Bitcoin, Ether extend losses; most other top 10 cryptos fall

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Bitcoin and Ether extended losses in Tuesday afternoon trading in Asia amid concerns of a potential decentralized finance (DeFi) contagion. Reports of a hack of the popular DeFi platform Curve Finance, and of an attack on the LeetSwap exchange running on Coinbase, added to investor tensions. Solana and Litecoin led the top 10 non-stablecoin losers.

See related article: Tether says USDT excess reserves reached US$3.3 billion in Q2

Solana, Litecoin lead losses

Bitcoin fell 1.54% to US$28,931 in 24 hours to 4 p.m. in Hong Kong, bringing its weekly losses to 0.72%, according to data from CoinMarketCap.

Ether fell 1.68% to US$1,834 in the past 24 hours and posted a weekly loss of 0.89%.

“In the aftermath of the LeetSwap attack, which saw a loss of about 340 Ether, and the Curve Finance exploit that resulted in a theft of approximately US$41 million in cryptocurrencies, there has been a dip in the prices of Bitcoin and Ether. The market is currently digesting these events as investors wait and watch,” Rajagopal Menon, vice-president of WazirX, India’s largest crypto exchange by volume, told Forkast in an email.

Bitcoin and Ether prices declined after CoinDesk reported that LeetSwap said it is working with on-chain security experts to recover 340 Ether after PeckShield tweeted the exchange on Coinbase’s Layer 2 blockchain had been attacked.

“In the past, similar incidents have caused price fluctuations, often downward, due to uncertainty and fear among investors,” Menon said.

“The extent to which these events impact Bitcoin and Ether prices throughout the week largely hinges on the DeFi community’s response and the speed at which investor confidence can be restored. News of fund recovery or enhanced security measures could potentially stabilize or even boost sentiment,” Menon added.

Over the weekend, decentralized stablecoin exchange Curve Finance reported a security issue in older versions of Vyper, the programming language used for smart contracts. According to data from smart contract auditing firm BlockSec, hackers drained an estimated US$41 million in cryptocurrencies from the platform as a result of the malfunction, raising concerns about possible problems at other DeFi platforms.

Following the Curve Finance incident, there has been a marked decrease in the total value of locked assets on the platform, plunging from over US$3 billion to US$1.7 billion – suggesting investors are fleeing the platform, according to Menon.

“This episode underscores a critical moment for DeFi and Ethereum, potentially indicating a nadir with immense upside potential. It also raises concerns about the risk of contagion spreading across other DeFi protocols,” he said.