Aaveβs Ethereum platform has been frozen for almost 4 straight days, so Circleβs chief economist, Gordon Liao, proposed an emergency fix in the platformβs governance forum.
Circle rarely speaks directly in third-party governance debates. However, Liaoβs post, which he says represents his personal views, and Circle CEO Jeremy Allaireβs endorsement of the proposal on X make it a big deal.
Liao argued that Aaveβs current interest rate model failed to respond adequately to the demand shock. Borrow rates capped near 14% were too low to deter borrowing or attract new supply, allowing the imbalance to persist.
How did $1.86 billion get stuck in the first place?
On April 18, 2026, a hacker used fake rsETH tokens to exploit a flaw in KelpDAOβs bridge and borrow about $292 million in real assets.
When news of the hack spread, whales rushed to withdraw their funds, and more than $6 billion left Aave within 24 hours. As reported by Cryptopolitan, this was the biggest withdrawal event Aave had ever hosted, and the protocolβs value dropped from $25 billion to around $17.5 billion in a single day.
Investors who reacted quickly got their money, while others watched as their funds froze on the platform. As analyst @duonine put it on X:
βI donβt think people realize how bad things are at Aave right now. All core markets are at 100% utilization, which includes $3 billion in USDT and $2 billion in USDC stuck. That means you CANNOT WITHDRAW your money.β
Things got worse when users whose funds were frozen borrowed other coins against their locked deposits and sold those instead. These holders were more than willing to take losses of 10% to 25% just to get back dollar liquidity.
What this panic reaction did was increase utilization because the loans added another $300 million in borrowing to the pool within 72 hours.
Why hasnβt the interest rate fixed this on its own?
Aaveβs current borrowing rate of 14% for USDC isnβt enough to attract new deposits or convince borrowers to repay. According to Aavescan data, the 14% rate limit has lasted four days straight. Supply and debt have also dropped by about $60 million per day, but thatβs mostly just existing borrowers repaying and investors withdrawing the same amount once it hits the reserves.
Most of the borrowers stuck in the pool are depositors who took loans against their frozen funds. So, a user whoβs willing to accept a 25% loss to exit wonβt be fazed by a 14% annual rate, since itβs still way less than the losses theyβre already absorbing from the hack.
Another reasonΒ the interest rates failed to fix the issue is that the automatic rate system,Β Slope 2 Risk Oracle,Β built by Chaos Labs, malfunctioned. The reasonΒ was that Chaos LabsΒ exited Aave on April 6, 2026, due to misunderstandings, so the tool had no one left to maintain it.
What Circleβs economist is proposing
Gordon Liao suggests Aave raise the maximum interest rate a USDC lender can earn on Aave from about 12.6% to 48%. According to Liao, lenders in lower-yielding places will move their USDC into Aave within hours just to earn those high returns.
Aaveβs current risk management firm, LlamaRisk, and Aave Labs can first use a shared control account to attract capital within hours, then hold a community vote in 5 β 7 days to ratify a slightly higher final target.
Liao also proposes that Aave pause the automatic rate-adjustment tool for USDC. This is because the original support team is missing, which poses more risk than a static setting controlled by LlamaRisk.
What Aaveβs founder said and what the community thinks
Aave founder Stani Kulechov posted on X, saying the team is working around the clock on multiple paths forward. He also updated everyone about how the Arbitrum Security Council recovered $70 million in ETH during the rsETH situation, which could reduce the unpaid debt.
He wrote, βEvery decision we are making is aimed at an orderly return to normal market conditions and the best possible outcome for everyone involved.β
Some users welcomed the proposal, while others pushed back hard. One account, @SiloIntern, called it βthe ultimate dupe,β while another, @amorfatiace, suggested Circle should just βsupply 1B in USDC and let the market sort itself out 3β6 months.β
Some even said Liaoβs proposal to raise rates only hurts the users who canβt withdraw their funds and have to pay interest on emergency loans they took to access their own money.
Liao countered, saying these people have no choice because their money will remain locked indefinitely. According to him, itβs either they hit the victims with high rates for a short period, or keep them locked out indefinitely at low rates.
Itβs now up to LlamaRisk and Aave Labs to decide whether to act on the proposal or wait to come up with something better, which means users will remain locked out of their funds.
The crypto card with no spending limits. Get 3% cashback and instant mobile payments. Claim your Ether.fi card.


















English (US)