Hacker Returns Stolen Assets to Curve Finance
After the latest Curve Finance exploit, the perpetrator made the surprising move of returning a large portion of the stolen assets to the protocol.
Reports indicate that the exploiter has sent about $12.7 million worth of 4,820 Alchemix Ethereum (alETH) and 2,258 Ethereum (ETH) to the Alchemix Finance platform.
Hacker returns $12.7 million worth of alETH
The events come after Curve asked the hacker on August 3 to return the funds, after which the hacker asked for address confirmation.
The refund was made in three transactions. The first involved a test transaction of 1 alETH. Then, a batch of 1,000 alETH, worth $1.7 million, was returned at around 9:00 AM ET. Then, another 3,819 alETH worth $6.7 million was returned just minutes later.
After alETH was returned, the hacker returned 2,258 ETH, worth $4.2 million, to the Alchemix Finance wallet, bringing the total returned funds to approximately $12.7 million.
The Curve Finance exploit also included a message in one of the transactions, shedding light on their motives for the sudden move.
Message text:
“I’ve seen some silly opinions, so I want to make it clear that I will pay you back not because you can find me, but because I don’t want to spoil your project. Maybe it’s too much money for many people, but not for me. I’m smarter than you all.”
Curve Finance is facing a $24 million exploit
Alchemix Finance, the recipient of the returned funds, operates as a loan-based DeFi protocol that uses Curve pools.
This news comes on the heels of Curve Finance experiencing a $24 million exploit on July 30, attributed to the Vyper attack.
After the events, Curve Finance founder Michael Egorov engaged in OTC transactions involving more than 106 million CRV tokens, valued at $42 million, to mitigate potential liquidation risks.