Ethereum’s validator exit queue swelled to 433,158 ETH on May 3 with a seven-day wait. The figure climbed roughly 72,000% in two weeks as Decentralized Finance (DeFi) exploits triggered restaking withdrawals.
The shift tracks April’s $625 million in DeFi losses. A $292 million KelpDAO bridge breach drained restaked ether and rattled lending markets.
The April 18 KelpDAO bridge attack drained 116,500 rsETH through a compromised cross-chain bridge. LayerZero traced the heist to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. Aave’s deposits then fell from $45.8 billion to $28.6 billion as withdrawals spiked.
April logged $625 million in stolen funds across 30 incidents. It was the worst month for crypto exploits in history.
Liquid restaking tokens, bridges, and lending markets bore the brunt. DeFi total value locked has dropped roughly 30% in 12 weeks.
On X, on-chain analyst Checkmatey put it bluntly.
Capital leaving all forms of ‘defi’ because the risk is heavily skewed towards a zero return OF capital,” commented on-chain analyst Checkmatey.
The bearish read isn’t the whole picture. Validatorqueue.com data shows 3.6 million ETH waiting to enter staking. The 62-day queue is roughly 7x the size of exits.
Total staked ether holds at 38.6 million, or 31.72% of supply. Annual yield sits near 2.92%, with active validators near 900,000.
The split signals rotation rather than a structural retreat from staking.
If exploits subside, queues should return to normal as they have in the past.