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SynFutures raises $14M for derivatives DEX supporting ‘anything with a price feed’

Polychain Capital led the derivative DEX’s $14 million Series A round.

Forthcoming decentralized derivatives exchange SynFutures has closed an oversubscribed $14 million Series A funding round led by Polychain Capital.

The automated market maker’s funding round also saw participation from other heavyweight crypto investors including Pantera Capital, Framework, and Wintermute. Including the DEX’s January 2021 seed round, SynFutures has nowraised $15.4 million in total.

According to an announcement, the exchange plans to offer a one-stop-shop for derivatives, allowing anybody to launch arbitrary trading pairs with any expiry date based on the value of the underlying assets for which the liquidity is provided.

SynFutures will not be alone in servicing the decentralized derivatives niche, with established projects like Synthetix and new players like Converge Finance targeting crypto-powered derivatives for real-world assets.

SynFutures’ bold objective is of "enabling trading on anything with a price feed," including speculative assets such as cryptocurrencies, traditional equities, and metals, along with more niche instruments such as products tracking the hash rate of crypto networks. It's a huge market as Polychain Capital's founder and CEO, Olaf Carlson-Wee, stated:

"In traditional financial markets, derivatives trading volume far eclipses that of spot trading and we're now seeing a similar shift in crypto, especially in centralized exchanges."

"As DEXs increasingly gain market share, we see a unique opportunity for SynFutures to become the leading futures marketplace of the decentralized economy," Carlson-Wee added.

Rachel Lin, SynFutures' founder and CEO, described the platform's mission as leveling "the playing field for the average investor by cultivating a free and open market for derivatives trading." Before starting SynFutures, Lin helped found Bitmain spin-off and Asian "neobank" Matrixport, and previously oversaw the sale of structured derivative products at Deutsche Bank.

The fundraising round's closure coincides with the alpha launch of SynFutures' platform, with the exchange targeting July for its public mainnet launch.

Related: DeFi and traditional finance could converge thanks to tokenization

SynFutures will join an expanding batch of new decentralized exchanges offering innovative derivative products.

Pendle, an AMM facilitating trade in tokens representing claims to future yields, launched on Ethereum’s mainnet earlier today after raising $3.5 million from Mechanism Capital, Signum Capital, and CMS, among others.

Pendle users can trade future yields on DAI deposited into Compound and USDC deposited into Aave.

Last month, Oiler Network, a DEX that allows traders to speculate on Ethereum's gas prices, completed a public raise through a Liquidity Bootstrapping Pool (LBP).

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Curve Finance’s new release positions project for AMM takeover

ETH, WBTC, and USDT trading pairs are live on Ethereum, and more trading pairs are expected to be added to the platform in the coming weeks.

A new release from a foundational DeFi protocol seeks to combine two popular asset swap models into a hybrid that may reshape the nature of the automated market maker (AMM) space — a DeFi primitive currently accounting for well over $40 billion in total value locked, per DeFiLlama. 

Earlier today Curve Finance announced the launch of a new “algorithm for exchanging volatile assets.” Curve’s base functionality is designed to enable low-slippage swaps between similar assets, such as one type of stablecoin to another — USDC to DAI, etc — by concentrating liquidity on a bonding curve weighted towards a particular price.

However, the new release will allow low-slippage swaps between “volatile” assets, such as a ETH/WBTC pool, or between assets that have ever-changing changing prices. The new pools will accomplish this with a combination of internal oracles relying on Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs), as well as a bonding curve model deployed by popular AMMs such as Uniswap. 

“This creates 5 − 10 times higher liquidity than the Uniswap invariant, as well as higher profits for liquidity providers,” an accompanying whitepaper reads.

While the math and architecture may be difficult to understand, the end result is not: Curve is now taking on the broader AMM space with what it believes to be a more efficient product for both traders and liquidity providers, using automatically rebalancing fee (between .04% and .4%) and price structures.

“Most common pairs will be added in coming weeks before we go to a fully permisionless factory where anyone can spin up their own metapool,” said Charlie, a Curve team member.

The DeFi community has reacted glowingly, with many christening the release as “Curve v2.” Observers have been gushing about the capital efficiency and liquidity optimizations the new model offers. 

“[Curve v2] extends Curve v1, instead of optimizing for target price of ‘1’ to a dynamic price based on pool Exponential Moving Average (EMA), which is a good indicator of the current pool price,” said whitehat hacker and co-founder of DeFi Italy Emiliano Bonassi, comparing the product to a superior version of Uniswap v3, which concentrates liquidity at particular prices.

“It continuously rebalances (and concentrates) the liquidity to [the EMA]. You can think like (not equal) to rebalancing a whole Uniswap v3 pool at once.”

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

The rise of DEX robots: AMMs push for an industrial revolution in trading

AMM-based decentralized exchanges are seeing unprecedented adoption, but are they the future of trading?

Centralized exchanges play an important role in the cryptocurrency industry. While their decentralized exchange counterparts have been growing in popularity and usage since 2020, the overwhelming majority of crypto trading volume is still concentrated on centralized exchanges. 

The supremacy of CEXs can be clearly observed in the size and popularity of trading platforms like Binance and Coinbase, which are now so recognizable and mainstream that Coinbase has recently become the first crypto company to be listed on the Nasdaq stock exchange.

Acting as a necessary bridge between fiat and crypto, centralized exchanges provide unparalleled convenience. Nevertheless, industry leaders often see these types of exchanges as one of crypto’s single points of failure. Sergej Kunz, co-founder of 1inch Network — a DeFi platform offering automated market makers and other related services — believes that AMMs will be the main competition for centralized exchanges. He told Cointelegraph:

“In the next four to five years, the DeFi industry will grow a lot. We will eliminate intermediaries, such as banks, and replace them with DeFi. In the upcoming years, 1inch is going to be ready to compete with centralized exchanges for users who swap assets a few times a day.”

Another factor fueling the interest in DEXs is the security concerns. Although malicious attacks on exchanges have become less frequent, exchanges have repeatedly proven that they are vulnerable to hacks and information leaks.

More decentralized alternatives aim to provide an answer for those concerns, and one way to do it is through the use of the automated market maker on exchanges.

The history of AMMs: From zero to hero

AMMs are the latest prominent breed of DEX protocols. They do not rely on order books like regular exchanges but instead use mathematical formulas to calculate the price of assets.

AMMs also provide liquidity from different pools, excluding the need to have another user on the other side willing to trade. Trading is done by interacting with smart contracts or peer-to-contracts, which provide the price and liquidity necessary to execute trades.

The new AMM-based DEXs greatly facilitate exchanges between crypto assets and have surged in popularity ever since the DeFi summer of 2020. The concept was first introduced by Bancor back in 2017. Vijay Garg, chief marketing officer of MakiSwap — a cross-chain AMM — explained how AMMs are revolutionizing the world of trading, telling Cointelegraph:

“AMM is going to drive the entire financial ecosystem, as they work independently without holding private keys of users and lie under less regulatory framework. Moreover, with enough liquidity, it’s faster, easy, convenient and cheap for users to trade. AMMs fundamentally alter how users swap cryptocurrencies.”

Hailed as the first true decentralized AMM, Ethereum-based Uniswap launched in late 2018 and, within several years, took the crypto world by storm due to its simple user interface and broad listing system. Right now, Uniswap is holding on to the top spot as the world’s leading DEX in terms of trading volume.

Uniswap spurred multiple “spinoffs,” one of which was SushiSwap, an AMM that launched a vampire attack and ultimately solidified itself as Uniswap’s main rival. Although SushiSwap was the first to use this method, it has since become a common practice, as protocols constantly try to leech liquidity from one another in “AMM wars.”

AMM protocols make up almost all of the total volume on DEXs and are considered an instrumental tool for the DeFi ecosystem. However, with innovation, there are always new problems and challenges that arise.

As such, new types of AMMs have now started to bloom and have been diversifying the space, where different exchanges cater to different user needs. Alex Lee, a developer at ZKSwap — a privacy-centric AMM — told Cointelegraph:

“DeFi and traditional finance aren’t much different, but DeFi requires lesser trust. AMMs, in particular, brought changes to the current financial landscape, and this can be observed in its growth.”

The different types of AMMs

Each AMM tends to have its own unique price algorithms to harness liquidity in various ways and from different sources. In the current DeFi landscape, the three most dominant and distinct AMM protocols are Uniswap, Curve and 1inch.

As the second-largest DEX in the world, Curve inherited the core design of Uniswap but specializes as the first AMM optimized for stable asset pools. As a result of its architecture, Curve minimizes the risk of impermanent losses, solves the problem of limited liquidity, and offers one of the lowest trading rates across all DEXs.

Another popular trend in the world of AMMs is aggregation. The 1inch Network has pioneered this technique to have a dominant market share in the area. This method seeks to allow its users to save on fees when making large trades on low-liquidity pools, avoiding high slippage by routering the transaction through multiple liquidity pools. Kunz told Cointelegraph: “Through our Pathfinder algorithm, deals are split across multiple DEX pools, ensuring users will be able to find the best swap rates.”

AMM downsides and risks

One of the downsides inherent to the current AMMs is impermanent loss. Whenever liquidity pool tokens fluctuate in value, an arbitrage opportunity is created that will incur losses to the pool. The larger the fluctuation, the worse the losses will be. Therefore, AMMs work better if token pairs have similar values.

Although Curve minimizes this risk, the new version of Bancor seeks to prevent the problem completely. Allowing the creation of AMMs with pegged liquidity, Bancor v2.1 was designed to mitigate slippage and help solve the issue of impermanent losses. Nate Hindman, head of growth at Bancor Protocol, told Cointelegraph:

“The Bancor protocol uses its elastic supply token, BNT, to co-invest in its pools and earn fees that the protocol uses to compensate for IL when an LP eventually withdraws their stake. An LP must be in a pool for 100 days or more to receive full protection from IL. This means that even if a token moons in price, an LP is entitled to withdraw the full value of their tokens as if they held them in their wallet.”

There are other disadvantages to trading with AMMs. On Ethereum, high gas fees have become an issue for the typical retail trader. Still, many exchanges have started to adopt layer-one and layer-two solutions to accommodate traders looking for smaller-size swaps. As Kunz stated: “The scaling of blockchain is a missing piece for further growth of the DeFi sector, but we already see some layer-two solutions by Optimism and Matter Labs, which are hopefully going to solve this in the coming months of 2021.”

Limited liquidity in some assets can also cause issues. Still, perhaps one of the most significant problems in the world of AMM trading is front-running bots that can take advantage of trades made by unwary buyers/sellers, creating faster transactions to profit from these traders.

Aleksandras Gaška, CEO of Blank Wallet — a privacy and user-centric wallet — told Cointelegraph that this issue is affecting the common AMM user. “Although tech-savvy investors can decrease their slippage or follow a DCA strategy to avoid front-running bots by buying in a few, smaller transactions, the only foolproof strategy is to allow users to use silent transactions.”

The need for privacy in DeFi

Privacy has always been a central topic in the cryptocurrency world. For example, Bitcoin and Ethereum are pseudonymous; they are also public in their nature. All transactions and addresses are exposed on the blockchain and can be viewed by anyone.

This level of transparency creates a danger for users sharing their public addresses. As such, privacy in the world of decentralized finance is becoming a highly demanded commodity. Speaking about this need, Lee told Cointelegraph:

“Market-level information should be transparent to all participants while still preserving individual privacy. And privacy is the basic right of an individual. It’s critical to keep in mind that any decentralized financial system worth having must respect the financial ownership of the individuals it serves.”

As previously mentioned, front-running bots are a big issue in the DeFi sector, and they are a direct result of the lack of privacy found in the DeFi sector, where all transactions are exposed on the blockchain. Therefore, the use of privacy-centric wallets can mitigate this issue.

The Future of AMMs

On May 6, Uniswap released its long-anticipated v3 update. Aiming to maximize capital efficiency, the upgrade was a success and, in just one day, recorded more than twice the volume that v2 saw in its first month. Despite the achievement, many users are calling the launch a flop due to the complex user interface and soaring gas fees, which are even higher than v2’s.

While most of the DeFi ecosystem resides on the Ethereum blockchain, there is a mass migration of projects, like 1inch Network joining Binance Smart Chain and other rival DApp blockchains. Uniswap and other ERC-20-based protocols might be reliant on the success of Eth2, but the future looks to be in interoperability.

It’s tempting to assume AMMs protocols will be responsible for all on-chain liquidity in the future. However, DeFi is still a maturing technology, and its innovation is fast-paced. Even if AMMs can resolve their limitations, regulatory frameworks and new technologies might present threats to their dominance.

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$50M reportedly stolen from BSC-based Uranium Finance

Uranium Finance joins the growing list of hacked projects on the Binance Smart Chain network.

Uranium Finance, an automated market maker platform on the Binance Smart Chain, has reported a security incident that resulted in a loss of about $50 million.

Tweeting on Wednesday, Uranium revealed that the exploit targeted its v2.1 token migration event and that the team was in contact with the Binance security team to mitigate the situation.

The hacker reportedly took advantage of bugs in Uranium’s balance modifier logic that inflated the project’s balance by a factor of 100.

This error reportedly allowed the attacker to steal $50 million from the project. As of the time of writing, the contract created by the hacker still holds $36.8 million in Binance Coin (BNB) and Binance USD (BUSD).

The remaining stolen funds include 80 Bitcoin (BTC), 1,800 Ether (ETH), 26,500 Polkadot (DOT), 5.7 million Tether (USDT), as well as 638,000 Cardano (ADA) and 112,000 u92, the project's native coin.

Details from BscScan show the attacker swapping the ADA and DOT tokens for ETH, upping the Ether stash to about 2,400 ETH.

Meanwhile, the alleged mastermind of the theft has already moved 2,400 ETH, worth about $5.7 million, using the Ethereum privacy tool Tornado Cash.

Data from Ethereum chain monitoring service Etherscan shows the funds moving in 100 ETH sums, with the cross-chain decentralized exchange bridge AnySwap used to migrate funds from BSC to the Ethereum network.

Source: Etherscan

According to Uranium, the project has reached out to the Binance security team to prevent the hacker from moving more funds out of the BSC ecosystem.

Binance did not immediately respond to Cointelegraph’s request for comment. A spokesperson for Uranium revealed that the bug was yet to be patched and that users have been advised to stop providing liquidity on the project and to cash out their funds.

The team also created a Telegram group for victims of the hack while promising to provide updates on the progress being made to recover the stolen funds.

Wednesday’s hack is the second attack on the Uranium project in quick succession. Earlier in April, hackers exploited one of the platform’s pools, stealing about $1.3 million worth of BUSD and BNB.

Indeed, the incident led to the first migration to v2 less than two weeks ago. In a previous announcement, the Uranium developer team said that multiple entities had audited its v2 contracts and that it had learned from its previous mistakes.

Meanwhile, speculation is rife as to whether the attack was an inside job, given the sudden decision to engineer another version upgrade barely 11 days after completing the v2 migration.

Hacks associated with smart contract bugs are commonplace within the decentralized finance arena even for fully audited projects — as was the case with MonsterSlayer Finance earlier in April. Back in March, Meerkat, a Yearn.finance clone on the BSC, reportedly “exit-scammed” its users, stealing $31 million in the process.

Days later, the project’s developer team revealed the alleged “rug pull” was a test while outlining plans to return the funds. TurtleDex, another BSC-based project, also exit-scammed shortly after its launch, draining over 9,000 BNB tokens raised during the pre-sale.

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

Shapeshift Reveals Platform Supports Unwrapped Swaps via Thorchain With No KYC

Shapeshift Reveals Platform Supports Unwrapped Swaps via Thorchain With No KYCJust recently, Shapeshift founder and CEO Erik Voorhees published a blog post about a new project called Thorchain, a protocol that allows for decentralized exchanges without wrapping or bridging technology commonly used today. Thorchain launched on April 13, 2021, and the Shapeshift founder recently revealed his company is first to leverage the multi-chain protocol in […]

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

Kyber Network introduces Uber-style surge pricing for DeFi token swaps

Dynamic fees will improve capital efficiency on the new DMM.

Decentralized exchange Kyber has launched a Dynamic Market Maker, or DMM, in what it claims is a world first.

The new platform, which was announced on April 5, has been designed to optimize fees and enable extremely high capital efficiency for liquidity providers.

One of the major differences between Kyber’s new platform and regular Automated Market Makers, or AMMs, is the fee generation system. While platforms such as Uniswap charge a fixed trading fee of 0.3%, the new DEX will calculate fees dynamically, increasing during times of high volatility and demand, and decreasing when markets are quiet. This encourages traders to take advantage of cheaper trade opportunities which improve capital efficiency for LPs and the platform.

The system mimics the Uber-style surge pricing that increases prices when there is a lot of demand for rides, such as in bad weather or rush hour, and drops them when there is less demand and traffic levels have returned to normal.

Kyber Network is an on-chain liquidity protocol that has a DEX called KyberSwap, which allows users to swap crypto assets without a central order book or operator. Much of the inspiration for the new DMM has been taken from the current Uniswap interface.

According to the DMM dashboard, liquidity on the platform is currently $20.5 million with a daily volume of $490,000. Kyber’s native token, KNC, has retreated over the past 24 hours dropping 5.7% to $3.13 according to Coingecko.

The new DMM also operates a “programmable pricing curve” which allows liquidity pool creators to customize pricing through an “amplification factor” based on the nature of the relationship between the two tokens.

In essence, tokens that have a lower deviation from their prices such as stablecoins can have a higher amplification factor which allows the liquidity to increase without needing more tokens in the pool. These features have also been included in the Uniswap v3 upgrade which also aims to improve capital efficiency by optimizing the bonding curve.

Pool creators can set their own AMP factor which increases the liquidity depending on the type of tokens in the pool — stable tokens can have a higher factor, whereas more volatile ones will be set lower.

“This means that given the same liquidity pool and trade size, Kyber DMM can provide much better liquidity and slippage compared to AMMs. Slippage can potentially be 100X better than AMMs for more stable pairs!”

The announcement added that the code has been fully reviewed and audited multiple times by both the internal team and external auditors with no critical issues found. It stated that the full audit will be released soon but added that the protocol is still in beta.

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

Bancor releases no-liquidation lending with Vortex as AMMs continue diversification

Bancor introduced a complex but useful lending and token burn mechanic through its vBNT token.

Automated market maker exchange Bancor has rolled out a new mechanism that allows users to increase their capital efficiency while providing liquidity in its pools.

Called Vortex, the solution allows users providing liquidity in BNT, Bancor’s utility token, to borrow funds while continuing to obtain yield from swap fees.

The Vortex mechanism reworks the existing mechanism of vBNT, a special version of the BNT token that entitles users to participate in governance. The voting token is automatically received when staking BNT into a liquidity pool, and it can be defined as Bancor’s pool token.

The Vortex proposal adds functionality to vBNT, creating an infrastructure that allows users to sell the token for the original BNT. Once vBNT is converted, users can exchange it into any other asset.

The vBNT sale mechanism makes Vortex a no-liquidation lending platform, letting liquidity providers receive their future rewards immediately, in a similar manner to Alchemix. Since their principal continues to accrue swap fees, the loan will eventually repay itself.

The “no-liquidation” part of the loan comes from the fact that vBNT and BNT are essentially the same token, and the rise in price of the BNT collateral is very likely to be mirrored by vBNT. BNT staking creates vBNT at a one-to-one ratio, but the price relationship between the two is not straightforward.

Combining protocol revenue and lending results in complex tokenomics

The vBNT token’s price is derived from a BNT/vBNT AMM pool, thus largely being defined by the market. A potential arbitrage mechanism means that vBNT is unlikely to ever be worth more than 1 BNT, as arbitrageurs could simply stake BNT, sell the vBNT, and obtain more BNT than they started with. The cycle could be repeated an infinite number of times until the vBNT price returns below 1 BNT.

At the same time, vBNT has no price floor because the arbitrage mechanism cannot work in reverse. As Mark Richardson, the creator of Vortex, explained to Cointelegraph, Bancor uses internal records to define ownership within an AMM pool. This is a significant difference from models like Uniswap’s pool tokens, which are the sole marker of liquidity ownership. The vBNT could be used to redeem a BNT liquidity pool only if that address had already created one.

To guarantee that vBNT maintains some value in the absence of a redemption mechanism, the protocol will be conducting a buyback-and-burn strategy on the token. A governance-defined portion of the protocol’s fee revenue will be diverted to periodically buy and destroy vBNT from the pool with BNT, providing a constant buying pressure.

This has the added result of creating a sink of BNT and vBNT. Since one vBNT unlocks one BNT, destroying vBNT supply creates an imbalance with the tokens contained in AMM pools. A portion of those tokens would thus remain locked in the pools forever, though this should not impact liquidity withdrawal for individual liquidity providers due to the large excess capacity — a similar mechanic occurs with cold wallets on centralized exchanges.

The vBNT token mechanics have a number of interesting ramifications. In addition to the ability to borrow while continuing to receive yield, liquidity providers are also able to leverage their liquidity to receive more swap fees. The price of vBNT directly affects how leveraged the system can be, as prices close to 1 BNT could support an almost infinite leverage factor. At the same time, as more LPs enter leveraged positions, the price of vBNT is likely to decrease and limit the leverage multiplier. An infinite leverage situation would extract value from the protocol, but Richardson is confident that the market-based pricing mechanism quickly makes this costly and ultimately impractical.

Liquidity is no longer an issue, but volume is trailing behind

The Bancor protocol has deployed every resource it has to draw liquidity into the protocol. Between the innovations of single-sided liquidity provision and impermanent loss insurance, introduced with V2.1, it has also launched aggressive liquidity mining programs. The Vortex proposal is yet another tool that could draw liquidity in by introducing leverage on AMM pools.

Bancor’s liquidity campaign has been a demonstrable success. With $1.8 billion in total value locked, it broke into the “billion-dollar TVL club” to become the eighth in the decentralized exchange rankings on DeFi Llama. While it is behind most of its direct competitors such as Uniswap or SushiSwap, Bancor has grown much faster as it started the year at just $140 million in TVL.

The growth in liquidity hasn’t automatically resulted in more volume, however. Though Bancor is in the top-five by volume on Ethereum at $430 million per week, Uniswap dominates the market and attracts almost 17 times as much volume despite only having slightly more than twice the TVL. In Richardson’s view, the Bancor team may have had misguided expectations in its pursuit of liquidity:

“There was this assumption, I would say — and we might not have even been aware that it was an assumption — that if the TVL gets high enough, it will just attract traders [...] And if everyone’s using aggregators, then that’s really good for us because we just have to offer the best product at the lowest rates and traders will just use us.”

The reality turned out to be less idealistic than expected as the team found out. “It turns out no one uses aggregators, and traders hardly ever are using the pools with the best rates,” Richardson added. “They just do whatever they’re going to do.” Nate Hindman, head of growth at Bancor, had his own view of why Uniswap is so dominant:

“I think a big part of that has been this sort of ‘Uniswap gems’ movement that was a DeFi summer thing, where there’s all these new tokens that are launching pools on Uniswap. So, Uniswap is the only place to get these ‘gems.’”

Hindman’s assessment seems to be in line with Uniswap’s volume data. According to its statistics, the volume distribution is heavily skewed toward smaller tokens. Pairs between Ether (ETH), Bitcoin (BTC) and stablecoins take about 25% of the total volume, while the rest of the list is populated largely by low-capitalization tokens that are hard to access on other platforms.

As Hindman revealed, capturing the “long tail of tokens” will be Bancor’s next major objective. One potential proposal for that is the Origin Pool, which allows creating “synthetic” pools paired with ETH, whic is seamlessly replaced with BNT by the protocol. This would solve long-standing onboarding friction for Bancor, as projects wishing to get listed needed to hold BNT in addition to their own token.

After the Uniswap V3 announcement and its heavy focus on swap efficiency — partially at the expense of liquidity pool automation — it became clear that AMM projects are starting to diversify into different niches. With SushiSwap’s focus on additional features such as margin trading, Balancer’s push for composability, and Bancor’s approach focusing on the LP and the BNT token, the AMM space is becoming more and more varied.

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology

Combined DEX liquidity tags new all-time high of $10 billion

Uniswap’s dominance over the Ethereum DEX sector continues to grow, with the exchange representing more than half of the sector’s combined weekly volume.

The amount of collateral on decentralized exchanges is nearing a milestone high of $10 billion, with Uniswap still sitting at the top of the heap.

Volumes and liquidity on decentralized exchanges have surged in 2021, with collateral approaching a milestone high of $10 billion, according to research by Messari.

Researcher Rahul Rai noted that DEX volumes for February soared to a record $72 billion. Dappradar reports that Uniswap has over half of the total liquidity locked up in DEXes with a TVL of $5.4 billion.

Rai added that despite their success, automated market makers face their own set of challenges:

“A number of inherent problems such as impermanent loss (IL), capital efficiency, slippage, gas costs, speed, and multi-token exposure are holding them back.”

According to Dune Analytics, Uniswap’s dominance over the Ethereum-powered DEX sector is growing, with the exchange hosting roughly $6.5 billion worth of weekly trade or 62.2% of combined trade across Ethereum DEXes.

Monthly volume of Ethereum-powered DEXes: Dune Analytics

Rival DEX SushiSwap, which was spawned in late August 2020 as a Uniswap fork and has big plans for 2021, is second place by  volume — with $1.6 billion in weekly trade or 15.2% of the sector's total trade.

Curve Finance is third in terms of market share with 6.2%, hosting $647 million worth of trade in the past seven days.

DeFi aggregators are growing at an unprecedented rate, with volumes so far this year already dwarfing that of the entirety of 2020. The 1inch exchange is currently top in terms of volumes with a little over $1 billion in the past seven days, according to Dune Analytics.

The sector’s combined volume for March has already tagged $44.3 billion — more than October and November 2020 combined.

CEO of Bitcoin.com Puts Ethereum on Blast for ‘Woke’ Ideology