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Kelp DAO Hacker Moves $175 Million In Ethereum, Begins Laundering – Here’s What You Need To Know

Kelp DAO Hacker Moves $175 Million In Ethereum, Begins Laundering – Here’s What You Need To Know

Bitcoinist
Author:
Bitcoinist
Release Time:
2026-04-22 02:00:40
0

A massive $292 million exploit targeting Kelp DAO's LayerZero bridge has escalated dramatically, with the attacker now actively laundering $175 million in stolen Ethereum. Arbitrum's Security Council moved to freeze $71 million of the funds on Tuesday, triggering an immediate response from the hacker and deepening a DeFi-wide confidence crisis. The breach, which drained 18% of rsETH's circulating supply, has left Aave V3 holding bad debt and forced an emergency pause of Kelp DAO's core contracts.

$175 Million Is Already Moving — and the Debate It Leaves Behind Is Just Beginning

Arkham data confirms what many feared once Arbitrum acted. The Kelp DAO hacker has already moved all 75,701 ETH — approximately $175 million — on Ethereum and has begun laundering the funds. The Arbitrum freeze succeeded in capturing $71 million. The remaining $175 million, the larger share by a considerable margin, is now in motion and being actively obscured.

Kelp DAO Hacker moves stolen ETH funds | Source: Arkham

The arithmetic is stark. A coordinated intervention by one of DeFi’s most capable security councils froze less than 30% of the stolen funds. The rest left anyway.

That outcome has ignited a debate that extends well beyond Kelp DAO and Aave. Arbitrum’s ability to freeze wallet addresses — even in response to a clear theft — has prompted immediate questions about what blockchain immutability actually means in practice, and who holds the authority to override it. For some, the freeze represents responsible crisis response from a mature ecosystem defending its users. For others, it represents precisely the kind of centralized intervention that decentralized infrastructure was designed to prevent.

Both arguments are being made loudly, and neither is entirely wrong.

What is not in dispute is the damage this attack has inflicted on DeFi’s broader credibility. The Kelp DAO exploit exposed collateral risk in lending protocols, triggered an $8.45 billion deposit exodus from Aave, sent AAVE down nearly 20%, and has now produced a philosophical confrontation about the limits of decentralization at the worst possible moment — when the ecosystem most needs to project confidence.

rsETH Market Cap Reflects Instability in Kelp DAO’s Restaking Layer

The market cap of rsETH — the liquid restaking token issued by Kelp DAO — is currently hovering near $1.3 billion after a sharp contraction that disrupted its prior recovery structure. The chart shows that rsETH reached peaks above $2 billion during earlier phases, but has since entered a volatile, downward-adjusting range, reflecting stress within the restaking ecosystem rather than organic market cycles.

RSETH market cap losing ground | Source: RSETH market cap chart on TradingView

The most recent move is particularly notable. After a brief recovery toward the $1.6 billion region, the market cap was rejected and fell aggressively back toward the $1.3 billion level. This type of rapid expansion followed by equally sharp contraction typically signals forced unwinds rather than discretionary capital rotation. In this context, that aligns with the exploit involving Kelp DAO’s rsETH bridge, which introduced systemic uncertainty around the asset.

From a structural perspective, rsETH is now trading below its key moving averages, with the 200-day trend flattening and beginning to roll over. That suggests the growth phase that defined its earlier expansion has stalled, at least temporarily.

Because rsETH represents collateral within broader DeFi systems — including lending protocols — its market cap is not just a valuation metric, but a proxy for trust. The current compression indicates that confidence has weakened, and until stability returns, the restaking layer remains vulnerable to further volatility.

Featured image from ChatGPT, chart from TradingView.com 

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