Pressure is building across the decentralized finance sector after cross-chain protocol Transit Finance reportedly lost nearly $1.88 million in a suspected hack. Blockchain security firm PeckShieldAlert said the stolen funds moved into a newly created Ethereum wallet holding mostly DAI stablecoins.
PeckShieldAlert wrote on X, “Transit Finance seems to have been hacked for ~$1.88M.” Blockchain data shows the wallet received about 1.87 million DAI in a single transfer on May 12, 2026 alongside recent inbound ERC-20 transfers and an ETH balance of ~1.37 ETH valued at $3,150. Before that transaction, the address handled only two smaller DAI transfers, suggesting the wallet became active shortly before the suspected exploit.
Cross-chain protocols face rising security pressure
Transit Finance operates as a cross-chain protocol that helps users move crypto assets across different blockchain networks through a single platform. The system simplifies decentralized finance transactions by routing liquidity between multiple chains and bridges. However, that added complexity can also create more entry points for attackers through smart contracts, approvals, and external integrations.
Blockchain data shows the suspected wallet now holds almost entirely DAI stablecoins along with about 1.367 ETH. Investigators have not linked the address to other wallets across major blockchain networks so far. However, analysts continue tracking the funds as concerns over DeFi security breaches keep growing.
Researchers have repeatedly warned about risks tied to unlimited wallet approvals and weak contract protections inside cross-chain systems. Besides that, bridging infrastructure can expose platforms to technical vulnerabilities during asset transfers and settlement processes.
The suspected Transit Finance exploit came only days after crypto trader Unihax0r reportedly lost more than $200,000 in a separate multi-chain attack. Investigators linked that incident to a compromised private key rather than malicious token approvals or smart contract weaknesses. The case also renewed debate around the security risks tied to Telegram-based crypto trading tools and wallet management practices.
DeFi industry faces survival test
The decentralized finance (DeFi) sector is going through one of its most difficult periods in recent years. More than 40 crypto protocols shut down in Q1 2026 after repeated security breaches and operational failures. At the same time, hackers drained over $770 million from DeFi platforms.
April stood out as the worst month on record for crypto hacks by incident count. The rising losses and shutdowns point to ongoing weaknesses in how many DeFi systems are built and secured.
LayerZero also recently acknowledged security weaknesses connected to verifier design following the $293 million Kelp DAO exploit. The company admitted that relying on a single verifier created a critical failure point for large cross-chain transactions. As a result, the incident added to growing concerns about structural risks inside decentralized finance infrastructure and cross-chain systems.
