokens on the AMM market to mitigate the potential of any future risks.”

The proposal cannot be executed until late Sunday, and currently, the vote is virtually unanimous in favor of adoption.

If, as Gauntlet’s research indicates, the risk of an exploit is small, the question remains: Why did Justin Sun remove his copious assets?

In the wake of the withdrawal, stablecoins — particularly USDT — are in short supply, and both utilization rates and, consequently, the yields being charged borrowers have skyrocketed. It currently costs nearly 80% annualized to borrow USDT on Aave’s V2 Ethereum market.

This is a developing story.

blockworks.co