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What Is Impermanent Loss? A Simple Explanation for Yield Farmers

2025-10-25 ·  9 days ago
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If you've spent any time exploring yield farming, you've undoubtedly come across its most intimidating and misunderstood risk: Impermanent Loss. It sounds scary, it's confusing, and it's the number one reason newcomers lose money, even when they think they're earning a profit.


But it doesn't have to be a mystery. As your guide, I'm going to demystify this concept for you. We'll use a simple analogy and a clear example to show you exactly what it is, how it happens, and how to think about it as part of your strategy.


The Core Concept: The Balancing Scale

Before we can understand Impermanent Loss, we must first understand how a typical liquidity pool works. Most pools, especially for yield farming, are like a perfectly balanced scale. You must deposit an equal value of two different assets. For example, if you want to provide liquidity to an ETH/USDC pool and Ethereum is worth $3,000, you would need to deposit 1 ETH and 3,000 USDC. Your total deposit is worth $6,000, perfectly balanced 50/50 in value. The protocol's job is to always keep this scale balanced, no matter what.


What Impermanent Loss Actually Is

Now, here is the most important thing to understand: Impermanent Loss is not a loss in the traditional sense. It is an opportunity cost. It is the difference in value between your assets inside the liquidity pool versus what their value would have been if you had simply held them in your wallet. This difference occurs when the price of one of the assets changes significantly compared to the other.


A Practical Example in Action

Let's go back to our balancing scale. You deposited 1 ETH and 3,000 USDC into the pool. Now, imagine the price of Ethereum doubles to $6,000 on the open market. Arbitrage traders will now come to your pool and buy the "cheap" ETH from it until the pool's price matches the market. To keep the scale balanced at a 50/50 value ratio, the pool's algorithm will have sold some of your ETH as its price went up.


Your pool now contains approximately 0.707 ETH and 4,242 USDC. The total value is $8,484. That's a great profit! But wait. What if you had just held your original 1 ETH and 3,000 USDC in your wallet? Their value would now be $6,000 (from the ETH) + $3,000 (from the USDC) = $9,000.


The difference—$9,000 - 8,484—is **516**. That is your Impermanent Loss. It's "impermanent" because if the price of ETH returns to its original price of $3,000, this loss disappears.


So, Why Would Anyone Do This? The Role of Fees

You might be asking, "Why would I ever provide liquidity if I'm just going to underperform holding?" The answer is trading fees. As a liquidity provider, you earn a percentage of the fees from every trade that happens in your pool. The entire game of yield farming is a bet that the fees you earn over time will be greater than any impermanent loss you might incur.


Understanding this risk is absolutely essential before you engage in any form of yield farming, especially the more complex strategies like [cross-chain yield farming].


Before you can provide liquidity to any pool, you first need to acquire the assets. Find a liquid and secure market for all major DeFi assets on the BYDFi spot exchange.

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