Solana-based lending protocol Loopscale was exploited for $5.8 million on Saturday, about two weeks after its launch on April 10.
The exploit impacted about 12% of Loopscale’s total value locked (TVL), which had reached around $40 million before the incident. The team said on X that they are investigating how the exploit occurred, who was behind it, and the best path for potential fund recovery. Loopscale is also working with law enforcement agencies.
Originally known as Bridgesplit, Loopscale was founded to create a different lending model from traditional pool-based platforms like Aave or Solend. Instead of pooling liquidity, it matches lenders and borrowers directly through an order book system. The platform supports over 40 token pairs and enables specialized lending strategies such as structured credit and receivables financing. Its USDC vault offered more than 5% APR, while the SOL vault offered yields over 10%. Before the hack, the platform had attracted about 7,000 lenders.
Loopscale had undergone a security audit by OShield between January and February 2025. Several critical vulnerabilities were found during the audit, but according to Loopscale’s documentation, all critical and high-risk issues were fixed. A second audit by Sec3 was still underway at the time of the hack. Despite these security measures, the exploit exposed serious weaknesses.
The incident comes amid a spike in crypto exploits in early 2025. In the first quarter alone, PeckShield reported that $1.6 billion worth of crypto assets were stolen, most notably including the $1.5 billion Bybit hack attributed to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. Other projects like KiloEX and Infini have also suffered losses.
Loopscale had completed a six-month closed beta phase before going live in April, aiming to introduce a more efficient lending model on Solana. The attack has raised concerns about ongoing security risks even for recently audited and newly launched DeFi platforms. Loopscale continues to update its users as investigations progress.