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Trader loses $50 million in slippage incident on Aave, sparking debate over DeFi safeguards

  • A trader lost nearly $50 million on Aave after a massive swap suffered more than 99% slippage due to low liquidity.
  • Aave founder Stani Kulechov said the protocol would initiate a $600,000 fee refund to the affected trader.
  • The incident sparked debate from top crypto voices about the need for stronger safeguards in decentralized finance platforms.

A massive trade on the decentralized finance (DeFi) lending protocol Aave (AAVE) has triggered debate across the crypto industry after a user lost nearly $50 million in a single transaction due to extreme slippage.

An anonymous trader attempted to swap $50.4 million worth of aEthUSDT for AAVE governance tokens via the protocol's mobile application late Thursday.

Trader loses millions after massive swap hits low Aave liquidity pool

The trade was routed through CoW Swap, a decentralized trading aggregator that searches multiple liquidity pools for optimal pricing. However, because the order size far exceeded available liquidity in some pools, the transaction was partially executed through a shallow pool on SushiSwap.

As a result, the trade suffered extreme slippage of over 99%, leaving the trader with roughly 327 AAVE tokens, valued at around $36,000, instead of the expected return.

Despite protocol warnings, the user completed the transaction. Once completed, several maximal extractable value (MEV) bots quickly intervened.

One MEV operator, Titan Builder, reportedly captured approximately $34 million in ETH through arbitrage and transferred the funds to a Coinbase wallet.

Stani Kulechov, founder of the Aave protocol, responded to the incident, stating that the protocol plans to refund roughly $600,000 in fees it collected from the transaction. He also emphasized that decentralized finance systems are designed to remain open and permissionless, allowing users to execute transactions without centralized restrictions.

"Events like this do occur in DeFi, but the scale of this transaction was significantly larger than what is typically seen in the space. We sympathize with the user and will try to make a contact with the user and we will return $600K in fees collected from the transaction," Kulechov wrote on X.

At the same time, he acknowledged that improved safety measures are necessary to prevent similar events in the future.

The incident has sparked wider discussion about the balance between decentralization and user protection in DeFi applications.

Aave's Senior VP of engineering, Emilio Frangella, defended the protocol's architecture and pointed to several built-in safeguards designed to prevent common user mistakes, including mechanisms that block accidental self-liquidations.

However, Marc Zeller, a former Aave contributor, whose firm, Aave Chan Initiative (ACI), recently announced plans to exit the Aave DAO, criticized the protocol. Zeller argued that earlier versions of the protocol included stronger safeguards to prevent clearly harmful transactions.

Zeller claimed some of those protective measures have weakened over time and called for renewed focus on product design that prioritizes user safety alongside decentralization.

DefiLlama founder 0xngmi also stated his displeasure concerning the matter. He pointed out that a similar trade on DeFiLlama would have been rejected.

"If you try to make this swap on llamaswap the UI won't let you at all, buttons get locked. We've spent years building a price API with the highest coverage of DeFi tokens to avoid this," he wrote.

The incident highlights the risks that can arise when large transactions interact with limited liquidity in decentralized markets. While DeFi platforms provide powerful financial tools, they typically operate with minimal intervention from centralized authorities.

Author

Michael Ebiekutan

With a deep passion for web3 technology, he's collaborated with industry-leading brands like Mara, ITAK, and FXStreet in delivering groundbreaking reports on web3's transformative potential across diverse sectors. In addition to

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