The Balancer hack on Monday, November 3, 2025 (or where I’m currently located: Bangkok time: Tuesday, Nov 4) hit DeFi like a brick. On-chain trackers and reporters counted over $100 million siphoned from Balancer’s V2 vaults across several networks, with tallies ranging from ~$110M to ~$128M as investigators reconciled addresses and mirrored pools. Early snapshots flagged big chunks of WETH, wstETH, osETH and other liquid-staking ETH variants among the stolen assets.
The short version
- Scope: Cross-chain drain from Balancer V2 vaults and connected pools; forks and integrations saw knock-on effects. Beets.fi and Berachain were cited among those reacting to exposure.
- Damage: Working estimates landed around $110M–$128M in losses as of November 3.
- Market move: Balancer’s BAL token slid ~4–5% after the reports; broader crypto wobbled, with some outlets noting ETH down intraday during the selloff.
How the exploit worked (plain english)
Balancer’s V2 Vault is a shared accounting hub that holds tokens for many different pools. A public function called manageUserBalance lets approved callers move “internal balances” (deposit, withdraw, transfer). Investigators say a permission/validation gap around this pathway allowed an attacker to craft operations that withdrew balances they didn’t own—or to get the Vault to treat a later call as authorized when it wasn’t. That’s why multiple pools on multiple chains drained in minutes: once the hub’s checks misfire, the blast radius is large.
Key indicators reported by researchers
- Trigger surface:
manageUserBalanceon the V2 Vault. - Assets hit: WETH, wstETH, osETH featured prominently in the first wave of transfers.
- Chains affected: Ethereum mainnet saw the largest drain; Base, Polygon, Sonic and others showed related outflows or impact via integrations/forks.
Bottom line: this was a smart-contract authorization bug at the vault layer, not a stolen key incident. Those still happen in 2025—but this time, code was the culprit.
How much was actually stolen?
Numbers moved fast through the day. CoinDesk and others initially saw ~$110M flowing to a newly controlled wallet. Later round-ups and security dashboards pushed the total into the $116M–$128M band as cross-chain traces were added. Expect the figure to settle as overlapping addresses get deduped.
Breakdown that circulated among trackers (approximate):
- Ethereum mainnet: the main hit (majority of losses)
- Base & Sonic: single-digit millions combined
- Other chains/integrations: lower-seven figures total
- Top assets: WETH, wstETH, osETH, frxETH, rETH and related LSTs
(Exact splits vary across sources; reconciliations are still ongoing.)
Aftermath: what else moved because of the hack?
- BAL price slipped ~4–5% into the headlines.
- Several teams interacting with Balancer V2 either paused, withdrew, or triaged their positions; Berachain announced emergency steps to contain related risk on its side.
- Some coverage tied the news flow to broader ETH weakness during Monday’s selloff, though macro jitters also contributed.
Check out the latest trend, prediction market airdrops.
Was the code “vibe coded” or AI-assisted?
Security chats on X pointed out debug-style logs visible on-chain in the attacker’s contract, which is unusual in polished production exploits. If verified, that would hint at hurried or AI-assisted code (LLMs often sprinkle console.log-style traces). Treat this as community chatter until a formal post-mortem lands; we don’t have a primary, public report confirming it yet.
Why a vault-level bug is so dangerous
Balancer’s single-vault design brings great UX and gas benefits, but it also centralizes invariants: if the vault’s checks fail, many pools become reachable in one go. That design tradeoff is well known—and audited many times over—but even mature contracts can harbor low-entropy validation gaps that only look “obvious” after the fact.
What you should do right now (if you used Balancer V2)
- Withdraw or unwind exposure from Balancer V2 pools (and forks/integrations) until the team publishes a green-light list.
- Revoke approvals to Balancer contracts you no longer need. Tools like Etherscan Token Approvals, Revoke.cash, or DeBank make this simple.
- Monitor your wallets for unexpected token transfers (Etherscan) and keep an eye on reputable dashboards.
- Follow real-time updates from Balancer, PeckShield, Lookonchain, and other incident responders.
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Lessons for protocols and power users
- Audits reduce risk; they don’t eliminate it. Even battle-tested DeFi code can miss an edge-case at the authorization layer. Put the strongest formal checks and simulation at the accounting hub, not just the pool wrappers.
- Multiple kill-switches beat one. Wallet-side transaction guards, stricter front-end integrity checks, and immutable CI/CD for web assets limit blast radius when something slips through.
- Assume cross-protocol contagion. If a vault is a hub for many pools, issues can ripple into forks and integrated apps—plan comms and circuit breakers accordingly.
Final words
The Balancer hack is a harsh reminder: DeFi’s convenience comes from powerful shared components, and those same hubs are high-value targets. If you had funds in Balancer V2 (or projects building on top of it), act first, debate later: pull exposure, revoke approvals, and wait for verified safelists. We’ll update once the post-mortems land and the numbers settle.
If you enjoyed this blog, you may want to check our other news items: Trump meeting Xi and the market reaction.
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