Why Did Aave Restore WETH Collateral Settings?

Aave has restored normal loan-to-value ratios for wrapped ether across six Aave V3 networks, reversing emergency limits introduced after April’s rsETH exploit caused more than $230 million in ETH to be drained from the lending protocol.

The decision marks a major step toward normalization for one of DeFi’s most important collateral assets. Wrapped ether, or WETH, is a tokenized version of ether widely used across decentralized finance as collateral for borrowing, leverage, liquidity strategies, and onchain treasury activity.

During the crisis, Aave cut WETH’s loan-to-value ratio to 0% across affected markets. That effectively disabled wrapped ether as borrowing collateral, preventing users from opening new debt positions against WETH and limiting the risk of further stress if unbacked assets continued to move through lending markets.

The restrictions have now been reversed across Ethereum Core, Ethereum Prime, Arbitrum, Base, Mantle, and Linea. According to Aave governance documents, WETH LTVs have returned to 80.5% on Ethereum Core, 84% on Ethereum Prime, 80% on Arbitrum, 80% on Base, 80.5% on Mantle, and 80% on Linea.

How Did the rsETH Exploit Hit Aave?

The April incident was tied to Kelp DAO’s rsETH, a yield-bearing token linked to restaked ether. Attackers exploited a LayerZero bridging misconfiguration that allowed them to mint about $292 million in unbacked rsETH. Those tokens were then used as collateral to drain roughly $230 million in ETH from Aave.

The exploit showed how a bridge failure can spread into lending markets when an unbacked or incorrectly minted asset is accepted as collateral. In this case, the issue did not remain isolated to the bridge layer. It moved into DeFi credit markets because the minted rsETH could be deposited and used to borrow against real liquidity.

Aave’s emergency response was designed to stop further collateral damage. By cutting WETH LTVs to 0%, the protocol restricted borrowing power around one of the market’s deepest collateral assets while liquidation and recovery efforts were underway.

The scale of the intervention reflected the importance of WETH to DeFi credit. When wrapped ether loses borrowing utility, traders and liquidity providers lose access to a core financing tool. That can reduce leverage, slow capital rotation, and leave assets locked in positions that are harder to adjust during market stress.

Investor Takeaway

Aave’s decision shows that the immediate liquidity threat from the rsETH exploit has eased. But the incident also proved that bridge failures can become lending-market failures when unbacked assets are allowed into collateral systems.

What Does the Recovery Show About DeFi Risk?

The recovery process has reduced the direct shortfall from the exploit. About 112,103 unbacked rsETH was created during the attack, and roughly 106,993 has since been recovered through liquidations and coordinated recovery actions.

That total includes 89,567 rsETH recovered through Aave liquidations and another 17,426 recovered through Compound. The remaining shortfall stands at about 5,200 rsETH and is expected to be covered by DeFi United, an industry coalition formed to help address the losses.

Those recoveries explain why Aave was able to restore WETH collateral settings. With more than 95% of the unbacked rsETH recovered and a plan in place for the residual gap, the protocol appears to have judged that the immediate systemic risk had been contained.

The larger risk lesson is still unresolved. DeFi lending protocols depend on accurate collateral valuation, asset backing, oracle inputs, and bridge integrity. When a bridge misconfiguration creates unbacked assets, the lending protocol may become the place where that error is monetized. That makes cross-chain infrastructure part of the credit risk stack, not a separate technical layer.

What Does This Mean for DeFi Markets?

For DeFi users, the restored WETH ratios reopen a core financing channel across multiple networks. Borrowers can again use wrapped ether to access liquidity, build leverage, and manage positions under normal collateral rules. That should improve capital efficiency across Aave markets and reduce the friction created by the emergency restrictions.

For institutional users and larger DeFi desks, the decision is a normalization signal. WETH is one of the few assets with enough liquidity, familiarity, and market depth to function as system-wide collateral. Restoring its borrowing utility suggests that Aave no longer sees the rsETH incident as an active threat to its affected markets.

The move does not close the matter. Legal disputes over frozen assets and questions over ultimate liability remain unresolved. The incident also leaves open harder governance questions for lending protocols, including how quickly collateral parameters should change during cross-chain failures and how much reliance should be placed on assets whose backing depends on external bridge infrastructure.