tldr; A crypto investor made a costly mistake by swapping $50 million of USDT for AAVE on a mobile app, ignoring slippage warnings. The transaction resulted in receiving only $35,000 worth of AAVE and incurring $600,000 in fees, leaving the investor with a loss exceeding $49 million. This incident highlights the importance of understanding slippage and liquidity, especially when trading large sums in decentralized exchanges. Developers are working to recover the fees, but the loss remains significant.
*This summary is auto generated by a bot and not meant to replace reading the original article. As always, DYOR.
>Given the unusually large size of the single order, the Aave interface, like most trading interfaces, warned the user about extraordinary slippage and required confirmation via a checkbox. The user confirmed the warning on their mobile device and proceeded with the swap, accepting the high slippage, which ultimately resulted in receiving only 324 AAVE in return.
He held the $50M on his phone.
BioRobotTch on
A theory I heard suggested is that this was a prearranged way to transfer money from the trader to the liquidity provider, which are likely both wallets controlled by the same user. This laundered the money. and generated a few headlines for the trader and platform. The trader is getting the fees returned which makes the platform look like the good guy. That makes this even more likely just a stunt.
DonkeyAsleep7884 on
This is the wildest story in crypto for sure. Losing 50M to slippage and doing it on a mobile phone is just insane
5 Comments
tldr; A crypto investor made a costly mistake by swapping $50 million of USDT for AAVE on a mobile app, ignoring slippage warnings. The transaction resulted in receiving only $35,000 worth of AAVE and incurring $600,000 in fees, leaving the investor with a loss exceeding $49 million. This incident highlights the importance of understanding slippage and liquidity, especially when trading large sums in decentralized exchanges. Developers are working to recover the fees, but the loss remains significant.
*This summary is auto generated by a bot and not meant to replace reading the original article. As always, DYOR.
[https://x.com/StaniKulechov/status/2032193345414664659?s=20](https://x.com/StaniKulechov/status/2032193345414664659?s=20)
>Given the unusually large size of the single order, the Aave interface, like most trading interfaces, warned the user about extraordinary slippage and required confirmation via a checkbox. The user confirmed the warning on their mobile device and proceeded with the swap, accepting the high slippage, which ultimately resulted in receiving only 324 AAVE in return.
He held the $50M on his phone.
A theory I heard suggested is that this was a prearranged way to transfer money from the trader to the liquidity provider, which are likely both wallets controlled by the same user. This laundered the money. and generated a few headlines for the trader and platform. The trader is getting the fees returned which makes the platform look like the good guy. That makes this even more likely just a stunt.
This is the wildest story in crypto for sure. Losing 50M to slippage and doing it on a mobile phone is just insane
alternative hypothesis
https://x.com/JordanLzG/status/2032386421789474959?s=20