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1) One reason I agree with -- when an aggregator combines fungible products, they are basically 'doing an arb'--telling a customer "instead of buying on X, buy on Y". So take what you were going to do, buy on Y, and sell on X. That's arbing the platforms.
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0/ There is a lot of talk about aggregators in DeFi Lots of competition on both the supply and demand side People are relying on Stratechery's Aggregation Theory framework I don't think aggregation theory actually applies on either the supply or demand side in DeFi twitter.com/jpurd17/status…
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2) So instead of aggregating and redirecting, why doesn't the aggregator just let customers do what they will and then do the arbs itself after? Well that doesn't sound so good--there are giant companies that do arbs professionally, an aggregator prob wouldn't win.
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3) So if it wouldn't win doing the arb, how can it win by letting customers do the arb? Well, it can save fees and charge some to users. So it's worth a bit, but not a ton. But if a customer is really fee-sensitive they won't pay the aggregator fees, they'll do it themselves.
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4) So aggregating arb-able markets prob isn't *that* good. But there's another thing that aggregators can do: thread things together. This won't save fees but it can save time, and everyone wants time! So putting together Compound + Uniswap --> margin trading would be cool.
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6) That being said each is only as strong as the weakest leg. And so if you really want a product that scales, it has to be able to aggregate things that scale. Otherwise it'll risk being out-competed by new systems. TL;DR: pls aggregate guys, it'll be great! :P
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