A well-known crypto trader linked to last month’s $114 million Mango Markets exploit is at it again – but this time appears to have gotten hung up.
The trader, identified on Twitter and tagged by blockchain analysts as Avraham Eisenberg, borrowed 40 million Curve (CRV) tokens (worth $20 million at the time) using the decentralized lending platform Aave, then transferred them to the OKEx crypto exchange.
But after a series of wild swings in the CRV price, Eisenberg appears to have gotten liquidated.
According to the blockchain-analysis firm Akrham, Eisenberg borrowed the majority of CRV tokens on Aave by pledging $40 million in USDC stablecoin as collateral.
According to blockchain data, he then sent the 40 million CRV to crypto exchange OKEx in two transactions – possibly putting the tokens in position for a quick sale.
Blockchain sleuths on Twitter speculated that he appeared to be building up a CRV short position – that is, to profit off a price decline.
CRV’s price declined early Tuesday, then shot up 75% within a few hours, according to CoinDesk pricing data, in what appeared to be a short squeeze.
Foiled?
In the end, all of Eisenberg’s CRV loan was liquidated, leaving Aave with $1.6 million of bad debt, according to blockchain data by Blockanalitica. The amount is insignificant relative to the $6 billion total value locked on the protocol.
“He ultimately didn’t have enough initial capital to make the ‘profitable trade’ work,” Dustin Teander, analyst of blockchain intelligence firm Messari, told CoinDesk.
Eisenberg had not returned a request for comment as of press time.
The dramatic sequence of events comes just five weeks after Eisenberg outlined a plan to exploit a loophole in Aave’s collateral accounting system.
This could have created a vicious cycle for the lending protocol, which could be “very dangerous for Aave,” Arkham tweeted earlier today.