On June 2025, ResupplyFi was exploited in a price manipulation, resulting in approximately $9.6M in losses. That makes the ResupplyFi exploit the 31st largest DeFi incident out of 690 documented in our archive.
Attack Mechanics: How the ResupplyFi Price Manipulation Played Out
Exploit Class Applied to ResupplyFi
The ResupplyFi incident on June 26, 2025 is classified as a Price Manipulation. The attacker drives the on-chain price of a token up or down within a single transaction to extract value from the protocol. In the full archive, ResupplyFi is 1 of 85 documented price manipulation incidents.
ResupplyFi in Context
At $9.6M, the ResupplyFi exploit is a significant ($1M–$10M) event compared to the largest same-class incident in our archive — CreamFinance (2021) at $130M.
Prior Price Manipulation Before ResupplyFi
The nearest price manipulation incident before ResupplyFi was MBUToken, 46 days earlier on May 11, 2025 ($2.16M lost). The same exploit class surfaced again within the price manipulation attack surface.
ResupplyFi Vulnerability Signature
The primary source categorises the ResupplyFi exploit specifically as “Share price manipulation”. This narrower label is entity-specific: it reflects how the ResupplyFi contract failed, rather than the broad price manipulation pattern alone.
Impact & Recovery for ResupplyFi
ResupplyFi Loss Figure
The ResupplyFi exploit caused $9,600,000 in losses — a significant ($1M–$10M) incident and the 6th largest of 96 documented in 2025. This single incident represents 0.5% of all tracked losses that year.
Where ResupplyFi Sits Among Price Manipulation Attacks
Ranked by loss size, ResupplyFi is the 5th largest of 85 price manipulation incidents documented. That puts the ResupplyFi loss above the class average of $3.9M.
Timeline Since the ResupplyFi Incident
The ResupplyFi exploit occurred 10 months ago (292 days). The contract, its fork-block, and the attack transaction remain on-chain and forensically reproducible.
Primary Reference for ResupplyFi
Public post-mortem / on-chain analysis for the ResupplyFi incident: view source.
FAQ
How much did ResupplyFi lose?
The ResupplyFi exploit in June 2025 resulted in $9,600,000 in losses — the 6th largest of 96 DeFi incidents that year.
When did the ResupplyFi hack happen?
The ResupplyFi exploit was recorded on June 26, 2025 — 292 days ago.
What type of exploit hit ResupplyFi?
The ResupplyFi incident is classified as a Price Manipulation. The attacker drives the on-chain price of a token up or down within a single transaction to extract value from the protocol.
How common is the Price Manipulation pattern seen at ResupplyFi?
Our archive contains 85 documented price manipulation incidents. The ResupplyFi incident is one of them.
How does ResupplyFi compare to the largest Price Manipulation attack?
The largest price manipulation incident in our archive is CreamFinance (2021) at $130M. The ResupplyFi loss is $9.6M.
What is the expected market value of the global supply chain management by 2026?
The market may double from its 2020 valuation by 2026.
Why do some companies hesitate to invest in blockchain technology?
Due to the perceived high costs and unclear return on investment.