Debt Relief Efforts Underway as Fluid Absorbs $21 Million Loss Stemming from Resolv Security Breach, Pledges Path Forward

Table of Contents Fluid, a DeFi liquidity protocol, confirmed that the March Resolv exploit resulted in roughly $21 million in bad debt for the platform. The attack involved the unauthorized minting of approximately $80 million in uncollateralized USR tokens. Fluid clarified that its own smart contracts were not compromised. All losses have since been fully covered through a combination of contributions from Resolv, Fluid’s governance treasury, and the core team. The exploit originated from compromised signing infrastructure within the Resolv ecosystem. A malicious actor used this access to mint uncollateralized USR tokens. Fluid had roughly $100 million in exposure to Resolv at the time of the attack. Opportunistic actors then purchased discounted wstUSR tokens and posted them as collateral at inflated oracle prices. They borrowed stablecoins against these positions and abandoned them, leaving residual bad debt on the protocol. Within hours, Fluid paused affected markets and secured external commitments to backstop the losses. The $19.3 million in remaining bad debt was split among three parties. Resolv covered approximately $9.7 million, while Fluid’s governance treasury contributed $8.2 million. The team covered the remaining $1.5 million, to be reimbursed from future protocol revenue. Following the incident, Fluid announced several steps to rebuild its treasury. The protocol will pause its FLUID token buyback program, having already repurchased around 1.3% of total supply. FLUID token emissions will also be significantly reduced or eliminated to cut sell pressure. Additionally, the Foundation will forgo its planned $250,000 monthly allocation from March through June. This decision reflects the protocol’s focus on treasury recovery over discretionary spending. The goal is to sustain organic growth while restoring financial stability. Fluid also addressed a separate issue involving its ETH Lite Vault. During the KelpDAO incident, ETH utilization neared 100% across major lending markets, temporarily blocking withdrawals. The team deployed an aWETH redemption mechanism that processed over $440 million in redemptions, generating enough fees to fully offset losses from that period. Fluid outlined several upgrades to its oracle and pricing infrastructure. The new system introduces per-key pricing, token classification, multi-source oracle feeds, and deviation checks that halt operations if prices shift beyond set thresholds. These changes are designed to improve risk management under extreme market conditions. The protocol also plans to establish legal agreements with asset issuers. These agreements aim to create enforceable claims on underlying assets and enable recovery pathways when an asset loses its peg. As Fluid noted in its post-mortem: “Recent events have shown that asset backing alone is insufficient without enforceable claims.” On the product side, Fluid confirmed that DEX v2 is ready but will launch once market conditions improve. The Solana DEX is in its final audit stage, with a launch expected within six weeks. Fixed-rate borrowing, Liquidity-as-a-Service, and custodied collateral products are also in development. These offerings target institutional clients who prefer to hold assets in custody while accessing DeFi liquidity. Fluid stated that several institutional integrations are already underway, with the largest institutional market deployment expected imminently. The protocol plans to co-design frameworks with traditional asset managers entering DeFi, offering technical and business development support alongside its liquidity infrastructure.