Digital Asset Liquidity Provider OrBit Markets Wins Google Cloud Customer Award

OrBit Markets, a Singapore-based institutional liquidity provider in the realm of digital asset options and structured derivatives, has garnered the 2023 Google Cloud Customer of the Year Award for the Financial Services Industry. The accolade is not merely ornamental; it signals the company’s proficiency in utilizing Google Cloud technologies to navigate the labyrinthine requirements of high-volume trading data, stringent security protocols, and compliance with financial regulations.

Digital asset derivatives trading is a sector that demands a blend of cutting-edge technology and robust security measures. For OrBit Markets, this entails the processing of massive amounts of trading data through machine learning algorithms, coupled with the computational rigor of running billions of risk-assessment simulations daily. Achieving this at scale is non-trivial and lends weight to the Google Cloud award.

Google Cloud’s suite, replete with high-capacity storage solutions, serverless architecture, and advanced access management systems, facilitated OrBit in meeting these challenges. According to Brian Hall, VP of Product and Industry Marketing at Google Cloud, the Customer Awards aim to “recognize innovative, technically advanced, and transformative cloud deployments across various global industries.” The award criteria include factors such as business impact, originality, and architectural complexity. OrBit Markets has met these metrics, illustrating the potent applications of Google Cloud’s capabilities within the financial services sector.

The company’s CTO, Tianjiao Sun, disclosed that OrBit’s trading volumes have surged by “several orders of magnitude” within the past year, attributing this scalability to Google Cloud’s infrastructure. While growth metrics are commonplace in corporate narratives, the quantitative scaling in a volatile market environment like digital asset trading is noteworthy.

Compliance with regulatory standards is another facet where OrBit Markets has scored. Navigating the compliance landscape while leveraging disruptive technologies is no mean feat, and the Google Cloud award acknowledges this balancing act.

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Half of Uniswap v3 liquidity providers are losing money: New research

Recent research shows that impermanent losses have become an increasing issue for liquidity providers on Uniswap v3. 

A Nov. 17 report by Topaz Blue and the Bancor Protocol found that 49.5% of liquidity providers on Uniswap v3 have incurred negative returns from impermanent loss (IL).

The report highlighted that Uniswap v3 generates the highest fees of any automated market maker (AMM) today, but IL surpasses those earned fees. The research surmised that hodling may have been a better option for liquidity providers.

“The average


liquidity provider (LP) in the Uniswap V3 ecosystem has been financially harmed by their choice of activities and would have been more profitable simply holding their assets.”

Impermanent loss is a phenomenon that occurs to liquidity providers on automated market makers (AMMs) when the spot price of the assets they have added to a liquidity pool changes. Since liquidity providers pair two assets together to form a position, the ratio of coins in the position changes when asset spot prices change.

For example, if a user has supplied equal USD values in USDT and ETH to a liquidity pool and the price of ETH goes up, arbitrageurs will begin to remove ETH from the pool to sell at a higher price. This leads to a decrease in the USD value of the user’s position, otherwise known as an impermanent loss.

In this regard, the report states in no unclear terms that there are inherent risks when providing liquidity to Uniswap V3.

“The user who decides to not provide liquidity can expect to grow the value of their portfolio at a faster rate than one who is actively managing a liquidity position on Uniswap v3.”

The pools that were studied accounted for 43% of all of Uniswap v3’s liquidity at the time of the research. In total, the analyzed pools generated $199 million in fees from $108.5 billion in trading volume from May 5, to Sep. 20, 2021.

During that time frame, those pools suffered $260 million in impermanent losses, resulting in $60 million in net total losses.

Of the 17 pools analyzed, 80% saw IL outweigh the fees earned by liquidity providers. Only three pools of those analyzed (WBTC/USDC, AXS/WETH, and FTM/WETH), saw net positive gains. Some pools marked losses well above 50% such as the MKR/ETH where 74% of users reportedly made a loss.

The study also sought to determine whether active strategies would produce different results than passive strategies. An active user adjusts their positions more frequently than a passive user. While the report expected short-term active traders to outperform passive traders, no correlation could be found between shorter-term positions and higher profits.

Related: How to spot a rug pull in DeFi — 6 tips by Cointelegraph

Out of the major time segments analyzed, those who held longer than a month performed best, as almost all time frames lower than a month still saw IL outpacing earnings.

Flash liquidity providers were the only group that saw no meaningful IL.

The report offers a stark conclusion for users who are considering providing liquidity on Uniswap v3. While it does state that a winning strategy could potentially be formulated, expected returns may be “comparable to the annual rates offered by mainstream commercial banking products.”