GMX seems to have made a deal with the hacker, and the hacker has started to return the money:
Half an hour ago, the GMX hacker returned the stolen 10.49 million FRAX to the GMX deployer's wallet.
1. On July 9, the hacker stole $42 million from the GMX V1 pool, and then the GMX team publicly requested the funds to be returned, offering a 10% bounty.
2. The hacker did not respond and converted all stolen assets except for FRAX into ETH.
3. One hour ago, the GMX deployer's wallet suddenly sent a thank-you message to the hacker's address, along with an address for receiving funds.
4. Half an hour ago, the hacker returned 10.49 million FRAX to the GMX deployer's wallet.
The assets stolen by the hacker still include 11,700 ETH, which are dispersed across four wallets.
We will see if he will return most of the ETH, keeping 10% as a bounty.
3000 ETH: 0xa33Fcbe3b84Fb8393690D1E994B6A6aDC256D8A3
3000 ETH: 0xe9Ad5a0F2697A3cF75FfA7328BdA93dBAeF7F7e7
3000 ETH: 0x69c965e164fa60e37a851aA5CD82B13Ae39C1d95
2700 ETH: 0x639cd2fc24EC06bE64aaf94eB89392Bea98A6605