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Recently compared the trading mechanisms of a leading DEX and mainstream centralized exchanges, and found some interesting differences.
First, let's talk about funding rates — this is a key point. On centralized exchanges, those who short pay funding to those who go long; but on some DEXs, the logic is reversed, and longs actually pay shorts. The rate differences are also huge and incomparable. Honestly, this kind of design is a bit confusing.
Even more frustrating is the stop-loss issue. Last night, I placed a stop-loss order on a DEX at 0.2424. The market moved down to 0.23 — it should have triggered, but when I checked in the morning, the order was still there and hadn’t been executed. That’s quite unreasonable. Centralized exchanges tend to execute stop-losses more reliably, but here there’s a clear execution flaw.
From these experiences, DEXs still have a long way to go in terms of maturity and completeness compared to established exchanges. The fundamental mechanism design and order execution stability still need refinement. Newcomers should pay close attention to these details to avoid losses.