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TurboLoop
DeFi Glossary

Slippage

Slippage is the difference between the expected price of a trade and the price at which it actually executes — caused by price movement between order submission and execution.

What is slippage?

Slippage occurs when the price of a trade changes between when you submit it and when it executes. On DEXs, this happens because the AMM's price changes as other trades execute in the same block.

Types of slippage

Price impact — your own trade moves the price. Larger trades relative to pool size cause more price impact.

Market slippage — other trades execute before yours, moving the price.

Slippage tolerance

DEX interfaces let you set a slippage tolerance — the maximum price movement you'll accept. If the actual slippage exceeds your tolerance, the transaction reverts.

  • 0.1% — suitable for large, liquid pools (USDT/USDC)
  • 0.5% — standard for most trades
  • 1%+ — for illiquid tokens or large trades

Minimising slippage

  1. Trade in liquid pools — more liquidity = less price impact
  2. Split large trades — break into smaller transactions
  3. Use DEX aggregators — route across multiple pools
  4. Trade stablecoin pairs — USDT/USDC has near-zero slippage

Slippage in stablecoin pools

USDT/USDC pools have extremely low slippage because both tokens maintain the same $1 value. This is one reason the USDT/USDC pool on PancakeSwap V3 is so attractive for liquidity providers — high volume with minimal price impact.

TurboLoop provides liquidity to the USDT/USDC pool — one of the lowest-slippage pools on BSC. High volume, low slippage = consistent fee income for depositors.

Understand TurboLoop's yield

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