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DeFi News

Inverse Finance Faces $240K Loss in DOLA Manipulation Alert

Certik further says the $30M flash loan was used to manipulate sDOLA, liquidating 27 users and netting the attacker around $240K in profit

Written By Kenrodgers Fabian Kenrodgers Fabian
Fact Checked by Gopal Solanky Gopal Solanky
Published March 2, 2026 4:16 PM·Updated 4 months ago
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InverseFinance Faces $240K Loss in DOLA Manipulation Alert

Key Highlights

  • About $240K lost after sDOLA price manipulation forced 27 users into liquidation on LlamaLend, not Inverse Finance.
  • Flash loans worth ~$30M were used to exploit sDOLA, showing stablecoins can still be vulnerable in complex DeFi setups.
  • Inverse Finance confirms DOLA itself is safe; the incident stems from external protocols using its token.

A suspicious transaction hit the DOLA token ecosystem, causing an estimated loss of around $240K. Security firm BlockSec Phalcon reported the incident on X, saying the unusual activity targeted a contract linked to Inverse Finance on Ethereum.

According to the post, the transaction exploited a DOLA price manipulation that forced multiple users into liquidation. “We have contacted the team but have not yet received a response,” BlockSec stated, urging all exposed users to take immediate action. The full technical details remain unclear, leaving uncertainty over whether additional users may still face risk.

ALERT! Our system detected a suspicious transaction targeting @InverseFinance's contract on Ethereum a few hours ago, resulting in ~$240K in losses. The incident appears to involve a DOLA price manipulation that forced multiple users into liquidation.

We have contacted the team…

— BlockSec Phalcon (@Phalcon_xyz) March 2, 2026

Security firm CertiK Alert confirmed that the incident involved a clever exploit using around $30 million in flash loans. The attacker managed to manipulate sDOLA balances, which led to the liquidation of 27 users’ positions, earning roughly $240K in profit. 

This is an example of how stablecoins such as DOLA can experience a price impact, especially if complex lending/borrowing systems are involved. Although Inverse Finance is responsible for DOLA as well as their fixed-rate lending platform, FiRM, the team has yet to provide a detailed explanation of how the price was manipulated.

Historical context of DOLA exploits

Inverse Finance has faced challenges before with DOLA and its money-market protocol, Frontier. In April 2022, Frontier—then called Anchor—lost $15.6 million in a price oracle manipulation. A hacker boosted the value of $INV tokens, which let them borrow against collateral and withdraw ETH, WBTC, YFI, and DOLA. 

A second incident happened in June 2022, when Chainlink price data was manipulated, allowing flash loans to exploit yvcrv3crypto positions, causing around $5.83 million in losses. Therefore, both events exposed unexpected attack paths rather than obvious security flaws.

Inverse Finance denies direct breach

However, the protocol’s team quickly pushed back against characterizations of the event as a direct attack on Inverse Finance itself. Founder and developer at Inverse Finance, Nour Haridy clarified on X, “Inverse Finance was NOT affected. It’s simply an incident in an external protocol that uses DOLA token.” 

Analyst YAM added, “This is NOT an InverseFinance exploit, but an issue with LlamaLend. The exploiter liquidated practically all users who supplied sDOLA and borrowed crvUSD on Llamalend.” He also explained that the attack involved a ‘donation attack’ that changed sDOLA’s value, unintentionally affecting users’ collateralized positions.

Clarification from Curve Finance

Speaking on the incident, Curve Finance team shared that the attack was made possible by a combination of factors, including the sDOLA price oracle and Llamalend.

“The attacker made a relatively small profit, but the attack emphasized the importance of handling vault collaterals in a specific manner in LlamaLend,” the team said, adding, “Borrowers who borrowed against sDOLA were liquidated, lenders are unaffected, and holders of sDOLA made some profit.”

We are currently investigating the attack on sDOLA LlamaLend markets. Investigation shows that it is made possible by a combination of which price oracle is used for sDOLA (e.g. whether affected by donation attacks) vs how much sDOLA existed outside of collateral in this market.… https://t.co/SUPlYvLKVG

— Curve Finance (@CurveFinance) March 2, 2026

Curve further said that an investigation is ongoing to check if any of other similar markets are affected and LlamaLend V2 is made safe with ‘donation-vulnerable’ vault collaterals at all market sizes.

Also Read: Kalshi CEO Responds to $500M Iran Prediction Market Backlash

Disclaimer: The information researched and reported by The Crypto Times is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional financial advice. Investing in crypto assets involves significant risk due to market volatility. Always Do Your Own Research (DYOR) and consult with a qualified Financial Advisor before making any investment decisions.

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