When a trader wipes out $50M in seconds, the industry usually assumes a bridge hack or a sophisticated exploit. Late on Thursday (March 12), however, a crypto whaleWhen a trader wipes out $50M in seconds, the industry usually assumes a bridge hack or a sophisticated exploit. Late on Thursday (March 12), however, a crypto whale

AAVE Crypto Swap Costs Nearly $50M Lost: ETH MEV Pocketed $9.9M

2026/03/13 15:11
3 min read
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When a trader wipes out $50M in seconds, the industry usually assumes a bridge hack or a sophisticated exploit. Late on Thursday (March 12), however, a crypto whale incinerated nearly their entire balance with a single click of AAVE crypto swap.

The user attempted to swap $50M worth of USDT for AAVE in a single on-chain transaction. Due to a complete lack of liquidity for an order of that magnitude, the trade suffered catastrophic slippage, returning just 324 AAVE crypto, worth roughly $50,000, for the $50M spent.

Data from the transaction shows the wallet interacted with the Aave interface via CoW Swap. According to Aave Labs founder Stani Kulechov, the interface explicitly “warned the user about extraordinary slippage and required confirmation via a checkbox.”

In a statement on X, CoW Swap confirmed that clear price-impact warnings were displayed and that the transaction followed the signed parameters. This comes down to user error and a lack of self-preservation in not using MEV bot protection.

SOURCE: TradingView

How a Single Swap Cost One Whale $50M While Buying AAVE Crypto

The mechanics behind this loss are brutal but standard. Decentralized exchanges (DEXs) rely on liquidity pools. When a buy order exceeds the available liquidity at the current price, the automated market maker (AMM) moves the price up the curve to fill the order.

To fill the $50M order, the protocol had to buy available AAVE at astronomically higher prices, resulting in an average entry price that wiped out the capital immediately.

This highlights why institutional players typically break such trades into thousands of smaller chunks or use OTC (over-the-counter) desks.

While Ethereum is quickly cementing itself as the backbone of institutional settlement, this event shows that the user interface layer still allows for catastrophic human error. Smart contracts do not judge the wisdom of a trade; it only executes the parameters signed by the wallet.

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What This Reveals About DeFi Market Structure

This event exposes the dangerous reality of “fat finger” trades in DeFi, where human intervention or flagging systems would likely pause such an anomaly in traditional finance.

Current liquidity on Aave, or almost any single DEX pool, cannot absorb $50M in a single tick without massive price distortion.

Interestingly, the AAVE crypto token is up +5% over the past 24 hours, a price surge that may have been buoyed by an unfortunate user who bought $50,000 worth of the token for $50M.

We have seen similar risks highlighted recently, as just yesterday, the Bonk.fun website was hijacked leading to user funds being drained.

While that incident involved malicious actors, the AAVE swap shows that users can cause similar losses to themselves without a compromised platform.

What Happens Next for the Whale and How to Avoid Their Mistake

There is no reversal button on the blockchain. However, Kulechov noted that Aave Labs is attempting to contact the user to return approximately $600,000 in fees collected from the transaction.

While a sympathetic gesture, it represents slightly more than 1% of the lost funds. For the broader market, the lesson is stark: liquidity warnings are not suggestions.

If the interface warns of “Extraordinary Slippage,” take note. And even for smaller transactions, let alone five-figure ones, always enable MEV protection when executing trades, protecting users from sandwich attacks and being front-ran.

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