Binance Smart Chain Protocol Qubit Finance Hacked for $80M
Qubit Finance, a DeFi protocol on Binance Smart Chain, was
exploited today for $80 million worth of BNB tokens.
Another Binance Smart Chain protocol has been hacked.
An unknown hacker was able to drain $80 million worth of BNB
tokens from the Binance Smart Chain lending protocol Qubit Finance.
On Jan. 27, at around 21:36 UTC, a hacker exploited a
vulnerability on the Qubit Bridge, a cross-chain bridge connected to Ethereum.
This bridge lets users deposit WETH from Ethereum mainnet into Qubit’s Binance
Smart Chain-based smart contract to mint xETH, which can be used as lending
collateral on the protocol.
Due to a critical vulnerability in the bridge’s smart
contracts, the hacker was able to mint xETH without depositing any WETH,
thereby giving them the ability to take out unlimited leveraged loans from
Qubit’s pools.
In a Twitter post announcing the exploit, the team reported
that the hacker “minted unlimited xETH to borrow on BSC.” Using the xETH as
collateral, the hacker proceeded to siphon 206,809 BNB from Qubit Finance,
worth about $80 million at the time. The loot can be seen sitting in the
hacker’s address.
In an on-chain message directed to the hacker, the Qubit
team offered a bounty of $250,000 in return for the stolen funds, as per the
protocol’s ongoing bug bounty program with the ethical hacking platform
Immunefi. In another post, the Qubit team has also tried to contact the hacker
to negotiate.
The Qubit Finance exploit appears to be the seventh-largest
DeFi protocol hack in terms of the value of stolen funds, as per data from DeFi
Yield. Following the hack, the protocol’s Qubit token has dropped 27% over the
past 24 hours.
Since the launch of Binance Smart Chain in September 2020,
the chain has become infamous for the amount of hacks, exploits and rug pulls
that have taken place on it.
In 2021, several DeFi projects on Binance Smart Chain
suffered major hacks or exploits. Some of the most severe include Meerkat
Finance’s $31 million hack in March 2021, a Uranium Finance exploit that cost
protocol users $50 million in April, and the $88 million attack on Venus
Finance in May.
Qubit Finance has not yet commented on plans to reimburse or
compensate users for funds lost due to the exploit.
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