While DeFi United works to restore rsETH support, Lido DAO [$LDO] proposes a targeted solution to protect Lido Earn $ETH [EarnETH] protect users from residual losses. The EarnETH vault has an exposure of about 9%, about $21.6 million, while the remaining losses are estimated at 400-600 $ETH.
These losses fall below the 1% threshold associated with the $3 million first loss buffer, leaving a gap in protection. This situation arises because external parties resolve the largest loss, but smaller consequences remain.

To address this, Lido is proposing a one-off threshold adjustment to cover these amounts. This step is intended to maintain user trust and prevent persistent losses.
If accepted, trust can stabilize, while a limited scope helps limit broader protocol risk.
The Ministry of Finance’s intervention tests Lido’s resilience and limits
Beyond immediate user protection, Lido’s response is beginning to test the strength and limits of its treasury.
Following the rsETH shock, the DAO allocated up to 2,500 stETH, equivalent to approximately $5 million, to stabilize affected positions and avoid forced liquidations.
This step takes place because external risks have entered integrated products, which require internal support. Although the treasury total is almost $94 million, this allocation remains relatively small.
However, it introduces a new dynamic, where protocol funds absorb external stress. Board approval also signals strong coordination, but subtly shifts expectations.
If such interventions are repeated, reserves may shrink over time as users increasingly expect protection beyond the protocol’s original design.
Lido limits liability and at the same time limits integration risk
While the Kelp exploit exposed how third-party integrations can communicate risk, Lido’s response shifts the focus to defining clear boundaries of responsibility.
Rather than expanding coverage, the DAO proposes to use its existing first-loss fund only for Kelp-related losses, without changing the 1% rule or adding new capital. This approach emerges because the core protocol remains unaffected, but user exposure still requires a response.
As a result, Lido combines protection with restraint, aiming to restore confidence without creating broad rescue expectations.
This shift indicates that future risks may not receive the same support. If users accept this limit, trust can stabilize, while uncertainty about coverage can affect participation and risk perception.
Final summary
- Lido DAO [$LDO] focuses on residual losses with limited use of government bonds, balancing user protection and risk management without increasing expectations for long-term bailouts.
- Lido strengthens confidence in the short term, but repeated interventions could put pressure on reserves and reshape user expectations around risk coverage at the protocol level.

