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Impermanent loss

Understanding Impermanent Loss in Cryptocurrency Trading

Welcome to the world of Decentralized Finance (DeFi)You've likely heard about exciting opportunities like Liquidity Pools and Yield Farming, but there's a risk you *need* to understand: **Impermanent Loss**. This guide will explain what it is, why it happens, and how to minimize it. This is crucial knowledge before diving into providing liquidity on platforms like Uniswap, PancakeSwap, or others.

What is Impermanent Loss?

Impermanent Loss isn't a *real* loss until you remove your funds from a liquidity pool. It’s the difference between holding your crypto and providing it to a pool. The “impermanent” part means the loss isn't realized until you withdraw your funds. It can *disappear* if the prices of the assets in the pool return to their original ratio when you deposited.

Let's break it down with an example:

Imagine you deposit 1 ETH and 100 USDT into a liquidity pool. At the time of deposit, 1 ETH is worth 100 USDT. The total value of your deposit is 200 USDT (1 ETH + 100 USDT).

Now, let's say the price of ETH *increases* to 150 USDT. Arbitrage traders will step in and buy ETH from the pool (because it's cheaper there than on other exchanges like Register now), and sell it elsewhere. This rebalances the pool, but it also means you now have *less* ETH and *more* USDT than you would have if you’d simply held the original 1 ETH and 100 USDT.

You might end up with, for example, 0.67 ETH and 133 USDT. The total value is still 200 USDT (0.67 ETH * 150 USDT/ETH + 133 USDT = 200.5 USDT), but you've missed out on the full potential gain of holding the 1 ETH. That difference is the Impermanent Loss.

If ETH's price *decreases* to 50 USDT, the opposite happens. You'll have more ETH and less USDT. The principle remains the same – you’ve likely missed out on potential gains compared to simply holding.

Why Does Impermanent Loss Happen?

Impermanent Loss occurs because of a mechanism called **Arbitrage**. Arbitrage traders exploit price differences between exchanges. When the price of an asset changes on an exchange, traders buy the cheaper asset and sell it where it’s more expensive, bringing the prices back into alignment. This process rebalances liquidity pools, and it’s the rebalancing that causes Impermanent Loss.

Liquidity pools work by maintaining a constant product formula (x * y = k), where:

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⚠️ *Disclaimer: Cryptocurrency trading involves risk. Only invest what you can afford to lose.* ⚠️