- Trend
- Bearish short-term on TVL outflows, structurally supported by industry-wide rescue
- Drivers
- Kelp rsETH exploit aftermath, $200M relief fund, frozen WETH/USDC pools, competitor inflows to SparkLend and Fluid
- Catalyst
- Aave DAO 25,000 ETH vote, Arbitrum DAO $71M ETH release decision, and Circle's USDC rate-ceiling proposal
AAVE is at the epicenter of one of DeFi's largest coordinated crisis-response efforts following the April 18 Kelp DAO bridge exploit, in which attackers deposited unbacked rsETH into Aave and borrowed roughly $190M in WETH. In response, Aave froze WETH across multiple markets (later partially unfreezing them) and spearheaded the 'DeFi United' relief fund, which has now raised nearly 80% of the $200M needed to cover the bad debt — over 69,550 ETH from 222 wallets across 1,623 transfers, with Mantle and Aave DAO contributing a combined $127M. The Aave DAO is currently voting on committing 25,000 ETH to the rsETH recovery fund, while Aave, Kelp and LayerZero have jointly petitioned Arbitrum DAO to release $71M in frozen ETH. Separately, Circle's chief economist has proposed a 50% interest rate ceiling to break the deadlock in Aave's $1.89B USDC pool, which has been stuck at full utilization for four days.
Market sentiment toward AAVE is mixed and pressured in the short term. TVL has plunged by roughly $10B since the exploit, with capital visibly rotating out — SparkLend has absorbed over $1B in fresh deposits, and Fluid's aWETH Redemption Protocol (launched with Lido, Ether.fi, 1inch, 0x and Kyber) has processed $136M out of Aave's frozen WETH pool in just 48 hours. The frozen USDC pool and lender exit queues create overhang on the token, but the speed and scale of the industry-wide rescue — pulling in Lido's 2,500 stETH commitment and major DAO treasuries — signals strong systemic backing and reinforces Aave's role as DeFi's de facto lender of last resort. Traders should expect elevated volatility, with downside risk if the remaining $40M+ funding gap stalls, and relief rallies on each successful governance milestone.
The outlook hinges on three near-term catalysts: closing the final ~20% of the $200M relief fund, the Aave DAO vote on the 25,000 ETH commitment, and Arbitrum DAO's decision on the $71M ETH release. Resolution of the USDC rate-curve issue — whether via Circle's 50% ceiling proposal or an alternative parameter change — is critical to unfreezing $1.89B in stuck liquidity and restoring lender confidence. If these catalysts resolve cleanly, AAVE could see TVL repatriation and a sentiment reset; failure or delays risk further migration to SparkLend, Fluid and Morpho, structurally weakening Aave's market share even after the bad debt is socialized.