SushiSwap initiates migration of over $800M in liquidity funds from Uniswap

Quick Take

  • Over $800 million in liquidity funds are being transferred from Uniswap to its upstart competitor, SushiSwap.
  • SushiSwap, a fork of Uniswap, is gaining popularity because unlike Uniswap, it rewards its liquidity providers with a native governance token, SUSHI.
  • If successful, the migration could cause Uniswap’s overall liquidity to drop by nearly 60 percent.

Over $800 million in funds that had been deposited in liquidity pools on decentralized cryptocurrency exchange protocol Uniswap are now being transferred to its upstart competitor, SushiSwap.

The SushiSwap-led migration, if successful, will cause Uniswap’s overall liquidity to drop by nearly 60 percent.

The $800 million transferred is denominated in Uniswap LP tokens, which are issued when users deposit assets on Uniswap. LP token holders had deposited them on SushiSwap looking to take advantage of the decentralized exchange's (DEX) attractive trading rewards.

SushiSwap, a fork of Uniswap, has gained popularity because unlike its parent protocol, it rewards its liquidity providers with a native governance token, SUSHI. Uniswap doesn’t have a governance token and currently distributes 0.30% of its collected trading fees to liquidity providers. SushiSwap, by contrast, offers liquidity providers 0.25% of trading fees, converting the remaining 0.05% into SUSHI token rewards.

In order to “farm” SUSHI tokens on SushiSwap, users will now have to migrate their Uniswap LP (for “liquidity providers”) tokens into SushiSwap SLP tokens that represent the exact same liquidity. 

SushiSwap has gained considerable traction among cryptocurrency traders since it launched on August 28, peaking at $1.58 billion in total locked value on September 3. 

But it has not been without controversy. On September 6, Chef Nomi, the anonymous founder of the protocol, converted a portion of SUSHI tokens that were supposed to be used to further develop the SushiSwap platform, to ether (ETH). This led some crypto users to believe SushiSwap was a scam. 

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After being accused of “exit-scamming” the protocol’s users, Chef Nomi transferred control of the protocol to FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried. 

"I hope SushiSwap does well without me," Nomi tweeted. "Again I did not intend to do any harm. I'm sorry if my decision did not follow what you expected."

Now that Bankman-Fried is in control, he is in charge of what he is calling SushiSwap’s “ Sushi Migration Plan.” In a Twitter thread posted early Wednesday morning, Bankman-Fried explained that after migration began, the team carried out a final round of internal tests to probe for potential security flaws. “While we don’t anticipate any issues, we want to be extra sure,” he wrote. 

After confirming that the new SushiSwap pool was functioning, the team is migrating the funds pool by pool. Once migration is complete, SUSHI rewards will “flow to the new SushiSwap pool stakers,” and trading will begin, Bankman-Fried wrote, adding that users’ current SUSHI holdings will not be affected by the migration. 

The migration will likely intensify the competition between Uniswap, the leading DEX in terms of trading volume, and its growing list of rivals. In an interview with The Block earlier this month, Uniswap founder Hayden Adams, without addressing SushiSwap or the migration directly, noted that many of these new competing protocols merely exist “because the money symbols are flashing in people’s eyes.”


© 2023 The Block. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

About Author

Saniya More (pronounced: Saan-ya Mo-ray) is a quadrilingual journalist at The Block. She got her master’s degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and did her undergraduate degree at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, Syracuse University. Her work has appeared in CBS News, Bangkok Post, Thai Enquirer, Globalists, Byline Times and other publications. When she’s not chasing a story, you will most likely find her biking, tweeting, taking photos or creating Spotify playlists for every occasion.