Skip to content
TurboLoop
DeFi Glossary

Impermanent Loss

Impermanent loss is the temporary reduction in value experienced by liquidity providers when the price ratio of their deposited tokens changes relative to simply holding them.

What is impermanent loss?

Impermanent loss (IL) is the difference in value between holding tokens in a liquidity pool versus holding them in your wallet. It occurs because AMMs (Automated Market Makers) automatically rebalance pool ratios as prices change.

A simple example

You deposit $500 ETH + $500 USDT into a pool (1 ETH = $500). If ETH doubles to $1,000, the AMM rebalances: you now hold less ETH and more USDT. When you withdraw, you have ~$1,414 — but if you'd just held, you'd have $1,500. The $86 difference is impermanent loss.

Why it's called "impermanent"

If prices return to their original ratio, the loss disappears. It only becomes "permanent" when you withdraw while prices are different from when you deposited.

How to minimise impermanent loss

  1. Use stablecoin pairs — USDT/USDC pools have near-zero IL because both tokens maintain the same value
  2. Use correlated pairs — WBTC/ETH moves together, reducing IL vs a USDT/ETH pool
  3. Use concentrated liquidity carefully — tighter ranges earn more fees but amplify IL if prices move outside the range
  4. Earn enough fees to offset IL — high-volume pools can generate enough fees to more than compensate

IL in stablecoin pools

For USDT/USDC pools, impermanent loss is negligible — typically less than 0.01% — because both tokens are pegged to $1. This makes stablecoin liquidity provision one of the lowest-risk yield strategies in DeFi.

TurboLoop provides liquidity exclusively in stablecoin pools (USDT/USDC) where impermanent loss is near-zero — your principal is protected while earning fixed yield.

See TurboLoop's risk profile

Related Terms