Balancer plans to distribute $8 million in recovered funds from $128 million exploit

DeFi protocol Balancer is proposing a plan to distribute roughly $8 million in rescued assets to users affected by a major exploit earlier this month that drained more than $128 million from its vaults.

According to Balancer's Thursday proposal, the $8 million in funds up for distribution was recovered through a combination of external white hat interventions and internal rescue operations.

Roughly $28 million was salvaged in total, but $19.7 million in osETH and osGNO is being managed by liquid staking protocol StakeWise.

Balancer is a decentralized exchange and automated portfolio manager that allows users to trade tokens and provide liquidity through self-balancing pools. In early November, attackers exploited a vulnerability in Balancer V2 Composable Stable Pools, draining roughly $128.6 million.

The reimbursement plan adopts a non-socialized model, where rescued funds will only be returned liquidity providers (LP) in the specific pools affected. Distributions will be made pro-rata based on Balancer Pool Token (BPT) holdings at the time of the exploit.

Funds are set to be distributed on a payment-in-kind basis, meaning LPs receive the same tokens that were recovered.

White hats

Under the proposal, six white hat actors who recovered about $3.86 million during the attack will receive 10% bounties capped at $1 million per operation. 

The largest recovery came from a white hat labeled "Anon #1," who rescued $2.68 million on Polygon. Security researcher Bitfinding recovered $963,832 on Ethereum mainnet, while other white hats recovered smaller amounts on Base and Arbitrum.

To claim their bounties, white hats are required to complete identity verification, know-your-client checks, and sanctions screening under Balancer's SEAL Safe Harbor Agreement. Arbitrum-based rescuers have waived their bounties by declining to identify themselves.

Balancer's proposal establishes a 180-day claim window, after which unclaimed assets become dormant and require governance decisions for reallocation.


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Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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