Aave, one of the largest decentralized lending platforms in DeFi, is facing a serious liquidity crisis after a hack on a separate protocol triggered a chain reaction that froze its core markets.
AAVE Price
The trouble started on April 18, when attackers exploited a vulnerability in a LayerZero V2 bridge between Unichain and Ethereum. This allowed them to drain around $293 million worth of rsETH from Kelp DAO without burning the corresponding tokens on the source chain.
Those stolen tokens were then deposited into Aave V3 as collateral. The attacker used them to borrow nearly $200 million in WETH. When news spread of the unbacked collateral, users began pulling funds fast.
Over $6.6 billion left Aave in under 24 hours. Major players including Justin Sun and the MEXC exchange were among those pulling large sums. The ETH market hit 100% utilization first, then the USDT and USDC pools followed.
At 100% utilization, a lending protocol has no available liquidity. That means users cannot withdraw, and the system cannot process liquidations.
Natalie Newson, a senior blockchain security researcher at CertiK, said the situation puts Aave in serious trouble.
Aave’s governance body acted quickly — freezing rsETH reserves, setting loan-to-value ratios to zero, and adjusting interest rates. But the damage to TVL was already done.
AmberCN reported on April 22 that total outflows from Aave over three and a half days reached $15.1 billion. TVL dropped from $48.5 billion to $30.7 billion.
Source: DefiLlama
Morpho also saw $1.5 billion leave. SparkLend, by contrast, gained $1.3 billion in fresh deposits — with some funds believed to come from the same whales that exited Aave.
Aave’s on-chain revenue fell from $1.1 million in early February to $625,000 as of Monday.
The AAVE token trades at around $91.22, sitting just above the key support level at $90.47. Resistance sits at the 20-day EMA near $98.80.
The post Aave (AAVE) Price: $15 Billion Exits Protocol After KelpDAO Hack Freezes Markets appeared first on CoinCentral.

