Aave to overhaul collateral and listing standards after KelpDAO exploit

Aave to overhaul collateral and listing standards after KelpDAO exploit

Miami — Aave Labs is set to fundamentally reshape how it assesses and lists collateral assets on its protocol, following the largest DeFi exploit of 2026, and the overhaul could set a new standard across the entire industry.

Linda Jeng, chief legal and policy officer at Aave Labs, said at Consensus Miami 2026 that the protocol’s existing risk framework, while robust, had been too narrowly focused on financial risk and volatility.

Going forward, every asset seeking to be listed on Aave will face a broader assessment covering interoperability, cybersecurity vulnerabilities, and the underlying architecture of the asset. She cited rsETH, the restaking token issued by KelpDAO that sat at the center of April’s crisis, as the catalyst for the change.

Beyond the new assessment criteria, Jeng announced that Aave would publish a formal playbook for asset issuers — a set of minimum standards that projects must meet before they can list on the protocol. She also said Aave would begin examining systemic interconnections across protocols, moving away from analyzing pools in isolation to understanding how exposure in one corner of DeFi can ripple into another.

“Out of a crisis like this, it ups our standards,” she said.

The remarks came as Jeng reflected on a month she described as “two weeks of no sleep.” An attacker had exploited KelpDAO’s cross-chain bridge, minting 116,500 unbacked rsETH tokens worth roughly $293 million, then depositing them into Aave as collateral to borrow real wrapped ether — leaving the protocol holding hundreds of millions in impaired debt.

Jeng, who worked as a regulator during the 2008 financial crisis, said the episode triggered a strong sense of déjà vu. But the resolution, she argued, was markedly different. Rather than a government-led bailout, the industry mobilized itself. An initiative called “DeFi United,” which has drawn commitments from Lido, EtherFi, Ethena and others, was launched to cover the collateral shortfall and prevent systemic bad debt from spreading further across DeFi lending markets.

“In the financial crisis, we had to bail out the banks,” she said. “Here, we came together as an ecosystem to bail ourselves out.”