The dominance of major trading platforms in shaping market conditions can't be overlooked. When centralized exchanges prioritize profit expansion and aggressive growth strategies, it inevitably influences how liquidity flows and volatility plays out across the entire market. Their incentive structures—whether through trading fees, leverage products, or promotional campaigns—tend to drive speculative behavior rather than healthy price discovery. This isn't necessarily hate, just reality: the concentration of trading volume on a few platforms means their business models directly impact market character.
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ChainProspector
· 12-20 03:10
Centralized exchanges are just vampires, and they say it's not hatred, profit comes first.
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HalfPositionRunner
· 12-20 00:49
The centralized exchange model has long needed to change. Basically, it's just about retail investors losing money to make a profit from the spread.
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MerkleMaid
· 12-18 21:57
Centralized exchanges are really just vampires, especially those leverage products, which are purely tools for harvesting retail investors.
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LiquiditySurfer
· 12-18 21:56
Well... basically, it's just a few major exchanges surfing there, and retail investors can only drink the soup. LP yields are completely eaten up by platform fees.
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GasFeeAssassin
· 12-18 21:56
The logic of centralized exchanges is actually just a disguised way of cutting leeks—fees, leverage, promotions... all the tricks are right there.
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just_vibin_onchain
· 12-18 21:46
The profit-driven model of centralized exchanges is essentially just a packaging of the "harvesting" mechanism.
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TideReceder
· 12-18 21:31
Centralized exchanges are just market makers; frankly, they're no different from traditional finance, just with a different shell.
The dominance of major trading platforms in shaping market conditions can't be overlooked. When centralized exchanges prioritize profit expansion and aggressive growth strategies, it inevitably influences how liquidity flows and volatility plays out across the entire market. Their incentive structures—whether through trading fees, leverage products, or promotional campaigns—tend to drive speculative behavior rather than healthy price discovery. This isn't necessarily hate, just reality: the concentration of trading volume on a few platforms means their business models directly impact market character.