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How to Identify Good Liquidity Pools and Make Use of Them
Most platforms aim to ensure that only reliable tokens are present in their liquidity pools. Understanding the differences between various liquidity pools doesn’t come instantly, but it’s important to research before providing liquidity.
On the TON blockchain, as on others, there are scam tokens that should not be trusted. To prevent liquidity from being supplied to them, the STON fi team generally tries to filter out poor-quality tokens. Typically, tokens that may raise suspicion are found on DEXs with little popularity, although they do occasionally appear on well-known DEX . Why is this the case?
Because DeFi is known for its user freedom – anyone can create their own liquidity pool on STON fi – and the team cannot always keep pace with monitoring pools that contain scam tokens.
Liquidity pools with no trading volume, or only very low volumes, fall into the scam category. These pools often contain tokens whose teams have already ceased developing their ecosystem and engaging with the community.
Tokens with high TVL in liquidity pools but no trading volume should also be considered scams. Such tokens often lure users with large TVL figures, but in reality, they offer nothing of real value and make no effort to develop their product.
Liquidity pools on STON fi containing tokens with potential:
$TON / $USDT – 28%
$FPIBANK / $TON – 88%