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Aave TVL Plummets $10B Following KelpDAO Exploit, But DeFi Resilience Sparks Recovery Optimism

Aave TVL Plummets $10B Following KelpDAO Exploit, But DeFi Resilience Sparks Recovery Optimism

Cryptopolitan
Release Time:
2026-04-21 15:12:29
0

Aave's total value locked (TVL) has plunged by $10 billion in the wake of the KelpDAO exploit, yet crypto stakeholders are already signaling a defiant recovery stance. The DeFi community is rallying behind the leading lending protocol, arguing that 'DeFi learns through failures' and emerges stronger from each setback. In a swift response, Arbitrum's security council has frozen 30,776 ETH (worth approximately $71 million) from addresses linked to the $290 million exploit. This coordinated action, alongside historical precedents where crises turned into catalysts for improvement, is fueling growing optimism. On-chain analytics from Santiment indicate that negative sentiment around Aave has halted its descent to new lows following the Arbitrum intervention, suggesting the market may be pricing in a robust comeback narrative.

Aave will be fine: Stakeholders back DeFi to recover from KelpDAO crisis

Sentiment and price have started to improve since Arbitrum’s $71 million ETH recovery. Source; Santiment

Aave is currently trading at $93.59, up from its $80 bottom from April 20, while the TVL decline has started to flatten. 

Aave will be fine: Stakeholders back DeFi to recover from KelpDAO crisis

AAVE price has followed sentiment recovery. Source: CoinMarketCap

Aave receives backing to ride out the storm

Defillama’s founder continues to pontificate on how the KelpDAO impacts Aave, with his latest comments focusing on how Arbitrum manages the seized ETH tokens will affect how much bad debt Aave will deal with. 

According to the anonymous founder @0xngmi, Arbitrum has two options, where one completely solves its problems, and the other minimizes them. 

Option one: if Arbitrum prioritizes its Aave market, there will be virtually zero bad debt on Arbitrum if it socializes losses. 

In the other scenario, where it makes rsETH holders on L2s bear the losses by continuing to hold their now worthless tokens, Aave on Arbitrum bad debt will reduce from about $88 million to $17 million, an 80% reduction in its obligation.  

if they return to kelp and kelp adds it to the pool to cover losses the bad debt on arbitrum will be higher as well, as this recovered money will need to be split among all l2s

— 0xngmi (@0xngmi) April 21, 2026

The $71 million recovery gives Aave a lot of breathing room on the very difficult decisions that it faced, according to an April 19 analysis by the Defillama headman. 

For example, in the first case, where every rsETH holder is treated equally, whether they are on L1 or L2, everybody is automatically down 18.5% on their holdings, which is the amount of rsETH supply that was stolen before the Arbitrum ETH recovery.

Aave will be on the hook for about $216 million and will have to deplete its treasury and Umbrella fund, and maybe even liquidate tokens to cover those debts. 

The other scenario, where losses are localized to rsETH holders on L2s since that was where the exploit happened, would leave Aave with about $341 million bad debt on its $359 million exposure. The kicker here is that Aave’s Umbrella fund doesn’t cover all L2s, so it will have the discretion to choose which markets to save and which to allow to fail. 

Of course, that could lead to dissatisfaction and potential litigation. 

Dragonfly and Defillama execs back DeFi 

In another post, the Defillama founder called out the ignorance of those who believe the KelpDAO exploit will be the proverbial nail in DeFi’s coffin. 

The critical side of the aisle will point to recent large exploits that have spread contagion across protocols, including the $285 million loss by Drift Protocol, as well as the Truebit, Step Finance, and Resolv Labs incidents. 

However, according to 0xngmi, “DeFi is gonna take a hit, but it will not die,” insisting that Aave and other affected protocols are in “completely recoverable” positions with a little maneuver from protocol treasuries and loans. 

Cryptopolitan reported that Drift Protocol had struck a deal with Tether and other parties to relaunch its platform with about $150 million in backing. 

A day earlier, even before any recoveries were announced, managing partner at Dragonfly Haseeb Qureshi shared similar sentiments, backing DeFi to learn from its failures. 

In his words: “AAVE might take on some bad debt, but it has the equity to pay it.”

There’s a middle ground between leaving money in the bank and rolling the dice in crypto. Start with this free video on decentralized finance.

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