Decentralized leveraged trading platform to offer actual spot trading prices

Published at: Dec. 6, 2021

Decentralized leveraged trading platforms are growing in popularity but fail to provide an ideal experience for traders. These platforms often charge high fees on leveraged trades, are subject to scams and often don’t provide the actual price of a crypto asset. Instead, leveraged trading platforms have users investing in a derivatives contract over the actual asset.

gTrade developed by Gains Network is a decentralized leverage trading platform looking to solve the problems with traditional leveraged trading platforms.

A median offering

gTrade is a decentralized leveraged trading platform enabling users to speculate on the real spot price of listed assets as opposed to competitors, which utilize perpetual contracts to generate a different price.

The platform utilizes custom Chainlink (LINK) oracles to pull prices from seven cryptocurrency exchanges and bases its own price on the median of those seven. This process is how the platform can confidently offer an actual spot price. Investors can then invest in the actual asset price with leverage rather than a derivatives contract price.

By pulling an exact price from multiple exchanges, gTrade avoids common issues suffered by other, singular platforms, such as potential price manipulation and scam wicks - a disingenuous trading method in which users trade at a price largely outside of the average trading range. In doing so, the trader activates various stop losses, which, in turn, manipulates the asset price in one way or another.

Powered by GNS

The platform’s GNS utility token powers most user interactions on Gains Network. When it comes to leveraged trading, most platforms borrow leveraged funds. But Gains instead burns and mints tokens when opening trades, simulating profits and losses as necessary.

By simulating leveraged funds, Gains can offer its services with meager trading fees. Fees that do exist go toward Gains’ liquidity providers, incentivizing additional liquidity over time. It’s because of these users that Gains has any network in the first place, so it only makes sense to reward liquidity providers for their offerings.

More insights on gTrade here

All liquidity sits in a GNS/DAI liquidity pool, with GNS acting as a synthetic to all tokens within the platform. While GNS is burnt or minted to open trades, the platform houses DAI in its trading vault to pay for closed trades. Then, trading bots automatically refill that lost DAI by slowly minting and selling GNS over time. Overall, these methods create long-term deflationary pressure on GNS supply.

“We believe to have solved the problem of decentralized leveraged trading, as Uniswap did for decentralized spot trading,” claims the team behind Gains Network. “Our capital efficiency is about 100x higher than any centralized or decentralized competitor. We don't charge funding fees, already support ten forex pairs and 37 cryptos (the most of any decentralized platform), and all of this while letting users keep full custody of their funds.”

Since its establishment, gTrade has serviced a daily average of over 100 users with an average of $20 million in daily trading volume. The team plans to integrate other options such as stocks, commodities, and indices while partnering with similar projects to increase its offerings.

Learn more about gTrade

Disclaimer. Cointelegraph does not endorse any content or product on this page. While we aim at providing you with all important information that we could obtain, readers should do their own research before taking any actions related to the company and carry full responsibility for their decisions, nor can this article be considered as investment advice.

Tags
Related Posts
How this crypto project is bringing all things DeFi under one roof
A crypto project says it is changing the game of decentralized portfolio management — and delivers an all-in-one platform that brings everything users need under one roof. DEXKIT has been built to provide a genuinely user-friendly way of managing and trading digital assets. The application features a DEX aggregator, professional exchange, NFT marketplace, and dashboard where users can monitor asset performance. The DSwap aggregator continually monitors more than 30 decentralized exchanges on the Binance Smart Chain and Ethereum networks, delivering up-to-the-minute crypto data. Swaps can be filled by multiple protocols at once which can result in more tokens for trades. …
Decentralization / June 17, 2021
How to provide liquidity to cryptocurrency exchange
A trading venue’s liquidity represents how easily a trader can use the platform to exchange one asset for another. If a trader sends a market order to buy or sell an asset and the venue can’t find enough buy or sell orders to complete the transaction at a reasonable price, the venue is likely struggling with low liquidity — and the trader is likely to take their future business elsewhere. Venues that provide adequate liquidity and competitive market pricing tend to experience a rewarding cycle, with traders who find their liquidity needs met, returning for more transactions, which provides liquidity …
Decentralization / Sept. 7, 2020
Crypto Exchange Hopes to Become Trendsetter by Scrapping Trading Fees Entirely
A crypto exchange has announced it is launching “zero-fee trading” across the 131 countries where it currently operates. Zebpay says it wants to “liberate crypto from the shackles of trading fees, and to reduce the friction for all those who are new to crypto.” Many exchanges charge a small commission whenever their users make a trade. While the company says fees of 0.25 percent may seem insubstantial, it warned they “certainly add up and can eat into trading profits,” and even deter infrequent traders from participating more. In a blog post announcing the changes, Zebpay said: “The ethos of the …
Decentralization / March 5, 2019
How does high-frequency trading work on decentralized exchanges?
Following the decentralized finance (DeFi) boom of 2020, decentralized exchanges (DEXs) solidified their place in the ecosystems of both cryptocurrency and finance. Since DEXs are not as heavily regulated as centralized exchanges, users can list any token they want. With DEXs, high-frequency traders can make trades on coins before they hit major exchanges. Plus, decentralized exchanges are noncustodial, which implies that creators cannot pull an exit fraud — in theory. As such, high-frequency trading firms that used to broker unique trading transactions with cryptocurrency exchange operators have turned to decentralized exchanges to conduct business. What is high-frequency trading in crypto? …
Decentralization / Sept. 10, 2022
What are the worst crypto mistakes to avoid in 2022? | Find out now on The Market Report
“The Market Report” with Cointelegraph is live right now. On this week’s show, Cointelegraph’s resident experts discuss the worst mistakes you should avoid making in crypto. But first, market expert Marcel Pechman carefully examines the Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH) markets. Are the current market conditions bullish or bearish? What is the outlook for the next few months? Pechman is here to break it down. Next up: the main event. Join Cointelegraph analysts Benton Yaun, Jordan Finneseth and Sam Bourgi as they talk about the worst crypto mistakes to avoid making in 2022. First up we have Bourgi, who thinks …
Decentralization / April 12, 2022