Drift confirms an exploit worth $280 million, with risk spreading to USDC inflows

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Drift confirms $280 million exploit, risks spilling into USDC inflows

Drift says the $280 million exploit stemmed from approving unauthorized transactions through durable nonce, raising concerns about USDC safety and capital flows.

Drift confirms the $280 million exploit was not caused by a flaw in the core smart contract. The project says the cause was unauthorized transaction approvals, supported by durable nonce (a mechanism for keeping transactions pending longer on Solana). This development quickly shifted the debate to how stablecoin issuers handle stolen assets.

Drift assigns responsibility for a sophisticated governance takeover

In an update released Wednesday, Drift said the attack originated from the bad actor gaining the ability to approve unauthorized transactions at the governance level. The durable nonce mechanism was exploited to keep transaction signatures valid for longer than usual, thereby widening the execution window for the hacker. The project emphasized this was an intentional, “sophisticated” intrusion rather than a one-off operational incident.

Notably, this attack method highlights risks beyond the traditional on-chain code layer. The focus is no longer solely on contract vulnerabilities, but instead moves to signature process security, governance permissions, and operational infrastructure control. For institutional investors, this is a signal that governance risk remains a major bottleneck for large-scale crypto protocols.

ZachXBT criticizes Circle for its handling of USDC flows tied to the hack

After the incident, on-chain investigator ZachXBT publicly criticized Circle for its response to the USDC amount connected to the stolen funds. The controversy centers on whether the stablecoin issuer should quickly freeze addresses that receive suspicious assets. The pressure therefore not only weighed on Drift, but also spread to intermediary organizations that play a backbone role in market liquidity.

Circle has long been viewed as one of the entities with strong ability to intervene in USDC through the asset-freezing mechanism at the contract level. That same capability makes the market expect an immediate response when large stablecoin-related exploits emerge. Once the response is judged to be slow or inconsistent, confidence in both the neutrality and the safety of the capital parked in USDC will be eroded.

Infrastructure risk is becoming a new pricing variable for the market

The case shows that infrastructure risk in crypto is no longer confined to smart contracts or cross-chain bridges. Links such as governance, order-signing systems, stablecoin issuers, and emergency response procedures directly affect the ability to preserve capital. When a point of failure appears, the ripple effect can extend far beyond the boundaries of the protocol under attack.

From a cash-flow perspective, investors will closely track how Drift addresses the fallout and the extent of coordination among relevant parties. If the stolen assets are not effectively frozen, pressure to withdraw funds from platforms with complex governance structures could increase. Conversely, a transparent and decisive handling process would help reduce damage to market-wide confidence.

The market will pay closer attention to governance standards and post-exploit response

In the short term, the focus is not only on the $280 million loss figure, but also on the quality of the response after the crisis. Funds and trading desks will reassess the safety of multisig models, transaction-signing procedures, and the ability to isolate risk at the governance layer. This could drive a wave of repricing for protocols that rely on internal control standards, rather than simply on user growth.

Further out, the dispute around Circle shows that stablecoins have become system-level infrastructure for crypto. Any decision to freeze or not freeze directly impacts expectations for asset recovery and market sentiment. An ecosystem seeking to attract large inflows will have to prove that it can not only grow quickly, but also handle crises at professional financial standards.

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