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RE: The Blackrock ETF Rake

in LeoFinancelast year

Impermanent loss only occurs to liquidity providers

That's exactly what I said.

but liquidity providers also like to wrongfully call it "impermanent loss"


and is the movement of their pair ratio as price moves.

AKA the price slipping.

I did not make a mistake.
Impermanent loss is something even experts incorrectly describe.
If they ever use the word "arbitrage" in the definition: they are wrong.
And they ALL use the word arbitrage.
Arb has nothing to do with IL.

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No, that's not exactly what you said lol. You claim they wrongfully call slippage for IL.
The price isn't slipping, your trade at perceived price do.
Slippage is your loss in a trade because price moves, while IL is movement in your LP token's pair proportion.
Your slippage don't accumulate, impermanent losses do as long as price move one direction only.

Being a liquidity provider in an AMM pool is the same thing as actively trading.
Except instead of making conscious decisions the algorithm does it automatically.
Very similar to running a bot on non-AMM orderbooks.

Every trade requires two parties.
In an orderbook the liquidity providers are makers only (limit orders).
In a basic AMM, liquidity providers don't get to pick and choose their limits,
so they are kinda like makers and takers on a sliding scale.

Meanwhile, slippage is only relevant on an orderbook when bots don't replace that liquidity behind you and you'd have to sell at a loss. Unsurprisingly, slippage happens when the price slips. The only time price doesn't slip is a static limit order. Everything else is slippage.

I did like a dozen hours of research on this because it was explained so poorly.
Link a better explanation or come up with a relevant example with numbers if you think you can prove otherwise.
I'm guessing you did not read the relevant post I wrote that I linked in the previous comment.