Evgeny Gaevoy, the visionary behind Wintermute, recently challenged the industry’s obsession with blaming perpetual contracts for market dysfunction. His argument cuts deeper: the structural defects lie in how exchanges themselves are architected.
Where the Actual Problem Resides
Most centralized and pseudo-decentralized exchanges operate with a fundamentally flawed three-layer structure. They simultaneously function as execution brokers, manage central limit order books (CLOB), and hold user custody—a combination that creates inherent conflicts of interest and operational vulnerabilities.
This bundling of roles means exchanges have simultaneous access to order flow, execution authority, and user funds. Compare this to traditional finance: brokers, market makers, and custodians are strictly separated entities. The regulatory and operational barriers between them exist for good reason.
Why Traditional Finance Got It Right
Evgeny Gaevoy’s observation points to a critical insight: Wall Street figured out decades ago that concentrating these functions leads to systemic risk and market inefficiencies. Investment banks don’t hold their clients’ securities. Brokers don’t operate the clearing house. Market makers operate separate from execution venues.
Web3 exchanges, by contrast, often collapsed all these roles into a single entity or loosely coordinated pseudodecentralized systems that still concentrate critical functions.
The Path Forward
Rather than engineering better perpetual contract mechanics, the industry should redirect its focus toward redesigning exchange infrastructure itself. The solution isn’t tweaking derivatives—it’s reimagining custody, execution, and market-making as distinct, separated functions, mirroring the checks and balances that traditional finance established through hard-won experience.
Evgeny Gaevoy’s critique suggests that Wintermute and the broader industry need to think structurally, not mechanically.
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The Real Problem Isn't Perpetual Contracts—It's How Exchanges Are Built
Evgeny Gaevoy, the visionary behind Wintermute, recently challenged the industry’s obsession with blaming perpetual contracts for market dysfunction. His argument cuts deeper: the structural defects lie in how exchanges themselves are architected.
Where the Actual Problem Resides
Most centralized and pseudo-decentralized exchanges operate with a fundamentally flawed three-layer structure. They simultaneously function as execution brokers, manage central limit order books (CLOB), and hold user custody—a combination that creates inherent conflicts of interest and operational vulnerabilities.
This bundling of roles means exchanges have simultaneous access to order flow, execution authority, and user funds. Compare this to traditional finance: brokers, market makers, and custodians are strictly separated entities. The regulatory and operational barriers between them exist for good reason.
Why Traditional Finance Got It Right
Evgeny Gaevoy’s observation points to a critical insight: Wall Street figured out decades ago that concentrating these functions leads to systemic risk and market inefficiencies. Investment banks don’t hold their clients’ securities. Brokers don’t operate the clearing house. Market makers operate separate from execution venues.
Web3 exchanges, by contrast, often collapsed all these roles into a single entity or loosely coordinated pseudodecentralized systems that still concentrate critical functions.
The Path Forward
Rather than engineering better perpetual contract mechanics, the industry should redirect its focus toward redesigning exchange infrastructure itself. The solution isn’t tweaking derivatives—it’s reimagining custody, execution, and market-making as distinct, separated functions, mirroring the checks and balances that traditional finance established through hard-won experience.
Evgeny Gaevoy’s critique suggests that Wintermute and the broader industry need to think structurally, not mechanically.