Polymarket traders don’t see Kelp socializing losses after $292 million exploit

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A Polymarket contract on whether Kelp DAO will spread the losses from the weekend’s $292 million exploit beyond those directly affected is pointing to a clear answer: probably not.

Bettors are giving a 14% chance that Kelp will “socialize the losses,” or implement a mechanism forcing rsETH holders on Ethereum, which wasn’t hit, to share the pain of users on other chains.

The attackers drained roughly 116,500 rsETH from a LayerZero-powered bridge that held the reserves backing the token across more than 20 blockchains. That left parts of the system undercollateralized, with some holders effectively owning tokens no longer fully backed by ether (ETH).

“Socializing the losses” would mean Kelp redistributes the shortfall across all rsETH holders, including those on the Ethereum mainnet, rather than leaving losses concentrated among users and protocols tied to the compromised bridge.

The most widely cited precedent of this approach came in 2016, when Bitfinex imposed losses on all users after a $60 million hack, effectively mutualizing the hit to avoid shutting down.

More recently, derivatives exchanges have used variations of the concept through auto-deleveraging (ADL), in which profitable positions are forcibly reduced to cover losses when insurance funds are exhausted.

During the October flash crash, ADL mechanisms were triggered across some venues, closing out even market-neutral positions and leaving traders exposed. These moves are rare and controversial, but they have been used as a last resort to stabilize systems under stress.

Kelp’s situation is more complex. The exploit drained the reserve backing rsETH across more than 20 chains, leaving losses fragmented across different user groups and platforms.

Holders on affected networks face impaired backing, while others remain relatively insulated. Any attempt to equalize losses would require coordination across chains, clear accounting of liabilities, and a willingness to impose losses on users who may not see themselves as affected.

That makes a clean, system-wide redistribution both technically and politically difficult, which may explain why Polymarket traders are approaching the question with skepticism.

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