Impermanent Loss
The percentage value lost by a liquidity provider compared to simply holding the tokens, due to price divergence between the two pooled assets.
What is Impermanent Loss?
Impermanent loss occurs when the price of tokens deposited into an automated market maker (AMM) liquidity pool diverges from their price at the time of deposit. Because AMMs like Uniswap v2 use a constant-product formula (x × y = k), the pool automatically rebalances as prices move, leaving liquidity providers with fewer of the appreciating token and more of the depreciating one. The loss is 'impermanent' because it reverses if prices return to the original ratio — but if liquidity is withdrawn while prices diverge, the loss is realized. Trading fees earned by the pool may partially or fully offset impermanent loss depending on volume.
Formula
Worked Example
ETH price doubles from $1,500 to $3,000
Source: Uniswap v2 Core Whitepaper (2020-03-23)
Calculate Impermanent Loss
New price divided by price at deposit. E.g. 2.0 = doubled, 0.5 = halved, 1.0 = unchanged.
Impermanent Loss
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How to Interpret Impermanent Loss
📚 DeFi Basics — Complete the path
- APR to APY
- APY to APR
- Effective Annual Rate
- DeFi APY
- Impermanent Loss