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Home » Designing a DEX for Liquidity Routing
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Designing a DEX for Liquidity Routing

Jane AustenBy Jane Austenfebrero 28, 2025No hay comentarios3 Mins Read
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At this point, the direction is no longer theoretical.

Decentralized markets have matured enough to expose their structural limits, and the conclusion is consistent across environments: hosting liquidity is not operating a market. The next generation of onchain exchanges must be built around coordination, not containers.

Liquidity routing is not an optimization.
It is the core infrastructure.

Markets Are Built at Execution Time

Static pools assume liquidity is most useful when it sits in one place. That assumption no longer holds.

Modern onchain trading spans fragmented venues, shifting conditions, and adversarial execution environments. Capital only becomes valuable when it is assembled correctly at the moment of execution.

A routing-centric exchange decomposes orders, sequences them intelligently, and distributes execution across multiple sources in real time. Depth is not defined by balances locked, but by the quality of execution delivered.

MEV Must Be Managed

Pool-based designs implicitly outsource execution to the fastest actors. Ordering becomes external competition, and users pay the cost through slippage and uncertainty.

A routing-based design internalizes execution decisions.

By controlling paths, timing, and aggregation, the system constrains adversarial behavior. MEV doesn’t disappear but it becomes structured, predictable, and aligned with user outcomes.

That shift requires coordination at a level static designs cannot provide.

Intent Is the Correct Interface

Users should not need to express execution mechanics.

They should express intent — outcomes within constraints — and allow infrastructure to determine how that intent is fulfilled under live conditions. Routing layers exist to absorb complexity, not expose it.

Separating intent from execution is what allows markets to scale without collapsing into chaos.

RWAs Make the Requirement Explicit

Real-world assets remove any remaining ambiguity.

Settlement delays, compliance boundaries, and permissioned participation are not exceptions — they define the market. A routing-based architecture accommodates these realities naturally: permission-aware paths, staged settlement, and conditional execution follow directly from coordination logic.

RWAs do not need new principles.
They need infrastructure that respects constraints by design.

This Requires an Intent Engine

Once these requirements are taken seriously, the shape of the solution becomes obvious.

What’s needed is not another DEX with better incentives, but an execution engine — a system that continuously observes liquidity, evaluates conditions, coordinates routes, and assembles execution in real time.

An engine that:

  • routes liquidity across venues
  • manages execution timing and sequencing
  • performs MEV dynamics
  • translates capital efficiency intent into optimal onchain actions

The Role Is Clear

An exchange is no longer a passive venue.

It is an execution coordinator.

Routing layers, MEV-aware execution, and intent-based interfaces are not features layered on top — they are foundational components of a market that actually works at scale.

Redefining DEX

Markets are systems, not pools.

As onchain trading expands to higher frequency, greater scale, and real-world assets, the exchanges that matter will be those that turn fragmented capital into coherent execution — consistently, predictably, and transparently.

Building an engine to do that is no longer optional.

It is the work.

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Jane Austen
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