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#DEX流动性与交易量 The Uniswap fee switch proposal has been approved, and the move to burn 100 million UNI is interesting. On the surface, it appears to be a benefit for the foundation, but in reality, it is optimizing the long-term logic of the DEX liquidity ecosystem—reducing LP costs, increasing yields, and attracting more liquidity to settle in the pools, which naturally boosts trading volume.
From a follow-trade perspective, such policy adjustments often bring about structural changes in the trading environment. Abundant liquidity means larger orders are easier to execute with less slippage, and traders relying on high-frequency small trades will enter a period of benefits. Over the past couple of days, I’ve been closely observing several active traders within the Uniswap ecosystem. Their execution efficiency has indeed improved, indicating that the market is digesting this positive news.
But there is a trap—don’t blindly increase your positions. Improved liquidity is a double-edged sword; it also reduces the market makers’ pricing power, which could lead to more frequent volatility. My strategic adjustment is: for traders with strict risk management and disciplined stop-loss strategies, consider increasing follow-trade ratios appropriately; for more aggressive traders, it’s better to reduce positions or lower follow-weightings.
Experience proves that the true test of such policy-driven benefits is a trader’s adaptability. It’s worth continuing to observe.