WikiBit 2025-07-11 23:01The attacker who drained over $40 million from GMX‘s V1 contracts earlier this week has started retu
The attacker who drained over $40 million from GMX‘s V1 contracts earlier this week has started returning funds, suggesting they’ve accepted the projects $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 GMXs 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.
#PeckShieldAlert #GMX Exploiter has returned a total of $37.5M worth of cryptos, including ~9K $ETH & 10.5M $FRAX to the #GMX Security Committee Multisig address
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 users 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).
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