The Billion-Dollar IOU
To understand the crisis, you have to understand the setup. Michael Egorov, the founder of Curve Finance, had taken out over $100 million in loans from various decentralized lending platforms. This isn't unusual in crypto, but his choice of collateral
was. He primarily used CRV, the native governance token of his own protocol, Curve. He had pledged hundreds of millions of CRV tokens—a significant portion of the entire circulating supply—to back his personal borrowing. This created a situation of extreme concentration risk. Essentially, the stability of a multi-billion dollar protocol became inextricably linked to one man's personal financial decisions.
The Ticking Time Bomb of Liquidation
Here's where the danger lies in DeFi. When you borrow against collateral, there's a liquidation price. If the value of your collateral (in this case, CRV tokens) drops below a certain threshold, the protocol automatically sells it on the open market to recoup the lender's funds. For a small loan, this is a normal market event. For Egorov, it was a doomsday scenario. If his loans were liquidated, a massive wave of CRV tokens would flood the market all at once. This sudden supply shock would inevitably crash the price of CRV, triggering even more liquidations—not just for him, but for everyone using CRV as collateral across DeFi. This is called a liquidation cascade or a “death spiral,” and it had the potential to create a black hole of value, sucking down Curve and potentially other interconnected protocols with it.
The Hack That Lit the Fuse
The bomb didn't go off by itself. On July 30, 2023, news broke of a critical vulnerability in Vyper, a programming language used by several liquidity pools on Curve. Hackers exploited this flaw, draining tens of millions of dollars from the protocol. While the hack itself was contained, the news sparked panic. Traders dumped CRV tokens, fearing broader insolvency. The price of CRV plunged over 30%, pushing Egorov's colossal loan positions dangerously close to their liquidation points. The death spiral wasn't a theoretical risk anymore; it was minutes away from becoming a reality, threatening to turn a bad situation into a catastrophic one for the entire DeFi ecosystem.
The Old-Fashioned Handshake Deals
This is the real reason Curve survived, and it has nothing to do with trustless code. Facing imminent disaster, Egorov didn't rely on algorithms; he hit the phones. He began negotiating a series of over-the-counter (OTC) deals with a who's who of crypto's wealthiest and most influential figures. Instead of letting his CRV collateral be dumped on the public market, he sold massive blocks of it directly to buyers like Tron founder Justin Sun, venture capital firms, and other DeFi founders. These buyers agreed to purchase CRV at a discount, often with a handshake agreement to not sell it for a set period. Egorov used the cash from these sales—over $50 million in a matter of days—to pay down his loans, increasing his collateral ratio and moving it away from the liquidation cliff. The automated executioner was halted not by code, but by backroom dealing.
A Decentralized System Saved by Insiders
The irony is palpable. A system designed to be decentralized, automated, and free from the whims of powerful individuals was ultimately saved by a small, interconnected group of powerful individuals. While their actions prevented a market-wide catastrophe, the event exposed a deep vulnerability. It showed that even in DeFi, where “code is law” is the mantra, the unwritten social layer—the relationships, reputations, and private deals between key players—is what can ultimately make or break the system in a crisis. Curve didn't survive because it was perfectly designed; it survived because the ecosystem was still small and centralized enough for a few key players to coordinate a bailout.













