On-chain liquidity games: Layers of hunting among developers, snipers, and traders
The people at the top of the pyramid reap most of the rewards.
Author: post-goa
Compiled by: Deep Tide TechFlow
Based on my research, here is a brief summary of the roles in on-chain liquidity games.
Developers and Insiders
False utility slow pump or "being exploited":
- These were very popular during the early AI hype, as no one really understood AI at the time, but everyone wanted early exposure.
- They never completed more than 1% of their roadmap, often hyped by Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs).
- The team usually allocates a large supply to themselves at the contract launch, then distributes it before others. These tokens are then hidden in multiple wallets and sold off.
- After the initial pump, they either slowly dump or encounter exploits after a few weeks, quickly running away after accumulating a large market cap (20-100 million).
- Involves gangs that repeatedly release false projects following current hot narratives. These projects are often derived from more successful projects backed by large venture capital.
Programmatic Snipers
Custom Bots:
- Systematic snipers with custom bots targeting multiple ETH projects.
- The bots follow specific parameters based on smart contracts and trading volume.
- The goal is to achieve 10-100x returns on a few projects from many failed or rugged snipes, almost like a form of yield.
Manual Snipers (ETH)
One of the most profitable on-chain traders:
- Search for new contract addresses or obtain contract addresses through insider information.
- Simulate contracts to check their security and determine other potential indicators, or understand the team's background.
- Outbid other snipers when promising contracts launch.
- Buy large supplies in promising on-chain projects or stealth projects that launch without anti-sniping defenses or pre-launch platforms like Fjord.
- Use multiple wallets to snipe to hold large supplies, exceeding 1%.
- In many cases, projects are at the mercy of snipers, who can crash them to zero in the early stages.
- Many snipers game each other after entering projects, hoping for "dumb money" to come in, and sell when the market cap reaches 500k-1 million, leading to project death. This happens daily on the ETH mainnet.
- Combining some fundamental analysis and machine learning, snipers who determine which contracts might yield over 5 million in market cap or more have significantly outperformed others in the past year.
- Most snipers hold tokens for less than a few hours.
On-Chain Data Traders
Tracking the actions of snipers and insiders:
- Track the movements of profitable (highest PNL) wallets.
- Monitor trading volume and holder alerts.
- Typically buy strong projects after snipers sell; or even knowing that snipers hold large supplies, they will buy if the launch is very promising.
- Usually conduct some basic analysis or narrative analysis on newly launched projects.
- Long-term holders.
- As on-chain trading becomes an increasingly growing content segment in the field, and more on-chain services become available for retail use, its popularity has diluted and increased.
- They are the exit liquidity for the above participants.
- These traders often game each other on newly launched projects that ultimately go to zero. It's just a matter of who gets in first.
- Rely on dumb crypto Twitter (CT), Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs), or other later on-chain traders as exit liquidity.
Other Traders
Haven't learned to use Etherscan or how to check basic data metrics of tokens:
- Get information from call groups, Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs), and crypto Twitter (CT).
- Slower traders who tend to buy into hype.
- Believe that cryptocurrencies have utility beyond speculation.
- Lagging behind in narratives.
- May have been in the field for less than a year.
- These traders are likely to have given up on buying new utility projects or meme coins. Or they are slowly starting to learn on-chain trading and gradually upgrading to the above categories.
Summary
On-chain trading is a liquidity game among developers, snipers, on-chain data traders, and others. As liquidity entering the on-chain space decreases, competition among participants becomes more intense, resulting in those at the top of the pyramid reaping most of the rewards.
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