From Aave [AAVE] The recovery process gradually shifted from emergency management to coordinated ecosystem stabilization after the rsETH exploit rocked the DeFi markets.
On May 6, Aave liquidated the thief’s eight identified positions on the Ethereum and Arbitrum markets. Recovered rsETH collateral was later moved directly to the Recovery Guardian with no impact to Umbrella stakers or unaffected users.
Initially, the exploit raised fears of increased bankruptcy pressures and broader liquidity fragmentation in DeFi credit markets.
Meanwhile, Mantle DAO overwhelmingly approved joining the broader DeFi United recovery coalition. Arbitrum DAO has also made proposals to recover approximately $71 million $ETH to affected Aave users.

However, the ongoing legal disputes still threaten to delay definitive recovery efforts, while also impacting the broader stabilization of confidence in the DeFi markets.
DAO coordination and legal battles are reshaping DeFi recovery efforts
As Aave stabilized liquidity conditions following the rsETH exploit, broader recovery efforts increasingly shifted toward coordinated DAO-led remediation. Arbitrum DAO overwhelmingly approved the release of approximately 30,766 $ETHworth nearly $71 million to DeFi United’s recovery initiative.
These actions reflected how DeFi governance is increasingly dependent on rapid ecosystem coordination during large-scale stress events.
However, legal pressure soon complicated the process after a US court seized parts of the recovered individuals $ETH on unrelated claims related to North Korea. This dispute brought DeFi recovery mechanisms ever closer to traditional legal systems.
While legal integration can strengthen institutional trust in the long term, it may also delay the implementation of decentralized recovery during future exploitation-induced crises.
Aave’s liquidity recovery is now testing DeFi’s long-term confidence
While legal and administrative coordination stabilized immediate recovery efforts, attention increasingly shifted to restoring rSETH support and rebuilding user trust.
Aave plans to burn the liquidated rsETH on Arbitrum while decommissioning the corresponding LayerZero package on Ethereum. This prevents extra inflated supply from re-entering the circulation.

Meanwhile, rSETH and a broader coalition recovered $ETH contributions will recapitalize the bridge lockbox before admissions fully reopen. These moves come amid severe market stress after Aave’s TVL fell from nearly $26 billion to $14.2 billion during the exploit-induced panic.
While liquidity conditions have since stabilized above $15 billion, deposit behavior remains cautious as institutions closely monitor the execution of the recovery.
Still, repeatedly relying on emergency governance coordination can strengthen near-term resilience while bolstering expectations of future DeFi safety net interventions.
Final summary
- Aave managed broader insolvency risks through rapid liquidations, DAO coordination, and gradual recovery of rsETH market support.
- The recovery stabilized liquidity above $15 billion, although legal disputes and governance could erode confidence.

