The crypto world recently experienced a rather absurd incident. A large BTC holder wanted to liquidate their Bitcoin holdings, switch to stablecoins, and then earn some investment returns—an annualized 20% yield, right? If you don’t try, you’ll never know. But after placing the order, they were immediately stunned. The liquidity pool couldn’t withstand such a large order at all, causing the price to plummet instantly, with BTC’s transaction price dropping all the way down to $24,000. That little annualized return? Not only would it fail to cover this loss, but even a lifetime of earning it wouldn’t be enough.
This incident is absurd, but it exposes some deep issues in DeFi. Without sufficiently deep liquidity pools, it’s like building a house on quicksand. No matter how attractive the price promises are, a large order can break the entire structure.
So what’s the solution? Investors need to know in advance: Is a pool truly safe? Are the price data real and trustworthy?
This brings us to a key infrastructure in DeFi—the oracle protocol. Simply put, it’s the bridge connecting real-world prices with on-chain data. Many projects are working on this. Through multi-node, multi-source aggregation mechanisms, they can effectively counteract price distortions caused by single exchanges or liquidity shortages. While big players are still desperately chasing high yields, knowledgeable people have long been researching how to fundamentally solve the disconnect between price sources and trading depth.
Oracles may not be glamorous, nor will they give you 20% annualized returns, but they are the true safety valve in the DeFi world.
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DaisyUnicorn
· 5h ago
Oh no, it's another greedy story. A 20% annualized rate sounds great, but one big order completely breaks the entire line. Flowers, huh, if they bloom too brightly, it's not good either.
View OriginalReply0
SnapshotStriker
· 5h ago
This big player is really greedy, getting their brain fried at 20% annualized return.
Another live example of a liquidity trap, no wonder DeFi is criticized.
Oracles have indeed been overlooked; infrastructure is the key.
Slippage instantly erases all profits, hilarious.
So no matter how deep you go, it's all pointless without liquidity.
View OriginalReply0
MemeKingNFT
· 5h ago
It's the same old trick again. Trying for a 20% annualized return and getting slapped in the face—that's the mentality of retail investors. Liquidity is like when I initially bought high-priced NFTs; it looks deep but it's actually all a trap.
The crypto world recently experienced a rather absurd incident. A large BTC holder wanted to liquidate their Bitcoin holdings, switch to stablecoins, and then earn some investment returns—an annualized 20% yield, right? If you don’t try, you’ll never know. But after placing the order, they were immediately stunned. The liquidity pool couldn’t withstand such a large order at all, causing the price to plummet instantly, with BTC’s transaction price dropping all the way down to $24,000. That little annualized return? Not only would it fail to cover this loss, but even a lifetime of earning it wouldn’t be enough.
This incident is absurd, but it exposes some deep issues in DeFi. Without sufficiently deep liquidity pools, it’s like building a house on quicksand. No matter how attractive the price promises are, a large order can break the entire structure.
So what’s the solution? Investors need to know in advance: Is a pool truly safe? Are the price data real and trustworthy?
This brings us to a key infrastructure in DeFi—the oracle protocol. Simply put, it’s the bridge connecting real-world prices with on-chain data. Many projects are working on this. Through multi-node, multi-source aggregation mechanisms, they can effectively counteract price distortions caused by single exchanges or liquidity shortages. While big players are still desperately chasing high yields, knowledgeable people have long been researching how to fundamentally solve the disconnect between price sources and trading depth.
Oracles may not be glamorous, nor will they give you 20% annualized returns, but they are the true safety valve in the DeFi world.