July 13, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Indian Crypto Exchange CoinDCX Denies Moving User Funds After WazirX Allegations Bitcoin's four-year market cycle isn't dead — Xapo Bank CEO Stellar Performance From XLM as It Posts Top 24H Percentage Gain Among Top 20 Cryptos Another BTC Mining Firm Moves Into Ethereum Reserve, Hailing ETH as ‘Digital Gold’ Pump.fun Swiftly Raises $500M in Public Sale at $4B Fully Diluted Valuation Tether to Halt USDT on Omni, BCH, Kusama, EOS, Algorand as Focus Shifts to Layer 2s Telegram is not a neobank — it’s the platform where the next ones are born Coinbase’s Pudgy Penguin Avatar Change, ETF Hopes Ignite 60% PENGU Rally Bitcoin, Ether Tentative, XRP Steady as Trump Announces 30% Tariff on EU and Mexico ‘We Expect Bitcoin to Top $200K by the End of Year’, Says Bitwise CIO

GMX Exploiter Return $40M Days After Hack, Token Zooms Higher

The attacker who drained over $40 million from GMX’s V1 contracts earlier this week has started returning funds, suggesting they’ve accepted the project’s $5 million white-hat bounty.

The first signs came Friday via an on-chain message: “ok, funds will be returned later.”

Hours later, over $10.5 million in FRAX was sent back to GMX’s deployer wallet. Security firm PeckShield flagged the returns, which appear to be just the start, with more funds expected to follow.

GMX is now trading at $13.15 having risen by 13% over the past 24 hours.

Later on, over $40 million in various tokens were returned to the GMX Security Committee MultiSig address, Lookonchain noted.

The breach, one of the largest DeFi exploits of the year, targeted GMX’s GLP pool on Arbitrum. It exploited a re-entrancy flaw in the OrderBook contract, allowing the attacker to manipulate short positions on BTC, inflate GLP’s valuation, and redeem it for outsized profits across USDC, WBTC, WETH, and FRAX.

Reentrancy is a common bug that allows exploiters to trick a smart contract by repeatedly calling a protocol to steal assets. A call authorizes the smart contract address to interact with a user’s wallet address.

GMX responded by halting V1 trading and minting across both Arbitrum and Avalanche. A bug bounty worth more than 10% of the stolen funds was offered, with a promise of no legal pursuit if the full amount was returned within 48 hours (which the hacker seems to have adhered to as of European morning hours Friday).

This post was originally published on this site

Please enter Coingecko Free Api Key to get this plugin works