BNB Chain-Based Venus Protocol Drained of $27M on Suspected Contract Compromise

Tech, Hack, Venus, Lending, News The attack involved updating a contract to a malicious address, affecting tokens like vUSDC and vETH. 

Venus Protocol, one of the largest lending platforms on the BNB Chain, was hit by a suspected exploit on Tuesday with attackers seemingly draining an estimated $27 million worth of assets.

On-chain sleuths said they suspect the protocol’s Core Pool Comptroller contract was updated to a malicious address, which then siphoned off tokens including vUSDC and vETH.

Security teams are tracking the stolen assets and the Venus community has yet to issue an official statement.

The funds remain in the attacker’s contract and have not yet been swapped, leaving open questions about whether the exploit will evolve into a full-scale cash-out.

Venus functions as a money market on the BNB Chain, allowing users to deposit assets such as stablecoins and major tokens to earn interest, while borrowers post collateral to take out loans.

Its native token, XVS, plays a role in governance and protocol incentives. At its peak, Venus held over $7 billion in assets, making it a core part of BNB Chain’s DeFi ecosystem.

(This is a developing story.)

 CoinDesk: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Crypto News and Price Data Read More

More From Author

Federal Reserve Rate Cut Could Spark a Revival in Bitcoin’s Basis Trade

Citi Says Stablecoins and AI Could Drive Post-Trade Shakeup

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *