Assets Under Management (AUM)

Avots LBankLaiks 2024-08-09 04:57:18

In the financial markets, market makers act as facilitators, ensuring buyers and sellers transact at optimal prices, be it stocks, currencies, or commodities. They achieve this by consistently being prepared to buy assets at prevailing market rates. With technological advancements, an innovative model – the Automated Market Maker (AMM) – has emerged, reshaping our understanding of trading.


Picture a scenario where the role of traditional market makers is supplanted by a set of smart contracts. That's precisely what AMMs do, functioning as a branch of Decentralized Exchange (DEX) protocols. Departing from conventional centralized exchanges, AMMs permit direct peer-to-peer trading of digital assets sans intermediaries. By relying on algorithms instead of human intervention for price determination, AMMs facilitate seamless, trust-minimized transactions.


The rapid ascendancy of AMMs can be attributed to several advantages: simplicity of operation, low transaction fees, and high user-friendliness. At the heart of an AMM lies its pricing formula, dynamically adjusting asset swap rates based on their relative proportions in the liquidity pool. For instance, consider a liquidity pool containing two cryptocurrencies, DAI and ETH. A surge in demand for DAI prompts more ETH to be deposited in exchange for DAI, leading to an ETH surplus. Consequently, the algorithm automatically lowers the ETH price to restore equilibrium.


To stay attuned to market fluctuations, AMMs often integrate "oracle services," fetching real-time asset prices from centralized exchanges. Any discrepancy between an asset's price within an AMM and its market value on centralized platforms spawns arbitrage opportunities. Savvy traders capitalize on these instances by buying low and selling high.


Contrasting with the traditional order book model, the paramount distinction of AMMs lies in their liquidity pool structure that automatically adjusts prices based on pool dynamics. In the order book model, buyers and sellers dictate prices, which are then matched to determine the final transaction price. AMMs streamline this process, enabling instantaneous and continuous trading.