Coin info
Rank
Market Cap
Volume (24h)
Circulating Supply
Total Supply
Do you think the price will rise or fall?
Rise 40%
Fall 60%
Price perfomance
Depth of Market
Depth +2%
Depth -2%


PRICE
+25.47%
$2.68

PRICE
+13.21%
$1.49

PRICE
+10.98%
$3.79

PRICE
+7.73%
$0.8101

PRICE
+7.21%
$306.06

PRICE
+6.71%
$2.97

PRICE
+5%
$0.1154
PRICE
+4.55%
$0.03625

PRICE
+4.3%
$2.15

PRICE
+4.19%
$0.8596

PRICE
+2.8%
$0.1224

PRICE
+2.49%
$0.06710
PRICE
+2.25%
$0.007803

PRICE
+2.2%
$0.1239

PRICE
+2.11%
$537.64

PRICE
+1.65%
$0.001899
PRICE
+1.38%
$642.59

PRICE
+1.37%
$0.6574

PRICE
+1.34%
$0.3228
PRICE
+1.28%
$0.01143

PRICE
+1.23%
$87.78

PRICE
+1.19%
$4,672.03

PRICE
+1.18%
$4,686.66

PRICE
+0.89%
$3.41

PRICE
+0.82%
$1.24

VOL24
+539.15%
$0.9990

VOL24
+233.99%
$2,858.96
VOL24
+195.13%
$0.01143

VOL24
+185.51%
$1.49

VOL24
+156.04%
$1.08
VOL24
+131.07%
$0.007805

VOL24
+125.92%
$0.9981

VOL24
+94.4%
$0.052

VOL24
+85.78%
$0.1239

VOL24
+83.36%
$0.8090

VOL24
+74.99%
$2,321.19

VOL24
+68.27%
$2.96

VOL24
+65.52%
$0.9995

VOL24
+64.53%
$2.68

VOL24
+62.88%
$0.9696
VOL24
+56.31%
$0.03621

VOL24
+55.82%
$3.41

VOL24
+55.79%
$462.12

VOL24
+53.59%
$0.1793

VOL24
+51.7%
$0.007132

VOL24
+51.68%
$86.09

VOL24
+51.08%
$2.16

VOL24
+48.63%
$4,673

VOL24
+45.58%
$408.35
VOL24
+44.35%
$642.67

PRICE
+25.47%
$2.68

PRICE
+13.21%
$1.49

PRICE
+10.98%
$3.79

PRICE
+7.73%
$0.8101

PRICE
+7.21%
$306.06

PRICE
+6.71%
$2.97

PRICE
+5%
$0.1154
PRICE
+4.55%
$0.03625

PRICE
+4.3%
$2.15

PRICE
+4.19%
$0.8596

PRICE
+2.8%
$0.1224

PRICE
+2.49%
$0.06710
PRICE
+2.25%
$0.007803

PRICE
+2.2%
$0.1239

PRICE
+2.11%
$537.64

PRICE
+1.65%
$0.001899
PRICE
+1.38%
$642.59

PRICE
+1.37%
$0.6574

PRICE
+1.34%
$0.3228
PRICE
+1.28%
$0.01143

PRICE
+1.23%
$87.78

PRICE
+1.19%
$4,672.03

PRICE
+1.18%
$4,686.66

PRICE
+0.89%
$3.41

PRICE
+0.82%
$1.24

VOL24
+539.15%
$0.9990

VOL24
+233.99%
$2,858.96
VOL24
+195.13%
$0.01143

VOL24
+185.51%
$1.49

VOL24
+156.04%
$1.08
VOL24
+131.07%
$0.007805

VOL24
+125.92%
$0.9981

VOL24
+94.4%
$0.052

VOL24
+85.78%
$0.1239

VOL24
+83.36%
$0.8090

VOL24
+74.99%
$2,321.19

VOL24
+68.27%
$2.96

VOL24
+65.52%
$0.9995

VOL24
+64.53%
$2.68

VOL24
+62.88%
$0.9696
VOL24
+56.31%
$0.03621

VOL24
+55.82%
$3.41

VOL24
+55.79%
$462.12

VOL24
+53.59%
$0.1793

VOL24
+51.7%
$0.007132

VOL24
+51.68%
$86.09

VOL24
+51.08%
$2.16

VOL24
+48.63%
$4,673

VOL24
+45.58%
$408.35
VOL24
+44.35%
$642.67
Rise 40%
Fall 60%

$0.00
#34008
$0.00
$0.00
0
0
5 May 2026, 14:45

Tydro, the Aave-powered lending protocol on Ink with $247 million in deposits, halted all markets on May 4 after detecting problems with a third-party oracle provider. The shutdown comes barely two weeks after Tydro contributed to coordinated relief efforts for Aave following the $290 million KelpDAO exploit that affected the protocol. Tydro posted on X that it was “temporarily pausing all markets out of an abundance of caution following reports of issues with a third-party oracle,” adding that user funds remained safe. However, it did not provide a timeline for the restoration. How did Tydro move from rescuer to rescued? On April 23, Tydro and the Ink Foundation announced they were joining Aave and other ecosystem participants in a “coordinated DeFi relief effort” to help parties affected by the KelpDAO rsETH exploit and “support an orderly resolution for lenders and mitigate bad debt,” according to Tydro’s post at the time. That exploit, which saw around $290 million drained through uncollateralized rsETH tokens minted via a KelpDAO bridge vulnerability on April 18. The incident triggered over $15.1 billion in outflows from Aave over three and a half days. Aave saw its deposits fall from $48.5 billion to $30.7 billion as users fled to competing platforms such as Spark. Tydro, which describes itself as “a non-custodial lending protocol for onchain capital markets, powered by Aave and built on Ink,” now faces headaches of its own, even though it did not confirm if it was exploited or not. Currently, Tydro holds over $206.7 million in active loans and generated over $943,000 in fees over the past 30 days, per DeFiLlama data . Tydro’s markets remain paused after an oracle issue. Source: DeFiLlama. Has Aave recovered from the April exploit? Aave itself is yet to fully recover from the April exploit fallout. On the same day Tydro went dark, Aave LLC filed an emergency motion to vacate a restraining notice served on Arbitrum DAO on May 1 that “attempts to seize approximately $71 million in ETH belonging to victims of the April 18 exploit,” according to the protocol’s post on X. The plaintiffs who filed the restraining order claim the thief is linked to North Korea and the funds seized thereby already belong to North Korea, against whom they already have grievances. Aave disputes this position, stating, “A thief does not gain lawful ownership of stolen property simply by taking it, and the law is clear on this.” It wrote, “Those assets were recovered to be returned to users victimized in the April 18, 2026 exploit. Freezing them harms the very people this recovery effort is designed to protect.” Tydro users, on the other hand, are still in the dark on how long markets will remain frozen and whether the oracle issue has exposed any positions to liquidation risk. For now, all they have to go on is that the protocol said it is “actively investigating.” The smartest crypto minds already read our newsletter. Want in? Join them .
5 May 2026, 01:07

Aave, a major decentralized finance (DeFi) liquidity protocol, is asking a U.S. federal court to lift a freeze on roughly $71 million in ETH. The firm argues that the assets belong to its users, not to a suspected North Korean hacker. The funds are currently locked on the Arbitrum network. The dispute highlights growing tension between DeFi recovery efforts and creditors seeking to enforce longstanding judgments against North Korea. In a court filing dated May 4, 2026, Aave said the court-ordered freeze is blocking the return of assets recovered following the Kelp DAO rsETH token exploit. In the meantime, the company is demanding an immediate lifting of the freeze. If the freeze stays, it requires a minimum $300 million bond from the plaintiffs. “Since the exploit occurred, teams from the Aave Protocol community, the Arbitrum community, and others in the global DeFi community have been working tirelessly as part of an effort called ‘DeFi United’ to return the frozen assets and other value to those affected by the Aave Protocol incident. They aim to restore stability and security within both the Aave Protocol and other protocols in the decentralized finance ecosystem while also ensuring that similar exploits do not happen again,” said the memo. Recent developments suggest that lawmakers are closer than ever to resolving those disputes. A bipartisan breakthrough on stablecoin yield restrictions has removed one of the biggest obstacles to progress, with negotiators now working on final language that would allow crypto rewards tied to user activity while limiting interest-like payments on idle balances. The Kelp DAO rsETH token exploit raises doubt over the Blockchain technology This dispute originated from a cyber breach in April involving Kelp DAO, a prominent liquid restaking protocol on Ethereum . In this scenario, a hacker exploited a vulnerability in a cross-chain bridge connected to the rsETH token. Afterward, the hacker exploited Aave by using illicitly obtained assets as collateral to borrow roughly $230 million in ETH. Shortly after the incident, as previously reported by Cryptopolitan, the Arbitrum protocol seized 30,766 ETH, worth about $73 million. It then reserved the assets for recovery. Analysts say the initial expectation was for the recovered ETH—the first major batch post-hack—to be returned to the victims. Later, this endeavor evolved into “DeFi United” pending ETH unfreezing decisions and other protocol votes. Notably, DeFi United is an emergency coalition of major crypto protocols—including Aave, Lido, and EtherFi—formed in April 2026 to restore rsETH backing after a $292 million Kelp DAO exploit. In this case, the plaintiffs, who hold unpaid judgments against North Korea, indicated a high likelihood that the attacker is linked to the regime’s Lazarus Group. Based on their argument, the frozen assets should be considered North Korean property and seized. In their filing, the plaintiffs began by admitting that the accusations regarding North Korea could be valid. “However, AaveLLC strongly disagrees with the idea that these issues can be legally resolved by restraining and seizing assets belonging to innocent third parties—specifically, users of the Aave software protocol (the ‘Aave Protocol’), who are completely unrelated to any alleged wrongdoing and have no known ties to North Korea,” they said. Despite uncertainty regarding the culprit, the hack had immediate consequences. Panic withdrawals quickly drained key lending pools, leaving them with critically low balances. These sudden mass withdrawals left some users unable to withdraw their deposits. The filing noted that the funds were seized directly from Aave users. This statement challenges the claim that they are associated with any alleged wrongdoer. It also casts doubt on whether Arbitrum DAO qualifies as a legal entity. Meanwhile, Aave refused to be an official entity subject to the plaintiffs’ method of service. This claim could create legal hurdles. Can stolen crypto be recovered without harming innocent users? Aave argues that freezing the assets is not only a legal issue but is actively hindering recovery from the Kelp DAO exploit. At this point, the attorneys for the plaintiffs stated that the Restraining Notice against Arbitrum DAO was not intended to assist in recovering funds for Aave Protocol victims; rather, they noted, it served the opposite purpose. In a statement, the founder and CEO of Aave, Stani Kulechov, stated that, “A thief does not own what he steals.” He compared the situation to a thief stealing diamonds, to have them snatched back. “These funds belong to the affected users they were stolen from — end of story,” he said. 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 .
3 May 2026, 00:14

Anthropic's Mythos AI model is questioning crypto security approaches. The model targeting inter-system weaknesses highlights AAVE's response to the Kelp DAO exploit: 301M$ in commitments were coll...
2 May 2026, 09:06

Record in April crypto hacks: 600M$+ loss, KelpDAO 292M$, Drift 280M$, AAVE bad debt crisis. DRIFT delisted, AAVE $92.18 downtrend. Technical levels and social engineering tactics analyzed. DeFi se...