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Showing posts with label Illicit Trade. Show all posts

Makina Finance Loses $4M in ETH After Flash Loan Price Manipulation Exploit

 

One moment it was operating normally - then suddenly, price feeds went haywire. About 1,299 ETH vanished during what looked like routine activity. That sum now exceeds four million dollars in value. The trigger? A flash loan attack targeting Makina Finance, built on Ethereum. Not a hack of code - but an economic twist inside the system. Security teams such as PeckShield traced moves across the DUSD–DUSDC liquidity pool. Borrowed funds flooded in, shifting valuations without breaking access rules. Prices bent under pressure from artificial trades. Afterward, profits drained off-chain. What stayed behind were distorted reserves and puzzled users. No stolen keys. No failed signatures. Just manipulation riding allowed functions too far. 

The exploit started, researchers say, with a $280 million flash loan taken in USDC. Of that amount, roughly $170 million went toward distorting data from the MachineShareOracle, which sets values for the targeted liquidity pool. With prices artificially raised, trades worth around $110 million passed through the system - leaving over 1,000 ETH missing afterward. What happened fits a known pattern: manipulating value via temporary shifts in market depth. Since Makina's setup depended on immediate price points, sudden influxes of borrowed funds were enough to warp them. Inserting capital, pushing valuations up, then pulling assets out while gains lasted exposed a flaw built into how prices are calculated.  

Even though the exploit worked, the hacker did not receive most of the stolen money. A different actor, an MEV builder, stepped in ahead during the draining transaction and took nearly all the ETH pulled out. According to PeckShield, this twist could make getting back the assets more likely. Yet, there has been no public word from Makina on whether they have reached out to - or even found - the MEV searcher responsible. 

After reviewing what happened, Makina explained the vulnerability only touched its DUSD–DUSDC Curve pool, leaving everything else untouched. Security measures kicked in across all Machines - its smart vault network - as checks continue into how deep the effects go. To stay safe, users putting liquidity in that specific pool got a heads-up to pull out whatever they had left. More details will come once the team learns more through their ongoing review. 

Not long ago, flash loan attacks started showing up more often in DeFi. By October, the Bunni exchange closed for good following one such incident - $8.4 million vanished fast. Its team said restarting safely would mean spending too much on checks and oversight. Just weeks before, another hit struck Shibarium, a layer-two system. That breach pulled out $2.4 million in value almost instantly. 

Even so, wider trends hint at slow progress. Chainalysis notes that losses tied to DeFi stayed modest in 2025, though value held in decentralized systems climbed back near earlier peaks. Despite lingering dangers from flash loans, safeguards within the space seem to be growing more resilient over time.

Terrorists Using Cyber Crime for Funding Since Covid-19


What is Asia Pacific Group Report?

Terrorist groups are actively depending on criminal activities, these include online frauds and cybercrime, scams that fund their illegal activities, as per the annual report of Asia Pacific Group on Money Laundering. 

The report also lists case studies from member countries, these include India and Pakistan, it involves money laundering and terrorism finance. 

Cybercrime and terrorism 

The economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic appears to have let terrorists to increase their dependence on trafficking in minerals and precious stones, drug smuggling, scam through electronic means, the trade of counterfeit medicines, and cybercrime. 

The authorities have also found sale of forged vaccination records. The members keep reporting fraud claims for COVID-19 related government subsidies. 

The lockdown and border closures because of COVID-19 led to a rise in the identification of illegal trade related to alcohol, tobacco, and illegal drugs. There has also been a rise in the discovery of large amounts of physical cash linked to the crime.

Recent Developments 

Denoting to large seizures of heroin in the Indian Ocean region, the report suggests that it could be a sign that drug traffickers are making more use of maritime routes to smuggle heroine to Europe by using the Southern route. 

This development might be going hand in hand with a decline in trafficking along the land routes. The shift can be attributed to a change in tactics by drug trafficking agencies in response to the COVID-19 measures.

Crackdown by Police 

Earlier this year, a joint operation by the Narcotics Control Bureau and the Indian Navy led to capturing of 750 kg of drugs worth more than Rs 2,000 crore via a ship off from the Gujarat coast. 

Recently, the Gujarat police captured 75 kgs of heroin, around Rs 376 crore worth, from a shipment in the Mundra Port (Gujrat). The NIA is enquiring the role of international cartel in trafficking 3,000 Kg of heroine at Mundra Port (Gujarat) in September last year.