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Zloader email campaign using MHTML to download and decrypt XLS

Written by Security Lab / 29.03.2021 /
Home » Blog » Zloader email campaign using MHTML to download and decrypt XLS

Summary

Zloader1 malware (associated with the kev configuration tag) is spreading via malspam using MIME encapsulation of aggregate HTML documents (MHTML)5 attachments. These MHTML files contain a Word document with VBA macros. The VBA macro code downloads and decrypts a password-protected XLS file, and after that, the XLS file decodes and executes the Zloader malware embedded within it.

Background

In February 2020, campaigns distributing Zloader ramped up usage of XLM (also known as Excel 4.0) macros. Detection of this old spreadsheet-based by design self-modifiable macro code format by anti-virus software is far lower than detection of regular sequential not by design self-modifiable plain-text VBA macro source code. We already highlighted the abuse of XLM macros in previous reports, e.g., XLM macros used to spread QakBot2 or BazarLoader3. However, as detection for XLM macro code has picked up with even Microsoft adding XLM macro support to AMSI4, threat actors continue to evolve.

Starting in January 2021, Hornetsecurity took notice of a new Zloader campaign using MHTML attachments. MIME encapsulation of aggregate HTML documents (MHTML)5 is a web page archive format used to combine multiple files into one. It used base64 encoding and MIME-boundaries similar to multipart MIME encoding in emails. Microsoft Word can open documents stored inside MHTML files.

Technical Analysis

The chain of infection of the Zloader MHTML campaign is as follows:

We will now outline each step of the attack chain.

Emails

The attack starts with emails.

Januar (first wave)

The first emails were designed and built like purchase invoices.

The wording and pretext changed between emails of this campaign. However, the general “invoicing” theme remained constant.

Initial email attacks were of low volume, the emails templates above have not been used much.

February

In February, contract pretexts were added to the mix of invoice pretexts.

At one point, the numero sign () was used instead of the number sign (#).

After that, with recent changes to the email template, the campaign’s volume started to increase sharply.

Targets

The campaign targets international, Canadian, US, and British companies, mainly English-speaking users.

However, the time histogram shows that on 2021-02-15, the majority of Zloader MHTML emails were destined for Canadian recipients.

The estimated distribution of recipients by industries would suggest a bias towards the professional services industry, i.e., consultancies, freelancers, funeral homes, law firms, etc.

MHTML documents

The MHTML document’s extension was set to .doc, so Microsoft Word will open the documents directly.

The smaller January campaign and later February campaign MHTML document’s main difference is the image instructing the user to “enable content” and “enable editing”, i.e., activating macro execution.

The January campaign lure image looks as follows:

The February campaign lure image looks as follows:

The MHTML document is an ASCII document featuring multiple MIME-parts.

One MIME-part contains the lure image.

The other parts contain an application/vnd.ms-officetheme and an application/x-mso file. Which (in addition to the text/xml files) are used by Microsoft Word to load the embedded Word document.

The document will automatically execute the macro code on closing the document:

The VBA code uses UserForm objects for obfuscation.

Within the ComboBox objects’ initialization code in the UserForm objects and various other mechanisms, a download URL and a password are assembled and used within a call to the VBA function CallByName. This calls the Workbook object’s open function with the fileName parameter set to the download URL, the Password parameter set to the assembled password, and the other optional parameters left empty.

The call will cause Word to open Excel and download the encrypted XLS file from the URL https://findinglala[.]com/down/doc.xls?ekyh_vD91041.z4730435.doc. Excel will use the provided password to decrypt the document.

The XLS document will use XLM macros to decode and use rundll32.exe to execute an embedded Zloader payload.

Zloader

Zloader is a fork of the famous Zeus banking Trojan. It is a loader that allows its operator to load additional malware onto infected devices.

Coarse dynamic analysis

The via rundll32.exe started Zloader process from the XLS document will spawn a suspended msiexec.exe process and inject code into it.

First, the original DLL running in rundll32.exe starts a msiexec.exe process.

Then, WriteProcessMemory is used to write code into it.

Eventually, the Zloader code running in rundll32.exe resumes the thread in the msiexec.exe process via NtResumeThread and the injected code starts running.

Zloader will then generate a lot of random directories in %APPDATA%\Roaming.

It then copies the original DLL into one of the folders. To this end, it first reads the original DLL into memory.

In the next step, data from the DLL is being written back into a new file.

The other folders remain empty but can be used at later points in time to hold additional data.

The original DLL is deleted.

Eventually, C2 communication initializes.

Unpacking

The Zloader DLL injected into msiexec.exe can be extracted either automatically via the open-source CAPE sandbox, manually dumped by breaking on NtResumeThread in the original rundll32.exe process, then dumping the msiexec.exe process, or semi-automatically by using a tool such as hollows_hunter5 (or PE-Sieve).

The following analysis was performed on a Zloader DLL dumped from the msiexec.exe process.

Obfuscation

The Zloader malware is obfuscated. It makes extensive use of junk code, i.e., adding program instructions that do not contribute to the program logic with the sole purpose of complicating analysis. Further, it often calls complicated functions to perform trivial calculations, making the code appear very complex. For example, the following is a function that performs the binary AND operation on two parameters. The code is littered with such junk code.

Dynamic library, function and string resolution

Functions are dynamically resolved at runtime via a hash lookup. Instead of calling a function directly, a proxy function returning a pointer to the desired function is called. The following example shows the function with which Zloader deletes its original file. The function we named zl_get_func received two parameters, the first is a library ID (0 is ntdll) and the second is a hash of the function name that should be called.

This is standard practice in modern malware, so no suspicious imports are present in the binary. It also makes a static analysis more complicated.

Obviously, the hash calculation also uses the previous mentioned junk code obfuscation.

However, it can be reimplemented in Python as follows.

def zl_hash(func_name):
    func_name = func_name.lower()
    hash = 0
    for c in func_name:
        a = 0 - (hash << 4)
        hash = 0 - (a - ord(c))
        b = 0x647400ac ^ 0x947400ac
        b = hash & (~(b ^ hash))
        if b != 0:
            d = 0x647400ac ^ 0x6b8bff53
            hash = (b >> 0x18) ^ (d & hash)
    return hash

With this function calls can be de-obfuscated.

Strings are XOR encoded with a static repeating ASCII keystream.

Configuration

The Zloader configuration is RC4 encrypted with a key using only ASCII as keyspace.

The data at the location we labeled zl_encrypted_config can be decoded with the ASCII string handed as the second parameter to the function we named zl_decrypt_config. Consequently, the configuration of the Zloader sample will be revealed.

The configuration contains a botnet name the particular sample is associated with, a campaign ID (presumably for the threat actors to keep track of infections per campaign), an RC4 key (used to encrypt and decrypt updated configuration stored in the registry) and last but not least a list of command and control URLs the malware should connect to for commands and updates.

We provide an update to the DC3-MWCP script included with the open-source CAPE sandbox that handles configuration extraction for the analyzed Zloader sample in the appendix. It helps automating the configuration extraction.

Malware objectives

The configurations of downloaded pieces of Zloader malware associates them with the kev botnet. The kev ID has been publicly observed since December 2020.

Zloader has been identified as an access vector for Ryuk and Egregor ransomware deployments. Whether the installments associated with the kev configuration tag are part of this or a different ransomware operation is currently unknown. However, by the direction the current threat landscape is moving, it is highly likely the malware is also used to deploy ransomware.

Conclusion and Countermeasures

Spreading the attack into multiple encoded stages (document in HMTL; payload URL in UserForms; download of password-protected XLS; decoding of Zloader payload from decrypted XLS) shows that much effort was put into evading detection. Even after the campaign ran for several weeks, the initial MHTML documents still only got 7 out of 61 detections when first scanned on VirusTotal.

The unusual MHTML encoding of the initial Word document can pose problems for security software unfamiliar with this format. Its initial layer must be parsed differently from OLE/CDF/OpenXML-based Office documents and being ASCII plain-text may completely bypass some detections. For network-based protection software, it is impossible to investigate the intermediary downloaded XLS document with the Zloader payload – because it is encrypted. Another struggle is the low level of maliciousness of the initial Word document. While downloads from documents should always be deemed at least suspicious, in this case, only another Excel document was download. Some business workflows may require Word documents to download resources from web. Consequently, the observed behaviour may fly under the radar. Hence, spreading the malicious components (download; dropper; Zloader malware) over multiple stages can bypass detection for some security solutions.

Hornetsecurity’s Spam Filtering Solutions and Malware Protection detects and quarantines the outlined threat. Hornetsecurity’s Advanced Threat Protection extends this protection by also detecting yet unknown threats.

References

Appendix

DC3-MWCP / CAPE configuration parser

The following DC3-MWCP configuration parser is an update to CAPE’s Zloader parser and can be used as a drop in replacement (additionally we opened a pull request with the upstream project):

# Copyright (C) 2020 Kevin O'Reilly (kevoreilly@gmail.com)
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

from mwcp.parser import Parser
import struct
import string
import pefile
import yara
import re
from Crypto.Cipher import ARC4
import logging
log = logging.getLogger(__name__)

rule_source = '''
rule Zloader
{
    meta:
        author = "kevoreilly"
        description = "Zloader Payload"
        cape_type = "Zloader Payload"
    strings:
        $rc4_init = {31 [1-3] 66 C7 8? 00 01 00 00 00 00 90 90 [0-5] 8? [5-90] 00 01 00 00 [0-15] (74|75)}
        $decrypt_conf = {e8 ?? ?? ?? ?? e8 ?? ?? ?? ?? e8 ?? ?? ?? ?? e8 ?? ?? ?? ?? 68 ?? ?? ?? ?? 68 ?? ?? ?? ?? e8 ?? ?? ?? ?? 83 c4 08 e8 ?? ?? ?? ??}
    condition:
        uint16(0) == 0x5A4D and any of them
}

'''
MAX_STRING_SIZE = 32

yara_rules = yara.compile(source=rule_source)

def decrypt_rc4(key, data):
     cipher = ARC4.new(key)
     return cipher.decrypt(data)

def string_from_offset(data, offset):
     string = data[offset : offset + MAX_STRING_SIZE].split(b"\0")[0]
     return string

class Zloader(Parser):

     DESCRIPTION = 'Zloader configuration parser'
     AUTHOR = 'kevoreilly'

     def run(self):
         filebuf = self.file_object.file_data
         pe = pefile.PE(data=filebuf, fast_load=False)
         image_base = pe.OPTIONAL_HEADER.ImageBase
         matches = yara_rules.match(data=filebuf)
         if not matches:
             return
         for match in matches:
             if match.rule != "Zloader":
                 continue
             for item in match.strings:
                 if '$decrypt_conf' in item[1]:
                     decrypt_conf = int(item[0])+21
         va = struct.unpack("I",filebuf[decrypt_conf:decrypt_conf+4])[0]
         key = string_from_offset(filebuf, pe.get_offset_from_rva(va-image_base))
         data_offset = pe.get_offset_from_rva(struct.unpack("I",filebuf[decrypt_conf+5:decrypt_conf+9])[0]-image_base)
         enc_data = filebuf[data_offset:].split(b"\0\0")[0]
         raw = decrypt_rc4(key, enc_data)
         items = list(filter(None, raw.split(b'\x00\x00')))
         self.reporter.add_metadata("other", {"Botnet name": items[1].lstrip(b'\x00')})
         self.reporter.add_metadata("other", {"Campaign ID": items[2]})
         for item in items:
             item = item.lstrip(b'\x00')
             if item.startswith(b'http'):
                 self.reporter.add_metadata("address", item)
             elif len(item) == 16:
                 self.reporter.add_metadata("other", {"RC4 key": item})
         return

Indicators of Compromise (IOCs)

Email

Subjects

  • Agreement information#?[0-9]+
  • Agreement info#?[0-9]+
  • Contract info#?[0-9]+
  • Contract information#?[0-9]+
  • Payment data#?[0-9]+
  • Invoicing data#?[0-9]+
  • Contract data#?[0-9]+
  • Invoicing information#?[0-9]+
  • Invoice data#?[0-9]+
  • Invoicing details#?[0-9]+
  • Payment info#?[0-9]+
  • Invoicing info#?[0-9]+
  • Agreement data#?[0-9]+
  • Contract details#?[0-9]+
  • Invoice information#?[0-9]+
  • Invoice details#?[0-9]+
  • Payment information#?[0-9]+
  • Invoice info#?[0-9]+
  • Agreement details#?[0-9]+
  • Payment details#?[0-9]+
  • Important agreement #?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential contract No. #?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential agreement No. #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important contract No. #?[0-9]+ update
  • Important contract №#?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential agreement Number #?[0-9]+ update
  • Necessary contract №#?[0-9]+ update
  • Important contract № #?[0-9]+ update
  • Important agreement No. #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important agreement #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Necessary agreement Number #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important contract № #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important contract #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important agreement № #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Essential contract #?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential agreement No. #?[0-9]+ update
  • Necessary agreement Number #?[0-9]+ update
  • Necessary contract № #?[0-9]+ update
  • Important agreement Number #?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential contract No. #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important contract #?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential agreement #?[0-9]+ update
  • Necessary agreement № #?[0-9]+ update
  • Important agreement No. #?[0-9]+ update
  • Necessary contract Number #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Necessary contract No. #?[0-9]+ update
  • Necessary agreement #?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential contract Number #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Essential contract № #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Essential agreement №#?[0-9]+ update
  • Necessary agreement №#?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential contract Number #?[0-9]+ update
  • Necessary contract No. #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important contract №#?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important agreement № #?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential contract №#?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Essential contract #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Necessary contract №#?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Necessary agreement #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important contract Number #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Necessary contract #?[0-9]+ update
  • Important agreement №#?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential contract №#?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential agreement №#?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Necessary contract #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important agreement Number #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Essential agreement № #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Necessary agreement № #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Essential agreement Number #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Essential contract № #?[0-9]+ update
  • Necessary contract Number #?[0-9]+ update
  • Necessary agreement No. #?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential agreement № #?[0-9]+ update
  • Essential agreement #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important contract No. #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Necessary agreement No. #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important contract Number #?[0-9]+ update
  • Necessary contract № #?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Necessary agreement №#?[0-9]+ documentation
  • Important agreement №#?[0-9]+ documentation

Attachments

The following regular expressions describe the attachment names used in the campaigns:

  • ([a-z]{4,8}_){1,2}[a-z]{4,8}[0-9]+.doc
  • [A-z0-9][A-z][0-9]+.doc

Hashes

Hashes of publicly available files:

MD5FilenameDescription
6743ca84f7e9929c2179238e20934f57nG772044.docZloader MHTML document
7a888f899a4850f02bad194bf01daaa7eU107462.docZloader MHTML document
35ee0681eb3076674e01efec565f663bL1978883.docZloader MHTML document
25e2cffc5621cab99bd0a36d234c234fQG915014.docZloader MHTML document
222cb61e1041f3e4dbdc3493572388e6dY433632.docZloader MHTML document

URLs

  • https://findinglala[.]com/down/doc.xls?ekyh_vD91041.z4730435.doc

DNS

  • findinglala[.]com
  • funkstarnews[.]com
  • heavenlygem[.]com
  • 2tut[.]com
  • khalilmouna[.]com

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