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Est. MMXXVIVol. VI · № 273RSS
Blockchain Breaches

An archive of cryptocurrency security incidents — hacks, exploits, bridge failures and rug pulls, documented with on-chain evidence.

Dossier № 074Rug Pull

Arbix Finance Rug Pull

Certik-audited Arbix Finance on Arbitrum minted 10M ARBX to attacker addresses, drained $10M in user deposits, and erased its entire web and social presence.

Date
Chain(s)
Status
Funds Stolen

On January 8, 2022, the Arbitrum-based yield-farming protocol Arbix Finance executed a $10 million rug pull. The protocol — which had been audited by Certik — minted 10 million ARBX tokens to four attacker-controlled addresses, drained user deposits, and then deleted its website, Twitter, and all social channels, vanishing entirely.

What happened

Arbix Finance had marketed itself as a legitimate yield protocol with the credibility markers users had been trained to look for: a deployed product, active social channels, and — critically — a security audit from Certik, one of the better-known audit firms.

The "audit" badge functioned exactly as intended for the scammers: it provided false assurance that drew user deposits. Audits assess whether the code does what it appears to do — they do not, and cannot, assess whether the team intends to act honestly. A protocol can pass an audit and still have privileged functions the team intends to abuse.

The rug:

  1. The team retained privileged minting authority over the ARBX token (a fact that may have been disclosed in the audit but was not understood by depositors as a critical risk).
  2. On January 8, they minted 10 million ARBX to four attacker-controlled addresses.
  3. Drained user deposits from the protocol's pools.
  4. Dumped the minted ARBX for stablecoins and ETH, then bridged off Arbitrum.
  5. Deleted the website, Twitter account, and all community channels — the textbook "exit scam" finishing move.

Total extracted: approximately $10 million in user funds.

Aftermath

  • No recovery — by design, rug pulls are structured so the team controls the keys and the exit path.
  • Certik's involvement drew significant criticism and contributed to a broader 2022 debate about what an audit badge actually certifies.
  • The incident became a frequently-cited example in the "audited ≠ safe" discourse.

Why it matters

Arbix Finance is one of the cleanest cases for the limits of security audits as a trust signal. Certik (and every reputable audit firm) audits code correctness against a specification — does the contract do what its design says? An audit does not certify:

  • That the team won't use disclosed privileged functions maliciously.
  • That the deployed contract matches the audited contract (cf. Hope Finance).
  • That the team's real-world identity is accountable.
  • That the tokenomics aren't structured for an exit.

The structural lessons for users:

  1. An audit badge is a necessary-not-sufficient signal. Its absence is a strong negative; its presence is a weak positive. Many of the largest rug pulls were "audited."

  2. Privileged minting authority is the single most important risk factor for any token. Users should check — on-chain, not from marketing — whether the team can mint unlimited supply, and whether that authority is renounced, timelocked, or multi-sig-gated.

  3. Audit firms' incentive structures matter. A firm paid by the project it audits, that issues a badge the project uses for marketing, is in a structurally compromised position relative to the depositors it nominally protects. The post-2022 push toward public, machine-readable audit scope (exact deployed address, bytecode hash, explicit list of privileged functions) is a direct response to the Arbix-class of incident.

Arbix Finance is one entry in a long 2021-2022 wave of audited rug pulls that collectively recalibrated how the market interprets the "audited" claim — from "this is safe" to "the code does roughly what it says, which may include things designed to harm you."

Sources & on-chain evidence

  1. [01]bleepingcomputer.comhttps://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/crypto-platform-arbix-flagged-as-a-rugpull-transfers-10-million/
  2. [02]malwarebytes.comhttps://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/news/2022/01/10m-of-funds-goes-missing-in-what-appears-to-be-a-cryptocurrency-rug-pull
  3. [03]halborn.comhttps://halborn.com/explained-the-arbix-finance-rug-pull-january-2022/

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