Cardano DEX MuesliSwap to refund users after slippage confusion

The team behind the Cardano-based decentralized exchange MuesliSwap has made a decision to refund users that have been hit with high slippage over the past year.

On Aug. 8, the MuseliSwap team said it โ€œfell short in providing adequate clarityโ€ on the slippage feature within its protocol.

Slippage is the price difference between when a transaction is submitted and when the transaction is confirmed on the blockchain.

MuesliSwap users have been paying high slippage for at least a year due to the way the decentralized matchmaker was set up, the team explained.

Matchmakers โ€” who scan for buy and sell orders to match up and fulfill โ€” were able to โ€œfill the limit order and choose whether to return the additional slippage amount or retain the difference at their discretion,โ€ MuesliSwap noted.

The slippage difference was an incentive for decentralized matchmakers, it added, but this caused confusion for users.

โ€œTo make amends, we will be refunding affected users who encountered high slippage on the MuesliSwap pools in the last 12 months from our project funds.โ€

Additionally, immediate action has been taken to remedy the slippage issue in the MuesliSwap order book, it added.

Related: DEX aggregators: The ultimate solution to reduce price slippage in DeFi

Users have been highlighting slippage issues on all Cardano DEXs. On Aug. 4, one trader said:

โ€œCurrently completing a LARGE trade on any CARDANO DEX is subject to HUGE slippage which diminishes traderโ€™s value by a large percentage.โ€

They claimed MuesliSwap was supposedly working on a DEX aggregator to split large trades and limit losses due to slippage.

MuesliSwap is the fifth-largest protocol on Cardano, with a total value locked of $17.3 million, according to DeFiLlama. However, MuesliSwap TVL has tanked 27% since the beginning of the month and is down 68% since its all-time high in April 2022.

In December, MuesliSwap launched an โ€œorganic APRโ€ feature that increased token emissions as more liquidity went into pools as a way to incentivize users to add collateral.

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