Definition
Uniswap is the largest decentralized exchange (or DEX) operating on the Ethereum blockchain.
It allows users anywhere in the world to trade crypto without an intermediary. UNI, the
governance token that allows users to vote on key protocol changes, is the fourth largest
cryptocurrency by market cap on Koinmex as of April 2021 — with a total value of more than
$18 billion.
Uniswap was one of the first decentralized
finance (or DeFi) applications to gain significant traction on Ethereum — launching in November 2018. Since then,
numerous other decentralized exchanges have launched (including Curve, SushiSwap, and
Balancer), but Uniswap is currently the most popular by a significant margin. As of April
2021, Uniswap had processed over $10 billion in weekly trading volume.
Uniswap pioneered the Automated Market Maker
model, in which users supply Ethereum tokens to Uniswap “liquidity pools” and algorithms set
market prices (as opposed to order books, which match bids and asks on a centralized exchange
like Koinmex) based on supply and demand.
By supplying tokens to Uniswap liquidity
pools, users can earn rewards while enabling peer-to-peer trading. Anyone, anywhere, can
supply tokens to liquidity pools, trade tokens, or even create and list their own tokens
(using Ethereum’s ERC-20 protocol). There are currently hundreds of tokens available on
Uniswap, and some of the most popular trading pairs are stablecoins like USDC and Wrapped
Bitcoin (WBTC).
Some of the potential advantages of
decentralized exchanges like Uniswap include:
-
Safe: Funds are never transferred
to any third party or generally subject to counterparty risk (i.e. trusting your assets
with a custodian) because both parties are trading directly from their own wallets.
-
Global and permissionless: There
is no concept of borders, or restrictions on who can trade. Anyone with a smartphone and
an internet connection can participate.
-
Ease of use and pseudonymous: No
account signup or personal details are required.
How to use Uniswap
In order to use Uniswap, all you need is an
Ethereum wallet, such as Koinmex Wallet, and a bit of ETH (which you’ll need to
pay for gas fees). Using the app browser built into Koinmex Wallet's mobile application
or its desktop browser extension, you can access app.uniswap.org to start swapping tokens or
supplying liquidity.
One issue users of all Ethereum-based apps
including Uniswap face are transaction fees (also called gas) that can vary widely in price
and can make it expensive to use the network. Multiple solutions to this issue are in the
works, from the long-planned transition to the ETH2 blockchain
(scheduled for sometime in 2022) to the nearer-term rollout of a “Layer 2” scaling
solution called Optimism later this year. Uniswap developers are confident
that Optimism will allow for significantly cheaper Uniswap transactions.
In early May 2021, Uniswap v3 launched with
the goal of making transactions faster and cheaper.
What is UNI?
After years of successful operation and on
its path to complete decentralization, Uniswap introduced the UNI token to enable community ownership over the
protocol, allowing stakeholders to vote on key protocol changes and development initiatives.
When Uniswap released the token in September 2020, it used a unique form of distribution in
which it “airdropped” 400 UNI tokens to each Ethereum address that had ever used the protocol.
Over 250,000 Ethereum addresses received the airdrop,
which was worth nearly $1,400 at the time. Airdrops have since become a popular way for DeFi
apps to reward longtime users – Uniswap has said it plans to distribute a total of 1 billion
UNI over four years.
Why are there so many DEXs with “Swap” in the
name?
It’s because Uniswap, like most crypto
protocols, is open source, meaning anyone can both see exactly how it works and adapt the code
to create a competitor.
In recent years, a large number of DEXs
adapted from Uniswap’s code have launched, including food-named competitors like SushiSwap and
PancakeSwap. (If you want to read more, check out this issue of Koinmex’s Around the
Block newsletter.)