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Aster Launches USD1 Perpetuals: Fee Structure is the Key Point, Whether Liquidity Can Handle It Remains to Be Seen
Fees Are Much More Important Than Headlines
After WLFI announced the launch of USD1 perpetual on Aster DEX, the discussion shifted from “Trump brand stablecoin” to “this thing might actually be useful.” Eric Trump and Don Jr. reposted, bringing millions of exposure, but more noteworthy is that the crypto community is starting to talk about fee structures instead of political labels.
Key numbers: order book 0 bps, taker 0.5 bps, USDT is 4 bps—taker fees dropped by 87.5%. For large and high-frequency traders, this gap can quickly translate into real advantages.
On-chain reaction: the announcement received over 140,000 views and 746 likes. During this period, ASTER followed the market to de-leverage, dropping 10% to $0.70, but later recovered to around $1 thanks to news of “up to 2.5 million WLFI incentives per month.” Aster’s total TVL is roughly $1.5 billion, but detailed trading data for the USD1 pair isn’t available yet. Early liquidity is slowly building, but it’s far from stable.
Industry perspective: The Defiant reports Aster’s daily trading volume at about $1.3 billion, ranking second among synthetic/perpetual DEXs; Phemex emphasizes the importance of “reducing reliance on a single stablecoin.” These narratives align with Aster Chain’s pre-launch strategy of diversification.
My take: The “Trump pump” is mostly noise. Past cycles have shown that political connections rarely lead to sustained on-chain retention. If there’s an advantage, it’s mainly in the combination of fee structures and collateral mechanisms.
Points often overlooked in discussions:
Political Narratives Overshadow Execution Risks
This tweet was retweeted by 15 major accounts, splitting opinions into two camps: optimists who say “switching from USDT is free money,” and cautious voices (fewer in number, mainly in comments) who, after WLFI dropped 3.5%, began questioning tokenomics. Media like Chaincatcher link this launch closely with Aster Chain’s liquidity depth.
WLFI COO Zak Folkman’s statement is worth noting—he positions USD1 as infrastructure rather than a gimmick, emphasizing that functionally it’s no different from mainstream stablecoins.
Position implications: if the USD1 trading pair’s TVL continues to grow, going long on ASTER/WLFI makes sense; but the “decision-making power” over fee adjustments lies with Aster, and the reward mechanism for USD1 holders has yet to be proven.
Conclusion: If you believe “USD1 will erode USDT’s perpetual market share,” entering now is early; but if you’re just chasing the hype from announcements, the window for cost-effective entry has closed. Friendly to builders and patient investors, but retail investors may pay a premium for incentives.
Judgment: Long-term allocators and builders/institutional funds focusing on “market share erosion” are still early and have an advantage; short-term traders chasing headlines are late and have low odds of success. If within a few weeks USD1’s TVL doesn’t surpass $100 million and fee sustainability is uncertain, retail participation will quickly become less attractive.