#AaveLaunchesrsETHRecoveryPlan Aave did something DeFi had never seen before on this scale: it risked its own treasury to fix someone else's bridge deficit.
On April 18th, an attacker exploited Kelp's LayerZero V2 bridge, generating 116,500 rsETH from thin air. This fake rsETH was transferred to Aave V3 as collateral in Ethereum, Arbitrum, and Base. The result: Aave's WETH markets accumulated between $123 million and $230 million in bad debt, and rsETH experienced a sharp decline in value.
Aave's response wasn't to pause and point fingers. It was to lead.
The plan, in numbers:
Aave DAO offered 25,000 ETH from its own treasury (approximately $58 million at current prices) to close the gap.
DeFi United, a coalition initiated by Aave, aims for a total of 100,000 ETH. Lido pledged 2,500 stETH, Mantle opened a 30,000 ETH loan facility, Frax, EtherFi, and others joined in.
Aave, Kelp, and LayerZero jointly applied to Arbitrum DAO to release 30,765 ETH ($71 million) frozen on the bridge. The funds will go to the 2-of-3 multi-signature, which is used solely to restore rsETH support.
Total deficit to be closed: approximately 75,081 ETH. With Aave's over 25,000 partners, they are currently about 80% funded.
Why this is important and why it caught my attention:
This is the first instance of a leading protocol voluntarily publicizing a cross-protocol loss. In 2022, everyone allowed the victims to accept it. In 2026, Aave says, "Our TVL is our reputation."
rsETH isn't a meme token. It's a fundamental LRT (Long-Term) token used as collateral by thousands. If it had failed, the contagion would have spread to EigenLayer, Pendle, and every restructuring vault. Aave stopped this domino effect.
They froze rsETH markets within hours, adjusted WETH rates, and contained the damage. There was no exploit in the Aave code – the bug was in Kelp's bridge – but Aave still stepped in.
My current strategy:
A treasury spending of 25,000 ETH seems large, but Aave DAO has over 300,000 ETH equivalent assets. This means allocating 8% of the treasury to protect 100% of the trust. This is a good capital allocation.
I'm watching the Arbitrum DAO vote on the 30,765 ETH release. If it passes, rsETH will be completely restructured. If it fails, expect short-term fluctuations.
I won't touch rsETH until multi-signature full support is confirmed. Recovery moves are for governance, not retail leverage.
#AaveLaunchesrsETHRecoveryPlan isn't about charity. It's about DeFi growth. In traditional finance, central banks support banks. In DeFi, the largest protocol ecosystem supported it.
These kinds of signals make me increase my exposure rather than decrease it.
Do you see this as Aave weakening its treasury or strengthening its stronghold?
🔹 Personal analysis only. Not financial advice. Manage your own risk.
On April 18th, an attacker exploited Kelp's LayerZero V2 bridge, generating 116,500 rsETH from thin air. This fake rsETH was transferred to Aave V3 as collateral in Ethereum, Arbitrum, and Base. The result: Aave's WETH markets accumulated between $123 million and $230 million in bad debt, and rsETH experienced a sharp decline in value.
Aave's response wasn't to pause and point fingers. It was to lead.
The plan, in numbers:
Aave DAO offered 25,000 ETH from its own treasury (approximately $58 million at current prices) to close the gap.
DeFi United, a coalition initiated by Aave, aims for a total of 100,000 ETH. Lido pledged 2,500 stETH, Mantle opened a 30,000 ETH loan facility, Frax, EtherFi, and others joined in.
Aave, Kelp, and LayerZero jointly applied to Arbitrum DAO to release 30,765 ETH ($71 million) frozen on the bridge. The funds will go to the 2-of-3 multi-signature, which is used solely to restore rsETH support.
Total deficit to be closed: approximately 75,081 ETH. With Aave's over 25,000 partners, they are currently about 80% funded.
Why this is important and why it caught my attention:
This is the first instance of a leading protocol voluntarily publicizing a cross-protocol loss. In 2022, everyone allowed the victims to accept it. In 2026, Aave says, "Our TVL is our reputation."
rsETH isn't a meme token. It's a fundamental LRT (Long-Term) token used as collateral by thousands. If it had failed, the contagion would have spread to EigenLayer, Pendle, and every restructuring vault. Aave stopped this domino effect.
They froze rsETH markets within hours, adjusted WETH rates, and contained the damage. There was no exploit in the Aave code – the bug was in Kelp's bridge – but Aave still stepped in.
My current strategy:
A treasury spending of 25,000 ETH seems large, but Aave DAO has over 300,000 ETH equivalent assets. This means allocating 8% of the treasury to protect 100% of the trust. This is a good capital allocation.
I'm watching the Arbitrum DAO vote on the 30,765 ETH release. If it passes, rsETH will be completely restructured. If it fails, expect short-term fluctuations.
I won't touch rsETH until multi-signature full support is confirmed. Recovery moves are for governance, not retail leverage.
#AaveLaunchesrsETHRecoveryPlan isn't about charity. It's about DeFi growth. In traditional finance, central banks support banks. In DeFi, the largest protocol ecosystem supported it.
These kinds of signals make me increase my exposure rather than decrease it.
Do you see this as Aave weakening its treasury or strengthening its stronghold?
🔹 Personal analysis only. Not financial advice. Manage your own risk.



























