Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

SecurityWeekSecurityWeek

Cybercrime

DeFi Protocol Balancer Starts Recovering Funds Stolen in $128 Million Heist

Hackers drained more cryptocurrency from Balancer by exploiting a rounding function and performing batch swaps.

Bank data breach

Hackers on Monday drained more than $120 million in cryptocurrency from the decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol Balancer by exploiting a rounding function and performing batch swaps.

The attack occurred at 7:48 AM UTC (2:48 AM ET) and impacted Balancer V2 composable stable pools, some of which have been live on the blockchain for years, meaning they could not be paused.

“Any pools that could be paused have been paused and are now in recovery mode. All other Balancer pools are unaffected,” Balancer said on Monday.

In a Wednesday preliminary incident report, the DeFi protocol revealed that pools across Ethereum, Base, Avalanche, Gnosis, Berachain, Polygon, Sonic, Arbitrum, and Optimism were affected, both on Balancer V2 and its forks on other blockchains.

The attackers, Balancer says, exploited the protocol’s support for batch swap, which allows users to combine multiple operations into a single transaction. Batch swap supports ‘deferred settlements’, enabling users to ‘flashloan’ tokens when performing swaps.

“Specifically for composable stable pools, the LP receipt-tokens (BPT) are treated as regular tokens, which allows bypassing the minimum pool supply limit, allowing the liquidity levels in the pool to reach extremely low values,” Balancer explains.

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

The hackers exploited a rounding direction in the upscale function of EXACT_OUT transactions, which rounds down values under certain circumstances.

“Attackers were able to exploit the incorrect rounding behavior in combination with the batch swap functionality to manipulate pool balances and extract value. In many instances, the exploited funds remained within the Vault as internal balances before being withdrawn in subsequent transactions,” Balancer explains.

Essentially, the attackers manipulated BPT price calculations, and then performed the batch swap to profit from a deflated price, protocol security firm BlockSec Phalcon notes.

The DeFi protocol is still investigating the attack and has not provided a final impact figure. Initial estimates suggested that roughly $128 million were drained, but rapid response from the community reduced the total losses by more than $20 million.

“Balancer continues to work with partners, researchers, exchanges, and whitehat teams to recover funds. A comprehensive post-mortem with validated totals, transaction references, and recovery/distribution flows will be published once partner verification and reconciliation are complete,” the DeFi protocol said.

The attack mainly affected Composable Stable v5 pools that were out of the pause window, and Balancer recommends that users refrain from interacting with them, noting that its priority is mitigation and recovery of funds.

Related: US Sanctions North Korean Bankers Accused of Laundering Stolen Cryptocurrency

Related: US Charges Cambodian Executive in Massive Crypto Scam and Seizes More Than $14 Billion in Bitcoin

Related: North Korean Hackers Have Stolen $2 Billion in Cryptocurrency in 2025

Related: Predatory Sparrow Burns $90 Million on Iranian Crypto Exchange in Cyber Shadow War

Written By

Ionut Arghire is an international correspondent for SecurityWeek.

Daily Briefing Newsletter

Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing for the latest cybersecurity threats, trends, and expert insights.

Trending

Daily Briefing Newsletter

Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing to stay informed on the latest threats, trends, and technology, along with insightful columns from industry experts.

Today’s attackers are no longer breaking in — they’re logging in. Join this live webinar as we break down the modern identity attack chain and examine how recent breaches exploited weaknesses in authentication, identity verification, and access management processes.

Register

AI has accelerated both sides of the fight. Adversaries are weaponizing vulnerabilities faster, while defenders are racing to ship detections and configurations. Join this live webinar as we explore how to prove your controls actually hold against new threats, map your security maturity, and unite breach simulation with automated pentesting into a single, coordinated program.

Register

People on the Move

SolarWinds has appointed Justin Henkel as Chief Information Security Officer.

J. Paul Haynes has joined Cinchy as Chief Executive Officer.

Hatem Naguib has become Chief Executive Officer at Sysdig.

More People On The Move

Expert Insights

Four decades of incident response experience suggest that exploits are often the symptom, not the root cause, of today’s cybersecurity failures.

Daily Briefing Newsletter

Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing to stay informed on the latest cybersecurity news, threats, and expert insights. Unsubscribe at any time.