Investors have lost billions of dollars this year due to theft and fraud among criminals targeting decentralized finance (DeFi) products and services, according to new research by Elliptic.
Specifically, DeFi users and investors have suffered more than $12 billion in losses due to theft and fraud, and those losses are only accelerating, with losses totaling $10.5 billion in 2021 to date, up from $1.5 billion in 2020, as per the research.
Owing to the relatively new underlying technology used in DeFi, criminals are able to hack in and steal users’ funds, while the deep pools of liquidity also allow criminals to launder proceeds of crime such as ransomware and fraud, leaving few traces, Elliptic found.
The figures lay bare the risks in the fast-growing but still predominantly unregulated area of cryptocurrencies.
DeFi is increasingly becoming a significant part of the financial system and tens of billions of dollars worth of crypto has flowed through such applications.
Over the last two years, the total amount of money deposited at DeFi services has spiked from just $500 million to $247 billion, according to Elliptic, while monthly trading volumes on decentralised exchanges (DEXs) have surged by more than 1,500 percent over the past year, to more than $300 billion each month.
“The DeFi ecosystem is an incredibly exciting and fast-moving space, with financial services innovation happening at light speed,” said Tom Robinson, chief scientist at Elliptic.
“This is attracting large amounts of capital to projects that are not always robust or well-tested. Criminal actors have seen the opportunity to exploit this.”
In the United States, regulators have taken a proactive approach to scrutinizing the decentralized finance industry and have proposed a number of regulatory models to address the various risks they may pose.
The Epoch Times has contacted Uniswap for comment.
“Countries should monitor for the emergence of risks posed by DeFi services and arrangements in such situations, including by engaging with representatives from their DeFi community. Countries should consider, where appropriate, any mitigating actions, where DeFi services operating in this manner are known to them,” the updated guidance states.