How Aggregators Bring Flow to Stabull
The post How Aggregators Bring Flow to Stabull appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
If solvers explain how sophisticated trades are executed, aggregators explain how that execution reaches users at scale. By Jamie McCormick, Co-CMO, Stabull Labs The ninth article in the 15 part “Deconstructing DeFi” Series. Aggregators are one of the quiet reasons why DeFi liquidity can suddenly become busy without any corresponding increase in a protocol’s visible user activity. They sit between users and liquidity, abstracting complexity and routing trades wherever execution is best. In the transactions we traced on Stabull, aggregator involvement was one of the clearest signals that the protocol had moved beyond UI-dependent usage. What aggregators actually do At a high level, aggregators exist to answer a simple question: “Where should this trade be executed to get the best result right now?” To do that, they: query many liquidity sources simultaneously compare prices, fees, and slippage split or route trades across multiple venues construct an execution path automatically From the user’s perspective, this all happens behind the scenes. They submit a swap once and receive an output amount. Everything in between is handled programmatically. Why aggregators matter in modern DeFi Liquidity in DeFi is fragmented by design. Different protocols specialise in: volatile asset price discovery stablecoin efficiency FX-style conversions long-tail assets No single DEX is optimal for every trade. Aggregators exist to stitch this fragmented liquidity landscape together. As a result, a large portion of “retail” DeFi activity today is actually aggregator-mediated, even if users believe they are trading on a single venue. How Stabull appears in aggregator flows When an aggregator evaluates a trade, it does not think in terms of brands or frontends. It thinks in terms of execution legs. For trades involving stablecoins or real-world–anchored assets, Stabull increasingly appears as: one leg of a multi-hop route a pricing reference for FX-style conversions a low-slippage venue for…
Filed under: News - @ March 17, 2026 9:22 pm