Aave Is Surrendering the Throne of DeFi Lending Due to Its Own Stupidity

Odaily星球日报Опубліковано о 2026-04-24Востаннє оновлено о 2026-04-24

Анотація

Aave, a leading DeFi lending protocol, is facing a severe crisis and losing its dominant market position due to its poor handling of a recent security incident. The crisis began when Kelp DAO suffered a hack resulting in a loss of $292 million in rsETH. In the aftermath, approximately $17.2 billion in funds flowed out of Aave as user panic escalated. The article criticizes Aave's crisis management as "extremely foolish." Instead of promptly offering reassurance or committing to cover the potential bad debt—estimated between $123.7 million and $230.1 million, which Aave could have afforded—the protocol initially deflected blame, emphasizing that its code was not at fault. This delay and lack of a clear guarantee led to widespread user anxiety, triggering a bank run-like scenario where users withdrew funds or borrowed aggressively from other pools, causing liquidity shortages. Meanwhile, Aave’s competitor Spark—a fork of Aave’s own code—has benefited significantly. Having removed support for rsETH months earlier, Spark avoided any losses from the incident and has since seen its TVL grow by nearly $2 billion, attracting major deposits such as over $1.24 billion from Justin Sun. Spark has actively capitalized on the situation, publicly criticizing Aave’s security reputation. Although Aave’s founder Stani eventually announced a relief plan named "DeFi United" with several partners and a personal donation, the damage to user trust and capital outflows may be irreversible. The ar...

Original | Odaily Planet Daily (@OdailyChina)

Author | Azuma (@azuma_eth)

$292 million, this is the total amount of rsETH funds stolen from Kelp DAO; $17.2 billion, this is the scale of funds that have flowed out of Aave since the incident.

Aave is watching as its extremely foolish crisis PR strategy allows community panic to ferment for several consecutive days, thereby losing its former biggest advantage in the lending track — hundreds of billions of dollars in deposited funds and the user perception label of "the safest DeFi".

  • Odaily Note: For background, please refer to "DeFi Hacked Again for $292 Million, Is Aave Not Safe Anymore?"; "The Tripartite Game Under the $290 Million Hole: Who Will Pay, Aave, L0, or Kelp?".

What Did Aave Do Wrong?

The details of the Kelp DAO hack incident need not be repeated. There's no point in blaming Aave for giving rsETH such a high LTV anymore. Here, I mainly want to discuss Aave's response strategy after the incident from the perspective of a long-term AAVE user.

First is the bad debt scale issue. Aave itself has done the math. Depending on the different handling of rsETH, there could be two possibilities for bad debt — If the stolen loss is written off from all circulating rsETH, it is expected to generate $123.7 million in bad debt; If the value of mainnet rsETH is protected, and the loss is fully accounted for in the mapped version of rsETH on Layer2, it is expected to generate $230.1 million in bad debt.

In either case, Aave has the financial strength to cover it with its Umbrella, DAO treasury, and team reserves. I understand that Aave is unwilling to pay this money itself and wants Kelp DAO, the main responsible party, and LayerZero, the secondary responsible party, to also contribute more. But the problem is, the other parties think the same way — "Aave is so rich, the situation is so awkward, surely they should bear more." Therefore, in the short term, it's difficult for these three parties to reach a consensus, meaning a solution that satisfies everyone is temporarily impossible.

But users cannot wait that long — Aave's yield levels have never been very competitive in the industry. Users who choose to deposit funds with Aave do so for its reputation, security, and liquidity. However, the current situation is that in the most critical days following the incident, Aave consistently failed to give users some kind of bottom-line guarantee promise, instead repeatedly emphasizing "our code is not the problem" and "Aave cannot control how rsETH is accounted for" to shift blame.

This is why panic continued to ferment within the community. Users tried every means to escape the risk, withdrawing directly if they could, or borrowing from other pools if they couldn't withdraw, causing the impact to gradually expand. So Aave's current situation is, on one hand, facing continuous fund outflows, and on the other hand, multiple pools are experiencing liquidity drying up due to utilization rates being maxed out.

This awkward situation could have been avoided (or at least not been this bad)...... Since Aave can afford the money, why not inject a dose of reassurance into the community from the start to prevent a bank run? At most, it's $230 million in bad debt (possibly less), and this money wouldn't necessarily be paid by Aave alone; they could negotiate with LayerZero and Kelp DAO later.

Now, it's done. For the sake of saving on a promise of relief worth at most $230 million, Aave watched as $17.2 billion in deposited funds flowed out (the number may continue to grow), and this doesn't even include the decline in the AAVE token price these days...... by any calculation, it's a disastrously bad deal.

What makes Aave even more uncomfortable is that the worse its situation becomes, the more relaxed opponents like LayerZero and Kelp DAO will be, because they will judge that Aave will be more motivated to solve the problem as soon as possible, which only puts Aave at a disadvantage in the博弈 (game theory).

Having reached this point, Aave has brought this upon itself.

Behind Aave, Spark Is Watching Closely

While Aave is suffering from headaches, the situation for its competitor Spark is booming and extremely positive. What's even more lamentable is that Spark is a competitor that Aave "personally incubated".

Spark was originally a lending protocol forked and developed by Sky (formerly MakerDAO) based on the open-source code of Aave V3. Both sides actually use the same underlying code logic. In return, there was once a profit-sharing agreement between Spark and Aave, but later Aave accused Spark of allegedly breaching the contract, and due to route differences, the two are now in a purely competitive relationship.

Three months before the Kelp DAO theft, Spark had just removed support for rsETH (for details, see "Different Fates on the Same Day: Aave Embraces rsETH and Loses Nearly $200M, Spark Exits Unscathed"). You can call it strategic conservatism, rigorous risk control, or even attribute it entirely to luck, but the result is that Spark was completely unaffected by this incident — on this point alone, Spark can brazenly attack Aave's former label of "safest DeFi".

Consequently, Spark became one of the safe havens for funds fleeing Aave. Since the incident, Spark's TVL has grown by nearly $2 billion (green part in the chart below). On the day of the incident, Justin Sun withdrew 53,665 ETH (worth $124 million) from Aave and subsequently deposited it into Spark. After further accumulation in recent days, the total deposit has reached $1.3 billion — In the DeFi world, Brother Sun's (Justin Sun) moves are really something to learn.

On April 23rd, Upbit officially announced the launch of the Spark (SPK) Korean Won trading market. SPK, stimulated by this positive news, surged over 80% in a single day, significantly narrowing the market capitalization gap with AAVE.

Even Wang Chun, founder of F2Pool, lamented on X: "In the past year, I received 83.7 million SPK rewards from Spark and sold them on CoWSwap for 663 ETH and $1.4 million. Now I kind of regret it."

Spark clearly realizes this is a perfect opportunity to seize market share from Aave's mouth. Since the incident, Spark's Strategy Lead, MonetSupply, has almost become the most vocal KOL on this matter, posting dozens of times a day. Although his comments do help the public understand what happened to some extent, they also objectively exacerbate the panic surrounding Aave.

But this is the purest form of commercial competition. MonetSupply simply made the most correct choice.

Aave Is Losing the Throne of DeFi Lending

In the early hours of April 24th, perhaps realizing the severity of the current situation, Aave founder Stani announced on X the launch of a relief plan called DeFi United. Participating collaborators include LayerZero, Ethena, ether.fi, Ink Foundation, Golem Foundation, Trydo, etc. Stani personally will also donate 5,000 ETH to help resolve the current issue.

But the funds have already flowed out, and user trust has been severely damaged. Relying solely on this belated statement, it will be difficult for Aave to quickly recover the deposited funds and user trust.

The DeFi lending track has long presented a "one superpower, many strong powers" pattern, with Aave一直以来 (yīzhí yǐlái - all along) having a seemingly extremely solid leading advantage. But now, Aave is surrendering the throne. Behind it, challengers are approaching menacingly. Besides the booming Spark, other opponents like Morpho and Jupiter Lend also hope to take a bite out of Aave's share.

Last year, Stani bought a five-story mansion in London for approximately $30 million, one of the most expensive transactions in the UK's sluggish luxury property market over the past year. I don't know if there's something like a "jinx," but following the examples of Su Zhu and others, it seems like big shots in the circle who consume conspicuously always run into some bad luck.

I can't guess what Stani is thinking right now in his five-story mansion.

Пов'язані питання

QWhat was the main reason for the massive outflow of funds from Aave following the Kelp DAO hack?

AAave's poor crisis management strategy, which failed to provide timely reassurance or a bailout guarantee to its users, leading to widespread panic and a bank run.

QWhat are the two potential bad debt scenarios calculated by Aave for the rsETH incident, and what are the amounts?

AIf the stolen loss is written off from all rsETH, the bad debt would be approximately $123.7 million. If the value of mainnet rsETH is protected and the loss is fully accounted for in the Layer2 mapped version of rsETH, the bad debt would be approximately $230.1 million.

QWhich competitor protocol directly benefited from the funds flowing out of Aave, and what was the approximate amount of TVL it gained?

ASpark Protocol directly benefited, gaining nearly $2 billion in Total Value Locked (TVL) following the incident.

QWhat was the name of the relief plan announced by Aave founder Stani Kulechov in response to the crisis, and what was his personal contribution?

AThe relief plan was named 'DeFi United'. Stani Kulechov personally donated 5,000 ETH to help resolve the situation.

QAccording to the article, what was the primary reason users traditionally deposited funds into Aave, given its uncompetitive yield rates?

AUsers primarily deposited funds into Aave due to its reputation for safety, security, and liquidity, not for competitive yield rates.

Пов'язані матеріали

Standing in the Light: A Comprehensive Guide to the Optical Module and CPO Supply Chain

"Standing in the Light: Understanding the Optical Module and CPO Industry Chain" This article analyzes the critical role of optical communication technology, specifically optical modules and Co-Packaged Optics (CPO), as the "nervous system" for modern AI data centers. With exponential growth in AI computational demands (e.g., NVIDIA's Vera Rubin architecture), traditional electrical interconnects using copper cables face severe bottlenecks in bandwidth, power consumption, and signal integrity over distance. The core function of an optical module is to act as a "translator," converting electrical signals from chips into optical signals for transmission over fiber (and vice-versa). Key internal components include lasers, modulators, photodetectors, drivers, and DSP chips. The industry is currently transitioning from 800G to 1.6T modules. However, the future lies in CPO. This next-generation technology integrates the optical engine directly with the switch ASIC/XPU on the same package substrate, drastically reducing power consumption (by ~3.5x according to NVIDIA), overcoming bandwidth density limits, and minimizing signal attenuation compared to traditional pluggable modules. Key challenges for CPO include advanced packaging capacity (dominated by TSMC), thermal management, repairability, and standardization. The article details the broader technology landscape, including Near-Packaged Optics (NPO, a pragmatic intermediate step), Linear-drive Pluggable Optics (LPO), Optical I/O (OIO for chip-level integration), and Optical Circuit Switches (OCS). A comprehensive CPO industry chain is mapped, highlighting shifting power dynamics: * **Architecture Definers:** NVIDIA, Broadcom, and Marvell now hold greater influence. * **Advanced Packaging & Manufacturing:** TSMC is central; Fabrinet is a key EMS player. * **Lasers ("The Heart"):** A strategic bottleneck. EML lasers are led by Lumentum and Coherent (both receiving major NVIDIA investments). CW lasers, favored for CPO/silicon photonics, see strong Chinese players like Source Photonics and Sicoya. * **Silicon Photonics Chips:** The mainstream path for CPO engines, with key players like Broadcom, Intel, Marvell, and China's Accelink. * **Fiber Connectivity Components:** A major new, high-growth market created by CPO, including Fiber Array Units (FAU), Polarization-Maintaining Fiber (PMF), and MPO connectors. Companies like Tianfu Communication and US Conec are leaders. * **Fiber & Cable:** Experiencing a super-cycle (e.g., Corning, Yangtze Optical Fiber). * **PCB/Substrates:** Requiring advanced materials (e.g., Shengyi Tech). * **DSP & SerDes:** Functions are integrated into switch ASICs in the CPO era (e.g., Broadcom, Astera Labs). * **Optical Module Makers:** Transitioning from standalone module suppliers to providers of optical engines and NPO/LPO solutions while riding the current pluggable boom (e.g., Zhongji Innolight, Eoptolink). The investment timeline is segmented: Short-term (2026-2027) features the "last feast" for pluggable modules and CPO's initial rollout. Medium-term (2027-2029) will see CPO expand and NPO peak. Long-term (2029-2032+) involves CPO/OIO penetration into intra-rack scaling. In conclusion, optical interconnects are fundamental to AI infrastructure. The competitive landscape sees US firms leading in architecture and high-end chips, TSMC in advanced packaging, and Chinese firms holding strong positions in modules, connectivity components, CW lasers, and fiber/cable. The future belongs to companies that can navigate the technological shift from "selling shovels" (modules) to "building highways" (CPO/OIO infrastructure).

marsbit8 хв тому

Standing in the Light: A Comprehensive Guide to the Optical Module and CPO Supply Chain

marsbit8 хв тому

Торгівля

Спот
Ф'ючерси

Популярні статті

Як купити AAVE

Ласкаво просимо до HTX.com! Ми зробили покупку Aave Protocol (AAVE) простою та зручною. Дотримуйтесь нашої покрокової інструкції, щоб розпочати свою криптовалютну подорож.Крок 1: Створіть обліковий запис на HTXВикористовуйте свою електронну пошту або номер телефону, щоб зареєструвати обліковий запис на HTX безплатно. Пройдіть безпроблемну реєстрацію й отримайте доступ до всіх функцій.ЗареєструватисьКрок 2: Перейдіть до розділу Купити крипту і виберіть спосіб оплатиКредитна/дебетова картка: використовуйте вашу картку Visa або Mastercard, щоб миттєво купити Aave Protocol (AAVE).Баланс: використовуйте кошти з балансу вашого рахунку HTX для безперешкодної торгівлі.Треті особи: ми додали популярні способи оплати, такі як Google Pay та Apple Pay, щоб підвищити зручність.P2P: Торгуйте безпосередньо з іншими користувачами на HTX.Позабіржова торгівля (OTC): ми пропонуємо індивідуальні послуги та конкурентні обмінні курси для трейдерів.Крок 3: Зберігайте свої Aave Protocol (AAVE)Після придбання Aave Protocol (AAVE) збережіть його у своєму обліковому записі на HTX. Крім того, ви можете відправити його в інше місце за допомогою блокчейн-переказу або використовувати його для торгівлі іншими криптовалютами.Крок 4: Торгівля Aave Protocol (AAVE)Легко торгуйте Aave Protocol (AAVE) на спотовому ринку HTX. Просто увійдіть до свого облікового запису, виберіть торгову пару, укладайте угоди та спостерігайте за ними в режимі реального часу. Ми пропонуємо зручний досвід як для початківців, так і для досвідчених трейдерів.

308 переглядів усьогоОпубліковано 2024.12.11Оновлено 2026.06.02

Як купити AAVE

Обговорення

Ласкаво просимо до спільноти HTX. Тут ви можете бути в курсі останніх подій розвитку платформи та отримати доступ до професійної ринкової інформації. Нижче представлені думки користувачів щодо ціни AAVE (AAVE).

活动图片