Risk Management

Understand the risks of providing liquidity and how to manage them.

What You Should Know

Counterparty Exposure

As an LP, you are the counterparty to every trade in your pool. This means:

  • When traders lose, your pool grows — their losses become your gains

  • When traders win, your pool shrinks — their profits are paid from your pool

Over longer time horizons, winners and losers tend to offset each other, and fee income provides a consistent positive baseline. But in the short to medium term, variance can be significant — especially if skilled or algorithmic traders generate sustained profits against your pool.

Withdrawal Constraints

During normal conditions, you can withdraw instantly. But during extreme market events, your withdrawal capacity may be temporarily limited if:

  • Traders hold large unrealized profits (PnL factor constraint)

  • Pool utilization is very high (reserve factor constraint)

This is a protective mechanism — it prevents a few LPs from withdrawing and leaving the remaining pool under-capitalized. Plan for potential illiquidity during stress periods.

Best Practices

Choosing the Right Markets

Not all pools carry the same risk. Here's how to think about market selection:

Market Type
Fee Income
PnL Variance
Risk Level

Major crypto (BTC, ETH)

Moderate

Moderate

Medium

Major forex (EUR/USD)

Steady

Low

Lower

Altcoins / Meme tokens

High

High

Higher

Equities / Indices

Moderate

Moderate

Medium

Before depositing, check:

  • Historical APY charts — look for stable, positive fee APR over time

  • Trader PnL patterns — balanced win/loss ratios indicate healthier dynamics

  • Open interest distribution — balanced long/short OI reduces your directional exposure

Extreme APY spikes often correlate with temporary PnL windfalls from trader losses. These can reverse quickly. Focus on consistent fee APR rather than headline APY numbers.

Monitoring Your Positions

Keep an eye on these indicators:

  • Remaining deposit/withdrawal caps — if withdrawal cap is low, traders hold large unrealized gains

  • Utilization rate — above 70% means higher borrow fees for you, but also more constrained withdrawals

  • OI balance — lopsided long/short OI increases your directional risk

Timing Your Deposits

  • Deposit when trader PnL is low or negative — you buy HzLP at a lower price, capturing upside as the pool recovers

  • Avoid depositing when traders hold large unrealized profits — you'd buy at an inflated price that may decline when they take profits

  • Avoid large moves around major events (economic data releases, protocol updates) — temporary volatility spikes can affect HzLP pricing

Diversifying Across Pools

Even within HertzFlow, spread your capital across multiple pools. Focus on markets with:

  • Established trading volume and liquidity depth

  • Stable historical fee generation

  • Moderate utilization rates

  • Balanced long-short open interest

Avoid over-concentrating in correlated markets (e.g., multiple altcoin pools) where a single directional move affects all your positions simultaneously.


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