Close Menu
Crypto Valley Journal
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Crypto Valley Journal
    • Hot Topics
      • News
      • Minds
    • Focus
      • Background
      • Blockchain
      • Legal & Compliance
      • Non-Fungible Token (NFTs)
    • Investing
      • Markets
      • Financial Products
      • Decentralized Finance (DeFi)
      • Exchange overview
    • Education
      • Basics
      • Glossary
      • Politicians on crypto
    • Statistics
      • Bitcoin-ETF-Flows
      • Ethereum-ETF-Flows
      • Crypto market data
      • On-chain data
    • Academy
      • Overview
      • Part 1: Blockchain
      • Part 2: Money
      • Part 3: Bitcoin
      • Part 4: Cryptocurrencies
      • Part 5: Decentralized Finance
      • Part 6: Investing
    • English
      • Deutsch
    Crypto Valley Journal
    You are at:Home»Glossary»AMM – Automated Market Maker
    Automated Market Maker AMM AMMs

    AMM – Automated Market Maker

    By Pascal on 13. April 2021 Glossary

    An Automated Market Maker (AMM) is a system that provides liquidity to an exchange through automated trading, enabling decentralized exchange platforms on the blockchain (DEXes).

    Currently, the vast majority of cryptocurrency exchanges are centralized, meaning they are operated by a company and conduct trading and custody on a closed server system. As centralized exchanges carry risks associated with centralized custody of crypto assets, the idea of decentralized exchanges is fundamentally appealing. In decentralized exchanges, crypto assets are held directly by the investor in their own wallet and are only transferred when a trade with another market participant occurs. Thus, the investor retains ownership of their assets.

    Decentralized trading alternatives on the blockchain: AMMs

    Decentralized trading alternatives on the blockchain, such as Automated Market Makers (AMMs), are the most widely used DeFi applications by trading volume. Unlike centralized exchanges (CEXs), DEXes do not have order books that determine the price of a token. Instead, liquidity pools can be created for all ERC-20 tokens, with anyone able to provide liquidity to them. When a user wants to buy a specific token or swap it for another, such as Ether (ETH), they access the relevant liquidity pool.

    The price is automatically adjusted by the Automated Market Maker (AMM) protocol, without the need for a third party, based on the token reserves in the liquidity pools. As an incentive, liquidity providers (LPs) receive all the fees. To decentralize decision-making processes, most DEXs have governance tokens, allowing users to decide, for example, which liquidity pools should receive additional incentives.

    History of Automated Market Makers

    The history of Automated Market Makers (AMMs) is closely tied to the development of decentralized finance (DeFi) and the broader blockchain ecosystem. The concept traces back to early experiments with decentralized exchanges but gained prominence with the introduction of the Ethereum blockchain in 2015. The breakthrough came with the introduction of Ethereum-based decentralized trading platforms like EtherDelta in 2017. Subsequent platforms utilized smart contracts to automate the trading process, enabling users to trade directly from their wallets without creating accounts or depositing funds on centralized exchanges.

    The real turning point for AMMs came in 2020 with the emergence of Uniswap, which introduced a novel automated pricing mechanism based on liquidity pools. Uniswap's success led to an explosion of DeFi projects and the provision of liquidity on Ethereum. Subsequent iterations of Automated Market Makers, such as Uniswap V3, further refined the concept. Today, AMMs are a foundational component of the DeFi ecosystem.

    Analysis by Bitget Research on Bitcoin quantum computing risks, ECDSA exposure, NIST post-quantum standards, and BIP-360 migration paths. Background
    17. April 2026

    Bitcoin quantum computing: What recent developments mean for network security

    Analysis by Bitget Research on Bitcoin quantum computing risks, ECDSA exposure, NIST post-quantum standards, and BIP-360 migration paths.

    XRPL validator analyzes quantum risk: only 0.03% of XRP supply is exposed, compared to up to 35% for Bitcoin. Google sets 2029 deadline. Background
    14. April 2026

    Quantum risk: Is XRP more secure than Bitcoin?

    XRPL validator analyzes quantum risk: only 0.03% of XRP supply is exposed, compared to up to 35% for Bitcoin. Google sets 2029 deadline.

    13. April 2026

    Power Shift in Crypto Exchanges: Retail Overtakes Institutional

    Entdecken Sie die Vorteile von Bitcoin im Portfolio als Werkzeug zur Renditesteigerung und zum Schutz vor Inflation.
    9. April 2026

    Bitcoin’s role within an institutional portfolio

    AI agent security risks grow as autonomous systems shift from analysis to execution in crypto markets, a Bitget and SlowMist report warns.
    8. April 2026

    New research highlights security risks as AI agents shift to execution

    6. April 2026

    Crypto Myths 2026: Four Costly Mistakes Investors Make

    $500 million in minutes: Pump.fun writes ICO history
    3. April 2026

    Have launchpads like Pump.fun destroyed the altcoin market?

    2. April 2026

    Unit bias in crypto: Why cheap coins mislead investors

    Popular Posts
    About Crypto Valley Journal
    About Crypto Valley Journal

    On the pulse of the movement

    • Academy
    • Contact
    • Advertising
    • About us
    • Partner
    • Imprint
    • Privacy
    • Disclaimer
    Search

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.