ChainCatcher reports that sDOLA LlamaLend was subjected to a flash loan price manipulation attack, resulting in a loss of approximately $240,000, including 6.74 WETH and 227,325 DOLA.
The attacker used flash loans and donations to manipulate the sDOLA price, raising the exchange rate from 1.189 DOLA to 1.353 DOLA per 1 sDOLA. This price fluctuation caused multiple accounts in the crvUSD Controller to have health factors below 0, triggering liquidation conditions. After the attack contract received rewards as a liquidator, it exchanged assets, repaid the flash loan, and profited.
Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to
Disclaimer.
Related Articles
$4 Billion DeFi Yield Vault Collapse Follow-up: MEV Capital Assets Shrink by 80%, Decentralized Leverage Strategy Risks Reconsidered
MEV Capital suffered a severe blow due to involvement in deUSD leverage strategies, with assets shrinking from $1.5 billion to $300 million, a decline of nearly 80%. This DeFi crisis was caused by complex lending relationships among yield treasury tokens, leading to multiple project failures and massive capital evaporation. The industry is working to shift towards more stable asset structures, but risks still remain.
GateNews10m ago
Canadian police warn of "cryptocurrency recovery scams": scammers impersonate RCMP to target victims again
Canadian police issue a warning about a "recovery scam" targeting cryptocurrency scam victims. Scammers impersonate police or lawyers, promising to help recover stolen assets, but in reality, they are conducting a secondary scam. Victims should stay vigilant, verify information sources, and avoid falling for the scam again.
GateNews45m ago
FBI and Europol jointly shut down the hacker forum LeakBase; law enforcement actions in 14 countries target 140,000 user data
The FBI in the United States and Europol, along with multiple law enforcement agencies, shut down the cybercrime forum LeakBase, a platform used for trading stolen data, which had 142,000 registered members. During the operation, servers were seized, a large amount of evidence was collected, and the sensitive data trading channels of cybercriminals were cut off. The collaboration among law enforcement agencies demonstrates that the international response to cybercrime is strengthening.
GateNews57m ago
Europol and the FBI jointly shut down the cybercrime forum LeakBase
The FBI and law enforcement agencies from multiple countries jointly conducted operations, successfully seizing the cybercrime forum LeakBase, confiscating user accounts and information, with searches and arrests in 8 countries. LeakBase is a platform for hacker trading stolen data and has experienced major data breaches.
GateNews1h ago
Canadian resident falls victim to a series of cryptocurrency scams, with scammers impersonating Royal Canadian Mounted Police to carry out secondary frauds
A resident of Nanaimo, Canada, lost 5,000 CAD in a remote stock trading scam and was subsequently targeted in a second scam. The scammer impersonated a lawyer and posed as the RCMP to recover funds, using the victim's information to carry out fake recovery services. Currently, the police have initiated related investigation and training.
GateNews1h ago