Magnate Finance, a lending and borrowing platform on Coinbase’s layer-2 protocol, Base, has rug-pulled its users of $6.5 million hours after on-chain sleuths like ZachXBT warned about the possibility of an exit scam due to several actions of the founders of the project.
Earlier on Aug. 25, the Magnate Finance protocol deleted its Telegram group and took its website offline, raising concerns among users of a possible exit scam.
Magnate Finance also deleted its X account and removed all possible social media presence. ZachXBT had notified that the Magnate Finance deployer address is directly linked to the Solfire $4.8-million exit scam.
Community Alert: Magnate Finance on Base will likely exit scam in the near future currently with over $6.4M TVL.
The deployers address is directly linked to the Solfire $4.8M exit scam. pic.twitter.com/mBDUy3D66j
— ZachXBT (@zachxbt) August 25, 2023
Just hours after deleting the Telegram group and taking their website down, the project developers manipulated the price oracle of the protocol and removed all the assets, leading to the collapse of the $6.4 million of total value locked (TVL) in the protocol.
Blockchain analytic firm PeckShield notified that the scammers behind the project transferred $1.34 million worth of Dai (DAI) tokens to a new address starting from 0x0664 and later bridged $1 million of the stolen funds to the BNB Smart Chain. PeckShield also tracked five different wallets linked to the Magnate Finance scammers.
The scammer behind the rugpull has bridged the majority of the profits to Ethereum L2 platforms Arbitrum and Optimism, along with the BNB Smart Chain through Stargate. Currently, around 295 Ether (ETH) and 1.3 million DAI are still held on the Base chain.
Exit scams and rugpulls have become a very common tactic of scammers, especially in the decentralized finance ecosystem due to the added convenience of decentralization. This is evident from the fact that the total value of cryptocurrencies lost in exit scams and hacks amounted to $656 million during the first half of 2023.
Magazine: Should crypto projects ever negotiate with hackers? Probably